A Cyclopaedia of Canadian Biography: Being Chiefly Men of the Time by Rose
1829. His parents were Neil Sinclair and Mary McDougall, first of
4461 words | Chapter 173
Kileenan, afterwards of Bowmore village. He was educated at the parish
school of Bowmore. He immigrated with his parents to Canada West, in the
summer of 1851; and came to the county of Bruce in the summer of 1853,
where he remained for a couple of years with his parents who had settled
in the township of Arran in 1852. Mr. Sinclair taught school in the Gore
area of Toronto, Chinguacousy and Toronto township, and afterwards in
the township of Saugeen; and then settled permanently in the county of
Bruce, in 1858. He has always taken a deep interest in municipal
affairs, and was deputy-reeve of Arran; and sat in the municipal council
of the united counties of Huron and Bruce in 1863, in which year he
removed to Southampton and became bookkeeper for his brother, Alexander
Sinclair, general merchant and grain buyer. In general politics, too, he
was greatly interested, and became the standard-bearer of his party, and
was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, at the general
election in 1867, as member for the North Riding of Bruce, which riding
he represented continuously till 1883. He was appointed registrar of
deeds on the 24th of February, 1883, for the county of Bruce, and this
position he still holds. Mr. Sinclair removed from Southampton to
Paisley in the year 1869, where he resided and carried on business as a
general merchant till he received his appointment. He married, 26th
April, 1871, Isabella, daughter of Thomas Adair, of Southampton. He is a
member of the Baptist church, and was always a Liberal in politics. Mr.
Sinclair is a sociable Scotchman, and is held in high esteem by his
friends.
* * * * *
=Scott, Hon. Richard William=, Q.C., leader of the Opposition in the
Senate, and ex-Secretary of State, was born in Prescott, Ontario, on the
24th February, 1825. He is of Irish parentage on his father’s side,
while, on his mother’s side he claims kinship with the McDonnells of U.
E. loyalist fame. Young Scott had the advantage of a good education, his
parents being in comfortable circumstances. He was educated by a private
tutor, William Spiller, of Prescott, until he was ready to enter upon
the study of law. He read in the office of Messrs. Crooks & Smith, of
Toronto, and was called to the bar at the age of twenty-three years. He
settled in Ottawa, then a small town, and entered upon the practice of
his profession. He early exhibited a leaning towards public affairs, and
took an active part as a young man in many warm political contests. In
1852 he was elected mayor of Ottawa, and filled his term of office with
general satisfaction to the people. In 1857 he was elected to the
Canadian Legislature for Ottawa, but suffered defeat on seeking
re-election in 1863. When confederation was consummated and the first
general election for the Ontario Legislative Assembly was held, Mr.
Scott was again elected for Ottawa, and from that time to the present he
has been continuously active in Canadian public affairs as a member of
one of the great legislative bodies. He has held high positions in
several administrations, and is to be credited with the initiation of
some of the most important laws under which the Canadian people now
live. He was elected speaker of the Ontario Legislative Assembly in
1871, but in the organization of the Blake administration he was asked
to accept a portfolio and a seat in the executive council, and resigned
the speakership after two weeks of office. He became commissioner of
crown lands, and administered the affairs of that exceedingly difficult
office with marked ability. In 1873 he was called to the Privy Council
of the Dominion, as a member of the Mackenzie administration, and
resigned his place in the Ontario government and his seat in the house.
He was chosen as the fittest man to lead the Senate in conjunction with
Hon. Mr. Pelletier, and was called to the upper house and made secretary
of state, in March, 1874. His position in the government was that of
secretary of state and registrar-general. When Hon. (now Sir) Richard
Cartwright, minister of finance, went to England in that year, Hon. Mr.
Scott acted in his place; and subsequently, in the absence of other
members of the government he acted at one time as minister of internal
revenue, and at another as minister of justice. On the defeat of the
Mackenzie administration at the polls in 1878, Hon. Mr. Scott became
leader of the opposition in the Senate, which position he still holds.
The legislative enactment by which he is most widely known, and which
forms his highest title to a high place among Canadian law-makers, is
the Canada Temperance Act of 1875, better known as “the Scott Act.” This
measure was the outcome of a long agitation on the part of the
temperance people for an advance in some way upon the license laws and
the old “Dunkin Act,” until then the ones in force. The “Dunkin Act” was
a local option measure, but was of so defective a character that it was
but lightly considered by the prohibitionists, and was not of much use
as a guide in framing another law based upon the local option principle.
