A Cyclopaedia of Canadian Biography: Being Chiefly Men of the Time by Rose
1810. Being poor working people, they were only able to give their son a
4145 words | Chapter 89
common school education; and at the early age of thirteen he was
apprenticed to a general merchant. Here he remained until he was
sixteen, and then started business on his own account. He visited
Halifax and made his own purchases, and after a few years’ successful
operations, he began to import his merchandise direct from foreign
markets, and has continued to do so ever since. In 1866, he joined the
Orange association by becoming a member of Derry lodge, No. 25, Truro,
and is still a member of the same lodge. He occupied the position of
worshipful master three years, and at the present time is grand master
of the Grand Orange lodge of Nova Scotia. In 1873 he joined the
Independent Order of Good Templars, and was elected chief templar the
same year. In 1878 he was sent as a delegate to the Grand Lodge of Nova
Scotia, and was nominated for grand chief templar, but declined. In 1880
he was elected one of the delegates to the Right Worthy Grand Lodge
which met in New York city in 1880; also to Washington in 1884; Toronto
in 1885; Richmond in 1886; and to Saratoga in 1887; and at Washington
session was elected right worthy grand marshal. In 1880, he was elected
grand chief templar of his own Grand Lodge. He held the office for four
successive years; but on being elected the fifth time, he resigned, and
was unanimously elected grand secretary. This office he held for two
years, declining re-election at the last session of the Grand Lodge, on
account of business engagements. When he assumed the office of grand
chief templar in 1880, the Grand Lodge for Nova Scotia had less than
2,000 members, with a debt of over $400; but when he retired from the
office the membership was over 6,000, and a surplus of cash on hand.
During the four years he held the office of grand chief templar, he
travelled extensively through the province of Nova Scotia as a lecturer
and organizer, and was very successful. In 1886 he received an
appointment as deputy right worthy grand templar from his very intimate
friend, the late Hon. John B. Finch, R.W.G.T., and two weeks afterward
he received a commission to proceed at once to Newfoundland and look
after the interests of Good Templary there. His trip was a grand
success, and on the eve of leaving the island he was tendered a grand
reception and was presented with a very flattering address, signed by
the leading Good Templars of Newfoundland. For three years he held the
position of chairman of lecture work, and it was through his influence
that the following celebrated lecturers visited Nova Scotia, New
Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island, namely, Hon. John B. Finch, Colonel
J. J. Hickman, Lou. J. Beauchamp, Hon. John Sobieskie, Professor
Crozier, and others. In one year he reported over 300 lectures delivered
and 60 lodges organized; the greatest number of lodges ever organized in
one year in Nova Scotia. At the present time he holds no office in the
Grand Lodge, but he is ever in demand as a lecturer and organizer. At
the present time he is president and manager of the Nova Scotia lecture
and concert bureau. He is a member of the Independent Order of
Foresters. In politics, Mr. Chisholm has always been a strong Liberal;
and in religion, a Presbyterian. Mr. Chisholm has been in business for
twenty years in the town of Truro, and no one living in that beautiful
town takes such great delight as he does in pointing out its beauty and
advocating its advancement. During the last ten years great inducements
have been offered him to leave his beautiful town, but to all such
offers up to the present time he has given a refusal. In 1872 he married
Bessie A. Cock, of Brookside, Colchester county. Her great-grandfather,
Rev. Daniel Cock, was the first settled Presbyterian minister in the
province of Nova Scotia. This is the oldest Presbyterian church in the
Dominion. The Rev. William McCulloch, D.D., who retired from the
ministry about a year ago, was pastor of the above congregation
forty-eight years. Rev. John Robbins, late of Glencoe, Ontario, is now
pastor of this church. Mr. Chisholm has been blessed with a family of
two boys. Mrs. Chisholm is a very active church member; a worker in the
Women’s Christian Temperance Union, and other moral reforms.
* * * * *
=Guillet, Major George=, Merchant, Cobourg, Ontario, M.P. for West
Northumberland, Ontario, was born in Cobourg, on the 19th July, 1840.
