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{{Short description|Prime Minister of Canada (1867–1873; 1878–1891)}}
{{otherpeople|John Alexander Macdonald}}
{{About|the Canadian prime minister|people with similar names|John Macdonald (disambiguation)|and|John Alexander Macdonald (disambiguation)}}
{{Infobox Prime Minister
{{Pp-vandalism|small=yes}}
| honorific-prefix =<small>]</small><br>
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2013}}
| name =Sir John A. Macdonald
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2024}}
| honorific-suffix =<br><small>] ] ] ]</small></br>
{{Infobox officeholder
| image =John A Macdonald-Brady-Handy-crop.jpg
| honorific_prefix = ]
| imagesize = 245px
| order = 1st | name = Sir John A. Macdonald
| honorific_suffix = {{post-nominals|country=CAN|GCB|PC|QC|size=100%}}
| office =Prime Minister of Canada
| image = John A Macdonald (ca. 1875).jpg
| term_start1 =July 1, 1867
| alt = Photograph of Macdonald circa 1875 by George Lancefield.
| term_end1 =November 5, 1873
| caption = Macdonald, {{circa}} 1875
| predecessor1 =
| order = 1st
| monarch =]
| office = Prime Minister of Canada
| successor1 =]
| term_start2 =October 17, 1878 | term_start = 17 October 1878
| term_end2 =June 6, 1891 | term_end = 6 June 1891
| predecessor2 =] | monarch = ]
| governor_general = {{plainlist|
| successor2 =]
* ]
| birth_date =10 or 11 January 1815
* ]
| birth_place =], ]
* ]
| death_date ={{death date and age |1891|6|6|1815|1|11}}
* ]
| death_place =], ], ]
| party =]
| religion =]; later ]
| spouse =] (1st wife)<br>] (2nd wife)
| children = John Alexander (died in infancy) and ] by Isabella;<br>Mary by Agnes.
| alma_mater = none (articled with a lawyer in Kingston)
| occupation = Politician, statesman
| profession = ]
| signature = John A MacDonald Signature-rt.svg
}} }}
| predecessor = ]
| successor = ]
| term_start1 = 1 July 1867
| term_end1 = 5 November 1873
| monarch1 = Victoria
| governor_general1 = {{plainlist|
* ]
* ]
* The Earl of Dufferin
}}
| predecessor2 = ''Office established''
| successor2 = Alexander Mackenzie
| office3 = Leader of the ]
| term_start3 = 1 July 1867
| term_end3 = 6 June 1891
| predecessor3 = ''Position established''
| successor3 = John Abbott
| order4 = ] of the ]
| term_start4 = 1867
| term_end4 = 6 June 1891
| office5 = ]
| term_start5 = 30 May 1864
| term_end5 = 30 June 1867
| monarch5 = Victoria
| predecessor5 = ]
| successor5 = ''Position abolished''
| term_start6 = 6 August 1858
| term_end6 = 24 May 1862
| monarch6 = Victoria
| predecessor6 = ]
| successor6 = John Sandfield Macdonald
| term_start7 = 24 May 1856
| term_end7 = 2 August 1858
| monarch7 = Victoria
| predecessor7 = ]
| successor7 = George Brown
| birth_name = John Alexander Mcdonald{{efn|name=officialbirthrecord}}
| birth_date = 10 or 11 January 1815{{efn|name=born}}
| birth_place = ], Scotland
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1891|6|6|1815|1|11}}
| death_place = ], Ontario, Canada
| resting_place = ]
| party = ]
| otherparty = {{unbulleted list|] (1843–1867)|] (1864–1867)|] (1867–1873)}}
| spouse = {{plainlist|
* {{marriage|]|1843|1857|end=died}}
* {{marriage|]|1867}}
}}
| children = 3, including ]
| education = ]
| profession = {{hlist|Politician|lawyer}}
| signature = John A Macdonald signature.svg
| nickname = {{hlist|"Old Tomorrow"|"The Old Chieftain"}}
| allegiance = ]
| branch = ]
| unit = ]<br>]
| serviceyears = 1837-1838
| rank = ]<br>]
| battles = ]
*]
| footnotes = {{Collapsible list
|titlestyle= background-color:lavender;text-align:center;
|title=Cabinet offices held
|bullets=no
|] (1854–1862, 1864–1867)
|] for the ] (1860–1867)
|] (1867–1873)
|] (1878–1883, 1888)
|] (1878–1887, 1888)
|] (1883–1889)
|] (1889–1891)
}}
----
{{Collapsible list
|titlestyle= background-color:lavender;text-align:center;
|title=Leadership offices held
|bullets=no
|Leader of the ] (1858–1867)
|] (1867–1891)
|] (1873–1878)
}}
----
{{Collapsible list
|titlestyle= background-color:lavender;text-align:center;
|title=Parliamentary offices held
|bullets = on
|Member of the ] (1843–1867)
|Member of the ] for Kingston (1867–1878, 1887–1891)
|Member of the Canadian Parliament for Marquette (1878)
|Member of the Canadian Parliament for Victoria (1878–1882)
|Member of the Canadian Parliament for Lennox (1882)
|Member of the Canadian Parliament for Carleton (1882–1887)
}}
}}
{{Conservatism in Canada|People}}
'''Sir John Alexander Macdonald'''{{efn|name=officialbirthrecord}}, {{post-nominals|country=CAN|GCB|PC|QC}} (10 or 11 January 1815{{efn|name=born}} – 6 June 1891) was the first ], serving from 1867 to 1873 and from 1878 until his death in 1891. He was the ] of ], and had a political career that spanned almost half a century.


Macdonald was born in ]; when he was a boy his family immigrated to ] in the Province of ] (today in eastern ]). As a lawyer, he was involved in several high-profile cases and quickly became prominent in Kingston, which elected him in 1844 to the legislature of the ]. By 1857, he had become ] under the colony's unstable political system. In 1864, when no party proved capable of governing for long, he agreed to a proposal from his political rival, ], that the parties unite in a ] to seek federation and political reform. He was a leading figure in the subsequent discussions and conferences which resulted in the ] and the establishment of Canada as a nation on 1 July 1867.
'''Sir John Alexander Macdonald''', ], ], ], ], (11 January<ref name="Pope">Pope, Sir Joseph (1930) ''Memoirs of The Right Honourable John Alexander Macdonald''. Toronto: ON: The Musson Book Company Ltd., p.3. Pope relates that Hugh Macdonald recorded the time of Sir John's birth as 4:15, January 11, 1815.</ref> 1815 &ndash; 6 June 1891) was the ] ] of ] and the dominant figure of ]. Macdonald's tenure in office spanned 18 years, making him the second longest serving Prime Minister of Canada. He is the only Canadian Prime Minister to win six ]s. He was the major proponent of a national ], the ], completed in 1885, linking Canada from the ] to the ]. He won praise for having helped forge a nation of sprawling geographic size, with two diverse ] colonial origins, numerous ] nations, and a multiplicity of cultural backgrounds and political views.


Macdonald was the first prime minister of the new nation, and served 19&nbsp;years; only ] has served longer. In his first term, he established the ] and expanded Canada by annexing the ], ], ], and ]. In 1873, he resigned from office over ] in which his party took bribes from businessmen seeking the contract to build the ]. He was reelected in ]. His greatest achievements were building and guiding a successful national government for the new Dominion, using patronage to forge a strong ], promoting the protective tariff of the ], and completing the railway. He fought to block provincial efforts to take power back from the national government in ]. He approved the execution of ] leader ] for treason in 1885 which alienated many ] from his Conservative Party. He sat until his death in 1891 and remains the oldest Canadian prime minister.
==Early years, 1815–1835==
John Alexander Macdonald was born in Glasgow Scotland on 11 January 1815. Although 10 January is the official date recorded in the Glasgow Registry Office, 11 January is the day Macdonald and his family celebrated his birthday.<ref name="Waite">Waite, P.B. (1976) ''John A. Macdonald''. Don Mills: ON: Fitzhenry and Whiteside Limited, p.7.</ref>His father was Hugh Macdonald, an unsuccessful merchant, who had married Helen Shaw, on 21 October 1811.<ref>Phenix, Patricia. (2007) ''Private Demons: The Tragic Personal Life of John A. Macdonald''. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart Ltd. p.6.</ref> Together, they produced five children. The first-born, William died in infancy. The next was Margaret who was followed a year and a half later by John Alexander, then a younger brother, James and a baby sister named Louisa. After the failure of Hugh Macdonald's business ventures, the family immigrated to ], ] in 1820 along with thousands of others seeking affordable land and promises of prosperity.<ref>Swainson, Donald. (1989) ''Sir John A. Macdonald: The Man and the Politician''. Kingston, ON: Quarry Press, p.17.</ref>
Bad luck followed the family to their new country. Macdonald watched as his younger brother James was struck and killed by a drunken servant who was supposed to be looking after them.<ref>Pope, Joseph. (1894) ''Memoirs of the Right Honourable Sir John Alexander Macdonald'', vol.1. Ottawa: J. Durie and Son, p.5. The death was treated as an accident.</ref> Hugh Macdonald's business ventures in the Kingston area were scarcely more successful than they had been in Scotland.<ref>Pope, p.3.</ref> The family managed to scrape up the money to send Macdonald to Kingston's Midland Grammar School where, according to biographer ], he studied subjects such as Latin, French and mathematics. "Already he was a voracious reader," Creighton writes, "and he would sit for hours deep in a book, almost oblivious to what was going on."<ref>Creighton, Donald (1952) ''John A. Macdonald: The Young Politician''. Toronto: The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited, p.14–15.</ref> At 14, Macdonald switched to a school for "general and classical education" founded by a newly arrived ] minister from Scotland. It was one of the few schools in Upper Canada that taught both boys and girls.<ref>Creighton, pp.17–18</ref>
Macdonald's formal schooling ended at 15, which was common when only the most prosperous were able to attend university.<ref>Creighton, p.18.</ref> Nevertheless, Macdonald later regretted leaving school when he did, remarking to his private secretary ] that if he had attended university, he might have embarked on a literary career. "He did not add, as he might have done," Pope wrote in his biography of Macdonald, "that the successful government of millions of men, the strengthening of an empire, the creation of a great dominion, call for the possession and exercise of rarer qualities than are necessary to the achievement of literary fame."<ref>Pope, pp.4–5.</ref>


Macdonald came under criticism for his role in the ] and federal ], including his actions during the ] that resulted in Riel's execution, and the development of the ] designed to ] Indigenous children. He remains respected by others for his key role in Confederation. ] have consistently made him one of the highest-rated in ].
==Law career, 1830–1843==
===Professional training, 1830–1836===
Macdonald's parents decided he should become a lawyer after leaving school.<ref name="SW19">Swainson, p.19.</ref> As Donald Creighton writes, "law was a broad, well-trodden path to comfort, influence, even to power." It was also "the obvious choice for a boy who seemed as attracted to study as he was uninterested in trade."<ref>Creighton, p.19.</ref> Besides, Macdonald needed to start earning money immediately to support his family because his father's business ventures were failing. "I had no boyhood," he complained many years later. "From the age of 15, I began to earn my own living."<ref>Pope, p.6.</ref>
]


==Early years, 1815–1830 ==
Macdonald travelled by steamboat to ] (then known as ]), where he passed an examination set by the ].<ref>Gwyn, p.34.</ref> In 1830, there were no law schools, so prospective lawyers wrote the entrance exam, then learned the trade through on-the-job training by articling with an established lawyer. Macdonald was extremely fortunate to begin his apprenticeship with George Mackenzie, a young lawyer who was a prominent member of Kingston's rising Scottish community. Mackenzie practised corporate law, a lucrative specialty that Macdonald himself would later pursue.<ref>Gwyn, pp.46–47.</ref> A promising law student, Macdonald was managing a branch office for Mackenzie in ] at age 17. It meant much more independence and responsibility.<ref>Creighton, p.25.</ref> In 1833, Mackenzie permitted his articling student to leave his firm to run the law practice of Macdonald's ailing cousin, Lowther Pennington Macpherson, at ]. By all accounts, the 19-year-old Macdonald did well.<ref>Swainson, p.21.</ref> But in the summer of 1835, he decided to return to Kingston to open his own practice after George Mackenzie's sudden death during a cholera epidemic.<ref>Creighton, p.34.</ref> Biographer Donald Swainson writes that Macdonald was determined to step into Mackenzie's shoes as the "leading lawyer within Kingston's Scottish Presbyterian community, a community that was quickly becoming the dominant force in the life of the city."<ref>Swainson, pp.21&23.</ref>
John Alexander Macdonald was born{{efn|name=officialbirthrecord}} in ] parish in ], Scotland, on 10 January (official record) or 11 (father's journal) 1815.{{efn|name=born}}<ref name=Haggis>{{cite web | url=http://www.happyhaggis.co.uk/lanark-ramshorn.htm | title=Ramshorn Cemetery Glasgow, Lanarkshire. | publisher=Happy Haggis | access-date=29 June 2017 | archive-date=2 August 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200802194712/http://www.happyhaggis.co.uk/lanark-ramshorn.htm | url-status=live }}</ref> His father Hugh, an unsuccessful merchant, had married John's mother, Helen Shaw, on 21 October 1811.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=6}} John Alexander Macdonald was the third of five children. After Hugh's business ventures left him in debt, the family immigrated to ], in ] (today the southern and eastern portions of Ontario), in 1820, as the family had several relatives and connections there.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=13}}


The family initially lived together, then resided over a store which Hugh Macdonald ran. Soon after their arrival, John's younger brother James died from a blow to the head by a servant charged with taking care of the boys. After Hugh's store failed, the family moved to Hay Bay (south of ]), west of Kingston, where Hugh unsuccessfully ran another shop. In 1829, his father was appointed as a magistrate for the ].{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=23}} John Macdonald's mother was a lifelong influence on her son, helping him in his difficult first marriage and remaining influential in his life until her 1862 death.{{sfn|Smith|McLeod|1989|p=1}}
===Early successes, 1836–1837===

Macdonald was then ] on 6 February 1836.<ref>Johnson J.K. and Waite P.B. (2007) "Sir John Alexander Macdonald" in ''Canada's Prime Ministers, Macdonald to Trudeau: Portraits from the Canadian Dictionary of Biography'', p.1. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.</ref> Soon after opening his own law firm he took in two students: ], a future premier of Ontario and like Macdonald himself, a Father of ], and ], future Father of Confederation, federal cabinet minister and ].<ref> Pope, p.8.</ref> With the help of his students, Macdonald "busied himself with lucrative but tedious work, such as chasing down unpaid bills and searching titles."<ref>Gwyn, pp.48–49.</ref> Then suddenly, in 1837, Macdonald switched to criminal law for two years. Biographer ] writes that although there's no documentary evidence, there is a "plausible explanation" for Macdonald's motives:
Macdonald initially attended local schools. When he was aged 10, his family gathered enough money to send him to ] in Kingston.{{sfn|Smith|McLeod|1989|p=1}} Macdonald's formal schooling ended at 15, a common school-leaving age at a time when only children from the most prosperous families were able to attend university.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|p=18}} Macdonald later regretted leaving school when he did, remarking to his secretary ] that if he had attended university, he might have embarked on a literary career.{{sfn|Pope|1894|p=4}}
<blockquote>

As a criminal lawyer who took on dramatic cases, Macdonald got himself noticed well beyond the narrow confines of the Kingston business community. He was operating now in the arena where he would spend by far the greatest part of his life --- the court of public opinion. And while there he was learning the arts of argument and of persuasion that would serve him all his political life.<ref>Gwyn, p.49.</ref>
==Legal career, 1830–1843 ==
</blockquote>

Macdonald unsuccessfully defended a man accused of raping an eight-year-old girl but won praise from a local newspaper for conducting "a very able defence." He then won the acquittal of a man accused of murdering a friend after an argument. Alexander Campbell, Macdonald's student, wrote years later that Macdonald had persuaded the jury by his "humour and strong liking for anecdote more than for his professional knowledge."<ref>The details of these cases are recounted in Gywn, pp.49–50.</ref>
===Legal training and early career, 1830–1837 ===
Macdonald's parents decided he should become a lawyer after leaving school.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=19}} As ] (who penned a two-volume biography of Macdonald in the 1950s) wrote, "law was a broad, well-trodden path to comfort, influence, even to power".{{sfn|Creighton|1952|p=19}} It was also "the obvious choice for a boy who seemed as attracted to study as he was uninterested in trade."{{sfn|Creighton|1952|p=19}} Macdonald needed to start earning money immediately to support his family because his father's businesses were failing. "I had no boyhood," he complained many years later. "From the age of 15, I began to earn my own living."{{sfn|Pope|1894|p=6}}

]

Macdonald travelled by steamboat to Toronto (known until 1834 as ]), where he passed an examination set by ]. British North America had no law schools in 1830; students were examined when beginning and ending their tutelage. Between the two examinations, they were apprenticed, or articled to established lawyers.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|pp=19–20}} Macdonald began his apprenticeship with George Mackenzie, a prominent young lawyer who was a well-regarded member of Kingston's rising Scottish community. Mackenzie practised corporate law, a lucrative speciality that Macdonald himself would later pursue.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|pp=46–47}} Macdonald was a promising student, and in the summer of 1833, managed the Mackenzie office when his employer went on a business trip to Montreal and Quebec in ] (today the southern portion of the ]). Later that year, Macdonald was sent to manage the law office of a Mackenzie cousin who had fallen ill.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|pp=29–30}}

In August 1834, George Mackenzie died of ]. With his supervising lawyer dead, Macdonald remained at the cousin's law office in Hallowell (today ]). In 1835, Macdonald returned to Kingston, and even though not yet of age nor qualified, began his practice as a lawyer, hoping to gain his former employer's clients.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|pp=32–34}} Macdonald's parents and sisters also returned to Kingston.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=38}}


