A Cyclopaedia of Canadian Biography: Being Chiefly Men of the Time by Rose
1796. He was formally thanked by parliament. A succession of honors
5653 words | Chapter 116
attended him until the period of his death, which took place in his
castle in Kent, August 3rd, 1797, at the age of eighty years. Thus the
first barony expired, but the second devolved according to the
limitation of the patent, upon his nephew, William Pitt Amherst, the
first earl, who was afterwards ambassador to China, and governor general
of India. The Amherst family seats are Montreal and Knole, near
Sevenoaks, Kent, and the Motto “_Constantia et virtute_.” His career was
wonderfully brilliant and successful. His time and talents had been
devoted to military duty from his early years, and the history of his
life beautifully illustrates the truth, that unbending application to
any pursuit, will assuredly be crowned with success, and also reminds
us, that neither exalted station, nor high enjoyment of life, can exempt
from the power of death. The veteran of many battles and victories must
at last resign his commission, and join the ranks of the spirit land. At
that hour, all scenes of earthly magnificence, and pomp, and the
glorious voice of renown, that had so often thrilled his soldier-heart,
faded and grew silent, and the untold sublimity of an eternal existence
asserted its sway. Happy was the great general, in his dying hour, that
he could look with confidence to the great Being, “by whom king’s reign
and princes decree justice.” He was twice married, first to Jane, only
daughter of Thomas Dalison, of Hampton, in Kent; and secondly, to
Elizabeth, eldest daughter of General the Hon. George Cary, and niece of
Viscount Falkland, but left no children.
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[1] “_Chi-on-der-o-ga_ means great noise (say the Indians). It was near
Fort Carrillon of the French, built and occupied by them in 1756, and
was a strong post. Its ruins are seen in Essex county, N.Y., and are
annually visited by a great number of travellers.” A few years ago the
compiler of this sketch picked up a couple of rough hand-made bullets on
the battle field (where a heavy rain had washed away the turf) which
must have lain hidden there for more than 100 years, since her
great-granduncle, Sir Jeffery Amherst took Fort Ticonderoga.
[2] A stone, forming part of the wall of the old fort there, bears
Amherst’s monogram and the date, 1759, at the present day.
[3] _Vide_—“l’Histoire du Canada,” by F. X. Garneau, book eleventh.
* * * * *
=Smith, Rev. John=, Erskine Church, Toronto, was born in Armagh,
Ireland, on the 28th March, 1824, and died on the 20th January, 1888,
after a few hours’ illness. He came to Canada with his parents in 1827,
and spent the earlier part of his life in the neighborhood of Brampton,
where his brother, Robert Smith, ex-M.P. for Peel, still resides. Mr.
Smith entered Knox College as a student in 1845, and after completing
his course of study was in due time licensed, and very shortly
thereafter settled in Bowmanville, where for twenty-four years he made
full proof of his ministry, and secured and retained the respect and
affection not only of those more immediately under his pastoral charge,
but of the general community in which he lived. In 1875 he received and
accepted a call from what was then known as the Bay Street Presbyterian
Church, in Toronto. In this charge he was permitted to labor, until his
demise, with great assiduity, and with an encouraging amount of success.
The congregation, when Mr. Smith was called, was comparatively a
handful, but under his faithful ministrations it made great progress
both in numbers and influence. In 1878, under his leadership, it erected
a fine new church at the head of Simcoe street, which was named “Erskine
Church,” and here Christian work in all its departments has been
constantly carried on with ever-growing energy and success. In addition
to performing with characteristic fidelity and zeal all the duties of
the pastoral office which he held, Mr. Smith showed himself to be a
public-spirited citizen, who was ready to do all in his power for the
best interests of the country and city in which his lot was cast. He was
specially earnest in the work of temperance, and spared neither trouble
nor toil in his efforts to put a stop to the ravages of strong drink.
Mr. Smith was married in 1851, shortly after his settlement in
Bowmanville, to Elizabeth McArthur, of West Gwillimbury, sister of F. F.
McArthur, of Bowmanville, by whom he had a family of seven children. The
widow and four children survive him.
