WILLIAM FRANKLIN KERR.
William Franklin Kerr, commissioner of th'e Saskatcheivan Red Cross Society and a former newspaper man of Regina, was born in Goderich, ontario, on the 25th of October, 1876, son of Dawson and Frances E. (Hale) Kerr. His paternal grandfather, Dawson Kerr, was born in the North of Ireland and came to Ontario as a young man, and there followed his trade as a printer. He moved to Ottawa in the days when it was known as Bytown and there started one of the earliest newspapers in the Ottawa valley, remaining in the newspaper business for years. Dawson Kerr, the second, was born in Toronto, while his wife is a native of Goderich. The father was a hardware merchant but had been living retired in Re- gina for some time prior to his death on August 9, 1923, in his eighty- second year. He had long been a consistent member of the Methodist church, as is his wife, who survives him and still makes her home in Re- gina. William F. Kerr is the second of their family of four children, one of whom is deceased. William Franklin Kerr obtained hIs education in the public schools of St. Thomas, Ontario, following which he secured his first employment as delivery boy for the telegraph office of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Later he worked in the branch telegraph office in the House of Commons and was with the railroad for a total period of seven years. After spending three and a half years in Winnipeg on the Free Press he came to Regina on the 1st of February, 1902, as editor of the Weekly Leader, a position he was to fill for nearly twenty years. In 1905 he changed the Leader from a weekly to a daily paper. Eventually Mr. Kerr purchased the paper from Walter Scott, becoming president of the newly organized company, in which capacity, together with that of editor, he directed the policy of the Leader until he resigned on the 1st of August, 1920. During his career as a journalist Mr. Kerr had many of the inter- esting experiences that are said to be the common lot of the members of that profession When the present king and queen of England visited Canada in 1901 he represented the Winnipeg Free Press in the staff of reporters that accompanied the royal pair in their progress to Vancouver and back. In the last exciting months of the Great war Mr. Kerr was over- seas in the interests of his journalistic work as the guest or the British and French governments. It was his duty in connection with this work, to visit the Allied and Associated troops at the front, where he saw the troops under fire-scenes that were forbidden to all but the necessary few in civilian roles. At the time that he sold his newspaper interests, Mr. Kerr accepted the position of commissioner of the Canadian Red Cross in Saskatchewan, which he holds at the present time. This work has been one of his chief interests for some years, so it was with great pleasure that he entered upon his new duties. He devotes his entire time to the administration of the affairs of his society and finds that its manifold activities present an interesting array of problems to be solved and difficulties to be adjusted. For Mr. Kerr this is a labor of love, while the Red Cross Society is consid- ered most fortunate in having the services of so able a man. On the 11th of October, 1904, Mr. Kerr was united in marriage to Miss Sara W. Sharman, who ~as born at Stratford, Ontario, and educated in Manitoba. They belong to the Westminster Presbyterian church and Mr. Kerr is affiliated with the Canadian Order of Foresters. Bibliography follows:


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THE STORY
OF
SASKATCHEWAN
AND ITS PEOPLE




By JOHN HAWKES
Legislative Librarian



Volume III
Illustrated



CHICAGO - REGINA
THE S.J. CLARKE PUBLISHING COMPANY
1924



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