Soon after Macdonald was ] in February 1836, he arranged to take in two students; both became, like Macdonald, ]. ] became premier of Ontario, and ] a federal cabinet minister and ].{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=19}} One early client was Eliza Grimason, an Irish immigrant then aged sixteen, who sought advice concerning a shop she and her husband wanted to buy. Grimason would become one of Macdonald's richest and most loyal supporters, and may have also become his lover.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=41}} Macdonald joined many local organisations, seeking to become well known in the town. He also sought out high-profile cases, representing accused child rapist William Brass. Brass was hanged for his crime, but Macdonald attracted positive press comments for the quality of his defence.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|pp=41–42}} According to one of his biographers, ]:
===Rebellions of 1837===
The ] in Upper and ] proved to be a crucial turning point in Macdonald's legal career. In fact, biographer Donald Creighton argues that the rebellions "made him as a lawyer," giving him the "reputation of a conservative who was not afraid to battle for liberal principles."<ref name="CR68">Creighton, p.68.</ref> Macdonald showed he was willing to take professional risks first by defending eight political prisoners from nearby counties who had been charged with treason for allegedly participating in the uprisings against colonial authorities. Macdonald succeeded in winning acquittals for all eight earning praise for his "ingenuity and ability" from a Kingston newspaper which also noted that the young barrister "is rapidly rising in his profession."<ref>Quoted in Creighton, p.54.</ref>


Then, Macdonald served as co-counsel for John Ashley, the man in charge of a local military jail, who had himself been arrested and briefly imprisoned for allegedly helping 15 political prisoners escape from custody. Ashley sued Colonel Dundas, the military commander for illegal arrest. Dundas was a popular figure, but Macdonald helped persuade the jury to award Ashley substantial monetary damages. Macdonald, Creighton writes, was now associated "with the defence of the plain people against the encroachments of military power. The solid blue of his inherited conservatism was varied now, in a pleasantly interesting fashion, with a few threads of a different and livelier color."<ref>Creighton, pp.55–58</ref>
]
Finally, Macdonald took his biggest risk of all by agreeing to advise American raiders who had participated in an abortive invasion to liberate Canada from what they saw as the yoke of British colonial oppression. The inept raiders had been captured after the ] (1838, near ]) --- a battle in which 16 Canadians were killed and 60 wounded. Worst of all, the American invaders were accused of mutilating the body of a dead Canadian lieutenant. Creighton writes that Kingston was "mad with grief and rage and horror."<ref>Creighton, p.63.</ref> At least two other lawyers refused to help when the brother-in-law of one of the Americans pleaded with them to provide legal advice. Macdonald must have hesitated, but eventually said yes after the frantic brother-in-law knocked on his door one morning before he was out of bed.
<blockquote> <blockquote>
As a criminal lawyer who took on dramatic cases, Macdonald got himself noticed well beyond the narrow confines of the Kingston business community. He was operating now in the arena where he would spend by far the greatest part of his life&nbsp;– the court of public opinion. And, while there, he was learning the arts of argument and of persuasion that would serve him all his political life.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=49}}
It was surely wisdom to have nothing to do with the whole affair. And yet, he took the case. Even he might have found it difficult to say why. A curious interest in people, a relish for cases which were odd and difficult, a jaunty recognition of the fact that professional prestige involved publicity, and, perhaps, a certain stubborn, independent conviction that these helpless and deluded men deserved at least the bare minimum of assistance – all these may have helped to move him to his decision.<ref>Creighton, pp.63–64.</ref>
</blockquote> </blockquote>
There was little Macdonald could do to defend the Americans. Under military rules governing courts martial, civilian lawyers were not allowed to question witnesses or address the judge. Macdonald could only give private advice which helped the brother-in-law to ask searching questions during his trial, but did not save him from the gallows. Macdonald also advised "General" ], the brave and charismatic Polish immigrant who had led the American raiders after their real commanders abandoned them at Windmill Point. Von Shoultz insisted on pleading guilty and wanted to leave Macdonald $100 in his will. Macdonald had to refuse it, but he never forgot the tragic story of the tall, handsome Pole.<ref>Creighton, pp.65–68. The information about the $100 legacy appears in Pope, p.10.</ref>


===Military service===
Biographer Donald Creighton writes that although the rebellions and their aftermath helped Macdonald's career, they also had lasting psychological effects. "For him, and for Kingston," Creighton writes, "the 'rebellion' had been not so much a native uprising as a succession of American raids; and from then on he never quite lost a certain lingering anxiety for the problem of British North American defence."<ref name="CR68"/>
All male Upper Canadians between 18 and 60&nbsp;years of age were members of the Sedentary Militia, which was called into active duty during the ]. Macdonald served as a private in Captain George Well's Company of the Commercial Bank Guard.<ref>{{cite book |last=Library and Archives of Canada |author-link= |date=1838 |title=Canada, British Army and Canadian Militia Muster Rolls and Paylists, 1795–1850: Commcercial Bank Guard, 1837|url= |location=Ottawa |publisher=Library and Archives of Canada |page= |isbn=}}</ref>


Macdonald and the militia marched to Toronto to confront the rebels, and Sir ], Macdonald's private secretary, recalled Macdonald's account of his experience during the march:
==Political rise, 1843–1864==
{{Blockquote
]
|"I carried my musket in '37", he was wont to say in after years. One day he gave me an account of a long march his company made, I forget from what place, but Toronto was the objective point: "The day was hot, my feet were blistered – I was but a weary boy – and I thought I should have dropped under the weight of the old flint musket which galled my shoulder. But I managed to keep up with my companion, a grim old soldier who seemed impervious to fatigue."{{sfn|Pope|1894|p=9}}
In 1843, Macdonald entered politics, standing for the office of ] in Kingston, a position to which he was elected.<ref name = "CC2">{{cite web|url = http://www.collectionscanada.ca/confederation/023001-2360-e.html|title = Sir John A. Macdonald – Canadian Confederation|publisher = Libraries and Archives Canada}}</ref> In 1844 he was elected to the legislature of the Province of Canada to represent Kingston<ref name = "QHE">{{cite web|url = http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/quebechistory/encyclopedia/SirJohnA.Macdonald-JohnAlexanderMacdonald-CanadianHistory.htm|title = Sir John A. Macdonald|publisher = The Quebec History Encyclopedia}}</ref>, gained the recognition of his peers and in 1847 was appointed Receiver General in ]'s government. However, Macdonald had to give up his portfolio when Draper's government lost the next election. He left the Conservatives, hoping to build a more moderate and palatable base. In 1854, he helped with the founding of the Liberal-Conservative Party under the leadership of Sir ]. Within a few years, the Liberal-Conservatives would attract all of the old Conservative base as well as some centrist Reformers. The Liberal-Conservatives came to power in 1854 and under the new government Macdonald was appointed ]. During his time in cabinet, Macdonald was usually the most powerful minister, even when other men held the premiership. In the next election Macdonald continued his rise in politics by becoming ] with Sir ] of Canada East for the years 1856 and 1857.
}}
The Bank Guard served on active duty in Toronto guarding the Commercial Bank of the Midland District on ]. The company was present at the ] and Macdonald recalled in an 1887 letter to ] that:<ref name="Blatherwick">{{cite web|last1=Blatherwick|first1=John|title=Prime Ministers of Canada Their Military Connections, Honours and Medals |url=https://www.blatherwick.net/documents/Prime%20Ministers%20of%20Canada/40%20-%20Prime%20Ministers%20of%20Canada%20Military.pdf|website=National Defence Historical Department|access-date= 4 April 2023|language=en}}</ref>
{{Blockquote
|"I was in the Second or Third Company behind the cannon that opened out on Montgomery’s House. During the week of the rebellion I was the Commercial Bank Guard in the house on King Street, afterward the habitat of ] ']'."<ref>{{cite book |last=Johnson |first=J.K. |author-link= |date=1968 |title=The Papers of the Prime Ministers, Volume 1: The Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald, 1836–1857|url= |location=Ottawa |publisher=Public Library of Canada |page= |isbn=}}</ref>}}
The Bank Guard was taken off active service on 17 December 1837, and returned to Kingston.<ref>{{cite book |last=Library and Archives of Canada |author-link= |date=1838 |title=Canada, British Army and Canadian Militia Muster Rolls and Paylists, 1795–1850: Commcercial Bank Guard, 1837|url= |location=Ottawa |publisher=Library and Archives of Canada |page= |isbn=}}</ref>


On 15 February 1838, Macdonald was appointed an ensign in the ]<ref name="Blatherwick"/> but did not take up the position, serving briefly as a private in the regiment, patrolling the area around Kingston.<ref>{{cite book |last=Library and Archives of Canada |author-link= |date=1838 |title=Canada, British Army and Canadian Militia Muster Rolls and Paylists, 1795–1850: Commcercial Bank Guard, 1837|url= |location=Ottawa |publisher=Library and Archives of Canada |page= |isbn=}}</ref> The town saw no real action during 1838 and Macdonald was not called upon to fire on the enemy.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=43}} The Frontenac Militia regiments stayed on active duty in Kingston while the ] occurred.<ref>{{cite book |last=Library and Archives of Canada |author-link= |date=1838 |title=Canada, British Army and Canadian Militia Muster Rolls and Paylists, 1795–1850: Frontenac Militia, 1838|url= |location=Ottawa |publisher=Library and Archives of Canada |page= |isbn=}}</ref>
Taché resigned in 1857, and ] took his place. In the election of 1858, the Macdonald-Cartier government was defeated and they resigned as Premiers. In an interesting piece of politics, the ] asked Cartier to become the senior Premier, only a week after his defeat. Cartier accepted and brought Macdonald into office along with him. This was legal as any member of the cabinet could re-enter the cabinet provided they did so within a month of resigning their previous position. Macdonald focused on communications and defence, especially the Intercolonial Railway. Canada had to pressure the Colonial Office, ], ], ] and ] to, as one historian notes, "consider an ambitious scheme proposed by their pushing and turbulent neighbour, Canada."


===Professional prominence, 1837–1843 ===
The coalition government was again defeated in 1862. Macdonald then served as the leader of the opposition until the election of 1864, when Taché came out of retirement and joined ranks with Macdonald to form the governing party yet again.


Although most of the trials resulting from the ] took place in Toronto, Macdonald represented one of the defendants in the one trial to take place in Kingston. All the Kingston defendants were acquitted, and a local paper described Macdonald as "one of the youngest barristers in the Province <nowiki></nowiki> is rapidly rising in his profession".{{sfn|Creighton|1952|pp=53–54}}
==The Confederation of Canada, 1864–1867==
[[Image:John A MacDonald Arms.svg|thumb|right|upright|Sir John A. MacDonald's arms<ref>
</ref>]]
To resolve the frequent legislative deadlocks in the Province of Canada, ], the leader of the ] (the forerunners to the ]) and an extremely vocal opponent of Macdonald's Conservatives, joined with Macdonald's Conservatives and George-Étienne Cartier's ] in 1864 to form the ]. The coalition sought to reform the political system of Canada, and was a crucial step in achieving a consensus to support future reform. However, the ] of Canada East, led by ], still refused to join the coalition. Macdonald then spent 1864 to 1867 organizing the legislation needed to confederate the colonies into the country of Canada. In September 1864, he led the Canadian delegation at the ] in ], ], to present his idea to the Maritime colonies, who were discussing a union of their own. In October 1864 delegates for confederation met in ], ], for the ], where the Seventy-Two Resolutions were created&nbsp;– the plan for confederation. By 1866, ], ], and the Province of Canada had agreed to confederation. ] and ] were opposed. In the final conference of confederation held in 1866 in ], ] the agreement to confederate was completed.


]
In 1867, the agreement was brought to the ], which passed the ] creating the Dominion of Canada. Upon the creation of the Dominion of Canada, the Province of Canada was then divided into the individual provinces of ] and ]. Macdonald was asked by the first Governor General of Canada ], to form the first government. He was subsequently ] on ], 1 July 1867, the only colonial leader ever to receive that honour.{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}}


In late 1838, Macdonald agreed to advise one of a group of American raiders who had crossed the border to overthrow British rule in Canada. The raiders had been captured by government forces after the ] near ]. Public opinion was inflamed against the prisoners, as they were accused of mutilating the body of a dead Canadian lieutenant. Macdonald could not represent the prisoners, as they were tried by ] and civilian counsel had no standing. At the request of Kingston relatives of Daniel George, paymaster of the ill-fated invasion, Macdonald agreed to advise George, who, like the other prisoners, had to conduct his own defence.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|pp=61–63}} George was convicted and hanged.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|p=67}} According to Macdonald biographer Donald Swainson, "By 1838, Macdonald's position was secure. He was a public figure, a popular young man, and a senior lawyer."{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=21}}
]


Macdonald continued to expand his practice while being appointed director of many companies, mainly in Kingston. He became both a director of and a lawyer for the new Commercial Bank of the Midland District. Throughout the 1840s, Macdonald invested heavily in real estate, including commercial properties in downtown Toronto.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=58}} Meanwhile, he was suffering from some illness, and in 1841, his father died. Sick and grieving, he decided to take a lengthy holiday in Britain in early 1842. He left for the journey well supplied with money, as he spent the last three days before his departure gambling at the card game ] and winning substantially.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=23}} Sometime during his two months in Britain, he met his first cousin, ]. As Macdonald did not mention her in his letters home, the circumstances of their meeting are not known.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=56}} In late 1842, Isabella journeyed to Kingston to visit with a sister.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=57}} The visit stretched for nearly a year before John and Isabella Macdonald married on 1 September 1843.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=59}}
==First term as prime minister, 1867–1871==
] knighted John A. Macdonald for playing an integral role in bringing about ]. His appointment as a Knight Commander of the ] was announced at the birth of the Dominion, 1 July 1867. An ] was held in August which put Macdonald and his Conservative party into power.


==Political rise, 1843–1864 ==
Macdonald's vision as prime minister was to enlarge the country and unify it. Accordingly, under his rule Canada bought ] and the ] from the ] for £300,000 (about $11,500,000 in modern Canadian dollars). This became the ]. In 1870 Parliament passed the ], creating the province of ] out of a portion of the Northwest Territories in response to the ] led by ].
{{See also|Electoral history of John A. Macdonald}}


===Parliamentary advancement, 1843–1857 ===
==Second term and resignation over Pacific Scandal, 1871–1873==
] ]
In 1871, Britain added ] to Confederation, making it the sixth province. Macdonald promised a transcontinental railway connection to persuade the province to join, which his opponents decried as a highly unrealistic and expensive promise. In 1873 ] joined Confederation, and Macdonald created the ] (now called the "]") on the advice of the Northwest Territories government, to act as a police force for the vast Northwest Territories.<ref name="final">{{cite news|title=The North-West Council|date=February 19, 1876|pages=8|work=Vol II No. 197|publisher=Manitoba Daily Free Press}}</ref>


On 29 March 1843, Macdonald was elected as ] in Kingston's Fourth Ward, with 156 votes against 43 for his opponent, Colonel Jackson. He also suffered what he termed his first downfall, as his supporters, carrying the victorious candidate, accidentally dropped him onto a slushy street.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=59}}{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=59}}
In 1873, Macdonald was accused of taking bribes to award contracts for the construction of the railway. The ] broke and Macdonald was forced to resign on 5 November 1873. ] leader ] formed a ]. After New Years, 1874, the Liberals called an ]. Macdonald's Tories were unable to recover from the scandal and the Liberals formed a majority government. This election was further more the first in Canada to use a ].


The ] had merged Upper and Lower Canada into the ] in 1841. Kingston became the initial capital of the new province; Upper Canada and Lower Canada became known as Canada West and Canada East.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=22}} In March 1844, Macdonald was asked by local businessmen to stand as Conservative candidate for Kingston in ].{{sfn|Phenix|2006|pp=63–64}} Macdonald followed the contemporary custom of supplying the voters with large quantities of alcohol.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=25}} Votes were publicly declared in this election, and Macdonald defeated his opponent, ], by 275&nbsp;"shouts" to 42 when the election concluded on 15 October 1844.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=64}} Macdonald was never an orator, and especially disliked the bombastic addresses of the time. Instead, he found a niche in becoming an expert on election law and parliamentary procedure.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=28}}
==Final years as prime minister and death, 1878–1891==
]]]
In 1878 on the strength of the ], a plan to promote trade within the country by protecting it from the industries of other nations. He also promised to renew the effort to complete the previously promised ]. Macdonald won re-election as prime minister again in 1882. In 1884, Macdonald introduced a bill that would have given unmarried women with the required qualifications Dominion franchise, but the bill was defeated by the house. The CPR was completed in 1885, after several refinancing plans to cover shortfalls for the very expensive project, plunging Canada heavily into debt. Also in 1885, Louis Riel returned to Canada from exile in the United States, and launched the ] in the ] (at that time part of the ]) in a bid for independence, but now that there was a railway through the area, militia were quickly sent to put it down; troops travelling from central Canada reached the site in eleven days.<ref>''Mr. Prime Minister 1867–1964'', by ], Toronto 1964, Longmans Canada.</ref> The success of this operation gave the CPR enough political capital to garner sufficient support to complete its construction. The trial and subsequent execution of Riel for treason caused a deep political division between French Canadians, who supported Riel (a culturally French ] and devoutly Catholic) and English Canadians, who supported Macdonald.


