A Cyclopaedia of Canadian Biography: Being Chiefly Men of the Time by Rose
1840. He was educated at Fredericton. Mr. Peck is the youngest son of
2257 words | Chapter 100
Elisha and Sarah Peck. His father was an extensive landowner in the
county, and captain in the militia, and was one of the first appointed
to the magistracy. Charles Allison Peck studied law in the office of the
late Sir Albert J. Smith, and was called to the bar in Easter Term,
1861, receiving a first-class certificate. Shortly after he formed a law
co-partnership with the Hon. Bliss Botsford, at present Judge Botsford,
and practised his profession at Hopewell, residing upon the old
homestead. He first appeared in public life in 1865, when he
unsuccessfully contested Albert on the Quebec scheme of confederation,
to which he was opposed, against the Hon. John Lewis and A. R. McLellan,
but was defeated by a small majority. After the union in 1867 he was
elected to the New Brunswick Legislature for Albert, where he sat for
three sessions, and was generally found supporting progressive
legislation; but devoted much of his time to the Albert Railway
question, the necessary legislation for which railway he secured against
much opposition, the construction of this railway being largely due to
his efforts while in the legislature, and subsequently. He was the
solicitor of the company until its completion. He organized, and was the
first president of, the Albert Southern Railway. In politics he is a
Liberal-Conservative. He has more than once declined candidature for
political honors, preferring to devote himself to his profession. Mr.
Peck was appointed captain of the militia; trustee of Albert county
Grammar School; and is a referee in equity. He is not a member of any
religions denomination, but a liberal supporter of all. Mr. Peck was
married, in 1864, to Amelia, youngest daughter of the late Solomon
Nichols, of the city of St. John, who was president of the Bank of New
Brunswick at the time of his death. Mrs. Peck is an Episcopalian; and
her ancestors were loyalists, who, on coming to the Maritime provinces,
left behind them at Flushing, New York state, large and valuable
properties. They have two sons, Henry Brougham and Charles Allison, and
one daughter, Celia Isabel Frances. The elder son, Henry, who is a
student at law, recently entered the civil service.
* * * * *
=Sénécal, Hon. Louis Adelard=, Senator, was born at Varennes, county of
Verchères, on the 10th of July, 1829. The man who, in after years,
became so universally known throughout the length and breadth of the
continent, received but a rudimentary education afforded by the humble
school of his native village, and attended a common school in
Burlington, Vermont, for a few months. After a residence of two years in
the United States, he settled in Verchères, province of Quebec, where he
established a general store. Such was his _début_ in trade; and from the
outset he showed the indomitable energy, the undaunted courage, and the
business tact which caused the admiration even of his opponents. In 1853
he purchased the steamboat _Frederic George_, which was at Ogdensburg,
took command of her, came down the river in the midst of floating ice,
and arrived at Montreal on the 9th of April. Since that time he was
known as “Captain Sénécal.” The _Frederic George_ did service between
Montreal and Sorel. In 1854 he repaired his steamboat, renewed her
machinery and boilers, and named her the _Verchères_. In 1857 he built
the steamboat _Yamaska_ in the short space of two months and a-half, to
inaugurate navigation on the river Yamaska, and established a line from
St. Aimé to Montreal. The next year he built the _Cygne_, and
established a regular service on the river St. Francis, between St.
Francis and Sorel. Thus he was the first to open navigation on these
rivers, and later on, by his energy and with government aid, he improved
the service to a considerable extent. In 1859 he launched the steamboat
_Ottawa_ to run in opposition to the Richelieu Company’s boats between
Montreal and Quebec. Since 1882 he was the president of the Richelieu
and Ontario Navigation Company, and it is due to his admirable
management that the company was enabled to refit its steamers and place
its finances on a sound and paying basis. When he took charge of the
company’s affairs its finances were almost disorganized; he left it in
full prosperity and almost doubled its field of operation and its
monetary value. Meanwhile Mr. Sénécal was doing a large trade in lumber
and grain in the United States. He had become the owner of eleven
steamers and eighty-nine barges plying between Montreal, Sorel and
Whitehall. One can easily form an idea of his marvellous activity from
the fact that during the year he was forced to suspend his operations,
he did three million dollars worth of business, without leaving the
village of Pierreville, which was the centre of his operations. The
losses suffered by several Montreal firms on account of the suspension
were the subject of much comment at the time; it is only fair to say
that all of these firms had derived benefits from their connection with
him, certain houses having endorsed his notes at the rate of two per
cent., others again having loaned him money at rates varying from 10 to
40 per cent. It was during the American civil war; he obtained money at
par at three months and was obliged to reimburse in bankable (?) value,
and pay a high rate of interest besides. Mr. Sénécal has built and was
the owner of several saw and grist mills at St. David, St. Guillaume,
Wickham, Wickham West, Yamaska, Kingsey, Pierreville and Acton. The
Pierreville mill was destroyed by fire on the 20th June, 1868. He
rebuilt in forty-seven days, and on the 5th August 146 saws were in
operation. The fire had been extinguished at one o’clock on Saturday
afternoon, and at twelve o’clock on the following Monday the foundations
of the new building were under way. The same mill was destroyed a second
time on the 14th January, 1870. He had not a single piece of timber on
hand and was obliged to draw from the forest the pine and oak necessary
for the building of the manufactory. Moreover, he was forced to buy new
machinery in the United States. In spite of these difficulties, and
although it was mid-winter, thirty days later, on the 15th February
following, the smoke from the new building was rising out of its
chimney, and the buzz of the saws proved that the Pierreville mill was
giving life to a busy population. In 1866 he purchased almost the whole
of Upton township, and it was at this period that he gave full scope to
the development of colonization, and that he found the solution of this
