Quickly shifted to the PMO, Pickersgill assisted King and St. Laurent on virtually all aspects of policy and politics. In 1952 he became clerk of the Privy Council and the next year secretary of state. He held 2 portfolios in the PEARSON government and was appointed president of the Canadian Transport Commission when he left politics in 1967. Pickersgill's historical studies of the King-St. Laurent years are of importance. In 1990 he came out of retirement as a member of the Friends of Meech Lake, a group that supported the failed constitutional accord. Pickersgill received the singular honour of having the title Right Honourable bestowed on him.
Author J.L. GRANATSTEIN
Suggested Reading
J.L. Granatstein, The Ottawa Men (1982); J.W. Pickersgill, My Years with Louis St. Laurent (1975) and The Road Back (1986).


The Dominion government's advertisement asked for volunteers "able to read and write either the English or French language" with "good antecedents" who were good horsemen...
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