In 1844, Isabella fell ill. She recovered, but the illness recurred the following year, and she became an invalid. John took his wife to ], in the United States in 1845, hoping that the sea air and warmth would cure her ailments. John returned to Canada after six months and Isabella remained in the United States for three years.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=28–29}} He visited her again in New York at the end of 1846 and returned several months later when she informed him she was pregnant.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|pp=79–83}} In August 1847 their son John Alexander Macdonald Jr. was born in New York, but as Isabella remained ill, relatives cared for the infant.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=30–31}}
] election poster from 1891]]


Although he was often absent due to his wife's illness, Macdonald was able to gain professional and political advancement. In 1846, he was made a ]. The same year, he was offered the non-cabinet post of ], but declined it. In 1847, Macdonald became ].{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=31}} Accepting the government post required Macdonald to give up his law firm income{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=83}} and spend most of his time in Montreal, away from Isabella.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=31}} When elections were held in December 1848 and January 1849, Macdonald was easily reelected for Kingston, but the Conservatives lost seats and were forced to resign when the legislature reconvened in March 1848. Macdonald returned to Kingston when the legislature was not sitting, and Isabella joined him there in June.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=31}} In August, their child died suddenly.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|pp=85–86}} In March 1850, Isabella Macdonald gave birth to another boy, ], and his father wrote, "We have got Johnny back again, almost his image."{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=37}} Macdonald began to drink heavily around this time, both in public and in private, which Patricia Phenix, who studied Macdonald's private life, attributes to his family troubles.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=107}}
In 1891, Macdonald won the elections again, but by this time, the 76-year-old political warhorse started to feel the years of overwork, stress, drink and several bouts of severe illness, including a gallstone problem in 1870 that turned his office into a sick room for two months. On 29 May 1891, Sir John A. suffered a severe ], which robbed him of the ability to speak. He died a week later on 6 June 1891 at the age of 76. He would ] in the ] Chamber (prime ministers now lie in state in the ] in the ]) where grieving Canadians turned out in the thousands to pay their respects. His ] was held on June 9, attended by hundreds of thousands of people.{{Citation needed|date=November 2008}} He is buried in ] in ]. None of his children left heirs; he is survived by relative Hugh Gainsford.{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}}


The Liberals, or ], maintained power in the 1851 election but were soon divided by a parliamentary scandal. In September, the government resigned, and a ] government uniting parties from both parts of the province under ] took power. Macdonald did much of the work of putting the government together and served as ]. The coalition, which came to power in 1854, became known as the ] (referred to, for short, as the Conservatives). In 1855, ] of Canada East (today Quebec) joined the Cabinet. Until Cartier's 1873 death, he would be Macdonald's political partner. In 1856, MacNab was eased out as premier by Macdonald, who became the leader of the Canada West Conservatives.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=40–42}} Macdonald remained as attorney general when ] became premier.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=162}}
==Personal life==
===Tragic first marriage===
]
John A. Macdonald's adult life was marked by sickness, death, drunkenness and tragedy. Yet, he rose above his private unhappiness and personal failings to become a well-loved and highly successful public figure, applying "all his passion to politics".<ref>Gwyn, p. 86.</ref> He officially became head of his family on 29 September 1841, with the sudden death of his father Hugh from a ].<ref>Phenix, p.49.</ref> Now, John was solely responsible for the financial support of his mother and two unmarried sisters. Fortunately, his law practice was going well and his income was supplemented by extensive business activities. He served for example, as a director of the prosperous Commercial Bank of the Midland District as well as its lawyer. The Bank provided him with a large part of his income.<ref>Swainson, p.29.</ref> He also bought real estate and eventually became a director of a dozen Kingston companies.<ref>Gwyn, pp.54–55.</ref>


===Colonial leader, 1858–1864 ===
But at the same time, he frequently suffered from an undiagnosed illness. The symptoms, weakness and listlessness, began in 1840 and continued sporadically throughout 1841.<ref>Swainson, p.31.</ref> Macdonald decided he needed a complete rest, and in January 1842 he set sail for Britain, his pockets full of the money (about two thousand dollars) he had won during three nights of playing the card game ].<ref>Creighton, p.84. The two thousand dollar figure is from Gwyn, p.55.</ref> Macdonald's trip proved to be fateful. He recovered his health and met his first cousin ].<ref>Waite, P.B. (1975) ''Macdonald: His Life and World''. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, p.24. Waite notes that "strictly speaking" Isabella was "a half-second cousin." The two had a maternal grandmother in common.</ref> Isabella's features were gentle and tranquil, according to biographer ], "her hair brushed smoothly away from its centre part in the demure fashion of the 1840s."<ref>Creighton, p.85.</ref> She also had "large, beautiful blue eyes with an imploring expression that melted more than one observer's heart."<ref>Phenix, pp.56–57.</ref> "Isa," as Macdonald called her, followed him home to Kingston and on 1 September 1843, they were married. Macdonald was 28, ], 34.<ref>Phenix pp.56 & 59</ref>
]
In July 1857, Macdonald departed for Britain to promote Canadian government projects.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|pp=124–125}} On his return to Canada, he was appointed premier in place of the retiring Taché, just in time to lead the Conservatives in a general election.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=42}} Macdonald was elected in Kingston by 1,189&nbsp;votes to 9 for John Shaw; other Conservatives did poorly in Canada West and only French-Canadian support kept Macdonald in power.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=129}} On 28 December, Isabella Macdonald died, leaving John a widower with a seven-year-old son. Hugh John Macdonald would be principally raised by his paternal aunt and her husband.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=130}}


The Assembly had voted to move the seat of government permanently to Quebec City. Macdonald opposed this and used his power to force the Assembly to reconsider in 1857. He proposed that ] decide which city should be Canada's capital. Opponents, especially from Canada East, argued that she would not make the decision in isolation and was bound to receive informal advice from her Canadian ministers. His scheme was adopted, with Canada East support assured by allowing Quebec City to serve a three-year term as the seat of government before the Assembly moved to the permanent capital. He privately asked the ] to ensure she would not respond for at least ten months, or until after the general election.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|pp=248–249}} In February 1858, her choice was announced to the dismay of many legislators from both parts of the province: the isolated Canada West town of ] became the capital.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=46–47}}
For the first year, the Macdonalds lived the life of a happy, successful couple. John had been elected city ] a few months before his marriage, so he was now a prominent local politician, and his law partnership with his former student, ], continued to flourish.<ref>Swainson, p.33. Macdonald concluded his partnership agreement with Campbell on the same day as his wedding. See, Phenix, p.61.</ref> In the fall of 1844, Macdonald was elected as a Conservative Member of Parliament for Kingston.<ref>Creighton, p.99.</ref> Then, in 1845, everything changed when his beloved "Isa" got sick. She suffered periodic attacks that included severe headaches and numbness. Biographer Patricia Phenix writes that Isabella was diagnosed "as suffering everything from ], a devastating pain in the fifth nerve of her face, to 'uterine ].'"<ref>Phenix, p.70.</ref>. To relieve the pain, she drank liquid ] as well as sherry. The opium and alcohol combined with the painful attacks left her groggy, exhausted and bedridden.<ref>Phenix, pp.69–71, 82 & 86.</ref> Her chronic illness may also have had psychological causes rooted in an "]" compounded by ] headaches and her dependence on opium.<ref>McSherry, James. (1984) "The invisible lady: Sir John A. Macdonald's first wife." In ''Canadian Bulletin of Medical History,'' pp. 91–97. See also Phenix, pp.71–72 & 77.</ref> As the illness continued, Macdonald feared Isabella would die. "The warm, pleasant edifice of his domestic happiness," Donald Creighton writes, "was crumbling towards utter ruin."<ref>Creighton, p.112</ref>


On 28 July 1858, an opposition Canada East member proposed an address to the Queen informing her that Ottawa was an unsuitable place for a national capital. Macdonald's Canada East party members ] to vote for the address, and the government was defeated. Macdonald resigned, and the governor general, ], invited opposition leader ] to form a government. Under the law at that time, Brown and his ministers lost their seats in the Assembly by accepting their positions, and had to face ]. This gave Macdonald a majority pending the by-elections, and he promptly defeated the government. Head refused Brown's request for a dissolution of the Assembly, and Brown and his ministers resigned. Head then asked Macdonald to form a government. The law allowed anyone who had held a ministerial position within the last thirty days to accept a new position without needing to face a by-election; Macdonald and his ministers accepted new positions, then completed what was dubbed the "]" by returning to their old posts.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|pp=175–177}} In an effort to give the appearance of fairness, Head insisted that Cartier be the titular premier, with Macdonald as his deputy.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=48}}
===Macdonald's two sons===
Macdonald responded to his wife's protracted illness by taking her to ] where he hoped the warm climate and the company of her sisters would restore her health. They set off on their journey in the summer of 1845. The trip turned out to be long and grueling with Isabella often unable to walk and suffering excruciating pain. They first joined Isabella's sisters in ], finally reaching Savannah in late November. Macdonald was anxious to return home to continue his political career. He had to remain in the American south however, until Isabella's sisters arrived in mid-January 1846. He would not see his wife again until Christmas when they were reunited in New York City.<ref>Phenix gives a detailed account of the couple's arduous travels, pp.72–79.</ref> There, Isabella became pregnant. After Macdonald returned to Canada, she remained under medical care in New York.<ref>Gwyn, p.83</ref> Their first son, John Alexander, was born in New York on 3 August 1847, after a long and agonizing labour.<ref>Phenix, p.85.</ref> "His eyes are dark blue, ''very large'' & ''nose'' to match," Macdonald wrote to his sister-in-law. "When born his length was 1 foot 9 inches & was strong and healthy, though thin."<ref>Johnson, J.K. (1969) ''Affectionately Yours: The Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald and His Family''. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, p.53.</ref>


In the late 1850s and early 1860s, Canada enjoyed a period of great prosperity, while the railroad and telegraph improved communications. According to Macdonald biographer Richard Gwyn, "In short, Canadians began to become a single community."{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|pp=194–195}} At the same time, the provincial government became increasingly difficult to manage. An act affecting both Canada East and Canada West required a "double majority"{{snd}}a majority of legislators from each of the two sections of the province. This led to increasing deadlock in the Assembly.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=201}} The two sections each elected 65&nbsp;legislators, even though Canada West had a larger population. One of Brown's major demands was representation by population, which would lead to Canada West having more seats; this was bitterly opposed by Canada East.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=49}}
]


The ] led to fears in Canada and in Britain that once the U.S. had concluded its internal warfare, they would invade Canada again.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=52–53}} Canada was sometimes a safe haven for ] operations against the U.S.; many Canadian citizens and politicians were sympathetic to the Confederacy. This led to events such as the ], the ], and a ].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=15jLDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA42|title=When the Irish Invaded Canada: The Incredible True Story of the Civil War Veterans Who Fought for Ireland's Freedom|author=Christopher Klein|date=2020|page=42|publisher=Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group|isbn=9-7805-2543-4016}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U38ka8Rm3NMC&pg=PA117|title=Guardian of the Great Lakes: The U.S. Paddle Frigate Michigan|author=Bradley A. Rodgers|date=1996|page=117|publisher=]|isbn=9-7804-7206-6070}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/article/the-confederate-spy-ring-spreading-terror-to-the-union/|title=The Confederate Spy Ring: Spreading Terror to the Union|author=Peter Kross|date=Fall 2015|publisher=Warfare History network}}</ref> As attorney general of Canada West, Macdonald refused to prosecute Confederate operatives who were using Canada to launch attacks on U.S. soil across the border.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q7rZDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT90|title=North American Border Conflicts Race, Politics, and Ethics|author=Laurence Armand French and Magdaleno Manzanarez|date= 2017|page=190|publisher=]|isbn=9-7813-5170-9873}}</ref>
Macdonald rented ] in Kingston in 1848 in the hope that the fresh suburban air and quiet would help Isabella's condition after her return from New York. This experiment, however, was a failure. Worse still, shortly after the Macdonalds moved into their new home, 13-month-old John Alexander was found dead in his crib, a possible victim of SIDS or ].<ref>Phenix, pp.93–94. Phenix writes: "According to Dr. Josephine Faveraux of the Addiction Research Foundation of Ontario, the rate of SIDS increases in infants and toddlers born to mothers addicted to opiates, especially if alcohol has also played a part in the equation."</ref> Isabella became pregnant again in 1849, yet another miracle for a 40-year-old chronically ill woman.<ref>Phenix, p.100.</ref> Their second son, ], was born on 13 March 1850. "We have got Johnnie back again," Macdonald wrote to his sister. "I don't think he is so pretty, but he is not so delicate. He was born fat & coarse."<ref>Johnson, p.71.</ref>


With Canadians fearing invasion from the U.S., the British asked that Canadians pay a part of the expense of defence, and a Militia Bill was introduced in the Assembly in 1862. The opposition objected to the expense, and Canada East representatives feared that French-Canadians would have to fight in a war they wanted no part in. Macdonald was drinking heavily and failed to provide much leadership on behalf of the bill. The government fell over the bill, and the Grits took over under the leadership of ] (no relation to John A. Macdonald).{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=52–53}} The parties held an almost equal number of seats, with a handful of independents able to destroy any government. The new government fell in May 1863, but Head allowed a new election, which did little to change party standings. In December 1863, Canada West MP ] accepted the post of solicitor general, and so had to face a by-election. John A. Macdonald campaigned against Richards personally, and Richards was defeated by a Conservative. The switch in seats cost the Grits their majority, and they resigned in March. John A. Macdonald returned to office with Taché as titular premier. The Taché-Macdonald government was defeated in June. The parties were deadlocked to such an extent that, according to Swainson, "It was clear to everybody that the constitution of the Province of Canada was dead".{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=54–55}}
Hugh John and his father were never close. The boy was raised by Macdonald's sister Margaret and her husband, James Williamson, after Isabella's death in 1857.


==Confederation of Canada, 1864–1867==
===Debt and drinking===
]
Macdonald's frequent absences from his law practice to care for Isabella and the expenses of providing medical and nursing care drove him into heavy debt. Salaries for politicians during this period were meager stipends. His partner objected to his casual habit of using law firm revenues to pay his expenses and in 1849, Alexander Campbell decided to leave the partnership.<ref>Creighton, pp.147–149.</ref> Macdonald had already turned to the bottle for solace during the 12 lonely years of Isabella's illness. They were years in which, according to Donald Creighton, he had become "a bachelor husband who had to go for companionship to bars and lounges and smoking rooms; a frustrated host who drank too much on occasion, partly because it was the only way he could entertain, and because it passed the empty time, and because it was an easy way to forget."<ref>Creighton, pp.260–261.</ref> According to Richard Gwyn, a biographer, Sir John was not a steady alcoholic but rather a binge drinker. Long periods of abstinence would precede bouts of intense inebriation lasting weeks. Macdonald was well known for his wit and also for his alcoholism. Two apocryphal stories are commonly repeated; the first describing an election debate in which Macdonald was so drunk he began vomiting while on stage. His opponent quickly pointed this out and said: "Is this the man you want running your country? A drunk!" Collecting himself, Macdonald replied "I get sick ... not because of drink I am forced to listen to the ranting of my honourable opponent." The second version has Macdonald responding to his opponent's query of his drunkenness with "It goes to show that I would rather have a drunk Conservative than a sober Liberal."


As his government had fallen again, Macdonald approached the new governor general, ], to ]. Before Macdonald could act on this, Brown approached him through intermediaries; the Grit leader believed that the crisis gave the parties the opportunity to join together for constitutional reform. Brown had led a parliamentary committee on confederation among the British North American colonies, which had reported back just before the Taché-Macdonald government fell.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|pp=286–288}} Brown was more interested in representation by population; Macdonald's priority was a federation that the other colonies could join. The two compromised and agreed that the new government would support the "federative principle"{{snd}}a conveniently elastic phrase. The discussions were not public knowledge and Macdonald stunned the Assembly by announcing that the dissolution was being postponed because of progress in negotiations with Brown{{snd}}the two men were not only political rivals, but were known to hate each other.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|pp=288–289}}
===Second marriage and daughter===
In 1867, at the age of 52, Macdonald married his second wife ] (1836–1920). They had one daughter, Margaret Mary Theodora Macdonald (1869–1933), who was born with ] and suffered from physical and mental disabilities. Macdonald always hoped she would recover, but she never did. She died in 1933.


The parties resolved their differences, joining in the ], with only the ] of Canada East, led by ], remaining apart. A conference, called by the Colonial Office, was scheduled for 1 September 1864, in ], Prince Edward Island; the ] were to consider ]. The Canadians obtained permission to send a delegation{{snd}}led by Macdonald, Cartier, and Brown{{snd}}to what became known as the ]. At its conclusion, the Maritime delegations expressed a willingness to join a confederation if the details could be successfully negotiated.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=63–65}}
==Supreme Court appointments==
Macdonald chose the following jurists to be appointed as justices of the ] by the ]:
* ] (27 October 1888&nbsp;– 24 July 1893)
* ] (14 January 1879&nbsp;– 7 January 1902)
* Sir ] (as Chief Justice, 11 January 1879&nbsp;– 25 September 1892; appointed a ] under Prime Minister Mackenzie, 30 September 1875)


In October 1864, delegates for Confederation met in Quebec City for the ], where they agreed to the ], the basis of Canada's government.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=67–69}} The Great Coalition was endangered by Taché's 1865 death; Lord Monck asked Macdonald to become premier, but Brown felt that he had as good a claim on the position as his coalition partner. The disagreement was resolved by appointing another compromise candidate to serve as titular premier, ].{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=73}}
==Freemasonry==
]
Macdonald was a ], initiated in 1844 at St. John’s Lodge No. 5 in Kingston. In 1868, he was named by the ] as its Grand Representative near the ] (in Ontario) and the rank of Past Grand Senior Warden conferred upon him. He continued to represent the Grand Lodge of England until his death in 1891. His commission, together with his apron and earmuffs, are in the ] at Kingston, along with his regalia as Past Grand Senior Warden. Among the books in his library was a very rare copy of the first Masonic book published in Canada, ''A History of Freemasonry in Nova Scotia'' (1786).<ref></ref><ref></ref>
In 1865, after lengthy debates, Canada's legislative assembly approved Confederation by 91 votes to 33.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=72}} None of the Maritimes approved the plan. In 1866, Macdonald and his colleagues financed pro-Confederation candidates in the ], resulting in a pro-Confederation assembly. Shortly after the election, ]'s premier, ], pushed a pro-Confederation resolution through that colony's legislature.{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=172}} A final conference, to be held in London, was needed before the British Parliament could formalise the union. Maritime delegates left for London in July 1866, but Macdonald, who was drinking heavily again, did not leave until November, angering the Maritimers.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=75}} In December 1866, Macdonald both led the ], winning acclaim for his handling of the discussions, and courted and married his second wife, ].{{sfn|Phenix|2006|p=175}} Bernard was the sister of Macdonald's private secretary, ]; the couple first met in Quebec in 1860, but Macdonald had seen and admired her as early as 1856.{{sfn|Smith|McLeod|1989|p=36}} In January 1867, while still in London, he was seriously burned in his hotel room when his candle set fire to the chair he had fallen asleep in, but Macdonald refused to miss any sessions of the conference. In February, he married Agnes at ].{{sfn|Phenix|2006|pp=176–177}} On 8 March, the ], which would thereafter serve as the major part of Canada's constitution, passed the House of Commons (it had previously passed the House of Lords).{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=76}} Queen Victoria gave the bill ] on 29 March 1867.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=416}}


Macdonald had favoured the union coming into force on 15 July, fearing that the preparations would not be completed any earlier. The British favoured an earlier date and, on 22 May, it was announced that ] would come into existence on 1 July.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|p=466}} Lord Monck appointed Macdonald as the new nation's first prime minister. With the birth of the new nation, Canada East and Canada West became separate provinces, known as Quebec and Ontario, respectively.{{sfn|Creighton|1952|pp=470–471}} Macdonald was appointed a ] (KCB) on that first observance of what came to be known as Dominion Day, later called ], on 1 July 1867.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=79}}
==Trivia==
{{Trivia|date=January 2008}}
*Macdonald played an integral role in the trial of ], an escaped slave from ].
*Macdonald's temper sometimes got the better of him, such as in one incident in the ] when ] angered him so much, that he charged across the Commons floor to physically attack him. While he was restrained, Macdonald was unrepentant, proclaiming "I'll lick him faster than Hell can scorch a feather!"
*Macdonald resembled British Prime Minister ]. At Disraeli's funeral in 1881, another British official thought that he saw Disraeli's ghost in attendance, although it was actually Macdonald.
*'']'' reported on June 30, 2005, that Macdonald's birthplace in Glasgow, Scotland, was under threat of demolition.
*Macdonald's private train car, which he named ], was given to him by the ] for his work on the railway.
*According to the ], Macdonald's nicknames included ''Old Chieftain'' and ''Old Tomorrow'', for his habit of putting off any large political problems until conditions were personally favourable to him.<ref></ref>
*Macdonald's nephew Newton Ford was the father of iconic Canadian-born ] actor ].<ref></ref>
*As of 2008, Macdonald was the first of two Canadian Prime Ministers to die in office (The other was ]).
*Macdonald was the favourite target of the "Grip" magazine's premier cartoonist ], who came to fame by ridiculing Macdonald's government during the ].


