Worshipful Brother
James Grieg
(28 July 1865 - 10 August 1954)
Temple Lodge, No. 33



Wor. Brother James Greig as Mayor of Duncan, circa 1936

Here is a brief biographical sketch of Wor. Brother James Greig taken from various records:
“....W. Bro. J. Grieg Special Committee on War Memorial reported collection of $88.50 and suggested that anything over $50.00 the amount mentioned for the Cowichan War Memorial be set aside for a tablet to be placed in the Lodge room. It was moved by Wor. Bro. Dobson and sec’d by W. Bro. Wm. Dwyer ‘That the action of W. Bro. J. Grieg in [illegible] the Bros. be endorsed and that Fifty Dollars be turned over to Treasurer of War Mem’l Fund and balance be held toward the purchase of a bronze mem’l to Fallen Brethren and put in the Lodge [illegible]. On behalf of the Lodge the Actg. Master thanked W. Bro. J. Grieg for his successful work.....”
        Source: Temple Lodge  Minute Book, Regular Meeting of 9 November 1920
“Grieg - Mr. James Grieg, aged 89, who made Duncan civic history, died at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Victoria, early on Monday morning, after a lengthy illness.
   The funeral will take  place here to-morrow, at 2:30 p.m. at St. Peter’s Church, Quamichan, with  interment in the family plot in the churchyard cemetery. The Rev. Canon T.M.  Hughes, Victoria, will officiate. It is requested there be no flowers.
      He was the first city clerk and treasurer of the City of  Duncan, serving for 22 years. He then became mayor for four years and followed  this with four years service as alderman.
      In addition, he held offices such as stipendiary magistrate,  juvenile-court judge, judge of the small debts court and, for a number of  years, was secretary of the former consolidated school board.
      These duties, often several at once, covered the three  decades from the city’s incorporation in 1912 until the middle of the recent  war. Following the war, he moved to Victoria, where he had since made his home.
      An illustrious career in the British Army occupied the first  half of his lengthy and full life. 
      He was born near Cambridge, England, on July 28, 1865, the  son of James Strachan Grieg, Kincardineshire, Scotland, and of Elizabeth  Gautrey, Cambridge, England, a descendent of one of the old French Huguenot  families.
      He was educated in private schools. His seventeenth birthday  found him in the British Army. He had joined The Buffs, Royal East Kent  Regiment, on June 17, 1882.
      He served with distinction in this regiment, advancing step  by step until he attained the rank of regimental sergeant-major, and afterwards  being promoted lieutenant and quarter-master which rank he held on his  retirement in 1907. His total army service was 25 years.
    Years later, The Dragon, regimental newspaper of The Buffs,  carried in its issue of February 1944, the following comment on his service,  with a reprint of a Leader editorial which marked the completion of his service  in Duncan:-
  “Mr. Grieg, whose regimental number was 443, served in the  Buffs from June 1882, to April 1907. His early service was spent mainly with  the senior battalion in which he attained the rank of colour-sergeant. In 1896  he was transferred to a territorial battalion as regimental sergeant-major. He  applied to go on pension in June 1906, and was appointed honourable lieutenant,  and quarter-master of the territorial battalion. He relinquished this  appointment the following year for the purpose of starting his family off into  the world of British Columbia, Canada.”
      In addition to different periods in England, he served  several years in Ireland and was stationed in Dublin during the turmoil  following the Phoenix Park murders and the subsequent trial of those involved  in that conspiracy.
      The trials took place in the Green Street police court and  an officers’ guard of 100 men, armed with rifles and ammunition, were always on  duty at the police court while the trials were in progress.
      A similar guard was also maintained at the Kilmainham goal  where prisoners were held while awaiting trial. Dublin was very full of  military at this time, never less than eight regiments being stationed there (two  cavalry and six infantry) plus several batteries of artillery and auxiliary  branches of the army such as engineers, army service corps and so on.
      Mr. Grieg also served approximately one year in the  Mediterranean (Malta), about two and a half years in the Straits Settlement  (Singapore and Panang) and two periods in India. During his last term of  service in India he was sent with his regiment to the Relief of Chitral and was  specially recommended to the Government of India for the services he rendered on  that occasion. 
      He was the holder of four medals, Indian Frontier (Chitral  Relief Force), the Long Service and Good Conduct, the King’s Coronation Medal  and the Meritorious Service Medal (1949).
      After severing his connection with the British Army in the  spring of 1907, he with his wife and family came to Canada, settling near St. Catherine’s,  Ont., where he was engaged in fruit farming until the latter part of 1910, when  he sold out and returned to the Old Country for the winter of 1910-1911.
      In the spring of 1911 Mr. Grieg and his family returned to Canada,  coming direct to British Columbia, and immediately settled in Duncan. Three  days after his arrival he began work as a day labourer under Mr. Carlton Stone,  in the lumber mill of the Island Lumber Company (Note. This company ceased to operate  about the end of 1912 or early in 1913. It was located on the McKinnon property  near the shore of Somenos Lake.)
      Before the year was out he was advanced to the position of  foreman in charge of the yard and shipping department, which was the position  he held when the City of Duncan was incorporated in March, 1912. He at once  made application for the post of clerk and treasurer to the newly incorporated city  and was selected for the said position out of some half dozen applicants.
      He retained that office until his retirement in the early  part of 1934 when he went for a short holiday to the old country. On his return  he found it hard to settle down to a life of complete idleness and, in the  spring of 1935, finding some one was needed to carry out the duties of  secretary-treasurer for the Sweet-Pea-Festival, he volunteered for the task  which kept him fully occupied for practically the greater part of that summer.
