Angus Lewis Macdonald PC QC was a Canadian lawyer, law professor and politician from Nova Scotia. He served as the Liberal premier of Nova Scotia from 1933 to 1940, when he became the federal minister of defence for naval services. He also served in the Canadian Army during the First World War as a lieutenant in Nova Scotia’s 25th battalion.
About Angus Lewis Macdonald in brief

He played rugby, joined the debating team, edited the student newspaper and, in his graduating year, won the gold medal in seven of his eight courses. In February 1916, he joined the 185th battalion, known as the Cape Breon Highlanders, leaving for Britain in October 1916. He spent eight months in Britain recovering from his wound in 1918, just four days before the Armistice. He felt fortunate to have been spared, but his luck ran out when he was hit in Belgium by a German sniper on November 7, 1918. Biographer Stephen Henderson writes that the war had made him less serious and less self-confident. He returned home to his family in 1919 in an abstract principle of ‘the horrible deaths of so many to march in the name of the abstract principle’ Macdonald was born August 10, 1890, on a small family farm at Dunvegan, Inverness County, on Cape Bretton Island. He hoped to enroll next in the Bachelor of Arts program at St Francis Xavier. His family couldn’t afford to pay for a university education so Macdonald obtained a teaching licence and taught for two years to finance his education. Midway through his university studies, he took another year off to earn money teaching. He completed his final term on credit and was required to teach in the university’s high school during 1914–15 to pay off his debt. Macdonald said that Nova Scotians were victims of a national policy that protected the industries of Ontario and Quebec with steep tariffs.
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