==Prime Minister of Canada==
==Legacy==
] in ].]]
] to ].]]
]]]
Macdonald is depicted on the ]. He also has bridges (]), airports (], and highways (]) named after him, as well as statues and a plethora of schools across the country. In ], Macdonald Park and Sir John A. Macdonald Boulevard are both named in his honour, and a large bronze statue of the man stands at the corner of King and West streets, in the southeastern corner of Macdonald Park. The law building at ] in ] is named in his honour. The ] in Edmonton and ], part of Canada's high commission in London, are also named for him.


{{See also|Electoral history of John A. Macdonald}}
Our Premier / words by ]; music by ] ] C.J Cameron, c 1885 in honour of ] <ref>http://amicus.collectionscanada.gc.ca/m5-bin/Main/ItemDisplay?l=0&l_ef_l=-1&id=544315.1058422&v=1&lvl=1&coll=17&rt=1&itm=5375808&rsn=S_WWWbeaPPbvVu&all=1&dt=AW+|Telgmann|&spi=-&rp=1&vo=1 Our Premier</ref>
Macdonald and his son, ], briefly sat together in the ] before the elder Macdonald's death.


===First majority, 1867–1871===
In 1999, after a survey of Canadian historians covering all the Prime Ministers up through ], ] and ] showed that Macdonald was ranked second, only beaten out of first place by ].
]
Macdonald and his government faced immediate problems upon the formation of the new country. Much work remained to do in creating a federal government. Nova Scotia was already threatening to withdraw from the union; the Intercolonial Railway, which would both conciliate the Maritimes and bind them closer to the rest of Canada, was not yet built. Anglo-American relations were in a poor state, and Canadian foreign relations were matters handled from London. The withdrawal of the Americans in 1866 from the ] had increased tariffs on Canadian goods in US markets.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=80–81}} American and British opinion largely believed that the experiment of Confederation would quickly unravel, and the nascent nation absorbed by the United States.{{sfn|Gwyn|2011|p=3}}


In August 1867, the new nation's ] was held; Macdonald's party won easily, with strong support in both large provinces, and a majority from New Brunswick.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|p=2}} By 1869, Nova Scotia had agreed to remain part of Canada after a promise of better financial terms{{snd}}the first of many provinces to negotiate concessions from Ottawa.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=84–85}} Pressure from London and Ottawa failed to gain the accession of Newfoundland, whose voters rejected a Confederation platform in a general election in October 1869.{{sfn|Waite|1975|p=76}}{{sfn|Gwyn|2011|p=72}}
In 2004, Macdonald was nominated as one of the top 10 "]" by viewers of the ]. He is considered by some Canadian political scientists to be the founder of the ] tradition.


In 1869, John and Agnes Macdonald had a daughter, Mary. It soon became apparent that Mary had ongoing developmental issues; she was never able to walk, nor did she ever fully develop mentally.{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=83–84}} Hewitt Bernard, deputy minister of justice and Macdonald's former secretary, also lived in the Macdonald house in Ottawa, together with Bernard's widowed mother.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|p=8}} In May 1870, John Macdonald fell ill with gallstones; coupled with his frequent drinking, he may have developed a severe case of ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.nationalpost.com/news/canada/everyone-knows-john-a-macdonald-was-a-bit-of-a-drunk-but-its-largely-forgotten-how-hard-he-hit-the-bottle|title=Everyone knows John A. Macdonald was a bit of a drunk, but it's largely forgotten how hard he hit the bottle |author=Tristin Hopper|date=9 January 2015|work=National Post}}</ref> In July, he moved to Prince Edward Island to convalesce, most likely conducting discussions aimed at drawing the island into Confederation at a time when some there supported joining the United States.{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=84–85}} The island joined Confederation in 1873.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=93}}
The ] ] in ] was Sir John Alexander Macdonald's home from 1848 to 1849.


Macdonald had once been tepid on the question of westward expansion of the Canadian provinces; as prime minister, he became a strong supporter of a bicoastal Canada. Immediately upon Confederation, he sent commissioners to London who in due course successfully negotiated the transfer of ] and the ] to Canada.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=85–86}} The Hudson's Bay Company received £300,000 ({{CAD|1,500,000}}) in compensation, and retained some trading posts as well as one-twentieth of the best farmland.{{r|esask, Rupert's Land purchase}} Prior to the date of acquisition, the Canadian government faced unrest in the ] (today southeastern ], centred on ]). The local people, including the ], were fearful that rule would be imposed on them which did not take into account their interests, and rose in the ] led by ]. Unwilling to pay for a territory in insurrection, Macdonald had troops put down the uprising before the formal transfer; as a result of the unrest, the Red River Colony joined Confederation as the province of Manitoba, while the rest of the purchased lands became the ].{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=80–83}}
Schools named after him:
:], Scarborough, Ontario
:, Hamilton, Ontario
:, Upper Tantallon, Nova Scotia
:, Calgary, Alberta
:], Waterloo, Ontario
:], Halifax, Nova Scotia
:, Belleville, Ontario
:, Pickering, Ontario
:, Brampton, Ontario


] from an 1869 issue of Grinchuckle, Uncle Sam is given the boot by Young Canada as John Bull looks on approvingly.]]
==Biographical and historical studies==
* Bliss, Michael. (1994) ''Right Honourable Men: The Descent of Canadian Politics from Macdonald to Mulroney''.
* Bowering, George. (1999) ''Egotists and Autocrats: The Prime Ministers of Canada''.
* Careless, J.M.S. (1963) ''Canada: A Story of Challenge''. (Revised Edition) Toronto: Macmillan of Canada.
* Collins, Joseph Edmund. (1883) ''Life and times of the Right Honourable Sir John A. Macdonald: Premier of the Dominion of Canada''
* Creighton, Donald. (1952) ''John A. Macdonald: The Young Politician'' vol 1: 1815–1867. Toronto: The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited.
* Creighton, Donald. (1955) ''John A. Macdonald: The Old Chieftain'' vol 2: 1867–1891. Toronto: The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited.
* Creighton, Donald. (1964) ''The Road to Confederation: The Emergence of Canada: 1863–1867''. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada.
* Granatstein, J.L. and Hillmer, Norman (1999) ''Prime Ministers: Ranking Canada's Leaders''. Toronto: HarperCollinsPublishingLtd. P. 15-28. ISBN 0-00-200027-X.
* Guillet, Edwin C, (1967) ''You'll Never Die, John A!''. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada.
* Gwyn, Richard. (2007) ''The Man Who Made Us: The Life and Times of Sir John A. Macdonald''. vol 1: 1815–1867. Random House Canada.
* Hutchison, Bruce. (1964) ''Mr. Prime Minister 1867–1964.'' Toronto: Longmans Canada.
* Johnson, J.K. (1969) ''Affectionately Yours: The Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald and His Family''. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada.
* Johnson, J.K. and Waite, P.B. (2007) "Sir John Alexander Macdonald," in ''Canada's Prime Ministers, Macdonald to Trudeau: Portraits from the Dictionary of Canadian Biography''. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
* McSherry, James. (1984) ''The invisible lady: Sir John A. Macdonald's first wife.'' In ''Canadian Bulletin of Medical History,'' pp.&nbsp;91–97.
* Phenix, Patricia. (2006) ''Private Demons, The Tragic Personal Life of John A. Macdonald''. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart.
* Pope, Joseph. (1894) ''Memoirs of the Right Honourable Sir John Alexander Macdonald, G.C.B., First Prime Minister of The Dominion of Canada, Vols. 1&2.'' Ottawa: J. Durie & Son.
* Pope, Joseph. (1915) ''The Day of Sir John Macdonald: A Chronicle of the First Prime Minister of the Dominion''. Toronto: Brook & Co.
* Pope, Joseph (1921) ''Correspondence of Sir John Macdonald: selections from the correspondence of Sir John Alexander Macdonald.'' Toronto: Oxford University Press.
* Sletcher, Michael. (2004) "Sir John A. Macdonald," in James Eli Adams, and Tom and Sara Pendergast, eds., ''Encyclopedia of the Victorian Era''. 4 vols., Danbury, CT: Grolier Academic Reference.
* Swainson, Donald. (1989) ''Sir John A. Macdonald: The Man and the Politician''. Kingston, ON: Quarry Press.
* Waite, P. B. (1971) ''Canada 1874–1896: Arduous Destiny''. Toronto, McClelland & Stewart Ltd.
* Waite, P. B. (1975) ''Macdonald: His Life and World''. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited. ISBN 0-07-082301-4.
* Waite, P. B. (1976) + (1999) ''John A. Macdonald''. Don Mills, ON: Fitzhenry and Whiteside Limited.
* Wallace, W. Stewart. (1924) ''Sir John Macdonald''. Toronto: The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited.


Macdonald also wished to secure the colony of British Columbia. There was interest in the United States in bringing about the colony's annexation, and Macdonald wished to ensure his new nation had a Pacific outlet. The colony had an extremely large debt that would have to be assumed should it join Confederation. Negotiations were conducted in 1870, principally during Macdonald's illness and recuperation, with Cartier leading the Canadian delegation. Cartier offered British Columbia a railway linking it to the eastern provinces within ten years. The British Columbians, who privately had been prepared to accept far less generous terms, quickly agreed and joined Confederation in 1871.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=91–92}} The Canadian Parliament ratified the terms after a debate over the high cost that cabinet member ] described as the worst fight the Conservatives had had since Confederation.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=105–106}}
==Notes==
{{Reflist|2}}


There were continuing disputes with the Americans over deep-sea fishing rights, and in early 1871, an Anglo-American commission was appointed to settle outstanding matters between the British, the Canadians and the Americans. Canada was hoping to secure compensation for damage done by ] ] from bases in the United States. Macdonald was appointed a British commissioner, a post he was reluctant to accept as he realised Canadian interests might be sacrificed for the mother country. This proved to be the case; Canada received no compensation for the raids and no significant trade advantages in the settlement, which required Canada to open her waters to American fishermen. Macdonald returned home to defend the ] against a political firestorm.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=93–94}}
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
*{{cite web|url = http://www.collectionscanada.ca/primeministers/h4-3031-e.html|title = Macdonald-Biography-First Among Equals|publisher = Libraries and Archives Canada}}
*{{cite web|url = http://www.cityofkingston.ca/sirj.asp|title = Sir John A. Macdonald: Father of Confederation|publisher = City of Kingston}}
*{{cite web|url = http://www.kingstonhistoricalsociety.ca/jam/jamkingston.html|title = John A. Macdonald's Kingston|publisher = Kingston Historical Society}}
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*{{cite web|url = http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0004867|title = Macdonald, Sir John Alexander|publisher = The Canadian Encyclopedia}}
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===Second majority and Pacific Scandal, 1872–1873===
{{canPM}}
In the run-up to ], Macdonald had yet to formulate a railway policy, or to devise the loan guarantees that would be needed to secure the construction. During the previous year, Macdonald had met with potential railway financiers such as ] and considerable financial discussion took place. The greatest political problem Macdonald faced was the Washington treaty, which had not yet been debated in Parliament.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=112–113}}


In early 1872, Macdonald submitted the treaty for ratification, and it passed the Commons with a majority of 66.{{sfn|Waite|1975|p=97}} The general election was held through late August and early September. Redistribution had given Ontario increased representation in the House; Macdonald spent much time campaigning in the province, for the most part outside Kingston. Widespread bribery of voters took place throughout Canada, a practice especially effective in the era when votes were publicly declared. Macdonald and the Conservatives saw their majority reduced from 35 to 8.{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=97–100}} The Liberals (as the Grits were coming to be known) did better than the Conservatives in Ontario, forcing the government to rely on the votes of Western and Maritime MPs who did not fully support the party.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=96}}
{{Template group

|title = Articles Related to John A. Macdonald
]. Macdonald is depicted claiming clean hands, but with "Send me another $10,000" written on his palm.]]
|list1 =

<span>
Macdonald had hoped to award the charter for the ] in early 1872, but negotiations dragged on between the government and the financiers. Macdonald's government awarded the Allan group the charter in late 1872. In 1873, when Parliament opened, Liberal MP ] charged that government ministers had been bribed with large, undisclosed political contributions to award the charter. Documents soon came to light which substantiated what came to be known as the ]. The Allan-led financiers, who were secretly backed by the United States's ],{{sfn|Gwyn|2011|p=200}} had donated $179,000 to the Tory election funds, they had received the charter, and Opposition newspapers began to publish telegrams signed by government ministers requesting large sums from the railway interest at the time the charter was under consideration. Macdonald had taken $45,000 in contributions from the railway interest himself. Substantial sums went to Cartier, who waged an expensive fight to try to retain his seat in ] (he was defeated, but was subsequently returned for the Manitoba seat of ]). During the campaign Cartier had fallen ill with ], which may have been causing his judgment to lapse;{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=97–100}} he died in May 1873 while seeking treatment in London.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=97–100}}
{{start box}}

{{succession box | before=] | title=Attorney General of Canada West| years=1854–1862 | after=]
Before Cartier's death, Macdonald attempted to use delay to extricate the government.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|p=156}} The Opposition responded by leaking documents to friendly newspapers. On 18 July, three papers published a telegram dated August 1872 from Macdonald requesting another $10,000 and promising "it will be the last time of asking".{{sfn|Waite|1975|p=103}} Macdonald was able to get a ] in August by appointing a ] to look into the matter, but when Parliament reconvened in late October, the Liberals, feeling Macdonald could be defeated over the issue, applied immense pressure to wavering members.{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=103–104}} On 3 November, Macdonald rose in the Commons to defend the government, and according to one of his biographer, P.B. Waite, he gave "the speech of his life, and, in a sense, for his life".{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=105–106}} He began his speech at 9&nbsp;p.m., looking frail and ill, an appearance which quickly improved. As he spoke, he consumed numerous glasses of gin and water. He denied that there had been a corrupt bargain, and stated that such contributions were common to both political parties. After five hours, Macdonald concluded,

<blockquote>
I leave it with this House with every confidence. I am equal to either fortune. I can see past the decision of this House either for or against me, but whether it be against me or for me, I know, and it is no vain boast to say so, for even my enemies will admit that I am no boaster, that there does not exist in Canada a man who has given more of his time, more of his heart, more of his wealth, or more of his intellect and power, as it may be, for the good of this Dominion of Canada.{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=105–106}}
</blockquote>

Macdonald's speech was seen as a personal triumph, but it did little to salvage the fortunes of his government. With eroding support both in the Commons and among the public, Macdonald went to the governor general, ] on 5 November, and resigned; Liberal leader ] became the second prime minister of Canada.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=102–103}} He is not known to have spoken of the events of the Pacific Scandal again.{{sfn|Gwyn|2011|p=255}}

On 6 November 1873, Macdonald offered his resignation as party leader to his caucus; it was refused. Mackenzie called ] for January 1874; the Conservatives were reduced to 70&nbsp;seats out of the 206 in the Commons, giving Mackenzie a massive majority.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=180–183}} The Conservatives bested the Liberals only in British Columbia; Mackenzie had called the terms by which the province had joined Confederation "impossible".{{sfn|Gwyn|2011|p=256}} Macdonald was returned in Kingston but was unseated on an election contest when bribery was proven; he won the ensuing by-election by 17&nbsp;votes. According to Swainson, most observers viewed Macdonald as finished in politics, "a used-up and dishonoured man".{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=104}}

===Opposition, 1873–1878===
]

Macdonald was content to lead the Conservatives in a relaxed manner in opposition and await Liberal mistakes. He took long holidays and resumed his law practice, moving his family to Toronto and going into partnership with his son Hugh John.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=105–107}} One mistake that Macdonald believed the Liberals had made was a free-trade agreement with Washington, negotiated in 1874; Macdonald had come to believe that protection was necessary to build Canadian industry.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=184–185}} The ] had led to a worldwide depression; the Liberals found it difficult to finance the railway in such a climate, and were generally opposed to the line anyway{{snd}}the slow pace of construction led to British Columbia claims that the agreement under which it had entered Confederation was in jeopardy of being broken.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=108}}

By 1876, Macdonald and the Conservatives had adopted protectionism as party policy. This view was widely promoted in speeches at a number of political picnics, held across Ontario during the summer of 1876. Macdonald's proposals were popular with the public, and the Conservatives began to win a string of by-elections. By the end of 1876, the Tories had picked up 14&nbsp;seats as a result of by-elections, reducing Mackenzie's Liberal majority from 70 to 42.{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=121–122}} Despite the success, Macdonald considered retirement, wishing only to reverse the voters' verdict of 1874{{snd}}he considered Charles Tupper his heir apparent.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|p=227}}

When Parliament convened in 1877, the Conservatives were confident and the Liberals defensive.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=228–230}} After the Tories had a successful session in the early part of the year, another series of picnics commenced in the areas around Toronto. Macdonald even campaigned in Quebec, which he had rarely done, leaving speechmaking there to Cartier.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=232–234}} More picnics followed in 1878, promoting proposals which would come to be collectively called the "]": high tariffs, rapid construction of the transcontinental railway (the ] or CPR), rapid agricultural development of the West using the railway, and policies which would attract immigrants to Canada.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=111}} These picnics allowed Macdonald venues to show off his talents at campaigning, and were often lighthearted{{snd}}at one, the Tory leader blamed agricultural pests on the Grits, and promised the insects would go away if the Conservatives were elected.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=111–112}}

The final days of the ] were marked by explosive conflict, as Macdonald and Tupper alleged that MP and railway financier ] had been allowed to build the ] branch of the CPR (connecting to American lines) as a reward for betraying the Conservatives during the Pacific Scandal. The altercation continued even after the Commons had been summoned to the Senate to hear the dissolution read, as Macdonald spoke the final words recorded in the 3rd Parliament: "That fellow Smith is the biggest liar I ever saw!"{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=239–240}}

] was called for 17 September 1878. Fearful that Macdonald would be defeated in Kingston, his supporters tried to get him to run in the safe Conservative ] of ]; having represented his hometown for 35&nbsp;years, he stood there again. In the election, Macdonald was defeated in his riding by ], but the Conservatives swept to victory.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=241–242}} Macdonald remained in the House of Commons, having quickly secured his election for ], Manitoba; elections there were held later than in Ontario. His acceptance of office vacated his parliamentary seat, and Macdonald decided to stand for the British Columbia seat of ], where the election was to be held on 21 October. Macdonald was duly returned for Victoria,{{sfn|Bourinot|2008|p=159}} although he had never visited either Marquette or Victoria.{{sfn|Gwyn|2011|p=299}}

===Third and fourth majorities, 1878–1887===
] and his party in this 1884 cartoon by ].]]

