Nicholas Stryk
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Nicholas John Stryk (born December 17, 1896 in western Ukraine; died 1950) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as a Liberal-Progressive from 1941 to 1945, and again from 1949 until 1950.
Stryk was born to an Austrian family living in western Ukraine, and came to Canada in 1899. He was educated in Manitoba, and worked as a school teacher for twenty-six years. In 1921, he became a Notary Public and Commissioner.
He sought election to the Canadian House of Commons in the federal election of 1935 as a Liberal-Progressive, but finished third in Springfield against official Liberal candidate John Mouat Turner.
He was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in the 1941 provincial election, defeating CCF incumbent Herbert Sulkers by almost one thousand votes in the constituency of St. Clements. He served as a government backbencher in the parliament which followed.
Stryk sought re-election in the 1945 provincial election, but lost to CCF candidate Wilbert Doneleyko by 220 votes. Donelyko was later expelled from the CCF caucus for promoting anti-NATO views, and Stryk defeated him without difficulty in the 1949 election to return to the legislature.
He again served as a government backbencher, and died the following year.