* * * * *
=Parker, Rev. William Robert=, M.A., D.D., Toronto, Ontario, was born in
West Gwillimbury, county of Simcoe, Ontario, June 20th, 1831. His
father, Robert Parker, was a native of Limerick, Ireland, whose paternal
ancestors were from England, and whose maternal ancestry were German,
his mother being a descendant of the brave band of exiles that found
shelter in Ireland during the reign of Queen Anne, from the bitter storm
of religious persecution that drove them from their pleasant homes in
the Palatinate on the Rhine. It is held to be a proud distinction to be
identified with this people, especially because of their ultimate
influence on the character and destiny of the United States and Canada,
through the agency of Methodism. In his early visits to Ireland, Wesley
found this colony of erstwhile devout Germans sharing the religious
apathy and demoralization so lamentably prevalent in those times. Wesley
and his itinerants preached Christ to those strangers that had been as
sheep without a shepherd for fifty years; and he soon rejoiced to see
them revived and folded again. Wesley bears this testimony concerning
the towns in which they lived: “Such places could hardly be found
elsewhere in Ireland or England; there was no profanity, no Sabbath
breaking, no ale-house in any of them.” Thus, these children of
persecution became the fit progenitors of the American contingent of the
most zealous type of Christianity known since Apostolic times; for these
German-Irish Emburys and Hecks founded in New York, and in Augusta,
Canada, the Methodism destined to be the predominant Protestant belief
of the New World, from Newfoundland to the Pacific coast. Mr. Parker’s
father was one of the heroic pioneers of Upper Canada. Upon his leaving
his native land he came to Baltimore, Md., where he spent some time with
an uncle, a merchant, dealing in paints and oils, and for whom he
visited the West Indies, acting as supercargo of his merchant ship. He
settled in West Gwillimbury about the year 1826, where he cleared one of
the finest farms, and established one of the most comfortable homes of
that wealthy township. He was industrious, economical, thrifty, and
hospitable to a proverb. He was a devout and active member of the
Methodist church, and one of its stewards and trustees. He was a Liberal
in politics, though not partisan. He took an active part in suppressing
the rebellion of 1837, and served as quartermaster-sergeant. After his
children left home he sold his farm, and lived retired in Bradford,
where he died on the 7th July, 1881, in the 84th year of his age, and
was interred in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto. Dr. Parker’s mother,
Sarah Sutherland, still surviving, and resident in Bradford, was a most
intelligent and hearty sympathizer and co-operator with her husband in
all his business plans, his home hospitality and religious duties. Her
mother was one of the Talbots, and one of her kinsmen, Hon. Thomas
Talbot, was recently governor of Massachusetts. Her father was one of
the pioneers of West Gwillimbury. One of the Methodist appointments
bears his name, the church having been built on the corner of his farm.
The youngest son, Captain T. G. Sutherland, sold the homestead a few
years since, when he retired to Alliston, where he and his wife now
reside in a comfortable home. Dr. Parker had but one brother, the late
Dr. T. S. Parker, M.P., of Guelph. He represented North Wellington in
the old Canada parliament for a term just before confederation. After
the formation of the Dominion of Canada, he was elected to the House of
Commons for Centre Wellington by acclamation, for which he sat till the
time of his death, which took place in 1868, through an accident that
occurred to him while returning from a visit to a patient. He was a
pronounced Liberal, and had won for himself a foremost place in his
party, and a prominent position in the county and on the floor of the
house, because of his personal qualities, and by his powers as a
debater. His early death was a great loss to the Reform party, for he
would no doubt have become a member of the government upon their coming
into power. His widow is a daughter of the late Archdeacon Brough, of
London, and cousin to the Hons. Edward and S. H. Blake. The subject of
this sketch was educated in Victoria University, Cobourg, where he
graduated, and received the degree of B.A., in 1858. He was the
valedictorian of his graduating class. Some five years thereafter he
received the degree of M.A., and in 1885, that of D.D. He was received
as a probationer for the ministry of the Wesleyan Methodist church in
1856, and received into full connection and ordained in 1860, at the
conference in Kingston, held in the Sydenham Street Methodist Church,