The Canada Temperance Act is therefore a pioneer in the path of local
option legislation in regard to the liquor traffic, and it is a
remarkable tribute to the sagacity and legal ability of its framer that
in the ten years since it was passed, although it has been the subject
of the fiercest legal disputes, not only has its constitutionality been
upheld by the highest court of the empire, in spite of the determined
efforts of the greatest pleaders to overthrow it, but so perfect have
its details been found that even now some half-dozen amendments are all
that the prohibitionists are asking, and of these some arise out of
advance in the temperance sentiment of the country which could not have
been legislated for in the first place. Another important act which owes
its origin to Mr. Scott, and which now forms part of our constitutional
system, is the Separate School Law of Ontario, prepared and carried
through parliament by him as a private member, in 1863; a measure which
was the means of removing a vexed question from the political arena, and
of allaying much public irritation. Mr. Scott is a man of quiet,
methodical ways, but remarkable for his perseverance and tenacity of
purpose. As a speaker, he makes no oratorical flourishes, but arranges
his arguments with marked ability in such a way as to produce the most
telling effect upon a candid mind. Personally there is no man in
parliament who is held in higher or more deserved respect by
representatives of all shades of political opinion.
* * * * *
=Adam, Graeme Mercer=, Toronto, was born in 1839, at Loanhead, a village
in Midlothian, Scotland, about half-way between De Quincey’s house at
Lasswade, on the Esk, and the woodland domain of the poet Drummond, of
Hawthornden, close by the far-famed castle and chapel of the Earls of
Roslyn. His father, who died in 1841, was factor on the estates of
Graeme Mercer of Mavisbank and Gorthy, after whom he was named. The
family is connected with the Adams of Blair-Adam, in Perthshire, and on
the paternal side has given many representatives to literature and other
professional callings; while on the maternal side, numberless Wisharts
(his mother is a lineal descendant of the Scottish martyr George
Wishart), have served their country in many of Britain’s great battles
on sea and land. After receiving his education, first at Portobello and
then at Edinburgh, Mr. Adam entered an old-established publishing house
in the Scottish capital while very young, and at the age of nineteen was
entrusted with the management of one of its most important departments.
Owing to the death of the head of the house, the business was wound up,
and young Mercer Adam was offered, through the Nelsons, a post in a
large colonial book-house in Calcutta, and from the Blackwoods he had at
the same time a proposal to go to Canada, to take charge of the book
business of Mr. (now Rev. Dr.) J. Cunningham Geikie; the latter of which
he accepted, and came to Canada in September, 1858. Two years afterwards
he succeeded to this business, as a member of the firm of Rollo & Adam,
who, it may be said, were the publishers of the first of the more
ambitious native periodicals published in Canada, the _British American
Magazine_. In this native periodical Mr. Adam made his first published
contributions to literature. In 1866 Mr. Rollo retired from the business
of Rollo & Adam, and the firm of Adam, Stevenson & Co. was formed. This
book-house was well known in its day for its many publishing
enterprises, and for the aid it gave the intellectual life of Canada, in
furthering native literature and in introducing a higher class of book
importations than had hitherto found sale in the country. Unfortunately
the house for a number of years met with many and severe losses, and its
business was wound up in 1876, Mr. Adam withdrawing for a time to New
York to found a publishing house there, which has since developed into
the extensive firm of the John W. Lovell Publishing Company. Mr. Adam,
however, returned to Toronto in 1878, and since then has almost
exclusively devoted himself to a literary life. In 1879 he established,
and for five years edited, the _Canada Educational Monthly_; and in 1880
assumed the editorship of the _Canadian Monthly_, which in connection
with Professor Goldwin Smith, he was instrumental in founding in the
year 1872. Mr. Adam has also had connection with many other periodical
publications issued in Ontario, either as a writer or in business
relations therewith. His services to literature have been wide and
important, for he has been journalist, educationist, critic, reviewer
and essay-writer. In 1885 he wrote “The North-West, its History and its
Troubles,” published by the Rose Publishing Company; he edited an
edition of Lord Macaulay’s Essay on Warren Hastings; founded the _Canada
Bookseller_, a trade organ, in 1870, and has written, in conjunction
with W. J. Robertson, B.A., of St. Catharines, a “School History of
England and Canada.” This History-Primer has had a sale of 100,000
copies, and is authorized for use in all the schools of Ontario as well
as in the educational institutions of other provinces. In 1883 Mr. Adam
edited a five volume series of school reading books, known as the “Royal
Canadian Readers,” and in the following year was an extensive
contributor to _Picturesque Canada_, and to a number of publications
issued in Canada and the mother country. Mr. Adam is also the joint
author, with J. W. Connor, B.A., of Berlin, of “The Canadian High School
Word Book,” a manual of orthoepy, synonymy and derivation. In 1886, in
conjunction with Miss A. E. Wetherald, a graceful Canadian writer in
prose and verse, Mr. Adam wrote an historical romance entitled “An
Algonquin Maiden,” three separate editions of which appeared in Toronto,
London, and New York. This novel, which deals with interesting events in
connection with the early history of Upper Canada, was exceedingly well
received by the public and highly praised by the critics. Of other
recent works which have come from Mr. Adam’s pen, the chief is an
“Outline History of Canadian Literature,” published in 1887. This
admirable text book of the native authors, though modest in its scope,
has been found exceedingly useful as a companion to the Canadian
histories. Mr. Adam has served Canada in the militia for twelve years.
