The Honourable D.L. Campbell, son of John Howard and Mary
Campbell, was born in Portage La Prairie. He attended elementary school
at Flee Island, high school at the Portage Collegiate Institute, and university
at Brandon College. Mr. Campbell took over the operation of the family
farm in 1917.
In December,1920, he married Gladys Crampton, and they raised seven
children, 3 boys and 4 girls, who have all had distinguished careers, and
are a credit to their parents.
In 1922, he was elected to the Manitoba Legislature from the
constituency of Lakeside, serving in this capacity until 1969. His 47 years
of continuous service are the longest public service tenure in the British
Empire. Mr. Campbell was appointed Minister of Agriculture in 1936 and
1942. He was given the additional portfolio of Manitoba Hydro, where he
initiated a Rural Electrification Program making electricity available
to every farm in Manitoba.
In 1948, he was elected Premier, an office he held until 1958. During
his tenure, he appointed John Bracken to study the liquor laws and regulations
and to bring in recommendations. These radically changed and modernized
laws were studied by other provinces and served as the basis for their
own changes. He also established an independent Election Boundary Commission,
a first such study in Canada, that was copied by others.
On his retirement from politics, he was elected Director of the Portage
La Prairie Mutual Insurance Co. and the Manitoba Hydro Commission. Mr.
Campbell had a great facility for remembering names and faces, and as a
gifted orator was much in demand. His topics were wide ranging, and his
talent of reciting popular poetry, and recalling a variety of his school
selections, were outstanding abilities.
Mr. D.L. Campbell was a lifelong member of the Masonic Lodge. He
was made Master of Assiniboine Lodge No.7 in Portage in 1922, Honourary
Member of St. John Lodge No.10 in Winnipeg, and Honourary Past Master of
Grand Lodge in 1975. He was also a member of the Royal Order of Scotland.
The Honourable Douglas Campbell will long be remembered as someone
who made many contributions to making Manitoba a better place in which
to live. He was a Gentleman, a great Statesman, a great Manitoban, and
above all a great Canadian.
Nominated by Catherine Vanstone, President, on behalf of the Portage
Industrial Exhibition Association.