the Rev. Dr. Stinson being president. Dr. Parker has been stationed
successively in the following places: Toronto, Montreal, Odelltown,
Stanstead, Brantford, St. Catharines, London, Woodstock, Thorold,
Chatham, St. Thomas, and is now (1888) pastor of the Spadina Avenue
Methodist Church, Toronto. He was chairman of the following districts:
Niagara, London, Brantford, Chatham and St. Thomas. He was twice elected
president of the London Conference. His second election was in 1886, to
the present London Conference, held in St. Thomas First Methodist
Church, where he was then pastor. The first election was in 1883, when
he was stationed in Chatham, and when the old London Conference covered
nearly all the territory now embraced in the present, London, Niagara
and Guelph conferences. He has been a member of all the general
conferences of the Methodist church held in Toronto, Montreal, Hamilton,
Belleville and Toronto, respectively. He was opposed to the lately
consummated union of all the Methodist churches, because of points in
the _basis_, and of the haste with which it was pushed. He has
pronounced views in favor of university federation. He is a member of
the Board of Regents of Victoria University. His political views have
been largely in harmony with those of the Liberal party, but he is now
convinced of the necessity of consolidating the temperance forces of
Canada in a prohibitory party, as both the existing parties so far
decline to adopt the entire abolition of the liquor traffic as a plank
in their platform. He has travelled in several states of the Union, and
visited England, Scotland, Ireland and France. In England he “did” the
International Exhibition, visiting in Scotland, Edinburgh, Glasgow and
the lakes; and in Ireland, besides several centres and the Lakes of
Killarney, his father’s and mother’s native places. As a preacher, Dr.
Parker is clear, forceful, eloquent, and eminently practical. He
fearlessly attacks the vices of the age, while insisting strongly on the
great Methodist doctrines of repentance, conversion, and the necessity
of true, practical holiness of heart and life. He is a vigorous opponent
of all forms of priestcraft and sacerdotalism. He is no theorizer, nor
idealist, but a firm believer and teacher of the great truth, that the
religion of the Lord Jesus is designed to meet and bless all the
requirements of human life; that in all civil, political and social
life, it is not only possible, but imperative, that God should be
honored, and that as a nation we are responsible for obedience to all
God’s laws. In September, 1863, he was married to Annie Sophia Ruston,
of Montreal. She was a native of the ancient capital, Quebec, where her
father was a grain and flour merchant. She had an aunt, sister of her
father, who was the wife of a Methodist minister, the Rev. R. A.
Flanders, and two sisters of her mother, wives of Revs. G. H. Davis and
Dr. Cox. She has one sister the wife of a Methodist minister, Rev. Dr.
S. J. Hunter, now of the Centenary Church, Hamilton. Her grandfather
Ruston, a Yorkshire Methodist local preacher, was induced, while a
resident of Odelltown, near Montreal, to assume pastoral work by a
people there as “sheep without a shepherd.” He was made eminently
useful, and when Dr. and Mrs. Parker were stationed there, their first
circuit after marriage, they found several of the most devout and
venerable members of the church, who had been brought to Christ through
his ministrations. Dr. Parker’s wife early evidenced literary taste and
ability, and has contributed several articles and tales to different
periodicals. She is now responsible for editing the ladies’ department
of the “Missionary Outlook,” published under the direction of the
General Missionary Society of the Methodist Church. This ladies’
department is conducted in the interests of Women’s Missionary Society
of the Methodist church. Dr. and Mrs. Parker have been blest with three
children. One dear son was called to an early immortality, and his body
rests in the Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto. A daughter and son are
yet left with them, the eldest and youngest. The daughter is a graduate
of Alma Ladies’ College, St. Thomas, in the Provincial Arts Department.
She took two prizes in paintings, “Studies,” in the Industrial
Exhibition, in this city, last autumn. The son is in the fifth form in
Upper Canada College, and has proved a diligent and successful student.
If spared he will pursue a university course.
* * * * *
=Rousseau, Joseph Thomas=, Artist, St. Hyacinthe, Province of Quebec,
was born on the 9th of August, 1852, at St. Elzéard de la Beauce, P.Q.
His father was Louis Rousseau, of the same place, a prominent merchant,
who in later years devoted himself exclusively to agricultural pursuits.
