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Drummond also joined the NAACP in Saint John. [3] On May 12, 1964, [4] [5] while serving as the vice-president of the New Brunswick Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NBAACP), [6] he led a sit-in with two other NBAACP members at a barbershop in Saint John's Haymarket Square to protest the owner's refusal to serve Black men.
George J. Jenkins (June 4, 1927 – February 15, 2002) [1] was a Canadian politician in the province of New Brunswick. He was elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in 1991 and did not run for re-election. Jenkins represented the electoral district of East Saint John. [2] He died on February 15, 2002. [3]
Thomas J. Higgins (1931 [1] – August 24, 1995) was a Canadian educator and municipal politician who served as the mayor of Saint John, New Brunswick from 1994 to 1995. He was Saint John's first Catholic mayor. [2]
Gordon Malcolm Keith Dow (July 1, 1937 – September 18, 2024) was a Canadian politician. He served in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick from 1982 to 1987 as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party from the constituency of Saint John West. [2]
Arthur Lee Irving OC ONB (July 14, 1930 – May 13, 2024) was a Canadian billionaire businessman, the second son of industrialist K. C. Irving of the Irving family.Born in Saint John, New Brunswick, Irving was the president of Irving Oil, and later became its sole owner through the Arthur Irving Family Trust.
Born and raised in Saint John, New Brunswick, Tobias worked as a draftsman in the early 1960s while also appearing as a musician at local venues in Saint John. He joined a folk group named the Ramblers in 1961, playing guitar, and he later played drums in a rock band called the Badd Cedes.
Walter Woodworth White FRCS (December 14, 1862 – July 10, 1952) was a Canadian physician as well as a municipal and provincial politician in New Brunswick.He served as the Mayor of Saint John between 1902 and 1906, and again from 1926 until 1932.
The paper has been published out of Saint John since 1862, when it was started as The Morning Telegraph. [2] The paper merged with several other New Brunswick papers in the following decades: the Morning Journal in 1869, [3] The Sun in 1910, [4] and The Daily Journal in 1923, which is when it first adopted the name Telegraph-Journal. [5]