It is named after the former premier of Nova Scotia, Angus L. Macdonald, who had died in 1954 and had been instrumental in having the bridge built.
One of his articles, "Adam's Fall," about suicides from the Angus L. Macdonald Bridge in the coastal city of Halifax, Nova Scotia, won two major prizes and was followed by the construction of suicide-prevention barriers on the bridge in question.
The company was responsible for the design and supervision of construction for the Jacques Cartier Bridge at Montreal, the Île d'Orléans Bridge at Quebec City, the Lions Gate Bridge at Vancouver, the Angus L. Macdonald Bridge at Halifax, Nova Scotia and the Burlington Bay Skyway Bridge near Hamilton, Ontario.
bridge | Angus | Golden Gate Bridge | Brooklyn Bridge | Contract bridge | Sydney Harbour Bridge | London Bridge | Tower Bridge | Eads Bridge | Angus cattle | Forth Bridge | Auckland Harbour Bridge | Waterloo Bridge | Stamford Bridge | Ramsay MacDonald | Jeanette MacDonald | Westminster Bridge | World Bridge Federation | The Bridge on the River Kwai | Ross Macdonald | Pegasus Bridge | John A. Macdonald | Manhattan Bridge | arch bridge | Tyne Bridge | Tappan Zee Bridge | Peace Bridge | Norm Macdonald | Hebden Bridge | Earl of Angus |
A member of the Bonnycastle family, his great-grandfather, Sir Richard Henry Bonnycastle, was a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Royal Engineers, and supervised building in Kingston, Ontario, Saint John, New Brunswick, and other Canadian cities.
The Works Progress Administration helped construct a makeshift Elizabethan stage on the Chautauqua site and Bowmer, college students, teachers, and Ashland citizens mounted two plays, The Merchant of Venice and Twelfth Night, for three performances.
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Bowmer attended the University of Washington in Seattle in the 1930s, acting in at least two of its Shakespeare productions, Love's Labor's Lost and Cymbeline under guest director Ben Iden Payne, an Englishman whose ideas for neo-Elizabethan staging of Shakespeare’s plays provided inspiration later in Bowmer's life as he began producing the plays that became the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.
While in Ashland, Adams met and entensively interviewed OSF's founder, Angus L. Bowmer.