His father, John Guillet, was born in St. Helier, Island of Jersey, and
after coming to America resided several years in St. John’s,
Newfoundland, where he acted as agent for a Jersey firm engaged in the
fisheries. His mother, Charlotte Payne, was the second daughter of John
Payne, and was born in Frome, Somersetshire, England. Mr. Guillet
received his elementary education at the public schools, and at a
private school of John Wilson, M.A., LL.D., and then entered Victoria
College, Cobourg. He enlisted at the time of the _Trent_ difficulty in
the Cobourg Rifle Company, was promoted to the ensigncy of that company,
and afterwards received a lieutenant’s commission in No. 2 company, 40th
battalion, becoming its captain in October, 1873. He is now
quartermaster of the 40th, with the rank of major. He sat in the
municipal council of Cobourg seven years, and was also for four years
mayor and commissioner of the town trust. His municipal career was
marked by the liberal encouragement given to the manufacturing interests
of the town; the obtaining of the passage of an act in the Ontario
legislature providing a property qualification for commissioners of the
town trust, and declaring the position shall be held without emolument,
save by the chairman and treasurer of the board. Several important
street improvements in the town also owe their origin to him. In
addition, he was active in promoting the educational interests of
Cobourg, particularly in getting erected the Faraday Science Hall, in
connection with Victoria University, and the Collegiate Institute. He
contested the West Riding of Northumberland in the provincial election
of 1879, but was defeated by 21 votes. On the resignation of the Hon.
James Cockburn, in 1881, Mr. Guillet was nominated for the vacant seat,
and was elected by a majority of 79 votes over the Reform candidate,
George Waters, M.D. He was re-elected at the general election of 1882,
but his election having been voided by the Supreme Court, he was again
nominated for re-election, and was returned, defeating for the second
time his opponent of 1882, William Kerr. At the general election of
1887, he again defeated the Reform candidate, J. H. Dumble, police
magistrate of Cobourg, and now represents West Northumberland in the
House of Commons at Ottawa. He is a firm supporter of British
connection, and all lines of national policy consistent therewith. He
is, however, in favour of reciprocal trade in natural products with the
United States, and the abolition of the canal tolls on Canadian trade.
While he is opposed to frequent changes in the British North America
Act, he favours the idea of transferring the power of prohibiting the
sale of intoxicating liquors to the provinces. In the session of 1882,
he introduced the bill granting to seamen a first lien and the right of
recovery of wages in _rem_, and by a summary process, which resulted in
the amendment of the Merchants’ Shipping Act of 1873 to that effect; and
he received the thanks of the Seamen’s Union for obtaining these
concessions. He is opposed to commercial union, on the ground of
impracticability, save at the sacrifice of distinctively Canadian
interests and institutions, and at the cost of humiliation and dishonour
to the Canadian name. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, also of
the Oddfellows, and the Ancient Order of United Workmen. In politics Mr.
Guillet is a Liberal-Conservative, and in religion an adherent of the
Methodist church. He has lived continuously in Cobourg since the day of
his birth, and has been engaged in the wholesale and retail grocery and
crockery business for over twenty-five years. This business was first
established by John Guillet, and is now one of the oldest of its kind in
Cobourg. Mr. Guillet has been a successful merchant; his career not
having been interrupted by either suspension, assignment, or compromise.
In addition to his regular line of business, he has invested
considerable of his means in lake shipping.
* * * * *
=McKinnon, Hon. John=, Farmer and Trader, Whycocomagh, M.P.P. for
Inverness, Nova Scotia, was born at Whycocomagh, Cape Breton, Nova
Scotia, on the 14th July, 1833. The family belongs to the McKinnons, of
Skye, Scotland, and the subject of our sketch is the second son of
Lauchlan McKinnon, who emigrated to Cape Breton from North Uist in 1828.
His mother was Anna McLean. Mr. McKinnon received his education at the
Free Church College, in Halifax. Apart from his business operations, he
has devoted a good deal of his time to public concerns. He taught for
several years, as Grammar school teacher in Halifax and Victoria
counties. He was gazetted captain in No. 5 Inverness Infantry of
militia, previous to confederation. In 1874 he was elected to represent
the county of Inverness in the House of Assembly of Nova Scotia. In May,
1875, he was sworn in as member of the Executive Council, and held
office without a portfolio in the Hill administration until its
resignation, in October, 1878. He was an unsuccessful candidate at the
general elections, held in 1878 and 1882; but at the general election in
1886 he was again returned to the Legislature by his old constituency.