His mother’s maiden name was Luce Huard. He was educated at St. Elzéard,
and also had private tuition. Having at an early age shown a decided
talent for painting and drawing, his parents, knowing well the obstacles
to be overcome and encountered, endeavored to dissuade him from adopting
art as a profession. However, the germs of an artistic career were too
strong to be lightly overcome. He went to Montreal, and there studied
for three years under M. Ravau, after which he commenced church
decoration, to which he devoted himself with great success for the space
of five years. His great desire for improvement, and a dim sense of
latent undeveloped power, induced him to go to Florence, Italy, to study
the old masters and rare works of art to be found there. While thus
engaged he took private lessons from the celebrated Professor Ciceri,
commandant of the Artists’ Society, Florence, which art school he also
attended, and passed successfully the examination imposed upon all those
who are desirous of entering. After two years’ close application to his
profession, he returned to Canada, and painted those many historical
religious subjects which have made him famous throughout this continent.
His celebrated oil painting of “Christ being Carried to the Tomb” was
sold to St. Louis church, Nashua, N.H., for the handsome sum of $1,000.
The paintings and decorations in the chapel of the Convent of the
Precious Blood, at St. Hyacinthe, are masterpieces of art, and there is
nothing in Canada or the United States to compare with it. The following
is a list of some of Rousseau’s most celebrated pictures:—“The Dying
Christ,” “Crucifixion,” “Mater Dolorosa,” “The Flight into Egypt,”
“Adoration of the Magi,” “The Trinity in Three Figures at the very
moment of the Annunciation,” “Christ Falling under the Weight of the
Cross,” “Christ Giving the Keys to Peter,” “The Triumph of the Church,”
a very large composition, containing more than sixty personages. In
religion Mr. Rousseau is an earnest Roman Catholic, and in politics a
staunch Conservative. He was married on May 2nd, 1875, to Hermine
Gendron, daughter of Jacques Gendron, merchant, of St. Rosalie, by whom
he has five children. Comparatively a young man, and judging by what he
has already accomplished, it is safe to prophesy a still more brilliant
future, and an immortal artistic fame.
* * * * *
=Hale, Hon. Edward.=—The Hon. Edward Hale, second son of the Hon. John
Hale, of Quebec (formerly of “Plantation,” Yorkshire, England), a
descendant of the Hales of Codicote and King’s Walden, in Hertfordshire,
England, and Elizabeth Frances, daughter of Gen. William Amherst, A.D.C.
to the King, lieut.-governor of Portsmouth, governor of St. John’s,
Newfoundland, and adjutant-general of his Majesty’s forces, was born in
Quebec, on the 6th December, 1801. His father had been A.D.C. and
private secretary to his Royal Highness the Duke of Kent, who stood
sponsor to the subject of this sketch. He was educated at Kensington,
England. Returning to his father’s home in Quebec, he entered the office
of the committee of audit as secretary, which post he held for three
years, until, in the winter of 1823, he received the appointment of
private secretary to his uncle, Earl Amherst, governor-general of India,
and, accompanied by his father, set out at once on sledges for Boston,
U.S.A., whence he sailed with Captain Heard, in the good ship _Bengal_,
for Calcutta. During his stay in India he acted for a time as military
secretary, and accompanied the governor-general in his expeditions
through the different provinces of India, visiting, among others, the
king of Oude, the Rajah of Benares, the king of Delhi and some of the
young princes who afterwards took such a conspicuous part in the Indian
mutiny. A few remarks from Mr. Hale’s diary of that date may not be out
of place here:
October 16th, 1816.—Having breakfasted, we prepared to hold a
native durbar in the house of the Rajah of Benares, which had
been placed at the governor’s disposal, and native gentlemen
began to collect in the compound. Long before the appointed hour
we were turned out of the billiard room, to make place for some
princes of the Delhi family, who had arrived much before their
time, but could not be allowed to remain outside. At eleven
o’clock Lord Amherst took his seat on the throne, surrounded by
his suite, while Lady Amherst and the other ladies were
spectators in another room. The first was a private audience
granted to the princes above mentioned, who were ushered in, and
were met by his lordship at the door, who embraced them all, and
they then sat down. The princes were a most wild-looking set of
fellows, dressed principally in fur, and had all a cast of
countenance that seemed to bespeak their readiness for any sort
of desperate enterprise. They were, with one or two exceptions,
nearly of the same age, being the sons of different Begums, and
he who sat first on the right was a much younger man than some
of the others, but the son of the eldest Begum. They requested
