Murray Dodd

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Murray Dodd
Source: Library and Archives Canada

Murray Dodd (May 23, 1843 – August 25, 1905) was a lawyer, judge and political figure in Nova Scotia, Canada. He represented Cape Breton in the House of Commons of Canada from 1882 to 1887 as a Conservative member.[1]

He was born in Sydney, Nova Scotia,[1] the son of judge Edmund Murray Dodd and Caroline Maria Ritchie, a granddaughter of David Mathews, the Loyalist Mayor of New York City under the British during the American Revolution,[2] and a descendant of the prominent Schuyler family of New York City. He was educated in Sydney and Sackville. He was called to the Nova Scotia bar in 1865[3] and practised in Sydney.[4] In 1879, he married Laura Isabel Archibald. The following year, Dodd was named Queen's Counsel. He was registrar for the county probate court from 1867 to 1872, when he was named judge in the same court.[3] He resigned in 1879 to run unsuccessfully for a seat in the House of Commons.[1] In 1888, he was named County Court Judge for Division number 7 in Nova Scotia. In 1893 he became one of the founding members of the Sydney Lawn Tennis Club which was incorporated by an Act of the Nova Scotia Legislature.[5] He died in Sydney at the age of 61 while still serving as a judge.[4]

By-election on 23 October 1879

On Mr. McLeod's death, 5 August 1879

Party Candidate Votes
Liberal–Conservative William Mackenzie McLeod 1,094
Liberal Newton LeGayet Mackay 866
Conservative Murray Dodd 799

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Murray Dodd – Parliament of Canada biography
  2. ^ Calnek, William Arthur (1897). History of the County of Annapolis: Including Old Port Royal and Acadia : with Memoirs of Its Representatives in the Provincial Parliament, and Biographical and Genealogical Sketches of Its Early English Settlers and Their Families. William Briggs.
  3. ^ a b The Canadian parliamentary companion, 1883, JA Gemmill
  4. ^ a b Johnson, J.K. (1968). The Canadian Directory of Parliament 1867-1967. Public Archives of Canada.
  5. ^ "212". The Statutes of Nova Scotia. Halifax, NS: Queen's Printer. 1893. p. 575. Retrieved 13 May 2020. An Act to incorporate the Sydney Lawn Tennis Club.