      The following year, 1936, he was elected by acclamation to  the position of mayor of the city. He served as mayor four years, 1936-1939  inclusive. In 1940 he was elected alderman and served four years.
      He took no active part in World War 1, but this was not  through any lack of effort on his part.
      When war was declared in August 1914, he realized that  his experience the authorities might be very  glad to make use of him and he at once approached the then mayor (the late O.T.  Smythe) for leave of absence to enable him to rejoin for service overseas.
      This was immediately granted and arrangements were made for  E.F. Miller to carry on with his work during his absence. Mr. Grieg had, in the  meantime, already cabled to his old depot, Canterbury, England, fully expecting  a cable in reply ordering him to rejoin at once.
      Some weeks went by and eventually a letter arrived to the  effect that they had no authority to accept his offer or to make any  arrangements about transportation and suggesting that his service might be  offered to the Canadian Military Authorities. This was at once done and the  usual official acknowledgement received “thanking him for his offer and  advising that should his service be required he would be communicated with,”  and that was the last he heard from the military authorities.
      In the meantime both his sons had joined up with the  Canadian Forces and Mr. Grieg took no further steps to force the issue so as  far as he was concerned, feeling that if he was wanted the authorities knew  where to find him. 
      Immediately following the outbreak of war, a local corps of  home defence was raised and Mr. Grieg assumed responsibility for their training.  He was also appointed secretary-treasurer for the local branch of the Canadian  Patriotic Fund and he held that post for several years until he was compelled  to relinquish it owing to the growth of his other duties, to such an extent that  it was impossible for him to continue except by serious neglect of his other  duties. 
      He helped to form the Cowichan Ex-servicemens’ Association which  became a G.W.V.A. branch and is now the Canadian Legion.
      In 1927 he was appointed stipendiary magistrate for the  county of Nanaimo and in 1945 he was appointed judge of the juvenile court for the  Cowichan District. At the same time he was also made magistrate of the small  debts court for this district, which position he resigned in 1933.
      During the six years that he held that office he put in a  great deal of work adjudicating on some 700 cases all told, with, on the whole  quite satisfactory results for the appellants.
      When he retired as clerk and treasurer in 1934 he was  publicly presented with a massive sterling silver salver, suitably engraved,  together with a set of cut glass decanters and tumblers and a valuable cheque.
      This presentation was made by ex-Mayor H.F. Prevost, now  dead, on behalf of the citizens of Duncan and the Consolidated School Board, of  which body Mr. Grieg had, in addition to his many other duties, carried out the  office of secretary during the whole of his period of service as clerk and  treasurer.
      During the second world war Mr. Grieg was secretary of the  Red Cross organization and of the local Ration Board. He was president of the  Duncan Chamber of Commerce in 1943.
      He was thrice married, in 1890 to Fanny Catherine Jiggle,  who predeceased him in 1927; again about a year and seven months later when he  married Mrs. Josephine Lovelace Milestone, who died at the end of the recent  war; and, for the third time, after he moved to Victoria, to Elizabeth Jiggle,  a relation of his first wife. She survives him.
      There are two sons, E.J. Grieg, Royston, and the Ven.  Archdeacon H.J. Grieg, Vancouver; two daughters, Mrs. A. Steward, (Doris),  Victoria, and Mrs. J.T.S. Wilson, (Ethel), Victoria.
      There are also six grandchildren and 17 great grandchildren.
      He has one brother, Charles, Paisley, Scotland, and three  sisters, Mrs. T. Paragreen and Mrs. H.G. Philpot, both residing in the town of  Bicester, England, and Mrs. A. Burns, Sheffield, England.
      Mr. Grieg was a past master of Temple Lodge, No. 33, A.F.  & A.M., Duncan, and was until a few years ago when he resigned, a member (18th  degree) of the Victoria Chapter of the Rose Croix, Ancient and Accepted  Scottish Rite of Freemasonry.
      An Anglican, he was a warden of St. John’s Church, First  Street, for many years and also a member of the choir.”
      Source: Cowichan Leader, 12 August 1954
“Grieg – many friends and former associates attended the funeral at St. Peter’s Quamichan, on Friday afternoon of the late James Grieg, aged 89, city clerk here for 22 years, who died in Victoria on Monday of last week.
      The Rev. Canon T.M. Hughes, Victoria, formerly of St.  Peter’s, officiated. There was no music. The 90th Psalm was read  responsively.
      Among those present who had held civic office during Mr.  Grieg’s years as clerk and treasurer was James M. Campbell, member of the first  city council of 1912 and now in his 89th year. Ex-mayor G.H. Savage  was also present.
      Mayor J.C. Wragg and members of the present city council  followed members of the immediate family. There was also a large attendance of  members of Temple Lodge, No. 33, A.F. & A.M.
      Burial took place in the family plot in the churchyard.
      Pallbearers were Messrs. Hugh Savage, R.W. Whittome, R.K.  Cairns (at present an alderman), W.B. Powel, William Evans (for 22 years an  alderman) and E.W. Lee, a friend of over 40 years standing and a former mayor.
      There were no flowers by request.”
      Source: Cowichan Leader, 19 August 1954
- Vancouver Island Masonic History Project -
- Deceased Brethren -
St. Peter's Quamichan Anglican Cemetery
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Cowichan Valley Cemeteries - Masonic Interments
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St. Peter's Quamichan Anglican Cemetery - Masonic Interments
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