Mr. McKinnon was a strong supporter of confederation, and assisted in
promoting the building of the railway extension from New Glasgow to the
Strait of Canso. He takes a deep interest in the temperance movement,
and has held several offices in the orders of the Sons of Temperance and
Good Templars. He actively supports the Scott Act. In politics, he is a
Liberal; and in religion, an adherent of the Presbyterian church. He was
married on the 19th December, 1878, to Harriet, daughter of the late D.
McQueen, of Sydney, Cape Breton.
* * * * *
=Owens, William=, Stonefield, Lachute, M.P.P. for Argenteuil, was born
at Stonefield, province of Quebec, in 1840. His father, Owen Owens, was
a native of Denbigh, Wales, and his mother, Charlotte Lindley, of
Brantford, England. Mr. Owens received his education in the schools of
his native parish; and afterwards adopted commerce as his profession. In
1861 he joined his brother in partnership, under the firm name of T. &
W. Owens, and they have since carried on an extensive business as
merchants and forwarders, until 1887, when Mr. Owens retired from
business. Mr. Owens was an officer in the active militia from 1863 to
1883, and retired with the rank of captain. For many years he held the
position of postmaster of Chatham, and also filled several terms as
councillor, and latterly as mayor, of the township of Chatham. In 1881
he entered political life, and at the general election of that year was
returned to the Legislative Assembly of Quebec province, as
representative of his native county. At the general election held in
1886 he was again elected for Argenteuil, this time by acclamation. In
politics Mr. Owens is a Conservative; and in religion is an adherent of
the Church of England. He is a widower.
* * * * *
=Taschereau, Hon. Henry T.=, B.L., B.C.L., Montreal, Judge of the
Superior Court of the province of Quebec, was born in the city of
Quebec, on the 6th October, 1841. He is the son of the Hon. Jean Thomas
Taschereau, late one of the judges of the Supreme Court of the Dominion,
who, after being on the bench for nineteen years, was forced to resign
his position in consequence of ill-health, in October, 1878. His
grandfather, Hon. Jean Thomas Taschereau, was in his lifetime one of the
puisne judges of the Court of Queen’s Bench of Lower Canada, and his
grandmother, Marie Panet, was a daughter of the Hon. Jean Panet, first
speaker of the House of Assembly for Quebec province, which he held for
twenty consecutive years. Judge Taschereau, the subject of our sketch,
is the fifth member of the Taschereau family who have sat on the bench
of the province of Quebec, or of the dominion of Canada, and is a nephew
of his Eminence the Cardinal Archbishop of Quebec. The family is one of
the oldest and most distinguished in that province, its founder in
Canada having been Thomas Jacques, of Touraine, France, son of
Christopher Taschereau, King’s counsellor, director of the mint, and
treasurer of the city of Tours. This gentleman came to Canada about the
beginning of the last century, was appointed treasurer of the marine,
and in 1736 obtained the cession of a seigniory on the banks of the
Chaudière river, Quebec province. Judge Taschereau was educated at the
Quebec Seminary, and at Laval University, and received from Laval the
degree of B.L., in 1861, and B.C.L. in 1862. He took up law as a
profession, and practised in Quebec, with marked success, until he was
elevated to the bench, in 1878. He was at one time a member of the city
council of Quebec, and represented the city on the North Shore Railway
Board. In 1862 he edited the newspaper, _Les Debats_, and in 1863 was
one of the editors of _La Tribune_, of Quebec. He entered active
political life in 1863, and ran as candidate for the county of
Dorchester in the Legislative Assembly of Canada, but failed to secure
his election. In 1872 he was more successful, and was returned as member
for Montmagny county to the House of Commons. In 1874 he again presented
himself for election, and was returned by acclamation. In politics, he
was a Liberal. Being possessed of good talents and fine culture, with a
good judicial mind, he has already done credit to his family of eminent
parents. He was first married to a daughter of E. L. Pacaud, advocate of
Arthabaska, on the 22nd June, 1864, and has a family of nine children.
After the death of his first wife (Nov., 1883), he married in April,
1885, Mrs. Marie Masson, widow, of Montreal, sister-in-law of
ex-Lieut.-Governor Masson. No children by last marriage.