He was a captain in the Queen’s Own Rifles, and commanded a company of
that crack corps at the fight at Ridgeway, between our volunteers and
the Fenian marauders. He is a graduate and first-class certificate
holder of the Military school of Toronto; received a second-class
certificate in 1865 from Colonel Peacock of Her Majesty’s 16th regiment;
and in 1866 a first-class certificate from Colonel Lowry of the 47th
regiment. Mr. Adam has for the last twenty years been brought into
contact with every literary man in the country and many representatives
of other professions in Canada, and we have not probably another man who
has a larger or more intimate acquaintance with books, book-men, and the
book-trade, as vouched for by the publishing and bookselling fraternity,
as well as by the leading men in all the professions—law, medicine,
education, theology, etc. Mr. Adam married in 1863, Jane, second
daughter of the late John Gibson, of Lovell & Gibson, parliamentary
printers, and editor for many years of the _Literary Garland_. This lady
died in 1884, profoundly regretted, leaving eight children to survive
her. In religion Mr. Adam is a member of the Church of England; in
politics he is an independent and a Canadian nationalist. Besides the
literary work noted, Mr. Adam has edited and prepared for the press
innumerable manuscripts; is a constant contributor to all the Toronto
journals, and is looked upon by literary people as a sort of general
reference library. The most pretentious of Mr. Adam’s published works so
far is “The North-West, its History and its Troubles;” and this is a
book that will be certain to survive in the literature of the country.
The style of the work is like everything that proceeds from the pen of
Mr. Adam,—it is clean cut, easy, swift and direct. There is a
fascinating grace about all of Mr. Adam’s work, and one finds himself
pausing constantly to admire the grace with which a sentence has been
rounded, or to linger over its exquisitely balanced rhythm. Nature he
loves with all his heart, and many of the descriptive passages in the
work in question are delightful. There is present, likewise, the
judicial quality, and the sense of historical responsibility; while the
strong individuality of the writer is ever manifest. What we say of the
work referred to, is true of Mr. Adam’s writing generally. But to him,
as some of our recently published historical and biographical works bear
testimony, Canadian literature lies under a debt which it can never
repay. Literature the man loves, and it is not an exaggeration to say
that his life has been consecrated to it. How bitter have been the
fortunes of letters in Canada, is a fact only too well known, but Mr.
Adam has always been fighting the literary fight, and when others have
dropped out of the battle, he has kept up his courage. He is at present
engaged exclusively in letters, and has now attained his meridian
powers, and we await much from his gifted pen.
* * * * *
=Dickson, George=, M.A., Principal of Upper Canada College, Toronto, was
born in Markham township, county of York, in 1846. His father was John
Dickson, a well-known and much respected mill owner, of Markham, who
came to Canada in 1829, and lived for a time in York (now Toronto). His
grandfather, Robert Dickson, was a substantial woollen manufacturer of
Lanarkshire, Scotland. His mother, a worthy Scotch lady, was the
daughter of Robert McNair, farmer, of Paisley, Scotland, who emigrated
to Canada in 1828, and settled at Milton, county of Halton, but
subsequently removed to York Mills, Yonge street. Another branch of the
family settled in Oswego, and there carried on an extensive shipping
business. The subject of this sketch, who for nearly a quarter of a
century has been worthily identified with educational pursuits, was
himself educated at the Richmond Hill Public School, at the Markham
Grammar School, and subsequently at the Whitby Senior County Grammar
School, then under the charge of Thomas Kirkland, M.A., now principal of
the Normal School, Toronto. From Whitby he proceeded to Toronto
University, where he matriculated with honors, and attended two
sessions. Here he prosecuted his studies, as the late President McCaul
relates, with much diligence, his proficiency in mathematics, history
and English, and in natural history, gaining him honors in these
departments. Later on he graduated with honors at the Victoria
University, Cobourg; and in 1878 he was admitted to the degree of master
of arts. In the year 1865 he began his career as an educator, teaching
first in the Lloyd school section, township of Whitchurch, and in 1866-7
in the village of Laskay, township of King. In the latter school we
first recognise Mr. Dickson’s special aptitude for teaching, for in the
two years he was engaged at Laskay no fewer than twelve of his pupils
obtained first-class certificates of qualification as teachers. In 1868
Mr. Dickson was appointed mathematical master in the Chatham Grammar
School, then under the late High School inspector, S. A. Marling, M.A.
