Albert Scott White
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Scott_White an entity of type: Thing
ألبرت سكوت وايت هو محامي وسياسي كندي، ولد في 12 أبريل 1855، وتوفي في 17 مارس 1931. انتخب Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick (1890 – 1892).
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Albert Scott White (April 12, 1855 – March 17, 1931) was a lawyer, politician, and judge in the Province of New Brunswick, Canada. From 1886 to 1903, he represented King's County as part of the official creation of the New Brunswick Liberal Party. He was born in Sussex, New Brunswick; the only child of Margaret Scott and James E. White. He attended Mount Allison College for his undergraduate education before attending law school at Harvard University. He received his LL.B. from the latter in 1877. Thus began a 30-year career practicing law in Sussex. Additionally, in 1894 he was created a QC.
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ألبرت سكوت وايت
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Albert Scott White
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15944830
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1084893508
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ألبرت سكوت وايت هو محامي وسياسي كندي، ولد في 12 أبريل 1855، وتوفي في 17 مارس 1931. انتخب Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick (1890 – 1892).
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Albert Scott White (April 12, 1855 – March 17, 1931) was a lawyer, politician, and judge in the Province of New Brunswick, Canada. From 1886 to 1903, he represented King's County as part of the official creation of the New Brunswick Liberal Party. He was born in Sussex, New Brunswick; the only child of Margaret Scott and James E. White. He attended Mount Allison College for his undergraduate education before attending law school at Harvard University. He received his LL.B. from the latter in 1877. Thus began a 30-year career practicing law in Sussex. Additionally, in 1894 he was created a QC. He married Ida Vaughan, and had one child, Donald Vaughan White. From 1890 to 1892, White served as speaker for the provincial assembly, then in 1892 was named Solicitor General. He went on to be appointed Attorney General in October 1897, serving in this position until January 1900. After resigning his seat in provincial legislature, White became chair of the commission to revise New Brunswick statutes. In this time he also drafted the Railway Act of 1903. After two unsuccessful bids for election to the House of Commons, White's acted as co-counsel in the prosecution of James Harvie Crocket, a Fredericton newspaper proprietor, in 1907. He died in Saint John in 1931.
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2838