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- Q19518916 subject Q6646274.
- Q19518916 subject Q6936609.
- Q19518916 subject Q8568657.
- Q19518916 subject Q9695503.
- Q19518916 abstract "William Austin Oke, Esquire (December 14, 1857 – February 24, 1923) was a printer and politician in Newfoundland. He represented Harbour Grace in the Newfoundland House of Assembly for three terms, from 1897 to 1908, as a Liberal.The grandson of Robert Oke, the first Chief Inspector, Newfoundland Lighthouse Service, and the son of Edward Langdon Oke, he was born in Harbour Grace and was educated there. His father, a lighthouse keeper on Harbor Grace Island in Conception Bay, drowned while crossing the ice in February 1862. From the age of 13, William apprenticed as a printer with the Harbor Grace Standard. In May 1888, he formed Munn & Oke with John F. Munn, editor, to continue publication of the Standard.On July 31, 1890, Oke married Sophia Lilla Snow (b. January 1863, d. June 11, 1938), a teacher at the high school in Harbour Grace, who became the first president of the local Women’s Patriotic Association during World War I and later was named an Officer in the Civil Division of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire. They raised two children, Annie Gladys Oke (1891 - 1974) who married Rev. Gordon Stewart Templeton, and Edward Langdon Oke (1893 - 1966).Oke and five other candidates ran in a close election for the three Member House Assembly seats for the Harbour Grace District in 1908 but he was unsuccessful in seeking a fourth term. From 1909 until his death in 1923, Oke served as one of the two District Court judges in Newfoundland (the District Court in Harbour Grace was abolished in 1935). By 1913, Oke was appointed as a Commissioner of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland, authorized to take affidavits for any cause pending in the Supreme Court and empowered to issue Original or Mesne Process.Locally, Oke served as a notary public and a justice of the peace. He was also on the Harbour Grace School Board, was elected president of the Sons of England Benefit Society (Lodge Diamond Jubilee no. 236), participated as a member of the Masons, and was a Trustee of Shannon Park.Oke died of meningitis in Harbour Grace in 1923. At the time of his death, Oke's son, Edward, was the editor and proprietor of the Standard.".
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q14420.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q15479268.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q258843.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q2879752.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q2984260.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q3127313.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q329455.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q3366492.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q361.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q41726.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q48143.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q6500733.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q6646274.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q6936609.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q8568657.
- Q19518916 wikiPageWikiLink Q9695503.
- Q19518916 comment "William Austin Oke, Esquire (December 14, 1857 – February 24, 1923) was a printer and politician in Newfoundland. He represented Harbour Grace in the Newfoundland House of Assembly for three terms, from 1897 to 1908, as a Liberal.The grandson of Robert Oke, the first Chief Inspector, Newfoundland Lighthouse Service, and the son of Edward Langdon Oke, he was born in Harbour Grace and was educated there.".
- Q19518916 label "William Oke".