important problem. He cleared a piece of land at his own expense, sold
it to a farmer, and employed him to clear an adjoining lot to be sold
again in the same manner. In 1871 he turned his attention to railroading
and solved another problem, that of building excellent railroads with
very limited resources. He first built forty-three miles of road laid
with wooden rails between Sorel and Wickham, _via_ Yamaska and
Drummondville, during the year 1871, and finished it before the time
agreed on by the contract; he thus had the benefit of the line during
all the year 1872. The boldness he displayed on that occasion is a
matter of astonishment, for all the resources he could dispose of to
complete the undertaking, including rolling material, right of way,
embankments, ballast, the Yamaska bridge, station buildings, wooden
rails, etc., etc., were only $5,000 in bonds per mile, on which he was
able to realize but $4,250 per mile. This road was sold to the South
Eastern, and he undertook, on his own account, to replace the wooden
rails by iron ones, and to build thirteen extra miles in order to reach
Acton. The contract was signed in September of 1875, and on the 15th of
February, 1876 the railroad was entirely completed. When he obtained the
contract he had not a single tie at his disposal, and received only
$2,300 per mile; yet he built fifty-four miles of a first-class railway,
in about seventeen months, at a total cost of $6,550 per mile. It must
be said, however, that the South Eastern Company furnished the iron
rails, which amounted to a value of about $2,000 per mile. In 1877, the
contractor of the Laurentian Railway having failed, Mr. Sénécal was
called upon to complete the road, hardly half built, with the scanty
resources left. He could dispose of a subsidy of $4,000 per mile, and
bonds on the road which could not be negotiated. Col. King, of
Sherbrooke, consented to advance $50,000, and Mr. Sénécal built the six
or seven miles not constructed, as well as the bridges, and the
ballasting in three months. He then proceeded to Lévis and undertook the
Lévis and Kennebec line, the contractors of which were also bankrupt.
There was very little left of the subsidies available, and with these,
and the revenue from the running of the road, he built several miles of
the new line, ballasted the whole, and made it a first-class road. In
the execution of this enterprise he showed his wonderful power of
perseverance and energy in the face of difficulties. The English
shareholders, who owned all the bonds and stock of the road, had thought
they would be able to control the operations of the line, and a number
of business and professional men were certain they would not meet with
any obstacle. Mr. Sénécal saw the situation at a glance, attacked the
enemy in the front, and defended himself for two years in civil and
criminal suits. He resisted the police and orders of the court, kept
possession of the road as long as he wanted, and in the end he proved
that he was in the right, for he obtained judgments in his favor in
forty or fifty cases brought against him by the Hon. Mr. Irvine.
However, as there was no money to be made out of the line, he abandoned
it, according to the terms of his contract, after making it a
first-class-road. One of the most striking traits of his character was
that he never allowed himself to be legally or financially cornered, and
had always gained his object, even when he had no resources available,
and had to struggle against combined wealth, talents and influence. He
has built the following railroad lines:—From Sorel to Acton, from
Lanoraie to St. Felix de Valois, the Berthier branch, the St. Eustache
branch, the ice railway; and he completed the St. Lin road and the Lévis
and Kennebec line. When he was appointed general superintendent of the
Q., M. O. & O. Railway it was far from finished, and the experience he
had acquired in railroad construction was of great benefit to the
government in the completion of the provincial road. The services
rendered by Hon. Mr. Sénécal in that transaction have been
misrepresented by his political adversaries; however, he effected
important savings for the provincial government. As these matters still
belong to the domain of political history, we will merely place this
observation on record. In 1881 he formed a syndicate for the purchase of
part of the road. The history and developments of this transaction are
too well known to require comment. Later on he sold the road to the
Grand Trunk Company, and when the Canadian Pacific Railway Company
obtained possession of the line, they were obliged to discharge the
bonds issued by the Grand Trunk to pay the first possessors. Although
Mr. Sénécal was the bearer of a considerable amount of these bonds, they
were not available, and he received only about $100,000 out of the
transaction. Mr. Sénécal was one of the founders of the Cumberland
Mining and Railway Company, which is to-day the most powerful company in
the maritime provinces. In 1883-84 he was president of the Montreal City
Passenger Railway, and, had he so desired, he would probably have filled
the position until now, but he resigned on being re-elected. He has
generally encouraged all great enterprises. He took a large amount of
shares in the Coaticook Cotton Company, and also in the Richelieu pulp
factory. A few years ago he spent a large amount of money to introduce
the electric light system, and he obtained, by a statutory charter, the
power to dam the Caughnawaga rapids. The purchase of timber limits, and
of the Hull mills, for which he paid more than a million dollars, proved
a disastrous venture. His plan was perfect; but no individual was in a
position to advance such an enormous amount, and he had to give up the
undertaking after losing nearly $400,000. This loss we look upon as a
national calamity, because his main object in purchasing such an immense
tract of territory was to put a great industry into the hands of his
countrymen. It is well known that when Mr. Sénécal had money, it was
used to the benefit of everybody, for in his opinion the hoarding of
wealth was contemptible. Through the vicissitudes of his eventful
career, there were moments when his financial resources were _nil_, as
in 1878-79, when his subsidies and his railroad bonds were practically
not worth a cent. Nevertheless he undertook the task, at that period, to
bring about the dismissal of Lieutenant-Governor Letellier de
Saint-Just, on account of his famous _coup-d’état_ of the 2nd of March,
Reading Tips
Use arrow keys to navigate
Press 'N' for next chapter
Press 'P' for previous chapter