* * * * *
=McLachlan, Alexander=, Erin, Ontario, was born at the Brig o’ Johnston,
Scotland, in the year 1820. He is the son of a mechanic, and has had few
of the advantages to be derived from a liberal education, yet from
boyhood he was a great reader, and thus became acquainted with the works
of the principal British authors. In early life he was apprenticed to a
tailor, and worked at his trade for many years. In this way he fostered
his inborn love of song, as few occupations are more conducive to the
growth of poetic sentiment than a mechanical movement of the fingers,
which leaves thought free to soar to heights that idleness could never
hope to attain. In early life he became connected with the Chartist
movement, but afterwards changed his views. In 1840 he emigrated to
Canada, and, for a short time, made his home in the wild-wood; but since
appearing before the public as an author and lecturer, he has resided at
Erin, Wellington county, Ontario. The height of Mr. McLachlan’s ambition
is to be to Canada what Burns was to Scotland: the poet of the people;
and in this, we think, he has succeeded thus far. We cannot say that a
greater than he may not appear in the future; but we have not yet seen
any volume of Canadian verse equal to his in the simplicity that goes to
the heart of the poor and lowly. In this respect he meets a want of the
community, and occupies a position of honor that a poet of higher
culture might vainly aspire to fill. It does not fall to the lot of
every man to receive an education that will enable him to appreciate the
classic beauties of a “Mulvaney” or a “Roberts,” or the chaste imagery
of a “Maclean”; nor has nature gifted everyone with the “wild wealth of
imagination” (we quote Collins) that would lead him to revel in the
love-songs, of a “Caris Sima”; but what Canadian farmer, with a soul
large enough to survive the transit to another sphere, would not feel
the pathos of the lines that he writes on the death of his ox. This
poem, though faulty in construction, brings the trials and sufferings of
the early settler so graphically before the reader that it is impossible
for us to overlook it. We quote the following lines:
Here, single-handed, in the bush, I battled on for years;
My heart sometimes buoyed up with hope; sometimes bowed down with
fears.
I had misfortunes not a few, e’en from the very first;
But take them altogether, “Bright,” thy death’s the very worst.
And again he writes,
How can I ever clear the land? How can I drag the wheat?
How can I keep my credit good? How can my children eat?
The reader of these lines, perhaps, at the moment, a judge of the
supreme court, a member of parliament, or a minister of the Gospel, will
instantly look back to his boyhood’s days and see the meek-eyed oxen
standing before the log-cabin door, from which issues the form of his
father, bearing a long slender switch, which he twirls round in front of
the gentle animals as he says “haw, Buck, gee, Bright”; and again he
will see them struggling in the yoke, their wide-spreading horns
clashing together as they draw the great logs into a heap for the
burning; and seeing the result of the early settlers’ efforts in the
magnificent stretches of cleared land, and waving fields of grain, he
will sing, with our poet, in patriotic strain:
Hurrah! for the grand old forest land,
Where freedom spreads her pinion;
Hurrah with me, for the maple tree,
Hurrah! for the new Dominion.
It is, though portrayed in the humblest language, a very pathetic
picture he draws of “Old Hannah,” poor old woman, husband and children
all gone, sitting, on the Sabbath morn, on the doorstep of her desolate
home, with her Bible on her knee, looking as sweetly patient as only
those purified by affliction can look, and silently teaching us to thank
God for the suffering that alone can fit us for the kingdom of heaven.
We quote these lines:
In her faded widow’s cap;
She is sitting alone
On the old grey stone
With her Bible in her lap.
. . . . . .
Her years are o’er three score and ten,
And her eyes are waxing dim,
But the page is bright
With a living light,
And her heart leaps up to Him
Who pours the mystic harmony
Which the soul can only hear,
She is not alone
On the old grey stone,
Though no earthly friend is near.
For his poem, “Halls of Holyrood,” Mr. McLachlan, in a world-wide
competition, won the prize offered some years ago by the _Glasgow
Workman_ newspaper, for a national song for Scotland. In 1863 he was
appointed by the Canadian government to lecture throughout Great Britain
in favor of emigration to Canada. He has also lectured in the principal
Canadian towns and villages on various subjects. He speaks with much
earnestness and simplicity. As a poet, we would say, Mr. McLachlan has
written many pretty musical pieces, while all his work evinces much
force, fervor, and simplicity. Here is a line of great beauty that he
gives birth to when he speaks of the humming bird as
Wandering spirit of the flowers.
