Born in Partick, Glasgow, Stronach was a Scottish record holder in 120 yard hurdles, setting the new mark at an even 16 seconds when he claimed the first of his three successive British national titles at the AAA Championships from 1904 to 1906.
He combined his athletics with rugby union, a sport he played as a forward with Glasgow Academicals RFC.
[1] Stronach took up Canadian football after emigrating to Ontario and played for the Ottawa Rough Riders as an outside wing, helping them win the 1909 Interprovincial Championship.
He served with the 38th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force in World War I, during which he was gassed and took part in the Battle of Vimy Ridge.
[2] After the war, Stronach was Superintendent of Banff National Park, until the injuries he had sustained on the Western Front forced him to retire in 1929.