Alan Davidson part of Cloverdale's 'greatest generation'
Frank Bucholtz photo
Alan Davidson, who died on July 25 at the age of 99, was a
key part of Surrey’s “greatest generation.”
The term “greatest generation” comes from the title of a
book by longtime NBC news anchor Tom Brokaw. He applied it to the young men and
women who lived through the Depression of the 1930s, took part in the Second
World War, and on returning home, had much to do with all the changes and
advances that followed. Davidson qualifies on all counts.
Born in Vancouver in 1918, he grew up on a small farm in the
Tynehead area, not far from Barnston Island. He came to Cloverdale to attend
Surrey High School – the only high school in the municipality. He graduated in
1936, and despite it being the Depression, was offered a job as an office clerk
at the Cloverdale real estate and insurance office run by Fabian Hugh and Frank
McKinnon. He was their lone employee,
coming in before school to light the fires, going to school in the morning and
working in the office in the afternoons and Saturday. He did entry level chores
such as dusting, sweeping, and learning to type. More details about the firm's long history in Surrey can be found here (most of the details came from Davidson himself).
He stayed there until retiring in 1983, taking four years
away during the Second World War, when he served as a pilot with the Royal
Canadian Air Force. He remained a member of the Air Force Officers Association.
On his return from the war, he resumed working with Hugh and
McKinnon, and was offered a partnership. He took care of the insurance side of
the business, with McKinnon handling real estate and conveyancing and Hugh in
charge of estates and the work they did for local dyking districts.
In 1946, Hugh was appointed as part-time police magistrate
and eventually became a full-time magistrate. He then resigned his position in
the firm.
Davidson was heavily involved in the community from the
beginning. He was a member of the volunteer fire brigade, the Cloverdale
Jaycees, the Masonic Lodge and was also involved in many other community
activities. He was not alone – Cloverdale was the centre of government in
Surrey at the time and a major shopping destination. Many young men of that
same generation started businesses, organized events such as the Cloverdale
Rodeo and actively promoted both Surrey and Cloverdale.
He and his partners brought a number of lots on the east
side of Pacific Highway, Cloverdale’s main street, and sold them to aspiring
business people. That side of the street had been a railway line and was mostly
unoccupied. Thus businesses like Venus Cleaners, the Clover Inn, the Clova Theatre
and new larger premises for the Bank of Montreal and Hugh and McKinnon all
helped to make Cloverdale a more complete business community.
Buildings to house new businesses such as the Clover Inn (foreground) and the Clova Theatre (background) were built in the late 1940s and early 1950s on the east side of Cloverdale's main street, Pacific Highway. Alan Davidson and his partners at Hugh and McKinnon had a great deal to do with that development, which helped Cloverdale to become a major shopping destination in the 1950s and early 1960s, before the opening of large malls and the construction of the 401 and 499 freeways (now Highways 1 and 99).
Photo from the Surrey Archives
The “greatest generation” in Surrey (which also included many active business and community-oriented people in Surrey’s two other towns of that era, such as Craig Frazer in Whalley and Don Munro in White Rock) also got married and had families. Alan Davidson married Doris McBeth in 1947 and they had three children, Lyall, Denise and Jamie. Doris predeceased him in June – they would have marked their 70th anniversary in September.
The “greatest generation” in Surrey (which also included many active business and community-oriented people in Surrey’s two other towns of that era, such as Craig Frazer in Whalley and Don Munro in White Rock) also got married and had families. Alan Davidson married Doris McBeth in 1947 and they had three children, Lyall, Denise and Jamie. Doris predeceased him in June – they would have marked their 70th anniversary in September.
As both business and family people, they supported school,
sports, community and charitable endeavours. Many of them were busy at work
every day (often including Saturdays) and at meetings and other community
activities most evenings.
Davidson also played a leading role in the Hilltop Water
Company, a private co-operative neighbourhood water utility in Cloverdale that
successfully operated for many years until municipal water service was
available there. In recent years, he donated its corporate records to the
Surrey Archives.
Surrey was growing rapidly in the 1940s and 1950s. Hugh and
McKinnon played a major role in that, in both real estate and insurance, and
established branches throughout the municipality.
He also played a major role in the broader insurance
industry, serving as president of the Insurance Brokers Association of B.C. He
also was a director and chairman of the Cancer Control Agency of B.C.
He was very active in many endeavours until very recently,
again proving that people of his generation knew how to both lead and serve. He
will be remembered at a memorial service at 2 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 18 at
Victory Memorial Park in South Surrey. As his death notice states, his was “a
life well lived.”
A more detailed story about him was published in last Wednesday's Cloverdale Reporter. I have been unable to find it online, but it can be read in The Reporter's e-edition of Aug. 9.
Well written Frank, I too grew up in Cloverdale and started my career in the insurance industry there as well . Alan was a stalwart of the industry and community and we are all a bit poorer with his passing . Don woode
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