Part of the National Policy was implemented in the budget presented in February 1879. Under that budget, Canada became a high-tariff nation like the United States and Germany. The tariffs were designed to protect and build Canadian industry{{snd}}finished textiles received a tariff of 34%, but the machinery to make them entered Canada free.{{sfn|Gwyn|2011|p=307}} Macdonald continued to fight for higher tariffs for the remainder of his life.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=115–16}}

In January 1879, Macdonald commissioned politician ] to write a report regarding the industrial boarding-school system in the United States.<ref name="TRCHistoryPart1">{{cite web|title=Canada's Residential Schools: The History, Part 1 Origins to 1939: Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada Volume 1|url=http://nctr.ca/assets/reports/Final%20Reports/Volume_1_History_Part_1_English_Web.pdf|website=National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation|publisher=Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada|access-date=1 July 2016|year=2015|archive-date=5 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170305044526/http://nctr.ca/assets/reports/Final%20Reports/Volume_1_History_Part_1_English_Web.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Davin">{{cite report|last1=Davin |first1=Nicholas Flood |author-link=Nicholas Flood Davin |title=Report on industrial schools for Indians and half-breeds |url=https://archive.org/details/cihm_03651/ |publisher= |access-date=11 July 2016 |format=microform |year=1879 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160529190243/https://archive.org/details/cihm_03651 |archive-date=29 May 2016 }}</ref> Now known as the Davin Report, the ''Report on Industrial Schools for Indians and Half-Breeds'' was submitted to Ottawa on 14 March 1879, providing the basis for the ]. It made the case for a cooperative approach between the Canadian government and the church to implement the "aggressive assimilation" pursued by ], ].{{sfn|Henderson|Wakeham|2013|p=299}}<ref name="Davin" /> In 1883, Parliament approved $43,000 for three industrial schools and the first, ], opened on 1 December of that year. By 1900, there were 61 schools in operation.<ref name="TRCHistoryPart1" /> In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission concluded that the assimilation amounted to ].<ref name="TRCExec">{{cite web |title=Honouring the Truth, Reconciling for the Future: Summary of the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada |url=http://www.trc.ca/websites/trcinstitution/File/2015/Findings/Exec_Summary_2015_05_31_web_o.pdf |website=National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation |publisher=Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada |access-date=28 June 2016 |date=31 May 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160706170855/http://www.trc.ca/websites/trcinstitution/File/2015/Findings/Exec_Summary_2015_05_31_web_o.pdf |archive-date=6 July 2016 }}</ref>

By the 1880s, Macdonald was becoming frailer, but he maintained his political acuity. In 1883, he secured the "Intoxicating Liquors Bill" which took the regulation system away from the provinces, in part to stymie his foe Premier Mowat. In his own case, Macdonald took better control of his drinking and binges had ended. "The great drinking-bouts, the gargantuan in sobriety's of his middle years, were dwindling away now into memories."{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=345, 347}} As the budget moved forward, Macdonald found that the railway was progressing well: although little money had been spent on the project under Mackenzie, several hundred miles of track had been built and nearly the entire route surveyed. In 1880, Macdonald found a syndicate, led by ], willing to undertake the CPR project. Donald Smith (later Lord Strathcona) was a major partner in the syndicate, but because of the ill will between him and the Conservatives, Smith's participation was initially not made public, though it was well-known to Macdonald.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=116–117}} In 1880, the Dominion took over Britain's remaining Arctic territories, which extended Canada to its present-day boundaries, with the exception of Newfoundland, which did not enter Confederation until 1949. Also in 1880, Canada sent its first diplomatic representative abroad, Sir ] as ].{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=123}} With good economic times, Macdonald and the Conservatives were returned with a slightly decreased majority ]. Macdonald was returned for the Ontario riding of ].{{sfn|Creighton|1955|p=33}}

The ] project was heavily subsidised by the government. The CPR was granted {{convert|25000000|acre|km2 sqmi}} of land along the route of the railroad, and $25 million from the government. In addition, the government had to spend $32 million on the construction of other railways to support the CPR. The entire project was extremely costly, especially for a nation with only 4.1&nbsp;million people in 1881.{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=149–150}} Between 1880 and 1885, as the railway was slowly built, the CPR repeatedly came close to financial ruin. The terrain in the ] was difficult and the route north of ] proved treacherous, as tracks and engines sank into the ].{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=118–119}} When Canadian guarantees of the CPR's bonds failed to make them salable in a declining economy, Macdonald obtained a loan to the corporation from the Treasury{{snd}}the bill authorizing it passed the ] just before the firm would have become insolvent.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=370–376}}

]

The Northwest again saw unrest. Many of the Manitoban Métis had moved into the territories and negotiations between the Métis and the Government to settle grievances over land rights proved difficult. Riel, who had lived in exile in the United States since 1870, journeyed to Regina with the connivance of Macdonald's government, who believed he would prove a leader they could deal with.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=385–388}} Instead, the Métis rose the following year under Riel in the North-West Rebellion. Macdonald put down the rebellion with Canadian troops who were transported by rail, and Riel was captured, tried for treason, convicted, and hanged. Macdonald refused to consider reprieving Riel, who was of uncertain mental health. The hanging of Riel was controversial,{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=159–162}} and alienated many Quebecers from the Conservatives and they were, like Riel, Catholic and culturally ]; they soon realigned with the Liberals.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=138}} Following the ] of 1885, Macdonald's government implemented ], requiring them to receive formal permission from an Indian Department Official in order to go off-reserve.{{sfn|Stonechild|2006|p=}} The federal government under Macdonald sought to keep the indigenous ill-fed and dependent on government food supplies, a policy which has been blamed for many deaths.<ref>{{cite book |last1=McKercher |first1=Asa |title=Canada and the World since 1867 |date=19 September 2019 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=978-1-350-03678-9 |page=14 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-nSuDwAAQBAJ&dq=%22food+until+the+Indians+are+on+the+verge+of+starvation%22&pg=PA14 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=King |first1=J. C. H. |title=Blood and Land: The Story of Native North America |date=25 August 2016 |publisher=Penguin UK |isbn=978-1-84614-808-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jfWpCwAAQBAJ&dq=%22food+until+the+Indians+are+on+the+verge+of+starvation%22&pg=PT85 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Gwyn |first1=Richard J. |title=Nation Maker: Sir John A. Macdonald: His Life, Our Times |date=21 August 2012 |publisher=Random House of Canada |isbn=978-0-307-35645-1 |pages=425–426 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cBKGvuvksIAC&dq=%22food+until+the+Indians+are+on+the+verge+of+starvation%22&pg=PA425 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Shipley |first1=Tyler A. |title=Canada In The World: Settler Capitalism and the Colonial Imagination |date=25 July 2020 |publisher=Fernwood Publishing |isbn=978-1-77363-404-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hwB0EAAAQBAJ&dq=%22food+until+the+Indians+are+on+the+verge+of+starvation%22&pg=PT59 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Dutil |first1=Patrice |last2=Hall |first2=Roger |title=Macdonald at 200: New Reflections and Legacies |date=10 October 2014 |publisher=Dundurn |isbn=978-1-4597-2460-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lQEiAwAAQBAJ&dq=%22food+until+the+Indians+are+on+the+verge+of+starvation%22&pg=PT103 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Daschuk |first1=James William |title=Clearing the Plains: Disease, Politics of Starvation, and the Loss of Aboriginal Life |date=2013 |publisher=University of Regina Press |isbn=978-0-88977-296-0 |page=123 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mxwwZmSSOssC&dq=%22food+until+the+Indians+are+on+the+verge+of+starvation%22&pg=PA123 |language=en}}</ref>

The CPR was almost bankrupt, but Canada's decision to deploy troops in response to the crisis showed that the railway was helpful to maintain the territory's status as part of the British Empire, and the British Parliament provided money for its completion. On 7 November 1885, CPR manager ] wired Macdonald from ], that the ] had been driven, completing the railway.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|p=436}} That same year, the Macdonald government enacted the '']''.<ref>{{cite news |first1=Avvy Yao-Yao |last1=Go |first2=Brad |last2=Lee |title=Should we really be celebrating Sir John A. Macdonald's birthday? |work=] |date=13 January 2014 |url=https://www.thestar.com/opinion/commentary/2014/01/13/should_we_really_be_celebrating_sir_john_a_macdonalds_birthday.html |access-date=30 December 2018 |archive-date=30 December 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181230233441/https://www.thestar.com/opinion/commentary/2014/01/13/should_we_really_be_celebrating_sir_john_a_macdonalds_birthday.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Macdonald told the House of Commons that, if the Chinese were not excluded from Canada, "the Aryan character of the future of British America should be destroyed".<ref>{{cite news |first=Aaron |last=Wherry |title=Was John A. Macdonald a white supremacist? |work=] |date=21 August 2012 |url=https://www.macleans.ca/politics/ottawa/was-john-a-macdonald-a-white-supremacist/ |archive-date=21 October 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141021075134/https://www.macleans.ca/politics/ottawa/was-john-a-macdonald-a-white-supremacist/ |url-status=live}}</ref> In the summer of 1886, Macdonald travelled by rail to western Canada.<ref name="oosterom">{{cite journal|last1=Smith|first1=Donald B.|last2=Oosterom|first2=Nelle|title=Worlds Apart|journal=Canada's History|date=2017|volume=97|issue=5|pages=30–37|issn=1920-9894}}</ref> On 13 August 1886, Macdonald used a silver hammer and pounded a gold spike to complete the ].{{r|Shawinigan Lake Museum}}

In 1886, another dispute arose over fishing rights with the United States. Americans fishermen had been using treaty provisions allowing them to land in Canada to take on wood and water as a cover for clandestine inshore fishing. Several vessels were detained in Canadian ports, to the outrage of Americans, who demanded their release. Macdonald sought to pass a Fisheries Act which would override some of the treaty provisions, to the dismay of the British, who were still responsible for external relations. The British government instructed the governor general, ], to reserve the bill for royal assent, effectively placing it on hold without vetoing it. After considerable discussion, the British government allowed royal assent at the end of 1886, and indicated it would send a warship to protect the fisheries if no agreement was reached with the Americans.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=454–456}}

===Fifth and sixth majorities, 1887–1891===
] election poster from 1891]]

Fearing continued loss of political strength as poor economic times continued, Macdonald planned to hold an election by the end of 1886, but had not yet issued the writ when ] was called by Liberal Ontario premier Oliver Mowat. The provincial election was seen as a bellwether for the federal poll. Despite considerable campaigning by Macdonald, Mowat's Liberals were reelected in Ontario and increased their majority.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=454–456}} Macdonald dissolved the federal Parliament on 15 January 1887, for ] on 22 February. During the campaign, the Quebec provincial Liberals formed a government (four months after ]), forcing the Conservatives from power in Quebec City. Nevertheless, Macdonald and his cabinet campaigned hard in the winter election, with Tupper (the new ] to London) postponing his departure to try to bolster Conservative votes in Nova Scotia. The Liberal leader, ], ran an uninspiring campaign, and the Conservatives were returned nationally with a majority of 35, winning easily in Ontario, Nova Scotia, and Manitoba. The Tories also took a narrow majority of Quebec's seats despite resentment over Riel's hanging. Macdonald became MP for Kingston once again.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|pp=466–470}}{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=182–184}} Even the younger ministers, such as future prime minister ], who sometimes differed with Macdonald on policy, admitted Macdonald was an essential electoral asset for the Conservatives.{{sfn|Waite|1975|p=185}}

Blake resigned after the defeat and was replaced by ]. Under Laurier's early leadership, the Liberals, who previously supported much of the National Policy, campaigned against it and called for "unrestricted reciprocity", or free trade, with the United States. Macdonald was willing to see some reciprocity with the United States, but was reluctant to lower many tariffs.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=141–143}} American advocates of what they dubbed "commercial union" saw it as a prelude to political union, and did not scruple to say so, causing additional controversy in Canada.{{sfn|Waite|1975|p=203}}
], Kingston, Ontario]]

Macdonald called an ]. The Liberals were heavily financed by American interests; the Conservatives drew much financial support from the CPR. The 76-year-old prime minister collapsed during the campaign, and conducted political activities from his brother-in-law's house in Kingston. The Conservatives gained slightly in the popular vote, but their majority was reduced to 27.{{sfn|Waite|1975|pp=208–209}} The parties broke even in the central part of the country but the Conservatives dominated in the Maritimes and Western Canada, leading Liberal MP ] to claim that Macdonald's majority was dependent on "the shreds and patches of Confederation". After the election, Laurier and his Liberals grudgingly accepted the National Policy; when Laurier later became prime minister, he adopted it with only minor changes.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=147–148}}

=== Death ===
In May 1891, Macdonald suffered a stroke which left him partially paralysed and unable to speak.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|p=569}} His health continued to deteriorate and he died in the late evening of 6 June 1891.{{sfn|Creighton|1955|p=574–576}} Thousands filed by his open casket in the Senate Chamber; his body was transported by funeral train to his hometown of Kingston, with crowds greeting the train at each stop. On arrival in Kingston, Macdonald lay in state in City Hall, wearing the uniform of an Imperial Privy Counsellor. He was buried in ] in Kingston,<ref name=Parks_Grave>{{cite web | url=http://www.pc.gc.ca/eng/clmhc-hsmbc/Sepulture-gravesiteindx/listesepulture-listgravesite/macdonald.aspx | title=Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada – Former Prime Ministers and Their Grave Sites – The Right Honourable Sir John A. Macdonald | author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> | date=20 December 2010 | website=Parks Canada | publisher=Government of Canada | access-date=6 March 2014 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131019031350/http://www.pc.gc.ca/eng/clmhc-hsmbc/Sepulture-gravesiteindx/listesepulture-listgravesite/macdonald.aspx | archive-date=19 October 2013 }}</ref> his grave near that of his first wife, Isabella.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|pp=149–152}}

== Legacy and memorials ==
]
Macdonald served just under 19 years as prime minister, a length of service surpassed only by ].{{r|Duration of Canadian Ministries}} In polls, Macdonald has consistently been ] as one of the greatest prime ministers in Canadian history.<ref name="Maclean's">{{cite web |first1=S. |last1=Azzi |first2=N. |last2=Hillmer |url=http://www.macleans.ca/politics/ottawa/ranking-canadas-best-and-worst-prime-ministers/ |title=Ranking Canada's best and worst prime ministers |work=] |date=7 October 2016 |issue=October 2016 |access-date=7 September 2017 |archive-date=12 November 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201112015922/https://www.macleans.ca/politics/ottawa/ranking-canadas-best-and-worst-prime-ministers/ |url-status=live }}</ref> No cities or political subdivisions are named for Macdonald (with the exception of ]), nor are there any massive monuments.{{r|leg}} A peak in the Rockies, ] ({{circa}} 1887) at ], is named for him.{{r|parl}} In 2001, Parliament designated 11 January as Sir John A. Macdonald Day, but the day is not a federal holiday and generally passes unremarked.{{r|leg}} He appears on ]s printed between 1971 and 2018.{{r|Canadian ten-dollar note}}<ref>{{cite press release |title=New $10 bank note featuring Viola Desmond unveiled on International Women's Day |date=8 March 2018 |publisher=] |url=https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2018/03/new-10-bank-note-featuring-viola-desmond-unveiled/ |access-date=9 March 2018 |archive-date=8 March 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180308230749/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2018/03/new-10-bank-note-featuring-viola-desmond-unveiled/ |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2015, the ] featured Macdonald's face on the two-dollar coin, the ], to celebrate his 200th birthday.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/sir-john-a-macdonald-toonie-to-celebrate-1st-pm-s-200th-birthday-1.2879467 |title=Sir John A. Macdonald toonie to celebrate 1st PM's 200th birthday |date=19 December 2014 |last=Payton |first=Laura |publisher=CBC |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160505020638/http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/politics/sir-john-a-macdonald-toonie-to-celebrate-1st-pm-s-200th-birthday-1.2879467 |archive-date=5 May 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref> Macdonald's name is also used in Ottawa's ] (renamed in 1993) and ] (the Macdonald–Cartier Freeway {{circa}} 1968).{{r|leg}} His name is being phased out on Ottawa's Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway (River Parkway before 2012),<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/ottawa-river-parkway-renamed-after-sir-john-a-macdonald-1.1131806 |title=Ottawa River Parkway renamed after Sir John A. Macdonald |date=15 August 2012 |publisher=CBC |access-date=3 December 2012 |archive-date=28 January 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130128185339/http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/story/2012/08/15/ottawa-river-parkway-sir-john-a-macdonald.html |url-status=live }}</ref> being renamed to an indigenous term, ].<ref>{{cite news |website=ottawa.ctvnews.ca |publisher=CTV News Ottawa |url=https://ottawa.ctvnews.ca/video?clipId=2713634 |title=New name for western Ottawa parkway |date=22 June 2023 |access-date=23 June 2023}}</ref><ref name="cbc-june2223">{{cite news |publisher=CBC News |website=cbc.ca |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/ottawa-sir-john-a-macdonald-parkway-renaming-1.6884063 |title=Ottawa's Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway renamed Kichi Zībī Mīkan |date=22 June 2023 |accessdate=23 June 2023}}</ref> Macdonald also had a street named after him in ], Saskatchewan. This street was renamed miyo-wâhkôhtowin, a ] word meaning good relations, on 7 December 2023. This was done as a response to Macdonald playing a significant role in developing the Indian residential school system.<ref>{{cite web |title=New name proposed for Saskatoon's John A. MacDonald Road |url=https://thestarphoenix.com/news/local-news/new-name-proposed-for-saskatoons-john-a-macdonald-road |website=Saskatoon Star Phoenix |access-date=6 June 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Saskatoon's John A. Macdonald Road name change passed despite weeks of speed bumps |url=https://globalnews.ca/news/9991625/saskatoon-john-a-macdonald-road-name-change/ |website=Global News |access-date=6 June 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=miyo-wâhkôhtowin Road (formerly John A. Macdonald Road) |url=https://www.saskatoon.ca/engage/miyo-wahkohtowin-road-formerly-john-macdonald-road#:~:text=On%20June%2028%2C%202021%2C%20Saskatoon,schools%20and%20their%20ongoing%20impacts. |website=City of Saskatoon |access-date=6 June 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Former John A Macdonald Road officially renamed miyo wahkohtowin Road |url=https://saskatoon.ctvnews.ca/former-john-a-macdonald-road-officially-renamed-miyo-wahkohtowin-road-1.6678516 |website=CTV News |date=7 December 2023 |access-date=6 June 2024}}</ref>