leave to make their salaam to Lady Amherst, and having done so,
took their leave. The other members of the same family then
followed and took their leave; when notice was sent to the Rajah
of Benares, Oodut Narrain, that he might now come. He had been
waiting in his tonjon at the gate of the compound for an hour
before. His procession accordingly entered, commencing with
flag-bearers, then camels, elephants, a native band, empty
tonjons and palanquins, tribes of sotaburdars, punkaburdars,
assaiburdars, burchyburdars, and all sorts of burdahs, when the
tonjon bearing the mighty man himself followed, and was
accompanied by numbers of horsemen, who galloped about in all
directions, going through an indiscriminate sham fight. The
procession passed along the back of the house, round it to the
front, and the “mighty” was ushered in, a visitor in his own
house. He was so immensely fat that he could with difficulty
walk, and he waddled into the room, occupying a space of at
least two yards. He salaamed low, very low, much lower than I
thought he could, and Lord Amherst, advancing three paces,
embraced him, when he sat down in a chair which was purposely
meant for him, but the exertion of coming up stairs and
salaaming had deprived him of the necessary breath for talking,
and he was obliged to remain mute for a short time. He was most
splendidly ornamented with jewels, his turband was surmounted by
a coronet of diamonds, with large emerald drops; his necklace
was composed of immense diamonds, and his arms and various other
parts were profusely covered with precious stones. Having
offered his nuzzur to Lady Amherst he also retired, and his
lordship then went down stairs to hold the public durbar.
In 1828, Lord Amherst’s administration being ended, Mr. Hale returned to
England with the governor-general and his family, and after visiting
Italy, Switzerland and France, sailed once more for Quebec, where, in
1831, he married Eliza Cecilia, daughter of the Hon. Chief Justice
Bowen. Chief Justice Bowen was born in Kinsale, Ireland, in 1780. He was
one of three brothers, the eldest of whom, Lieutenant-Colonel Bowen,
C.B., Madras army, was killed at Seringapatam; and the youngest, while
captain in the Royal Navy, won no little distinction for gallant conduct
in H.M.’s frigate _Apollo_. The Bowens are descended from an old Welsh
family, the name being originally Ap Owen. Mr. Bowen’s father, M.D. and
surgeon in H.M.’s forces, died in the West Indies, whither he had gone
with his regiment. His mother was the beautiful Isabella Cassan,
daughter of Richard Sheffield Cassan, and grand-daughter of Alexander
Hamilton, M.P., of Knock, county Dublin. In 1833, Mr. Hale moved to
Sherbrooke, and there built for himself a homestead, now known as
“Sleepy Hollow,” to which, to his dying day, he was much attached. He
was a member of the Special Council for Lower Canada in 1839, and
represented the county of Sherbrooke in the Legislative Assembly from
1841 to 1847; and, besides many other public offices, from 1866 to 1875
he held that of chancellor of Bishop’s College, Lennoxville, an
institution for which he had a sincere affection, and which owes much of
its present prosperity to his energy and good management. In 1867, he
was appointed a member of the Legislative Council for the province of
Quebec, which position he held for the remainder of his life. At the
meeting of the Legislative Council (next following his death) November,
1875, the Hon. Messrs. De Boucherville, Ferrier and Fraser offered many
tributes of respect to the memory of their venerable colleague, and Mr.
Fraser, addressing the House in French, said:
Mr. Hale was a member of the Special Council of Lower Canada in
1839 and 1840, and, as such, assisted in conferring important
benefits on this province, such as the law which granted the
seigniory of St. Sulpice to the seminary of that name, at
Montreal, the acts or ordinances of registration, turnpike
roads, and other measures, which powerfully contributed to the
development of the country. His grandfathers were officers of
high rank in General Wolfe’s army, and distinguished themselves
in the important events of those times. On his father’s side his
ancestors were persons of distinction in old England, and his
mother was a sister of Earl Amherst, whose ancestors were
followers of William the Conqueror, and one of whose
descendants, Hamo de Herst, in the reign of Edward III. (1339),
held large estates in the county of Kent, which the present Lord
Amherst still holds. I feel it a most pleasing duty to recall to
your memories his agreeable manners—those of the perfect
gentleman—which were natural to him. He was open, frank and
honest, never hiding his thoughts or opinions, but always
expressing them in language at once courteous and elevated. He
was as cheerful as he was amiable, his conversation was most
attractive, his powers of narration were great, and his mind was
filled with interesting and original anecdotes, at once lively
and entertaining, which rendered him a most agreeable and much
desired companion.
