Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Robert Randolph Bruce

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Monarch
  
George V

Name
  
Robert Bruce

Party
  
Liberal Party of Canada

Political party
  
Liberal

Education
  
University of Glasgow

Nationality
  
Canadian

Died
  
February 21, 1942

Role
  
Political figure


Robert Randolph Bruce httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Governor General
  
The Viscount Byng of Vimy The Viscount Willingdon The Earl of Bessborough

Premier
  
John Oliver John Duncan MacLean Simon Fraser Tolmie

Born
  
July 16, 1861 Lhanbryde, Scotland (
1861-07-16
)

Succeeded by
  
John William Fordham Johnson

Preceded by
  
Walter Cameron Nichol

Robert Randolph Bruce (July 16, 1861 – February 21, 1942) was an engineer, mining proprietor and the 13th Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia from 1926 to 1931.

Robert Randolph Bruce Robert Randolph Bruce Wikipedia

Bruce was born in Scotland and educated at the University of Glasgow where he studied engineering. He emigrated to the United States in 1887 before arriving in Canada to work for the Canadian Pacific Railway. In 1897 he settled in British Columbia to become a prospector. Bruce and his partner established a lead and silver mine near Windermere Lake in the East Kootenay region of British Columbia. He purchased land from the railway and promoted it in England for settlement.

Robert Randolph Bruce Robert Randolph Bruce City of Vancouver Archives

Bruce became the province's lieutenant-governor in 1926. Unusually for former vice-roys, he attempted to enter politics following his tenure as the Queen's representative and stood for the Liberal Party of Canada in the 1935 federal election but was narrowly defeated by Henry Herbert Stevens in the riding of Kootenay East. The government of William Lyon Mackenzie King appointed Bruce as Canada's second envoy to Japan with the title of Minister Plenipotentiary in 1936. He served for two years before retiring to Montreal.

References

Robert Randolph Bruce Wikipedia