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Pioneers - Grubstakers
Two of Stewart's
best-known merchants during the 1920s and '30s were Howard
Campbell and Charles Duke.
A baker and confectioner, Howard
Campbell learned his trade from his father in
Sidney, N. S., where he served as an alderman before heading west to
Hazelton, Prince
Rupert and, in 1920, Stewart.
Here, he joined forces with Charles Duke to become
"Campbell and Duke", general merchants. Charles, the younger
of the two, was
a cook, and had worked throughout much of British Columbia.
His first job in the Portland
Canal district had been with Walter Blanton, in Hyder, Alaska. With
Howard Campbell
as partner, he helped to build up a good business.
During the summer of 1932,
they made numerous improvements to their store and, in November, brought
in two
carloads of groceries and flour, to fill both store and warehouse with
some of the fanciest
Christmas articles ever seen in Stewart.
But, when the tragic fire of December
6 wiped out much of the town's business section, Campbell and Duke were among the
hardest hit. To make matters worse, they had neglected to renew their fire insurance
for the first time in years.
However, they managed to
survive, Campbell continuing his interest in public affairs,
serving as director of the Loyal Order of Moose, as a village
commissioner, as president
of the local Liberal Association, and as an active member of the board
of trade
and chairman of the hospital board.
Charles Duke was employed for a
time in the Canadian customs office at Hyder,
B. C., and in the liquor store in Stewart, before moving to Prince
Rupert to join the
engineering department of the national service at Barrett Point.
It came as quite a shock to the
Portland Canal district to hear of the passing of these
highly-esteemed members of the community, within three days of each
other.
Charles passed away at Rupert on
January 11, 1941, Howard Campbell following his old
business partner on the 14th at Stewart.
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