] in Montreal in 2011]]

A number of sites associated with Macdonald are preserved. His gravesite has been designated a ].{{r|Sir John A. Macdonald Gravesite|CRHP, Macdonald Gravesite}} ] in Kingston, where the Macdonald family lived in the 1840s, is also a National Historic Site administered by ], and has been restored to that time period.{{r|Bellevue House National Historic Site}} His Ottawa home, Earnscliffe, is the official residence of the British High Commissioner to Canada.{{r|parl}} Statues have been erected to Macdonald across Canada;{{r|LandmarksPublicArt}} one stands on ] in Ottawa (by Louis-Philippe Hebert {{circa}} 1895).{{r|ParliamentHill, Statues}} A statue of Macdonald stands atop a granite plinth originally intended for a statue of Queen Victoria in Toronto's ], looking south on University Avenue.{{sfn|Warkentin|2009|pp=63–64}} Macdonald's statue also stood in Kingston's City Park; the Kingston Historical Society annually holds a memorial service in his honour.{{r|Kingston Historical Society, Macdonald}} On 18 June 2021, following the discovery of 215 unmarked graves at the ], the statue of Macdonald was removed from Kingston's City Park after city council voted 12–1 in favour of its removal, and is set to be installed at Cataraqui Cemetery where Macdonald is buried.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://globalnews.ca/news/7961292/john-a-macdonald-statue-kingston-removed/|title=Sir John A. Macdonald statue removed from Kingston's City Park|publisher=globalnews.ca|date=18 June 2021|access-date=19 June 2021|archive-date=28 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210628182025/https://globalnews.ca/news/7961292/john-a-macdonald-statue-kingston-removed/|url-status=live}}</ref> In 2018, a statue of Macdonald was removed from outside ], as part of the city's program for reconciliation with local ].<ref>{{Cite news|title=John A. Macdonald statue removed from Victoria City Hall|publisher=CBC News|date=11 August 2018|url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/john-a-macdonald-statue-victoria-city-hall-lisa-helps-1.4782065|access-date=11 August 2018|archive-date=11 August 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180811195131/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/john-a-macdonald-statue-victoria-city-hall-lisa-helps-1.4782065|url-status=live}}</ref> The ] in Montreal has been repeatedly vandalized, and on 29 August 2020, the statue in the monument was vandalized, toppled and decapitated.<ref>{{cite news|last=Rowe|first=Daniel J.|publisher=]|title=Statue of John A. Macdonald toppled during defund the police protest|url=https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/statue-of-john-a-macdonald-toppled-during-defund-the-police-protest-1.5084561|date=30 August 2020|access-date=30 August 2020|archive-date=30 August 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200830165156/https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/statue-of-john-a-macdonald-toppled-during-defund-the-police-protest-1.5084561|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name=restore>{{cite web|url= https://www.cbc.ca/amp/1.5705101|title= Activists topple statue of Sir John A. Macdonald in downtown Montreal|publisher= CBC.ca|date= 29 August 2020|access-date= 30 August 2020|archive-date= 30 August 2020|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20200830091051/https://www.cbc.ca/amp/1.5705101|url-status= live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |publisher=CBC |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/pei-statue-sir-john-a-macdonald-1.5619052 |title=Sir John A. Macdonald statue defaced overnight |date=19 June 2020 |first=Sara |last=Fraser |access-date=26 March 2021 |archive-date=11 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210311115131/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/pei-statue-sir-john-a-macdonald-1.5619052 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |publisher=BBC |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53963665 |title=Canada statue of John A Macdonald toppled by activists in Montreal |date= 30 August 2020 |access-date=26 March 2021 |archive-date=4 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210404132148/https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53963665 |url-status=live }}</ref> Montreal Mayor ] condemned the actions and said the city plans to restore the statue.<ref name=restore/>

Macdonald's biographers note his contribution to establishing Canada as a nation. Swainson suggests that Macdonald's desire for a free and tolerant Canada became part of its national outlook and contributed immeasurably to its character.{{sfn|Swainson|1989|p=10}} Gwyn said Macdonald's accomplishments of Confederation and building the Canadian railroad were great, but he was also responsible for scandals and bad government policy for the execution of Riel and the ] on Chinese workers.{{sfn|Gwyn|2007|p=3}} In 2017, the ] had voted to remove Macdonald's name from their prize for best scholarly book about Canadian history. Historian James Daschuk acknowledges Macdonald's contributions as a founding figure of Canada, but states "He built the country. But he built the country on the backs of the Indigenous people."<ref>{{cite news |last=Hamilton |first=Graeme |date=18 May 2018 |title='A key player in Indigenous cultural genocide:' Historians erase Sir John A. Macdonald's name from book prize |work=National Post |url=https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/a-key-player-in-indigenous-cultural-genocide-historians-erase-sir-john-a-macdonalds-name-from-book-prize |access-date=25 August 2018 |archive-date=30 May 2018 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20180530085545/http://nationalpost.com/news/canada/a-key-player-in-indigenous-cultural-genocide-historians-erase-sir-john-a-macdonalds-name-from-book-prize |url-status=live }}</ref> A biographical online article about Macdonald was deleted from the Scottish government's website in August 2018. A spokesperson for the Scottish government stated: "We acknowledge controversy around Sir John A Macdonald's legacy and the legitimate concerns expressed by Indigenous communities".<ref>{{cite news |last=Hopper|first=Tristin |date=20 August 2018 |title=Scottish government is actively distancing itself from John A. Macdonald: report |work=National Post |url=https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/scottish-government-is-actively-distancing-itself-from-john-a-macdonald-report}}</ref> On 5 July 2021, Canada's national library, ], deleted its web page on Canada's prime ministers, "First Among Equals", calling it "outdated and redundant".<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/archives-canada-removes-outdated-redundant-web-page-about-nations-prime-ministers|title=Archives Canada removes 'outdated, redundant' web page about nation's prime ministers|first=Tyler|last=Dawson|newspaper=National Post|date=6 July 2021}}</ref>

==Honorary degrees==
Macdonald was awarded the following ]:
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;"
! style="width:20%;"| Location
! style="width:20%;"| Date
! style="width:40%;"| School
! style="width:20%;"| Degree
|-
| Canada West || 1863 || ] || ] (LL.D)<ref>{{cite web |title=Honorary Degrees |publisher=] |date=14 September 2011 |url=http://www.queensu.ca/registrar/sites/webpublish.queensu.ca.uregwww/files/files/HDrecipients.pdf |access-date=21 May 2018 |archive-date=27 February 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200227133354/http://queensu.ca/registrar/sites/webpublish.queensu.ca.uregwww/files/files/HDrecipients.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>
|-
| {{Flagu|England}} || 1865 || ] || ] (D.C.L.)<ref>{{cite book|first=Joseph|last=Foster|chapter=Macdonald, (Sir) John Alexander|chapter-url=https://en.wikisource.org/Alumni_Oxonienses:_the_Members_of_the_University_of_Oxford,_1715-1886/Macdonald,_(Sir)_John_Alexander|title=Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715-1886|volume=3|year=1891|location=Oxford|publisher=Parker and Co.|pages=891|access-date= 29 September 2020|archive-date=30 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210930141953/https://en.wikisource.org/Alumni_Oxonienses:_the_Members_of_the_University_of_Oxford,_1715-1886/Macdonald,_(Sir)_John_Alexander|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|chapter=SirJohn A. Macdonald|chapter-url=http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/QuebecHistory/encyclopedia/SirJohnA.Macdonald-JohnAlexanderMacdonald-CanadianHistory.htm|editor-first=W. Stewart|editor-last=Wallace|title=The Encyclopedia of Canada|volume=IV|year=1948|location=Toronto|publisher=University Associates of Canada|pages=165–166|access-date=29 September 2020|archive-date=1 August 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200801211324/http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/QuebecHistory/encyclopedia/SirJohnA.Macdonald-JohnAlexanderMacdonald-CanadianHistory.htm|url-status=live}}</ref>
|-
| Ontario || 1889 || ] || Doctor of Laws (LL.D)<ref>{{cite web |title=Honorary Degree Recipients |publisher=] |date=14 September 2016 |url=https://governingcouncil.utoronto.ca/sites/default/files/import-files/degreerecipients1850tillnow3709.pdf |access-date=6 September 2019 |archive-date= 21 August 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190821115911/https://governingcouncil.utoronto.ca/sites/default/files/import-files/degreerecipients1850tillnow3709.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>
|-
|}

==Arms==
{{Emblem table
| name = Sir John Alexander Macdonald
| image = Arms of John Alexander Macdonald.svg
| imagesize =
| notes =
| year_adopted =
| coronet =
| crest = "A dexter forearm couped palewise proper the hand holding a balance fesswise together with a sprig of three maple leaves Or"
| torse =
| helm =
| escutcheon = "Quarterly: first, Argent a lion rampant Gules armed and langued Azure; second, Or a dexter hand couped fessways proper holding a cross-crosslet fitchée Azure; third, Or a lymphad sails furled and oars in action Sable flagged Gules; fourth, barry wavy of six Argent and Azure a salmon naiant proper; overall on a fess Vert a covered cup between two sprigs of three maple leaves Or"
| supporters =
| compartment =
| motto = '''PER AQUAM ET TERRAM''' (By sea and land)
| orders =
| other_elements =
| bannerimage =
| banner =
| badgetitle = <!-- Bolded title displayed in table for badge, not required for first badge -->
| badgeimage = <!-- Required for first badge -->
| badge =
| badge2title = <!-- Bolded title displayed in table for badge, required for second badge -->
| badge2image = <!-- Required for second badge -->
| badge2 =
| badge3title = <!-- Bolded title displayed in table for badge, required for third badge -->
| badge3image = <!-- Required for third badge -->
| badge3 =
| symbolism =
| previous_versions =
| other_versions =
}} }}
{{end box}}


== References ==
{{start box}}
=== Notes ===
{{succession box | before=] | title=Attorney General of Canada West| years=1864–1867 | after=Replaced by ] and ]
{{notelist
| notes =

{{efn
| name = born
| Although 10 January is the official date recorded in the General Register Office in Edinburgh, 11 January is the day Macdonald and those who commemorate him have celebrated his birthday. See {{harvnb|Gwyn|2007|p=8}}.
}} }}
{{end box}}


{{efn
{{start box}}
| name = officialbirthrecord
{{s-off}}
| The official birth record for John Alexander Mcdonald, proving the original spelling of the surname and official date of birth can be found in the ] or online at ] using the following details:Parish: Glasgow, Parish Number: 644/1, Ref: 210 201, Parents/ Other Details: FR2265 (FR2265).
{{succession box|
before=]<br>|
title=]&nbsp;– Canada West|
years=1856&nbsp;– 1858|
after=]
}} }}

{{succession box|
title=]&nbsp;– Canada West|
before=]|
years=1858&nbsp;– 1867|
after=himself as ] and ] as ]
}} }}

{{s-bef | rows=3 | before=none}}
=== Citations ===
{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1867–1891}}

{{s-aft | rows=1 | after=]}}
{{reflist
{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1867–1873}}
| colwidth = 20em
{{s-aft | rows=1 | after=]}}
| refs =
{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1867–1873}}

{{s-aft | rows=1 | after=]}}
<ref name="esask, Rupert's Land purchase">
{{s-bef | rows=2 | before=]}}
{{cite encyclopedia
{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1873–1878}}
| first = Elizabeth |last = Mooney
{{s-aft | rows=1 | after=]}}
| title = Rupert's Land purchase
{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1878–1891}}
| encyclopedia = The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan
{{s-aft | rows=1 | after=]}}
| publisher = University of Regina
{{s-bef | rows=2 | before=]}}
| url = http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/ruperts_land_purchase.html
{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1878–1883}}
| access-date = 25 March 2011
{{s-aft | rows=1 | after=]}}
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101013053632/http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/ruperts_land_purchase.html
{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1878–1887}}
| archive-date = 13 October 2010
{{s-aft | rows=1 | after=]}}
| url-status = dead
{{succession box|
before=]|
title=]|
after=]|
years=1883&nbsp;– 1889
}} }}
</ref>
{{s-bef | rows=2 | before=]}}

{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1888}}
<ref name="parl">{{cite web |url=https://lop.parl.ca/sites/ParlInfo/default/en_CA/People/Profile?personId=4997 |title=Macdonald, The Right Hon. Sir John Alexander, P.C., G.C.B., Q.C., D.C.L., LL.D. |website=ParlInfo |publisher=Parliament of Canada |access-date=8 September 2019 |archive-date=22 August 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190822045733/https://lop.parl.ca/sites/ParlInfo/default/en_CA/People/Profile?personId=4997 |url-status=live }}</ref>
{{s-aft | rows=2 | after=]}}

{{s-ttl |title=] | years=1888}}
<ref name="Shawinigan Lake Museum">
{{succession box|
{{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111008221451/http://www.shawniganlakemuseum.com/The%20Last%20Spike.html |date=8 October 2011 }} ''Shawinigan Lake Museum.'' Retrieved on 21 July 2011.
before=]|
</ref>
title=]|

after=] ''(acting)''|
<ref name="Duration of Canadian Ministries"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151215204532/http://www.parl.gc.ca/ParlInfo/Compilations/FederalGovernment/MinistriesDuration.aspx |date=15 December 2015 }} Parliament of Canada. Retrieved on 22 March 2011.</ref>
years= 1889&nbsp;– 1891

<ref name="leg"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200223032318/http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/sir-john-a-macdonald/023013-6000-e.html |date=23 February 2020 }} ''Library and Archives Canada,'' 27 June 2008. Retrieved on 13 March 2011.</ref>

<ref name="Canadian ten-dollar note">{{cite web |url=http://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/design_10.pdf |title=The Design of Canada's $10 Polymer Note |publisher=] |date=May 2013 |access-date=17 December 2014 |archive-date=6 August 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140806023648/http://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/design_10.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>

<ref name="Sir John A. Macdonald Gravesite">
{{DFHD|1874|Sir John A. Macdonald Gravesite National Historic Site of Canada}}
</ref>

<ref name="CRHP, Macdonald Gravesite">
{{CRHP|12964|Sir John A. Macdonald Gravesite|21 March 2011}}
</ref>

<ref name="Bellevue House National Historic Site">
{{cite web
|title = Bellevue House National Historic Site of Canada: Discover
|publisher = Parks Canada
|url = https://www.pc.gc.ca/en/lhn-nhs/on/bellevue/decouvrir-discover
|date = 27 October 2017
|url-status = live
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20171211203200/https://www.pc.gc.ca/en/lhn-nhs/on/bellevue/decouvrir-discover
|archive-date = 11 December 2017
}} }}
</ref>
{{s-par|ca}}

{{succession box|
<ref name="LandmarksPublicArt">{{cite web
before=none|
| title = Sir John A. Macdonald by John Dann
title=] for ]|
| work = Landmarks&nbsp;– Public Art in the Capital Region
after=]|
| publisher = LandmarksPublicArt.ca
years=1867&nbsp;– 1878
| url = http://www.landmarkspublicart.ca/Artwork/280
| access-date = 2 July 2013
| archive-date = 10 July 2012
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120710050902/http://www.landmarkspublicart.ca/Artwork/280
| url-status = live
}}</ref>

<ref name="ParliamentHill, Statues">
{{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100301082936/http://www.parliamenthill.gc.ca/histoire-history/terrains-grounds/statues-eng.html |date= 1 March 2010 }} Public Works and Government Services Canada. 4 August 2009. Retrieved on 20 March 2011.
</ref>

<ref name="Kingston Historical Society, Macdonald">
{{cite web
|title = John A. Macdonald's Kingston
|publisher = Kingston Historical Society
|url = http://kingstonhistoricalsociety.ca/jamkingston.html
|access-date = 20 February 2012
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120524212930/http://kingstonhistoricalsociety.ca/jamkingston.html
|archive-date = 24 May 2012
}} }}
</ref>
{{succession box|
before=]|
title=] for ]|
after=]|
years=1878
}} }}

