Alexander Cameron Rutherford (February 2, 1857 _ June 11, 1941), Canadian politician, was Premier of Alberta between 1905 and 1910.
Alexander Rutherford was born in 1857, on a farm in Carleton County, Ontario. In 1881 he graduated from McGill University with Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Civil Law degrees. In 1885 he was called to the Ontario Bar, practising at the law firm of Hodgkins, Kidd, and Rutherford. In 1895 he moved to the District of Alberta in western Canada where he continued to practise law.
Rutherford's government promoted railway and road expansion and the creation of a public telephone system. He was forced to resign as premier on May 26, 1910, over allegations of conflict of interest in the government's proposals to insure bonds issued by a railway company. Although cleared of wrongdoing, he lost his seat in the legislature in the 1913 election. He later joined the Conservatives, campaigning for them in the 1921 federal election.
On December 19, 1888, he married Mattie Birkett, with whom he had three children: Cecil Alexander, Hazel Elizabeth and Marjorie Cameron.
External link
Alberta legislative assembly biography (http://www.assembly.ab.ca/lao/library/premiers/rutherfo.htm)
In 1896 and 1898, AlexanderC. Rutherford unsuccessfully contested the electoral division of Edmonton for the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories.
AlexanderC. Rutherford was then elected to the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories for Strathcona in 1902, and subsequently served as Deputy Speaker of the Territorial Assembly from 1903 to 1905.
AlexanderC. Rutherford died on June 11, 1941, at Edmonton, Alberta, and was buried in the Mount Pleasant Cemetery in that city.