At a meeting of the Synod in Quebec, of which he had been a delegate for
many years, his lordship Bishop Williams, made the following remarks in
alluding to his death:
My reverend brethren and brethren of the laity.—Before
proceeding to read, in accordance with our custom, the summary
statement which I have prepared of the ecclesiastical events of
the diocese, I must advert, however briefly, to a matter
belonging to the history of the Synod itself. Since last we met,
one who from the Synod’s first creation has been an honored
member of the same, has been taken from us. The death of the
Hon. Edward Hale caused us a loss not easily repaired. During
the whole time of my residence in this country he has been my
valued friend, but for a record of his fine qualities we need
not go to the reminiscence of a friend. He carried it with him
wherever he went. His prompt and punctual attention to all
public duties, the kindness of his heart, and the courtesy of
his demeanor are known to all. His genial presence we shall see
no more, his peace-loving spirit will, I trust, remain with us
for ever.
Mr. Hale died April 26th, 1875, at Quebec, whither he had gone to attend
to his parliamentary duties, and was buried at Sherbrooke. Mrs. Hale
died at Boston, United States, in 1850. She was the mother of seven
children, of whom six are now living. The eldest son, Edward John, at
Quebec, at the old house which has been the home of four generations of
Hales. The second son, Edward Chaloner, at “Chaloner,” near Lennoxville;
and the youngest, William Amherst, at the old homestead, “Sleepy
Hollow,” near Sherbrooke. Two of the daughters live in Sherbrooke, and
the third is the wife of Henry Turnour Machin, assistant treasurer of
the province of Quebec. During a residence of upwards of forty years in
the Eastern Townships, Mr. Hale aided materially, and watched with
interest, the growth of Sherbrooke from an obscure hamlet of a few
straggling houses to the large and prosperous town it now is. When the
rebellion of 1837 and 1838 broke out, he joined the volunteers, refused
a commission, and, for the sake of example, served in the ranks.
Although a Conservative in politics, Mr. Hale placed individual merit
far above party, creed, or class, and by his impartiality and just
judgment, living above suspicion or reproach, he won the respect and
esteem of all who knew him, and of him might truly be said, as he so
often said of others, “the rank is but the guinea’s stamp, the man’s the
gowd for a’ that.” But it was to his children and intimate friends that
his noble Christian life was best known. Possessed of charity in the
widest sense of the word, full of love and compassion for those in
trouble or distress, ever ready to help the poor and needy, his active
sympathy and generosity made him beloved and revered by all classes. The
example of his pure, unselfish life is not forgotten, and he still lives
in the hearts of those who loved him.
* * * * *
=Withall, William John=, Montreal, Que., was born on the island of
Jersey, November 22nd, 1814. His father was born in London, and his
mother in Jersey. He received what was considered in those days an
education sufficient to commence training for commercial pursuits.