{{succession box|
===Works cited===
before=]|

title=] for ]|
*{{Cite book |last=Bourinot |first=John George |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=k1i056Bp0IMC |title=Parliamentary Procedure and Practice in the Dominion of Canada |date=2008 |publisher=The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. |isbn=978-1-58477-881-3}}
after=]|
* {{cite book
years=1878&nbsp;– 1882
| last = Creighton
}}
| first = Donald
{{succession box|
| year = 1952
before=]|
| title = John A. Macdonald: The Young Politician'', Vol 1: 1815–1867''
title=] for ]|
| publisher = The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited
after=]|
| location = Toronto
years=1882
| url = https://www.questia.com/library/1134611/john-a-macdonald-the-young-politician
}}
| isbn = 978-0-307-37135-5
{{succession box|
| access-date = 18 November 2015
before=]|
| archive-date = 18 November 2015
title=] for ]|
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151118210841/https://www.questia.com/library/1134611/john-a-macdonald-the-young-politician
after=]|
| url-status = live
years=1882&nbsp;– 1887
}} }}
* {{cite book
{{succession box|
| last = Creighton
before=Alexander Gunn|
| first = Donald
title=] for ]|
| year = 1955
after=]|
| title = John A. Macdonald: The Old Chieftain'', Vol 2: 1867–1891''
years=1887&nbsp;– 1891
| publisher = The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited
| location = Toronto
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=lJTx3BMuGRYC&pg=PP1
| isbn = 978-0-8020-7164-4
| access-date = 8 September 2019
| archive-date = 3 August 2020
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200803204540/https://books.google.com/books?id=lJTx3BMuGRYC&pg=PP1
| url-status = live
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Gwyn
| first = Richard
| year = 2007
| title = John A., The Man Who Made Us: The Life and Times of Sir John A. Macdonald
| volume = 1: 1815–1867
| publisher = Random House Canada
| location = Toronto
| isbn = 978-0-679-31475-2
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=FB_wanPti6IC&pg=PP1
| access-date = 8 September 2019
| archive-date = 3 August 2020
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200803200817/https://books.google.com/books?id=FB_wanPti6IC&pg=PP1
| url-status = live
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Gwyn
| first = Richard
| year = 2011
| title = Nation Builder: Sir John A. Macdonald: His Life, Our Times
| volume = 2: 1867–1891
| publisher = Random House Canada
| location = Toronto
| isbn = 978-0-307-35644-4
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=cBKGvuvksIAC&pg=PP1
| access-date = 8 September 2019
| archive-date = 3 August 2020
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200803224658/https://books.google.com/books?id=cBKGvuvksIAC&pg=PP1
| url-status = live
}}
*{{cite book|editor1-last=Henderson|editor1-first=Jennifer|editor2-last=Wakeham|editor2-first=Pauline|title=Reconciling Canada: Critical Perspectives on the Culture of Redress|date=2013|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto|isbn=978-1-4426-1168-9|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nyIaxJFkdPIC&q=davin+report+half-breeds&pg=PA299|access-date=5 May 2017|chapter=Appendix A: Aboriginal Peoples and Residential Schools|archive-date=13 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210613180647/https://books.google.com/books?id=nyIaxJFkdPIC&q=davin+report+half-breeds&pg=PA299|url-status=live}}
*{{cite book |last=McInnis |first=Edgar |title=Canada: A political and social history |date=1982 |pages=–431 |publisher=Holt |isbn=978-0-0392-3177-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/canadapoliticals0000mcin|url-access=registration }}
* {{cite book
| last = Phenix
| first = Patricia
| year = 2006
| title = Private Demons: The Tragic Personal Life of John A. Macdonald
| edition = 1st hardcover
| publisher = McClelland & Stewart
| location = Toronto
| isbn = 978-0-7710-7044-0
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=nK_aVqnqfNwC&pg=PP1
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Pope
| first = Joseph
| year = 1894
| title = Memoirs of the Right Honourable Sir John Alexander Macdonald, G.C.B., First Prime Minister of The Dominion of Canada
| publisher = J. Durie & Son
| location = Ottawa
| url = https://archive.org/details/memoirsofpope01popeuoft/page/n8
}}
* {{cite book
| last1 = Smith
| first1 = Cynthia
| last2 = McLeod
| first2 = Jack
| year = 1989
| title = Sir John A.: An Anecdotal Life of John A. Macdonald
| location = Don Mills, Ontario
| publisher = Oxford University Press Canada
| isbn = 978-0-19-540681-8
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=JjUlAAAAMAAJ&pg=PP1
}}
*{{Cite book|title = The New Buffalo: The Struggle for Aboriginal Post-Secondary Education in Canada|last = Stonechild|first = Blair|publisher = University of Manitoba Press|year = 2006|isbn = 9780887556937|location = Winnipeg|url = https://archive.org/details/newbuffalostrugg0000ston/page/19}}
* {{cite book
| last = Swainson
| first = Donald
| year = 1989
| title = Sir John A. Macdonald: The Man and the Politician
| location = Kingston, ON
| publisher = Quarry Press
| isbn = 978-0-19-540181-3
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=y-vzpltDNQMC&pg=PP1
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Waite
| first = P. B.
| year = 1975
| title = Macdonald: His Life and World
| publisher = McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited
| location = Toronto
| isbn = 978-0-07-082301-3
| url-access = registration
| url = https://archive.org/details/macdonald00pete
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Warkentin
| first = Tim
| year = 2009
| title = Creating Memory: A Guide to Toronto's Outdoor Sculpture
| publisher = Becker Associates
| location = Toronto
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gCUyR1svtb8C&q=john+a+macdonald+statue+queens+park+toronto
| access-date = 20 March 2011
| isbn = 978-0-919387-60-7
| archive-date = 29 August 2021
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210829192155/https://books.google.com/books?id=gCUyR1svtb8C&q=john+a+macdonald+statue+queens+park+toronto
| url-status = live
}} }}
{{end box}}


== Further reading ==
{{Portal|Canada|Politics}}
{{See also|List of books about Prime Ministers of Canada}}


* {{cite book
| last = Bliss
| first = Michael
| year = 2004
| title = Right Honourable Men: The Descent of Canadian Politics from Macdonald to Mulroney
| publisher = Harper Perennial Canada
| location = Toronto
| edition = Updated
| isbn = 978-0-00-639484-6
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Collins
| first = Joseph Edmund
| year = 1883
| title = Life and times of the Right Honourable Sir John A. Macdonald: Premier of the Dominion of Canada
| publisher = Rose Publishing Company
| location = Toronto
| url = https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_9KwNAAAAQAAJ
| oclc = 562542085
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Creighton
| first = Donald
| year = 1964
| title = The Road to Confederation: The Emergence of Canada: 1863–1867
| publisher = The Macmillan Company of Canada Ltd
| location = Toronto
| url = https://archive.org/details/roadtoconfederat0000crei
| url-access = registration
| isbn = 978-0-8371-8435-7
}}
* {{cite journal |last=Creighton |first=Donald G. |title=John A. Macdonald, Confederation and the Canadian West |journal=Transactions of the Manitoba Historical Society |volume=Series 3 |issue=23, 1966–67 |url=http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/macdonald_ja.shtml |access-date=6 November 2015 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304080228/http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/macdonald_ja.shtml |url-status=live }}
* {{cite book |editor-last1=Dutil |editor-first1=Patrice |editor-first2=Roger |editor-last2=Hall |title=Macdonald at 200: New Reflections and Legacies |date=2014 |location=Toronto |publisher=Dundurn |isbn=978-1-4597-2448-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wJciAwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1 |access-date=8 September 2019 |archive-date=3 August 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200803203626/https://books.google.com/books?id=wJciAwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1 |url-status=live }}; essays by scholars
* {{cite magazine |last=Gwyn |first=Richard J. |title=Canada's Father Figure |magazine=] |date=2012 |volume=92 |issue=5 |pages=30–37 |url=https://www.canadashistory.ca/explore/prime-ministers/canada-s-father-figure |access-date=6 September 2019 |archive-date=6 September 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190906025125/https://www.canadashistory.ca/explore/prime-ministers/canada-s-father-figure |url-status=live }}
* {{cite DCB |title=Macdonald, Sir John Alexander |first1=J.K. |last1=Johnson |first2=P.B. |last2=Waite |volume=12 |url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/macdonald_john_alexander_12E.html }}
* {{cite wikisource |first=John A. |last=Macdonald |title=Troublous Times in Canada: A History of the Fenian Raids of 1866 and 1870 |publisher=W. S. Johnston |date=1910 |wslink=Troublous Times in Canada: A History of the Fenian Raids of 1866 and 1870}} This author is different from the subject of this page, and lived 1846–1922. Since the copyright has run out, there exist today many reprints.
* {{cite journal |last=Martin |first=Ged |title=John A. Macdonald: Provincial Premier |journal=British Journal of Canadian Studies |date=2007 |volume=20 |issue=1 |pages=99–122 |doi=10.3828/bjcs.20.1.5 |url=https://online.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/abs/10.3828/bjcs.20.1.5 |url-access=subscription |access-date=6 September 2019 |archive-date=6 September 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190906025122/https://online.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/abs/10.3828/bjcs.20.1.5 |url-status=dead }}
<!-- https://globalnews.ca/news/3693078/sir-john-a-macdonald-controversy-canadas-first-prime-minister/ -->


===Historiography===
* {{cite book
| editor-last1 = Dutil
| editor-first1 = Patrice
| editor-first2 = Roger
| editor-last2 = Hall
| year = 2014
| title = Macdonald at 200: New Reflections and Legacies
| publisher = Dundurn
| location = Toronto
| isbn = 978-1-4597-2448-8
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=wJciAwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1
}}, essays by scholars
* {{cite magazine |last=Symons |first=Thomas H.B. |title=John A. Macdonald: A founder and builder |magazine=Canadian Issues |date=Summer 2015 |pages=6–10 |url=https://acs-aec.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/CITC-2015-Summer.pdf}}

===Primary sources===
* {{cite book |editor-last1=Gibson |editor-first1=Sarah Katherine |editor-first2=Arthur |editor-last2=Milnes |title=Canada Transformed: The Speeches of Sir John A. Macdonald: A Bicentennial Celebration |publisher=McClelland and Stewart |date=2014 |isbn=9780771057199 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E_5vDwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1}}; mostly drawn from debates in Parliament
* {{cite book
| last = Johnson
| first = J.K.
| year = 1969
| title = Affectionately Yours: The Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald and His Family
| publisher = The Macmillan Company of Canada, Ltd
| location = Toronto
| isbn = 978-0-7705-1017-6
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=8A0QAQAAIAAJ&pg=PP1
}}

==External links==
{{commons category|John A. Macdonald}}
{{wikiquote}}
{{wikisource author}}
* {{cite news|title=Topic&nbsp;– Sir John A. Macdonald: Architect of Modern Canada|publisher=]|url=http://www.cbc.ca/archives/categories/politics/prime-ministers/sir-john-a-macdonald-architect-of-modern-canada/topic---sir-john-a-macdonald-architect-of-modern-canada.html|access-date= 30 August 2012}}
*
* {{cite DNB |wstitle=Macdonald, John Alexander |first=Henry |last=Bruce |volume=35 |pages=43–46}}
* {{cite EB1911 |wstitle=Macdonald, Sir John Alexander |first=George Robert |last=Parkin |author-link=George Robert Parkin |volume=17 |pages=211–212}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Johnson |first=J.K. |title=Sir John A. Macdonald |encyclopedia=] |date=12 December 2018 |publisher=] |edition=online |url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/sir-john-alexander-macdonald}}
* at ]
* , Archives of Ontario

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{{John A. Macdonald}}
{{CanPM}}
{{Canadian Conservative Leaders}} {{Canadian Conservative Leaders}}
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<!-- Metadata: see ] -->
{{Persondata
|NAME=Macdonald, John Alexander
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION=1st Prime Minister of Canada (1867–1973, 1878–1891)
|DATE OF BIRTH={{Birth date|1815|1|11|mf=y}}
|PLACE OF BIRTH=], ]
|DATE OF DEATH={{death date|1891|6|6|mf=y}}
|PLACE OF DEATH=]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Macdonald, John A.}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Macdonald, John A.}}
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Latest revision as of 10:42, 22 December 2024

Prime Minister of Canada (1867–1873; 1878–1891) This article is about the Canadian prime minister. For people with similar names, see John Macdonald (disambiguation) and John Alexander Macdonald (disambiguation).

The Right HonourableSir John A. MacdonaldGCB PC QC
Photograph of Macdonald circa 1875 by George Lancefield.Macdonald, c. 1875
1st Prime Minister of Canada
In office
17 October 1878 – 6 June 1891
MonarchVictoria
Governors General
Preceded byAlexander Mackenzie
Succeeded byJohn Abbott
In office
1 July 1867 – 5 November 1873
MonarchVictoria
Governors General
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byAlexander Mackenzie
Leader of the Conservative Party
In office
1 July 1867 – 6 June 1891
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byJohn Abbott
Member of the House of Commons of Canada
In office
1867 – 6 June 1891
Joint-Premier of the Province of Canada
In office
30 May 1864 – 30 June 1867
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byJohn Sandfield Macdonald
Succeeded byPosition abolished
In office
6 August 1858 – 24 May 1862
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byGeorge Brown
Succeeded byJohn Sandfield Macdonald
In office
24 May 1856 – 2 August 1858
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byAllan MacNab
Succeeded byGeorge Brown
Personal details
BornJohn Alexander Mcdonald
10 or 11 January 1815
Glasgow, Scotland
Died6 June 1891(1891-06-06) (aged 76)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Resting placeCataraqui Cemetery
Political partyConservative
Other political
affiliations
Spouses
Isabella Clark ​ ​(m. 1843; died 1857)
Agnes Bernard ​(m. 1867)
Children3, including Hugh John Macdonald
EducationApprenticeship
Profession
  • Politician
  • lawyer
Signature
Nicknames
  • "Old Tomorrow"
  • "The Old Chieftain"
Military service
AllegianceProvince of Upper Canada
Branch/serviceLoyalist militia
Years of service1837-1838
RankPrivate
Ensign
UnitCommercial Bank Guard
3rd Frontenac Militia Regiment
Battles/warsUpper Canada Rebellion
Cabinet offices held
Leadership offices held
Parliamentary offices held
  • Member of the Parliament of the Province of Canada (1843–1867)
  • Member of the Parliament of Canada for Kingston (1867–1878, 1887–1891)
  • Member of the Canadian Parliament for Marquette (1878)
  • Member of the Canadian Parliament for Victoria (1878–1882)
  • Member of the Canadian Parliament for Lennox (1882)
  • Member of the Canadian Parliament for Carleton (1882–1887)
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Sir John Alexander Macdonald, GCB PC QC (10 or 11 January 1815 – 6 June 1891) was the first prime minister of Canada, serving from 1867 to 1873 and from 1878 until his death in 1891. He was the dominant figure of Canadian Confederation, and had a political career that spanned almost half a century.

Macdonald was born in Scotland; when he was a boy his family immigrated to Kingston in the Province of Upper Canada (today in eastern Ontario). As a lawyer, he was involved in several high-profile cases and quickly became prominent in Kingston, which elected him in 1844 to the legislature of the Province of Canada. By 1857, he had become premier under the colony's unstable political system. In 1864, when no party proved capable of governing for long, he agreed to a proposal from his political rival, George Brown, that the parties unite in a Great Coalition to seek federation and political reform. He was a leading figure in the subsequent discussions and conferences which resulted in the British North America Act and the establishment of Canada as a nation on 1 July 1867.

Macdonald was the first prime minister of the new nation, and served 19 years; only William Lyon Mackenzie King has served longer. In his first term, he established the North-West Mounted Police and expanded Canada by annexing the North-Western Territory, Rupert's Land, British Columbia, and Prince Edward Island. In 1873, he resigned from office over a scandal in which his party took bribes from businessmen seeking the contract to build the Canadian Pacific Railway. He was reelected in 1878. His greatest achievements were building and guiding a successful national government for the new Dominion, using patronage to forge a strong Conservative Party, promoting the protective tariff of the National Policy, and completing the railway. He fought to block provincial efforts to take power back from the national government in Ottawa. He approved the execution of Métis leader Louis Riel for treason in 1885 which alienated many francophones from his Conservative Party. He sat until his death in 1891 and remains the oldest Canadian prime minister.

Macdonald came under criticism for his role in the Chinese head tax and federal policies toward Indigenous peoples, including his actions during the North-West Rebellion that resulted in Riel's execution, and the development of the residential school system designed to assimilate Indigenous children. He remains respected by others for his key role in Confederation. Historical rankings of Prime Ministers of Canada have consistently made him one of the highest-rated in Canadian history.

Early years, 1815–1830

John Alexander Macdonald was born in Ramshorn parish in Glasgow, Scotland, on 10 January (official record) or 11 (father's journal) 1815. His father Hugh, an unsuccessful merchant, had married John's mother, Helen Shaw, on 21 October 1811. John Alexander Macdonald was the third of five children. After Hugh's business ventures left him in debt, the family immigrated to Kingston, in Upper Canada (today the southern and eastern portions of Ontario), in 1820, as the family had several relatives and connections there.

The family initially lived together, then resided over a store which Hugh Macdonald ran. Soon after their arrival, John's younger brother James died from a blow to the head by a servant charged with taking care of the boys. After Hugh's store failed, the family moved to Hay Bay (south of Napanee, Ontario), west of Kingston, where Hugh unsuccessfully ran another shop. In 1829, his father was appointed as a magistrate for the Midland District. John Macdonald's mother was a lifelong influence on her son, helping him in his difficult first marriage and remaining influential in his life until her 1862 death.

Macdonald initially attended local schools. When he was aged 10, his family gathered enough money to send him to Midland District Grammar School in Kingston. Macdonald's formal schooling ended at 15, a common school-leaving age at a time when only children from the most prosperous families were able to attend university. Macdonald later regretted leaving school when he did, remarking to his secretary Joseph Pope that if he had attended university, he might have embarked on a literary career.

Legal career, 1830–1843

Legal training and early career, 1830–1837

Macdonald's parents decided he should become a lawyer after leaving school. As Donald Creighton (who penned a two-volume biography of Macdonald in the 1950s) wrote, "law was a broad, well-trodden path to comfort, influence, even to power". It was also "the obvious choice for a boy who seemed as attracted to study as he was uninterested in trade." Macdonald needed to start earning money immediately to support his family because his father's businesses were failing. "I had no boyhood," he complained many years later. "From the age of 15, I began to earn my own living."

