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  1. Angus Lewis Macdonald PC QC (August 10, 1890 – April 13, 1954), popularly known as 'Angus L.', 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.

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  2. 18. Feb. 2008 · Angus Lewis Macdonald, lawyer, professor, politician and premier of NS 1945-54 (b at Dunvegan, NS 10 Aug 1890; d at Halifax 13 Apr 1954). An officer in the Canadian Expeditionary Force (WWI), educated at Saint Francis Xavier, Dalhousie and Harvard, Macdonald was assistant deputy attorney general of NS 1921-24 and professor of ...

  3. Most are aware that Angus L. Macdonald was a long-serving premier of the province, and almost every Nova Scotian born before 1950 could tell you that he was a political legend who... Angus Macdonald grew up in Dunvegan, Inverness County, in the Diocese of Antigonish on the eastern shores of the Northumberland Strait.

  4. Angus L. MacDonald . Posted: August 9, 2018. Few names are more recognizable in Nova Scotia than Angus Lewis Macdonald (1890-1954). Most Nova Scotians remember himas an ardent orator, a formidable premier and the namesake of Halifax and Dartmouth’s first harbour bridge.

  5. Angus Lewis Macdonald PC QC (August 10, 1890 – April 13, 1954), popularly known as 'Angus L.', 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.

  6. Angus L. Macdonald P.C., K.C., B.A., LL.B, S.D.J., LL.D., D.C.L. was a Canadian lawyer, law professor, and politician. [1] Born in 1890, [2] he was the son of Lewis MacDonald and Veronica Perry. He married Agnes Foley in Halifax on June 24, 1924. [3] Sources.

  7. "Perhaps one of the most influential Canadian premiers of the twentieth century and one of the leading political intellectuals of his generation, Angus L. Macdonald dominated politics in Nova Scotia for more than twenty years, serving as premier from 1933 to 1940 and again from 1945 until his death in 1954. One rival referred to him as 'the ...