Leaving school in 1826, and having a strong desire to visit other parts
of the world, he pressed on his parents to grant him permission to leave
home. Being only twelve years of age, and having an uncle and aunt in
Gaspé, it was decided that he should go thither, and arriving there on
the 30th April, found that country covered with deep snow. His uncle’s
occupation was farming, fishing and lumbering. During that year his
mother died, and being a minor, he had no choice but to make Gaspé his
abode. That country was thinly populated, and almost isolated from the
outside world. He received a letter from Jersey in winter, the postage
of which was four shillings and sixpence. It was the custom then to
dispatch a courier in January from Gaspé for Quebec, carrying the
mail-bag on his back. This was a perilous journey, there being hardly
any habitation between Gaspé and Quebec for two hundred and fifty or
three hundred miles. When sixteen years of age, he thought, if his uncle
would allow him his independence, he could, by working and trading, do
something better for himself, but when he made the proposal, his uncle
said he was too young, and could not provide for himself. His answer
was, “Give me my freedom.” Although young, and feeling confident that
where others could make a living he could do the same. On getting his
uncle’s consent, he then commenced the battle of life. He managed,
through perseverance and economy, to save a little money each year. At
the time he arrived in Gaspé, the language spoken was French, which he
could neither speak nor understand. There being no schools, he made use
of the only means at his disposal. There was a local Methodist preacher
from the island of Guernsey using the French language. Young Withall was
punctual in his attendance every Sabbath (and has continued to identify
himself with the same church ever since). He commenced by repeating the
hymns and Scriptures when read out by the preacher, and soon acquired
the French pronounciation, and became familiar in reading and writing
that language. This in after life became very useful, and to some extent
he attributes it to his financial success. The winter of 1832 was passed
in St. Thomas, below Quebec, and between teaching, fishing and trading,
he began to have a balance to the good. In 1835 he took passage to his
native land, the island of Jersey. After visiting several places in
Europe, he returned to Gaspé, having made an engagement with a Jersey
merchant to take charge of his stores and fishing establishments. In
1837 he took a joint interest in purchasing a large block of land in the
north-west arm of Gaspé Bay. The intention was to build a saw mill for
the lumber trade. The prospect for the future not coming up to his
ideas, he sold out his interests. In 1840 he left Gaspé for Quebec, and
commenced, by opening a provision and grocery store. In 1841 he married
Elizabeth, widow of the late Peter Bott, who departed this life in 1882.
In 1883 he married Eleanor, widow of the late Richard W. Langmuir. In
1850 he commenced taking an active interest in the different
institutions connected with the city of Quebec; was elected city
councillor and director in the Union Building Society in 1865; was
elected a director in the Quebec Bank; joined, as silent partner, in a
soap and candle factory; and was one of the promoters of the National
Bank; the Quebec Steamship Company; the Quebec Marine Insurance Company;
the Quebec Street Railway Company; the Lake St. John Railway Company;
was proprietor of the Quebec Rubber Company; took an interest in the
Quebec Worsted Company; the Quebec Tow Boat Company; and was either
president or director in the above companies until 1884. In 1867 he was
appointed justice of the peace. In 1854 he joined a party of four for
the building of two vessels intended to trade between Chicago and ports
on the ocean. These were built by the Messrs. McCarthy, at Sorel, one
being named _Chicago_, and the other _Quebec_. These vessels made
voyages direct from Chicago to Newfoundland and Liverpool, but, being
built with centre-boards and considered unsafe, the underwriters
declined to cover them by insurance, and the adventure, not proving
profitable, was discontinued. It is believed these were the first
vessels that sailed direct from Chicago to the ocean. In 1884 Mr.
Withall left the city of Quebec, and is now a resident of Montreal,
filling the offices of vice-president of the Quebec Bank, and director
of the Sun Life Insurance Company, the Canadian Rubber Company, the
Quebec Steamship Company, the Guarantee Company of North America, the
Royal Electric Company, and still holding one-half interest with his
nephew, Thomas A. Piddington, in the Bulstrode Tannery, near Arthabaska,
Quebec. During his mercantile life he never entered into any transaction
beyond his own resources, and when anything proved unprofitable, himself
only was the sufferer. Mr. Withall is now in the seventy-fourth year of
his age, possessing a good constitution, sound in body and mind, and
enjoying the confidence and esteem of a wide circle of friends and
acquaintances.
* * * * *
=Hammond, John=, St. John, New Brunswick, a professional Artist of many
years’ standing, was born in Montreal in the year 1843; has studied in
England, France, Holland, and Italy; is a regular exhibitor in the
annual exhibitions of both the Royal Academy, London, and the Paris
Salon, and is principal of the Owen’s Art Educational Institution of St.
John, New Brunswick.
* * * * *
=Mackenzie, Hon. Alexander=, Toronto, M.P. for East York, ex-Premier of
Canada. About the end of the year 1842, three young men resided in the
city of Kingston, who were destined to act prominent parts in the public
life of Canada. One of the three was a rising young lawyer of pleasing
address and popular manners, who had won distinction by his defence of
Von Schultz and other state prisoners connected with the troubles of
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