And here is a pretty stanza from “Indian Summer”:
Down from the blue the sun has driven,
And stands between the earth and heaven,
In robes of smouldering flame;
A smoking cloud before him hung,
A mystic veil, for which no tongue
Of earth can find a name;
And o’er him bends the vault of blue;
With shadowy faces looking through
The azure deep profound;
The stillness of eternity,
A glory and a mystery,
Encompass him around.
The air is thick with golden haze,
The woods are in a dreamy maze,
The earth enchanted seems.
Have we not left the realms of care
And entered in the regions fair,
We see in blissful dreams?
Here our poet has left the logging-field and is enjoying the beauties of
nature, while giving more attention to the rhythmic tone of the muse. We
understand that Mr. McLachlan is now writing for _Grip_, and we have
seen some lines of his entitled “May Song” which, as a lyric, is far in
advance of his previous work. We give the first stanza:
Now morn is ascending from out the dark sea,
A light crimson veil hanging o’er her;
The lark leaves her nest on the bonny green lea,
And flutters aloft to adore her.
And, oh, how the living beams revel and leap!
In purple and gold to enfold her;
And how the wild cataract roused on the steep,
Is shouting with joy to behold her.
Here is good word-painting, and shows what heights our poet is capable
of attaining. We would say, in conclusion, that we think Mr. McLachlan
should be looked upon as a benefactor to his country, in that he has
thrown a halo over the humblest home. Well would it be, for those who
are seized with the “brick and mortar craze” of the present day, to
pause and read “The Old Settler’s Address to his Old Log House,” before
he lays the foundation stone of the new brick mansion that too often
leads to ruin, and sometimes to disgrace.
* * * * *
=O’Connor, Hon. John=, Q.C., Puisne Judge of the Divisional Court of
Queen’s Bench, who died at Cobourg, on the 3rd November, 1887, was of
Irish descent. His parents, both of whom were named O’Connor, were
representatives of two distinct branches of that family, and emigrated
in 1823 from Kerry to Boston, Massachusetts, where deceased was born, in
January, 1824. Four years later his parents removed to Canada, and
settled in Essex county, Ontario, where he grew to manhood. When about
nineteen years of age he sustained an accident which materially
influenced his future career. While cutting timber on his father’s farm
a heavy tree fell upon him, jambing one of his legs in the brushwood.
Young O’Connor struggled hard to liberate the limb, but failed, and as
night was fast approaching, and a biting frost prevailed, he feared he
might be frozen to death. There was no hope of assistance. Under these
desperate circumstances the young fellow took out his jackknife, cut off
the limb, and crawled to his home over the snow, bleeding profusely.
This disabled the future judge for manual labor, and from that date he
devoted all his energies to study. Mr. O’Connor was called to the bar in
1854, settled down to practice in Windsor, and was successful, not only
in gaining a profitable business, but in acquiring a good deal of local
influence, political and otherwise. He was also a member of the Michigan
bar. He filled the offices of reeve of Windsor, warden of Essex, and
chairman of the Windsor School Board. In politics, he was a
Conservative, and in religion a Roman Catholic. Mr. O’Connor represented
Essex in the Canadian Assembly for a short period, and he was member of
the same constituency in the House of Commons from 1867 to 1873, being
one of Sir John Macdonald’s cabinet from 1872 till it resigned in 1873.
Defeated in Essex in 1874, he was out of Parliament until 1878, when he
was elected for Russell county, and again became a member of the
Conservative government, holding the portfolios successively of
president of the Council, postmaster-general, and secretary of state.
From the cabinet he went to the bench, having been a judge of the
Ontario Queen’s Bench since September, 1884.
* * * * *
=Moffat, William=, Treasurer of the county of Renfrew, Pembroke,
Ontario, was born on the 29th November, 1825, in Haddingtonshire,
Scotland. His father, Alexander Moffat, came to Pembroke in 1840, and
laid out the village (now town) of Pembroke. He was its first
postmaster, and subsequently became an extensive mill owner. In his day
he was a leading Reformer, and was on one occasion nominated by his
party to represent it in the Legislative Council, but declined the
honor. Mr. Moffat’s mother was Margaret Dickson Purvis, who died in
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