A pillar of engineering in Nova Scotia retires at age 98 - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:48 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

A pillar of engineering in Nova Scotia retires at age 98

Philip (Skit) Fergusonof Reserve Mines, N.S., is a prominent figure among the province's engineers who was an accomplished baseball player before finding his true vocation.

Philip (Skit) Ferguson is also a baseball legend in the province

This 98-year-old is retiring from Nova Scotia's engineering industry

1 year ago
Duration 1:56
Philip 'Skit' Ferguson has been the executive director of the Consulting Engineers of Nova Scotia for 30 years. He's also a baseball legend in the province, winning 50 out of 55 games as a pitcher in the 1940s. On Thursday, his monumental career was celebrated as he prepares for retirement.

Philip (Skit)Fergusonhas made a name for himself as both a baseball legend and anengineer with along andinfluential career.Herecently announced that he's retiring at the age of 98, after more than seven decades in theengineering industry.

Ferguson says he willstepdown in October as executive director of the Consulting Engineers of Nova Scotia, a business association of engineering firms that promotes high standards for the engineering industry, after holding the position for more than 30 years.

A luncheon was held Thursday afternoon at the Prince George Hotelin Halifax to celebrate Ferguson's career.Buthe's humble about his influence.

"I don't look at it as legacy, I just look at it as trying to do something for people and just make a contribution and enjoy it at the same time," he told CBCNews in an interview.

"I enjoyed the engineering profession, enjoyed the people in it and I enjoyed the end results that would come out of it."

Perry Mitchelmore speaking at a luncheon
Perry Mitchelmore, president of Meco Engineering, was one of the speakers at an event held in recognition of Ferguson's contributions to the engineering industry in Atlantic Canada. (Mark Crosby/CBC)

Ferguson, who was bornin a small Cape Breton mining town, saidhe doesn't look to the past but toward the future, and he's grateful for the many friends he made during his career.

Ferguson mostenjoyedfinding opportunities for young engineersto keep them in theprovince, he said.And he advises young people to find careers that make them want to get up in the morning, but to also know their limitations.

Perry Mitchelmore,the association's former presidentand currentchair of itsgovernance committee,said in an interview that Ferguson has had a wide-reaching impacton the engineering industry across Atlantic Canada. And his stories will be missed.

The Halifax Shipyards team circa late 1940s
Ferguson finished every game he played as a starting pitcher back in the 1940s. (The Nova Scotia Hall of Fame)

"I really enjoyed the moments when he would sit down and he talked about when he was coming out of university, and his choices about engineering and playing ball, and how he played summer ball with Rocket Richard and a bunch of Montreal Canadiens in the Quebec league,"Mitchelmoresaid. "I thought that was so, so cool."

Ferguson's leadership in engineering is irreplaceable, he said,but the association will try its best to follow the model he set.

A baseball legend

Ferguson is also an accomplished athlete. Hecreditshis mother for encouraging him to go outside and play at a young age, which gave him the chancetomeet other baseball players and coaches.

In his career as a pitcher in the 1940s with the Dominion Hawks, Truro Bearcats and the Halifax Shipyards, he won 50 of55 games.Healso playedwith Drummondvillein the Quebec provincial league in 1947, according to the Nova Scotia SportHall of Fame, which he was inducted intoin 1980.

"I think it's a person's responsibility to develop whatever talent you have. And that's what I did, and I was very fortunate that the good Lord gave me those things," Fergusonsaid.

He received three professional offers but declined them allto pursue his engineering degree. His coach told him that sports careers are short-lived, and encouraged him to pursue his education instead of a career in mining or sports.

"You can do a lot more with your life than just play sports, Ferguson said. "But play it as hard as you can, enjoy it as much as you can and realize there are other, better things to do."

Ferguson said that for him, doing nothing during retirement isn't an option, even at 98-years-old. He hopes to continue playing golf, once he gets an upcoming knee surgery out of the way.

"I don't think of retirement at any particular age," he said. "It'swhen you settle into a mode of operation that you feel comfortable with, and it's no pressure and you feel satisfied in what you're doing."

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Get the latest top stories from across Nova Scotia in your inbox every weekday.

...

The next issue of CBC Nova Scotia newsletter will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.