Lincoln Alexander, parliamentarian and public servant
Ontario lawyer was first black Canadian to serve as an MP and to hold a vice-regal position
On Sept. 20, 1985, Lincoln Alexander became the 24th lieutenant-governor of Ontario.
The first black person to hold a vice-regal position in the country, the achievement was just one more "first" for the former politician who had also been the first black Canadian elected to Parliament.
As we hear in this CBC News report, Alexander's appointment to this office was a day "he never dreamed possible."
During his first official speech to the legislative chamber, Alexander spoke of the appointment as "recognition that Canadian society has changed immeasurably over the last 30 years."
The son of immigrant parents from the West Indies, he paid tribute to the "vibrant and envied multicultural and multiracial society" of Canada that had led to his appointment.
He also cautioned that "we have come a long way, but we have a long way to go."
This was the latest achievement in a successful work life which began with a law degree in the 1950s.
In 1965, the year he was appointed as Queen's Counsel, he made an unsuccessful bid as a Conservative candidate to be the MP for Hamilton-West.
Three years later, Alexander tried again, and was elected to the House of Commons. When he spoke to CBC News the day after his election, he was asked what he felt got him to "the victor's seat" this time.
'I went out on the street'
Chalking it up to his willingness to "go out and 'press the flesh' as they say," he explained that his team thought he "had a personality" and "perhaps we could use the word charisma, which had to be sold."
"I went out on the street and met as many people as I possibly could, and tried to impress them with my personality."
A year later, when the CBC program The Day It Is featured an interview with the "fledgling" MP, it was noted that Alexander was not only the first elected black member of the House of Commons, but as the only Progressive Conservative elected in an urban riding in Ontario, he had the distinction of surviving "the Trudeaumania onslaught in urban centres."
'There was a little feeling of apprehension'
When he was asked by what his first year sitting in the House was like, Alexander said he knew "very little about government and how it was run," admitting to "a little feeling of apprehension" about sitting "where the greats have gone ahead of you."
Alexander said sitting in opposition was informative and gave him opportunities to participate by asking questions and made him feel "part of the parliamentary structure."
He later was in the spotlight with that same prime minister, Pierre Trudeau, when he was part of the infamous "fuddle-duddle" incident in the House of Commons in 1971.
Alexander continued to win the seat, for three more elections, and in 1979 was a cabinet minister in the short-lived Joe Clark government.
He won his seat again in the February 1980 election, but soon resigned, as he was appointed chairman of the Ontario Worker's Compensation Board, and it was after serving five years in that position that he became lieutenant-governor.
Alexander died in October 2012 at the age of 90.
His birthday, Jan. 21, was declared Lincoln Alexander Day in Ontario in 2013. In 2014, an act of Parliament was passed, recognizing that same day across Canada each year on the anniversary of his birth.