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David A. Golden

Telecommunications Pioneer

 

 

Passed Away in 2012 - Scroll Down for Obituary  

Décès en 2012 - Avis de décès au bas de la page  

 

Memorable Manitobans

From the Manitoba Historical Society

 

David A. Golden
Lawyer, civil servant, telecommunications pioneer

 

 

David A. Golden

 

Born at Sinclair, Manitoba on 22 February 1920, one of four children of Russian immigrants Sholem Wilfrid Golden (1885-1970) and Rose Perlman (1890-1987), he spent his early childhood in Vancouver and Montreal before returning to Winnipeg at the age of 11. He attended public school in Winnipeg and also the I. L. Peretz Folk School. To raise money for university education, he borrowed money from his uncle Sam Perlman and enrolled in the Law School of the University of Manitoba, graduating in 1941.

 

He was selected a Rhodes Scholar in 1941 but enlisted in the Canadian Army rather than attending Oxford University. He joined the Winnipeg Grenadiers as an intelligence officer, rising to the rank of Captain. He was in Hong Kong when it was invaded by the Japanese army and spent the next three years and eight months in a prisoner-of-war camp. On returning to Winnipeg after the war, he was admitted to the Manitoba Bar and travelled to England to take up his Rhodes scholarship. He spent eight months in England then returned to Winnipeg in 1947. He practiced law with Samuel Freedman and also taught at the University of Manitoba Law School.

 

In 1951, he accepted an invitation to join the legal branch of the federal Department of Defence Production, which necessitated a move to Ottawa. He rose quickly, to Branch Director, then to General Counsel, then Assistant Deputy Minister. In September 1954, at the age of 34, he became the youngest Deputy Minister in Ottawa. It was during his tenure with the Department that the Avro Arrow project was cancelled.

 

He resigned from the federal civil service in 1961 and spent a year at the Air Industries Association of Canada (AIAC) before returning to government for a year as Deputy Minister in the newly-created Department of Industry. In July 1962, he became President of the AIAC. In 1969, when the federal government created Telesat Canada consortium with private industry to develop a communications satellite system for the country, Golden became its Founding President. The firm launched its first Anik A1 satellite in November 1972 and he received the first long-distance telephone call carried by satellite in Canada, from Resolute to Ottawa. He stepped down as President in 1981 but remained Chairman and a full-time employee until retirement in 1985.

 

In recognition of his service to Canada, he was inducted into the Order of Canada in 1977. He received honorary doctorates from the University of Manitoba (1986), Carleton University, and University of Winnipeg (2011). He was inducted into the Canadian Telecommunications Hall of Fame and received the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal (2012).

 

He died at Victoria, British Columbia on 20 July 2012.

 

Obituary  -  Avis de décès

David A. Golden

1920 - 2012

 

DAVID A. GOLDEN Born February 22, 1920 at Sinclair MB, died July 20, 2012 at Victoria Hospice, Royal Jubilee Hospital, Victoria. LL.B., LL.D. (Carleton, Manitoba, Winnipeg), Order of Canada, Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal; Rhodes Scholar, prisoner of war at Hong Kong (1941-45), Deputy Minister of Defence Production and Industry, president of the Air Industries Association of Canada, founding president of Telesat Canada, member of the Canadian Telecommunications Hall of Fame and many community and corporate boards, recipient of the John H. Chapman Award for contributions to Canada's space program.

 

David was devoted to his family, his people and his country, wise, loyal, generous and an inexhaustible supply of stories. He was predeceased by his beloved daughter Sari and his granddaughter Katie Rose, survived by his wife of 65 years, Molly, sons Mark (JoAnne) and Peter (Charlotte), grandchildren Julia, Darcy and Max, siblings Don, Esther Carr and Frances Miles, many nieces and nephews -- and a rich legacy of memories and achievements.

 

The family thanks Dr. Stephen Starr, Victoria Hospice and the staff of Sunrise Senior Living. No long goodbyes, Dad. Rest easy.

 

As published in the Winnipeg Free Press on July 25, 2012

 

Related Links

The Remarkable Career of David A. Golden

by Hugh Grant
Manitoba History, Number 67, Winter 2012

 

 

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