Education
Born in Calgary, Wicks graduated from McLean High School in Haney, British Columbia, Canada in 1930.
Born in Calgary, Wicks graduated from McLean High School in Haney, British Columbia, Canada in 1930.
He was one of the first employees of the British Columbia Plywoods Company (now defunct), and in 1940 he joined the British Columbia Electric Railway Company, where he worked as a streetcar operator within the Vancouver transit system. He joined the Social Cr movement in 1943 and became actively involved in its organisational efforts. From 1946 to 1948, Wicks was elected Vice-President of the Social Cr Association of Canada, British Columbia Section.
He also took on the position of Chairman of the Vancouver and District Social Cr Council in 1948.
In 1949 Lyle Wicks became the founding President of the British Columbia Social Cr League. He was re-elected to this position until the time of his resignation in October 1952.
As president, Wicks recruited West.A.C. Bennett to the nascent party after Bennett bolted the British Columbia Conservative Party to sit as an independent Modern Language Association in March 1951. In the 1952 convention to elect the party"s leader, both Wicks and Bennett were nominated for the party"s leadership.
Wicks and Bennett both withdrew in favour of Reverend Ernest George Hansell, an Alberta Social Cr Member of Parliament hand-picked by Alberta Premier Ernest Manning to lead the British Columbia party.
Wicks was elected Modern Language Association for the Dewdney constituency in the 1952 election. In August he was appointed Minister of Labour in Bennett"s cabinet. The first session of the Social Cr Party took place in 1953.
In September 1956 Wicks was appointed Minister of Railways, a portfolio he held until March 1959, at which time he was appointed Minister of Commercial Transport.
He also served as the acting Minister of Agriculture for several months in 1959. During his political career, he played an active role in the establishment of the Albion Ferry on the Fraser River, the development of Alouette Park, the establishment of the Maple Ridge and Mission Hospitals, the completion of the north shore highway connecting Agassiz to Hope, and in the construction of the Agassiz-Rosedale Bridge.
He was made an Honorary Chief of the Kwakuitl Indian Nation in Harrison Hot Springs, British Columbia in 1958. Wicks was defeated in the 1960 general election by future British Columbia Premier Dave Barrett.
Lyle Wicks died in 2004.
The Lyle Wicks Papers, a collection of records documenting Wicks"s political career, is housed at the Trinity Western University Archives.
From 1961 to 1973 he served as a member of the Board of the Public Utilities Commission, which was abolished in 1973.