Here his success as an educator followed him, one of his earliest pupils
obtaining first-class honors in mathematics at the matriculation
examinations at Toronto University. Of the characteristics of his
educational work at Chatham, Mr. Marling, the then head master,
writes:—“Mr. Dickson is a thorough teacher, an excellent
disciplinarian, and possesses in an unusual degree the power to excite
and maintain the interest of a class.” In 1871 the subject of our sketch
was offered and accepted the important post of preparing young men for
university matriculation in the Woodstock Literary Institute, under the
late Rev. R. A. Fyfe, D.D. Here he had charge of the university class in
mathematics, English, history, and part of the classics; and in the year
he remained at Woodstock he justly earned, as the authorities
acknowledged, much of the gratifying honors won by the students of the
institute. We now follow Mr. Dickson to Hamilton, to which city he
removed in the autumn of 1872, to assume the duties of assistant
mastership of the Collegiate Institute. The then headmaster was the late
J. M. Buchan, M.A., who in the following year was made high school
inspector; the board appointing Mr. Dickson in his stead. To this
important position the new headmaster brought his now matured talents,
rare aptitude for teaching, and an industry and power of work which
enabled him not only to establish his fame as one of the most successful
of Canadian educators, but to win for the Hamilton Institute a position
in the first rank among the secondary schools of the province. These
statements find ready confirmation in the gratifying statistics of the
institute during the thirteen years Mr. Dickson remained in charge of
its affairs. In 1872, when he was appointed headmaster, the school
ranked third in the province; in 1885, when he removed to Toronto, again
to succeed Mr. Buchan in the principalship of Upper Canada College, the
school, as we have said, ranked first; from an attendance of 230 at the
former period, the attendance rose to 585 at the latter period. Not only
was the school thoroughly organized, with a specialist at the head of
each department, but a literary society was formed in connection with
it, and later on its members began the publication of a magazine, which
at first modestly appeared quarterly, then blossomed out into a vigorous
monthly, dealing with every branch of educational work, and finding its
way into almost every county in the province. In the management of this
periodical, which finally was merged in the _Canada Educational
Monthly_, Mr. Dickson took an active interest, and gave it the benefit
of his literary and scientific attainments. Meantime the institute
greatly prospered, and the most gratifying successes were won by its
pupils at the various university examinations and at those of the
educational department of the province. The university record of the
institute under Mr. Dickson’s administration shows almost phenomenal
results. Within ten years of his appointment no less than one hundred
and seventy-five of its pupils passed the university examinations. The
scholarships (nineteen in number) taken by pupils of the school within
the same period are in the same ratio. As bearing on this subject, we
extract the following from a late report of the Hamilton board:—
At Toronto University the school has ranked either first or
second in classics no fewer than ten times, in mathematics
eleven times first and three times second; in modern languages,
including English, history and geography, twice first and twice
second; and at every matriculation examination since 1873
Hamilton has won scholarships. Official university records show
that no other collegiate institute has done this. In addition to
the scholarships given above, Hamilton won six at first year
Toronto University; one at London, England, ten at Knox College;
two at McGill University; one at Trinity College, Toronto; two
at Victoria and one at Queen’s College, Kingston; in all, forty
scholarships, or an average of four each year. In 1883, in
addition to all this, five scholarships were won at university
examinations by Hamilton.
The departmental examinations show like results. Under Mr. Dickson’s
_régime_ upwards of four hundred passed the non-professional
examinations for teachers’ certificates, and over fifty matriculated in
law. From 1880 to 1885, in addition to his onerous duties as principal
of the Collegiate Institute, Mr. Dickson had charge of the organization
and management of the school system of the city of Hamilton. He also
organized the Hamilton Teachers’ Association, and was its first
president; was president for one year of the Teachers Association of the
county of Wentworth; and for a number of years a director of the
Hamilton Mechanics’ Institute. In 1885, on the lamented death of J. M.
