William Alfred Galliher

http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_Alfred_Galliher an entity of type: Thing

William Alfred Galliher (July 26, 1860 – November 23, 1934) was a Canadian lawyer, judge and Liberal politician. Gallier was born in Bruce County, Canada West. In 1885, he served as part of the British Nile contingent under General Wolseley. Galliher was elected as MP for Yale—Cariboo in 1900, despite running against "Independent-Labour" candidate , who threatened to split the Liberal vote. After the Kootenay riding was split off from Yale Cariboo in 1904, Galliher was reelected there and remained in the House until 1908. rdf:langString
rdf:langString William Alfred Galliher
rdf:langString William Alfred Galliher
rdf:langString William Alfred Galliher
xsd:date 1934-11-23
xsd:date 1860-07-26
xsd:integer 11398274
xsd:integer 1045857049
rdf:langString William Alfred Galliher.jpg
xsd:date 1860-07-26
xsd:date 1934-11-23
rdf:langString Canadian
rdf:langString District was created in 1903
xsd:integer 1904 1908
xsd:integer 1900 1904
rdf:langString William Alfred Galliher (July 26, 1860 – November 23, 1934) was a Canadian lawyer, judge and Liberal politician. Gallier was born in Bruce County, Canada West. In 1885, he served as part of the British Nile contingent under General Wolseley. The son of Francis Galliher and Sarah Kirkpatrick, he was educated in Walkerton and Collingwood. He moved to western Canada, studied law and was called to the Manitoba bar in 1887, to the bar for the Northwest Territories in 1889 and to the British Columbia bar in 1897. Galliher practised law in Nelson and Victoria. In 1907, he married Margaret Louise Brown. He was a partner of noted lawyer Charles F. P. Conybeare from 1888 to 1887. Galliher was elected as MP for Yale—Cariboo in 1900, despite running against "Independent-Labour" candidate , who threatened to split the Liberal vote. After the Kootenay riding was split off from Yale Cariboo in 1904, Galliher was reelected there and remained in the House until 1908. In 1909, he was named judge in the British Columbia Court of Appeal. Galliher died in Victoria at the age of 74.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3618

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