George
Pinder
George Pinder was born at Salford,
England and came to Edmonton in 1907 and to Calgary in
1930.
He was a captain and one of the original members of C Company, 49th
Battalion, Edmonton during World War I, and was wounded and won the M.C.
at Ypres. After his recovery, he was an adjutant of the Convalescent
Hospital at Edmonton, Ogden, and Frank, Alberta.
He was a land surveyor with the Alberta and Dominion governments until
entering private practice in
1933 until
his retirement.
He was president of the Alberta Land Surveyors’ Association in
1947
and made an honorary life member in
1957.
He passed away May 28,
1967.
His son, Tom Pinder, wrote the following letter to the Alberta Land
Surveyors’ Association in
1982:
He was born in 1881 in Salford, near Manchester, England, went to
Bedford Grammar School and loved rugby; we was a good enough player to
be on the Manchester team and played in some international matches. He
worked for a time for Manchester Electric, then came to Canada in, I
think, 1908. He was in Montreal for a short time, then bought a ticket
to Edmonton with what money he had left and said farewell to Montreal by
giving his bowler hat a drop-kick in the middle of one of the main
streets there!
He went out on township work each year up to World War I; I believe he
got his DLS before the War when one could qualify without university
training. An old friend of his, “Olie” Rowbotham, in Edmonton, told me a
few stories about Dad’s winter activities which Dad didn’t mention.
Apparently, a group of them used to spend quite a bit of time at the
Corona Hotel, and one of their main sports was chasing each other with
soda siphons, the idea being to squirt it down the other fellow’s neck
when he wasn’t looking. Dad also distinguished himself at a rather dull
play once; in between two of the acts, he blew his nose very loudly;
everybody applauded so he stood up, bowed – and did it again!
Early in the War, Dad joined the Loyal Edmonton Regiment, the 49th
Battalion, and got his commission as a captain. He was wounded at Ypres,
was sent home and married my mother, Kate Bourchier, of Edmonton, in
1916.
I was born in
1917
and she died in
1918.
Soon after that, Dad went back to England with me in tow intending to
stay there; he lasted a year-and-a-half; couldn’t stand it any longer
and came back out to Edmonton. My aunt at the Coast took me in and Dad
used to come and visit at Christmas most years but not all.
I don’t know what year he started surveying for the Alberta government
but it was somewhere around the mid-1920s, I think.
In 1930,
he was married to Anne Kemmis, of Pincher Creek; they moved to Calgary
to live and I came back home from the Coast, from my Aunt’s to live with
them. For the years
1930-1932,
my stepmother and I spent the summer in camp wherever Dad happened to
be, and I still remember careering across the prairie in that springless
old Chev one-ton truck…
Come 1933,
when the Alberta government cut out almost all surveys, Dad got the chop
along with nearly everyone else and the best thing they could offer him
was a job in charge of pick-and-shovel men at 45 cents an hour. In
1934,
he and my stepmother bought five acres just south of Calgary, expanded
the small house that was on it, and lived there till he passed away in
1967.
My stepmother, an excellent horsewoman, started a riding school which
she ran for about twenty years and Dad concentrated on gardening, taking
on surveys when they came along. He would never do surveys in Calgary on
his own but he used to help out H.H. Moore in jobs in the city; I
remember one day his telling us that with his 70 years and H.H. Moore’s
80 years, their combined ages were a century and a half!
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