Buchan, Mr. Dickson succeeded that gentleman in the principalship of
Upper Canada College, by appointment of the Ontario government, and
thereupon removed to Toronto. In his new sphere, Principal Dickson’s
power of organization, good discipline, and thoroughly business-like
administration, combined with his all round scholarship, fine teaching
ability and faculty of imbuing students with love of their work soon
manifested themselves, and gave a new impetus to the old historic school
of the province. Under his management not only has the institution
continued to flourish, but it has done increasingly good work, as yearly
university honors prove, and passed through a crisis in its history
which, under a less vigorous administration would probably have seen its
doom. Though it is soon to pass to new quarters in the northern suburbs
of the city, its future need cause no uneasiness to any “old College
boy,” for its interests will be in safe keeping in the hands of its
present capable head. As principal of Upper Canada College Mr. Dickson
is _ex officio_ a member of Toronto University Senate, and his large
experience as an educationist, and the fact that he has filled
successively the post of classical, mathematical, science and English
master, in high school, collegiate institute and college, peculiarly fit
him to serve in the academic senate. Personally, he is held in high
esteem for his many fine qualities of head and heart, and for those
gifts and endowments which, if they have not led him to take a prominent
part in public affairs, nevertheless attach to him many warm friends.
Though he is not what is known as a “pushing” man, for his modest
demeanor indicates him to be the reverse of this, he is a gentleman of
great and varied mental resources, which would enable him to acquit
himself with credit in any sphere he is called upon to fill. He is
withal a genial, large-hearted, and lovable man. In politics Principal
Dickson is a Reformer; in religion a Presbyterian. In 1882 he married
Mary, eldest daughter of the late Captain Thomas Flett, of Hamilton, a
lady whose musical tastes and varied graces and accomplishments endear
her to a large circle of friends.
* * * * *
=Stephen, Alexander=, Halifax, N.S., was born at Musquodoboit, Halifax
Co., March 9, 1845, and was the eldest son of Alexander Stephen of
Rothess, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, who came to Nova Scotia in 1834, and
engaged in business, founding the house of A. Stephen & Son, carried on
by his son to-day. His mother was Mary Ann Gould, a daughter of one of
the settlers of the Musquodoboit valley. The subject of this sketch was
educated at the Free Church Academy and Horton College. He early in life
became associated with his father in the firm of A. Stephen & Son,
furniture and wooden ware manufacturers, and on the decease of his
father (a few years ago), continued the business, which has increased
and developed under his management. Prior to the confederation of the
provinces he held a captain’s commission in the 9th Halifax militia, and
since 1867 holds the commission of a captain in the militia reserve. He
was elected an alderman for the city of Halifax in 1882, and was again
re-elected in 1885. During that period he has filled many responsible
positions such as chairman of the Board of Works of the city; chairman
of the Public Gardens Commission; and joint delegate with Mayor J. C.
Mackintosh and Hon. Dr. Farrell in the St. John-Halifax delegation to
Ottawa, on the Dry Dock and Short Line Railway matters, in 1885. He was
one of the executive committee of the Dominion Exhibition of 1881, and
was one of the most zealous movers in that successful exposition. He is
an active promoter of the Victoria School of Art and Design, established
in Halifax, 1887, in honor of her Majesty’s jubilee. Mr. Stephen is a
Royal Arch Mason and P.M. of Virgin lodge, No. 3, R.N.S., with which he
has been connected for twenty years. He is a Liberal in politics and an
uncompromising free trader, though engaged in, and very successfully
carrying on one of the best protected trades, viz.: furniture, wooden
ware and house furnishings. Has in his employ a large number of men at
his factory and warerooms in Halifax. The factory is situate number 162
to 166 Grafton street, and extends through to Albermarle street. The
ware rooms are on the corner of Barrington and Prince streets, adjoining
the Y. M. C. A. building, and are very extensive. He has lately added
the house furnishings branch, carpets, oil cloths, and draperies, to his
extensive business which is still carried on under the old style, A.
Stephen & Son. He is a Presbyterian. He married August 19, 1873, Sadie
Cogswell, daughter of late Rev. John Cogswell, of Halifax, and has a
family.
* * * * *
=Hill, Hon. George Frederick=, St. Stephen, N.B., is a son of the late
Hon. George S. Hill, a barrister of extensive connections, who sat for
twenty-eight years in the House of Assembly and the Legislative Council
of New Brunswick. Hon. Mr. Hill was born at St. Stephen in February,
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