Albert Mallory
Albert Elhanon Mallory (February 1, 1848 – October 4, 1904) was a physician and political figure in Ontario, Canada. He represented Northumberland East in the Canadian House of Commons in 1887 as a Liberal member.
He was born in Cobourg, Canada West, the son of Caleb R. Mallory, an unsuccessful candidate for a seat in the Legislative Assembly for the Province of Canada.[1] Mallory was educated at Albert College and McGill University, receiving a M.D. from the latter institution in 1872, and set up practice in Warkworth. He was licensed by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons in Edinburgh in 1878.[1] In 1880, he married Frances Waddell. After being elected in the 1887 federal election, Mallory was unseated on petition in November of that year and was defeated in the by-elections that followed in December 1887 and November 1888 by Edward Cochrane. In 1889, he was named registrar for Northumberland East. Mallory died in Colborne at the age of 56.[2]
References
- Albert Mallory – Parliament of Canada biography
- The Canadian men and women of the time a handbook of Canadian biography (1898) HJ Morgan