Background
He was born in Scotland and raised on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. Muir was born in Edinburgh, Scotland on 10 November 1919.
He was born in Scotland and raised on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. Muir was born in Edinburgh, Scotland on 10 November 1919.
Before he became a politician, he was also a miner, a union official, a salesman and a businessman during his career. He died at his home in the Cape Breton Regional Municipality in 2011. After his father died in 1920, he and his mother immigrated to Canada.
After leaving school in grade 8, he worked in the coal mines until injuries ended his ability to do southern
Before he was injured for the final time, he was elected as the secretary of his United Mine Workers of America (UMW) local. After recuperating from his injuries, he worked in insurance for London Life until he was elected to parliament.
He later served as chair of the Miners" Hospital in Cape Breton. He entered federal politics in the 1957 Canadian general election, winning the Cape Breton North and Victoria electoral district in Nova Scotia.
His old riding was abolished after the 1966 electoral district redistribution.
On 28 March 1979, two-days after an election call, Liberal Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau appointed Muir to the Senate. Muir sat in the self-designated Senate division of Cape Breton-The Sydneys. Muir retired from the Senate on 10 November 1994.
He died at home, in Coxheath, Nova Scotia on 31 August 2011, aged 91, from respiratory failure.
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, Liberal Party of Canada.
Muir sat in both chambers as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. Muir began politics as a member of the Sydney Mines, Nova Scotia municipal council, where he served from 1948 to 1958.