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GERALD EDWARD ACKERMAN
Born: Dec 19, 1931
Date of Passing: Dec 24, 2023
Send Flowers to the Family Offer Condolences or MemoryGERALD EDWARD ACKERMAN
Born in mid-December, Jerry was a Sagittarian. His sign: a centaur shooting for the stars, seeking truth and wisdom. A fire sign, signifying one who is intelligent, visionary, artistic, and philosophical. Also, someone who is self-driven, resilient, ambitious, and passionate, with a strong desire for autonomy. There is much about this description that sounds like my husband.
Jerry grew up with two older brothers on Fifth Depot Lake in eastern Ontario - in the “back of beyond”, where “the rocks came up to the first rail of the cedar fence.” From a one-room school he went on to graduate with a BS from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, to receive a Ph.D. from Purdue University in Indiana, and to become an Associate Professor of Agricultural Economics at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg.
An entrepreneur at heart, he thrived on the challenge of new projects, including a prairie farm in Manitoba and a plantation in Curacao. Beginning in the late 1970s, he began spending his summers in Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, where he built the Annapolis Royal Inn and helped develop the Delaps Cove Campground, Good Cheer Restaurant, and Garden Path Restaurant.
In the 1960s, he initiated Thresher Consultants, an investment company he ran until 2021. To help investors learn to do their own investing, he gave innumerable public seminars and co-authored a best-seller, "Start With $1000." Some of his favourite memories are of sitting around the kitchen tables of prairie farmers, helped them assess and improve their business practices.
As a practicing Quaker, he was drawn to progressive causes, including the Green Party and the NDP, and wrote numerous letters to the editor and treatises on financial policy, proportional representation, and sustainability. His motto: “If not me, then who? If not now, then when?”
For many years he was an active member of COMER, a group dedicated to public banking, and in 2006 ran for parliament as a member of the Canadian Action Party. During the Vietnam War, his Winnipeg home was known as an oasis for US war resisters. Delighting in making fun of the establishment, he chaired the Winnipeg Campaign for the Rhinoceros Party, with Al Simmons as candidate.
He loved to grow food, both the sowing and the hoeing as well as the reaping. He eagerly planted corn, squash, and beans, and looked forward to his annual harvest of grapes, cherries, apples, and black currants. He loved playing golf and was always open to a game of pool, bridge, Scrabble, and cribbage.
He had a passion for folk and fiddle music, was on the dance floor for every tune, and attended the first twenty-five years of the Lunenburg Folk Harbour Festival. His journals are filled with his poetry, his favourite way to reflect on what he was experiencing.
Jerry was easily recognized because of the long ponytail he started growing in the early 70s, sometimes causing him to be mistaken for Willie Nelson. He liked big cars and for many years drove an old monster Chrysler, until persuaded to buy a Toyota Avalon.
He had five children with his first wife, Caroline Clardy. In 1989, he married Eleanor Macklin and took early retirement from UM to move east. In 2004, they built a retirement cottage on the lake where he grew up. Since then, they have spent winters in Ontario and summers in Nova Scotia. He is survived by both his wives, his five children (Ed, Joe, Rain, Sunshine, and Steven), 10 grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchildren, most of them living in Winnipeg or BC. For 40 years, he managed to entice much of this big family to join him at Chico Hot Springs in Montana, to help celebrate his pre-Christmas birthday.
A long-term supporter of Indigenous causes, Jerry contributed significantly to Indspire, an organization that has awarded over $27.5 million to First Nations, Inuit, and Metis students through bursaries and scholarships for post-high school education. Persons interested in supporting this work can do so by emailing indspire@indspire.ca or calling 1-855-463-7747
As published in Winnipeg Free Press on Dec 30, 2023, Dec 30, 2023
Condolences & Memories (2 entries)
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Sorry for your loss. I'm sorry that I never got to meet him. I knew his brother. We are second cousins. - Posted by: Carl C. Kirkland (Cousin) on: Sep 07, 2024
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I came across the announcement of Dr. Ackerman's passing today. I am sorry to hear this: my condolences go out to you the family. I remember Professor Dr. Jerry Ackerman from the late 70's, as a passionate teacher always ready to assist and very approachable. I will never forget when he invited our class for a supper at his house where we had a chance to interact with his friend Raffi, the children entertainer. All of us students enjoyed and were honored to get to know our prof on a personal basis. Being a bit older than the rest of the class Prof Jerry and I became good friends. I count him as one of my mentors that I will never forget and always will be thankful for! - Posted by: Bernie Brandt (student at U of M) on: Apr 27, 2024