A photograph of a two-story building
A few months after he opened his first law office in 1835, Macdonald moved with his parents and sisters to this 2+1⁄2-storey stone house on Kingston's Rideau Street.

Macdonald travelled by steamboat to Toronto (known until 1834 as York), where he passed an examination set by The Law Society of Upper Canada. British North America had no law schools in 1830; students were examined when beginning and ending their tutelage. Between the two examinations, they were apprenticed, or articled to established lawyers. Macdonald began his apprenticeship with George Mackenzie, a prominent young lawyer who was a well-regarded member of Kingston's rising Scottish community. Mackenzie practised corporate law, a lucrative speciality that Macdonald himself would later pursue. Macdonald was a promising student, and in the summer of 1833, managed the Mackenzie office when his employer went on a business trip to Montreal and Quebec in Lower Canada (today the southern portion of the province of Quebec). Later that year, Macdonald was sent to manage the law office of a Mackenzie cousin who had fallen ill.

In August 1834, George Mackenzie died of cholera. With his supervising lawyer dead, Macdonald remained at the cousin's law office in Hallowell (today Picton, Ontario). In 1835, Macdonald returned to Kingston, and even though not yet of age nor qualified, began his practice as a lawyer, hoping to gain his former employer's clients. Macdonald's parents and sisters also returned to Kingston.

Soon after Macdonald was called to the Bar in February 1836, he arranged to take in two students; both became, like Macdonald, Fathers of Confederation. Oliver Mowat became premier of Ontario, and Alexander Campbell a federal cabinet minister and Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. One early client was Eliza Grimason, an Irish immigrant then aged sixteen, who sought advice concerning a shop she and her husband wanted to buy. Grimason would become one of Macdonald's richest and most loyal supporters, and may have also become his lover. Macdonald joined many local organisations, seeking to become well known in the town. He also sought out high-profile cases, representing accused child rapist William Brass. Brass was hanged for his crime, but Macdonald attracted positive press comments for the quality of his defence. According to one of his biographers, Richard Gwyn:

As a criminal lawyer who took on dramatic cases, Macdonald got himself noticed well beyond the narrow confines of the Kingston business community. He was operating now in the arena where he would spend by far the greatest part of his life – the court of public opinion. And, while there, he was learning the arts of argument and of persuasion that would serve him all his political life.

Military service

All male Upper Canadians between 18 and 60 years of age were members of the Sedentary Militia, which was called into active duty during the Rebellions of 1837. Macdonald served as a private in Captain George Well's Company of the Commercial Bank Guard.

Macdonald and the militia marched to Toronto to confront the rebels, and Sir Joseph Pope, Macdonald's private secretary, recalled Macdonald's account of his experience during the march:

"I carried my musket in '37", he was wont to say in after years. One day he gave me an account of a long march his company made, I forget from what place, but Toronto was the objective point: "The day was hot, my feet were blistered – I was but a weary boy – and I thought I should have dropped under the weight of the old flint musket which galled my shoulder. But I managed to keep up with my companion, a grim old soldier who seemed impervious to fatigue."

The Bank Guard served on active duty in Toronto guarding the Commercial Bank of the Midland District on King Street. The company was present at the Battle of Montgomery's Tavern and Macdonald recalled in an 1887 letter to Sir James Gowan that:

"I was in the Second or Third Company behind the cannon that opened out on Montgomery’s House. During the week of the rebellion I was the Commercial Bank Guard in the house on King Street, afterward the habitat of George Brown’s 'Globe'."

The Bank Guard was taken off active service on 17 December 1837, and returned to Kingston.

On 15 February 1838, Macdonald was appointed an ensign in the 3rd (East) Regiment of Frontenac Militia but did not take up the position, serving briefly as a private in the regiment, patrolling the area around Kingston. The town saw no real action during 1838 and Macdonald was not called upon to fire on the enemy. The Frontenac Militia regiments stayed on active duty in Kingston while the Battle of the Windmill occurred.

Professional prominence, 1837–1843

Although most of the trials resulting from the Upper Canada Rebellion took place in Toronto, Macdonald represented one of the defendants in the one trial to take place in Kingston. All the Kingston defendants were acquitted, and a local paper described Macdonald as "one of the youngest barristers in the Province is rapidly rising in his profession".

See caption
Battle of the Windmill, near Prescott, Upper Canada, 13 November 1838

In late 1838, Macdonald agreed to advise one of a group of American raiders who had crossed the border to overthrow British rule in Canada. The raiders had been captured by government forces after the Battle of the Windmill near Prescott, Upper Canada. Public opinion was inflamed against the prisoners, as they were accused of mutilating the body of a dead Canadian lieutenant. Macdonald could not represent the prisoners, as they were tried by court-martial and civilian counsel had no standing. At the request of Kingston relatives of Daniel George, paymaster of the ill-fated invasion, Macdonald agreed to advise George, who, like the other prisoners, had to conduct his own defence. George was convicted and hanged. According to Macdonald biographer Donald Swainson, "By 1838, Macdonald's position was secure. He was a public figure, a popular young man, and a senior lawyer."

Macdonald continued to expand his practice while being appointed director of many companies, mainly in Kingston. He became both a director of and a lawyer for the new Commercial Bank of the Midland District. Throughout the 1840s, Macdonald invested heavily in real estate, including commercial properties in downtown Toronto. Meanwhile, he was suffering from some illness, and in 1841, his father died. Sick and grieving, he decided to take a lengthy holiday in Britain in early 1842. He left for the journey well supplied with money, as he spent the last three days before his departure gambling at the card game loo and winning substantially. Sometime during his two months in Britain, he met his first cousin, Isabella Clark. As Macdonald did not mention her in his letters home, the circumstances of their meeting are not known. In late 1842, Isabella journeyed to Kingston to visit with a sister. The visit stretched for nearly a year before John and Isabella Macdonald married on 1 September 1843.

Political rise, 1843–1864

See also: Electoral history of John A. Macdonald

Parliamentary advancement, 1843–1857

See caption
Portrait of Isabella Clark Macdonald, artist unknown

On 29 March 1843, Macdonald was elected as alderman in Kingston's Fourth Ward, with 156 votes against 43 for his opponent, Colonel Jackson. He also suffered what he termed his first downfall, as his supporters, carrying the victorious candidate, accidentally dropped him onto a slushy street.

The British Parliament had merged Upper and Lower Canada into the Province of Canada in 1841. Kingston became the initial capital of the new province; Upper Canada and Lower Canada became known as Canada West and Canada East. In March 1844, Macdonald was asked by local businessmen to stand as Conservative candidate for Kingston in the upcoming legislative election. Macdonald followed the contemporary custom of supplying the voters with large quantities of alcohol. Votes were publicly declared in this election, and Macdonald defeated his opponent, Anthony Manahan, by 275 "shouts" to 42 when the election concluded on 15 October 1844. Macdonald was never an orator, and especially disliked the bombastic addresses of the time. Instead, he found a niche in becoming an expert on election law and parliamentary procedure.

In 1844, Isabella fell ill. She recovered, but the illness recurred the following year, and she became an invalid. John took his wife to Savannah, Georgia, in the United States in 1845, hoping that the sea air and warmth would cure her ailments. John returned to Canada after six months and Isabella remained in the United States for three years. He visited her again in New York at the end of 1846 and returned several months later when she informed him she was pregnant. In August 1847 their son John Alexander Macdonald Jr. was born in New York, but as Isabella remained ill, relatives cared for the infant.

Although he was often absent due to his wife's illness, Macdonald was able to gain professional and political advancement. In 1846, he was made a Queen's Counsel. The same year, he was offered the non-cabinet post of solicitor general, but declined it. In 1847, Macdonald became receiver general. Accepting the government post required Macdonald to give up his law firm income and spend most of his time in Montreal, away from Isabella. When elections were held in December 1848 and January 1849, Macdonald was easily reelected for Kingston, but the Conservatives lost seats and were forced to resign when the legislature reconvened in March 1848. Macdonald returned to Kingston when the legislature was not sitting, and Isabella joined him there in June. In August, their child died suddenly. In March 1850, Isabella Macdonald gave birth to another boy, Hugh John Macdonald, and his father wrote, "We have got Johnny back again, almost his image." Macdonald began to drink heavily around this time, both in public and in private, which Patricia Phenix, who studied Macdonald's private life, attributes to his family troubles.

The Liberals, or Grits, maintained power in the 1851 election but were soon divided by a parliamentary scandal. In September, the government resigned, and a coalition government uniting parties from both parts of the province under Allan MacNab took power. Macdonald did much of the work of putting the government together and served as attorney general. The coalition, which came to power in 1854, became known as the Liberal-Conservatives (referred to, for short, as the Conservatives). In 1855, George-Étienne Cartier of Canada East (today Quebec) joined the Cabinet. Until Cartier's 1873 death, he would be Macdonald's political partner. In 1856, MacNab was eased out as premier by Macdonald, who became the leader of the Canada West Conservatives. Macdonald remained as attorney general when Étienne-Paschal Taché became premier.

Colonial leader, 1858–1864

A photograph of a man
John A. Macdonald in 1858

In July 1857, Macdonald departed for Britain to promote Canadian government projects. On his return to Canada, he was appointed premier in place of the retiring Taché, just in time to lead the Conservatives in a general election. Macdonald was elected in Kingston by 1,189 votes to 9 for John Shaw; other Conservatives did poorly in Canada West and only French-Canadian support kept Macdonald in power. On 28 December, Isabella Macdonald died, leaving John a widower with a seven-year-old son. Hugh John Macdonald would be principally raised by his paternal aunt and her husband.

The Assembly had voted to move the seat of government permanently to Quebec City. Macdonald opposed this and used his power to force the Assembly to reconsider in 1857. He proposed that Queen Victoria decide which city should be Canada's capital. Opponents, especially from Canada East, argued that she would not make the decision in isolation and was bound to receive informal advice from her Canadian ministers. His scheme was adopted, with Canada East support assured by allowing Quebec City to serve a three-year term as the seat of government before the Assembly moved to the permanent capital. He privately asked the Colonial Office to ensure she would not respond for at least ten months, or until after the general election. In February 1858, her choice was announced to the dismay of many legislators from both parts of the province: the isolated Canada West town of Ottawa became the capital.

On 28 July 1858, an opposition Canada East member proposed an address to the Queen informing her that Ottawa was an unsuitable place for a national capital. Macdonald's Canada East party members crossed the floor to vote for the address, and the government was defeated. Macdonald resigned, and the governor general, Sir Edmund Walker Head, invited opposition leader George Brown to form a government. Under the law at that time, Brown and his ministers lost their seats in the Assembly by accepting their positions, and had to face by-elections. This gave Macdonald a majority pending the by-elections, and he promptly defeated the government. Head refused Brown's request for a dissolution of the Assembly, and Brown and his ministers resigned. Head then asked Macdonald to form a government. The law allowed anyone who had held a ministerial position within the last thirty days to accept a new position without needing to face a by-election; Macdonald and his ministers accepted new positions, then completed what was dubbed the "Double Shuffle" by returning to their old posts. In an effort to give the appearance of fairness, Head insisted that Cartier be the titular premier, with Macdonald as his deputy.

In the late 1850s and early 1860s, Canada enjoyed a period of great prosperity, while the railroad and telegraph improved communications. According to Macdonald biographer Richard Gwyn, "In short, Canadians began to become a single community." At the same time, the provincial government became increasingly difficult to manage. An act affecting both Canada East and Canada West required a "double majority" – a majority of legislators from each of the two sections of the province. This led to increasing deadlock in the Assembly. The two sections each elected 65 legislators, even though Canada West had a larger population. One of Brown's major demands was representation by population, which would lead to Canada West having more seats; this was bitterly opposed by Canada East.

The American Civil War led to fears in Canada and in Britain that once the U.S. had concluded its internal warfare, they would invade Canada again. Canada was sometimes a safe haven for Confederate Secret Service operations against the U.S.; many Canadian citizens and politicians were sympathetic to the Confederacy. This led to events such as the Chesapeake Affair, the St. Albans Raid, and a failed attempt to burn down New York City. As attorney general of Canada West, Macdonald refused to prosecute Confederate operatives who were using Canada to launch attacks on U.S. soil across the border.

With Canadians fearing invasion from the U.S., the British asked that Canadians pay a part of the expense of defence, and a Militia Bill was introduced in the Assembly in 1862. The opposition objected to the expense, and Canada East representatives feared that French-Canadians would have to fight in a war they wanted no part in. Macdonald was drinking heavily and failed to provide much leadership on behalf of the bill. The government fell over the bill, and the Grits took over under the leadership of John Sandfield Macdonald (no relation to John A. Macdonald). The parties held an almost equal number of seats, with a handful of independents able to destroy any government. The new government fell in May 1863, but Head allowed a new election, which did little to change party standings. In December 1863, Canada West MP Albert Norton Richards accepted the post of solicitor general, and so had to face a by-election. John A. Macdonald campaigned against Richards personally, and Richards was defeated by a Conservative. The switch in seats cost the Grits their majority, and they resigned in March. John A. Macdonald returned to office with Taché as titular premier. The Taché-Macdonald government was defeated in June. The parties were deadlocked to such an extent that, according to Swainson, "It was clear to everybody that the constitution of the Province of Canada was dead".

Confederation of Canada, 1864–1867

A photograph of a group of men in a semi-circle consisting of two rows. The front row is seated. There is a desk in the middle of the semi-circle with a man seated behind it.
The Quebec Conference. Macdonald is seated fourth from left.

As his government had fallen again, Macdonald approached the new governor general, Lord Monck, to dissolve the legislature. Before Macdonald could act on this, Brown approached him through intermediaries; the Grit leader believed that the crisis gave the parties the opportunity to join together for constitutional reform. Brown had led a parliamentary committee on confederation among the British North American colonies, which had reported back just before the Taché-Macdonald government fell. Brown was more interested in representation by population; Macdonald's priority was a federation that the other colonies could join. The two compromised and agreed that the new government would support the "federative principle" – a conveniently elastic phrase. The discussions were not public knowledge and Macdonald stunned the Assembly by announcing that the dissolution was being postponed because of progress in negotiations with Brown – the two men were not only political rivals, but were known to hate each other.

The parties resolved their differences, joining in the Great Coalition, with only the Parti rouge of Canada East, led by Jean-Baptiste-Éric Dorion, remaining apart. A conference, called by the Colonial Office, was scheduled for 1 September 1864, in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island; the Maritimes were to consider a union. The Canadians obtained permission to send a delegation – led by Macdonald, Cartier, and Brown – to what became known as the Charlottetown Conference. At its conclusion, the Maritime delegations expressed a willingness to join a confederation if the details could be successfully negotiated.

In October 1864, delegates for Confederation met in Quebec City for the Quebec Conference, where they agreed to the Seventy-Two Resolutions, the basis of Canada's government. The Great Coalition was endangered by Taché's 1865 death; Lord Monck asked Macdonald to become premier, but Brown felt that he had as good a claim on the position as his coalition partner. The disagreement was resolved by appointing another compromise candidate to serve as titular premier, Narcisse-Fortunat Belleau.

A black and white photograph of a woman in a dark dress standing in profile at an easel.
Lady Agnes Macdonald

In 1865, after lengthy debates, Canada's legislative assembly approved Confederation by 91 votes to 33. None of the Maritimes approved the plan. In 1866, Macdonald and his colleagues financed pro-Confederation candidates in the New Brunswick general election, resulting in a pro-Confederation assembly. Shortly after the election, Nova Scotia's premier, Charles Tupper, pushed a pro-Confederation resolution through that colony's legislature. A final conference, to be held in London, was needed before the British Parliament could formalise the union. Maritime delegates left for London in July 1866, but Macdonald, who was drinking heavily again, did not leave until November, angering the Maritimers. In December 1866, Macdonald both led the London Conference, winning acclaim for his handling of the discussions, and courted and married his second wife, Agnes Bernard. Bernard was the sister of Macdonald's private secretary, Hewitt Bernard; the couple first met in Quebec in 1860, but Macdonald had seen and admired her as early as 1856. In January 1867, while still in London, he was seriously burned in his hotel room when his candle set fire to the chair he had fallen asleep in, but Macdonald refused to miss any sessions of the conference. In February, he married Agnes at St George's, Hanover Square. On 8 March, the British North America Act, 1867, which would thereafter serve as the major part of Canada's constitution, passed the House of Commons (it had previously passed the House of Lords). Queen Victoria gave the bill Royal Assent on 29 March 1867.

Macdonald had favoured the union coming into force on 15 July, fearing that the preparations would not be completed any earlier. The British favoured an earlier date and, on 22 May, it was announced that Canada would come into existence on 1 July. Lord Monck appointed Macdonald as the new nation's first prime minister. With the birth of the new nation, Canada East and Canada West became separate provinces, known as Quebec and Ontario, respectively. Macdonald was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) on that first observance of what came to be known as Dominion Day, later called Canada Day, on 1 July 1867.

Prime Minister of Canada

See also: Electoral history of John A. Macdonald

First majority, 1867–1871

See caption
Timeline of the evolution of Canada's boundaries since 1867

Macdonald and his government faced immediate problems upon the formation of the new country. Much work remained to do in creating a federal government. Nova Scotia was already threatening to withdraw from the union; the Intercolonial Railway, which would both conciliate the Maritimes and bind them closer to the rest of Canada, was not yet built. Anglo-American relations were in a poor state, and Canadian foreign relations were matters handled from London. The withdrawal of the Americans in 1866 from the Reciprocity Treaty had increased tariffs on Canadian goods in US markets. American and British opinion largely believed that the experiment of Confederation would quickly unravel, and the nascent nation absorbed by the United States.

In August 1867, the new nation's first general election was held; Macdonald's party won easily, with strong support in both large provinces, and a majority from New Brunswick. By 1869, Nova Scotia had agreed to remain part of Canada after a promise of better financial terms – the first of many provinces to negotiate concessions from Ottawa. Pressure from London and Ottawa failed to gain the accession of Newfoundland, whose voters rejected a Confederation platform in a general election in October 1869.

In 1869, John and Agnes Macdonald had a daughter, Mary. It soon became apparent that Mary had ongoing developmental issues; she was never able to walk, nor did she ever fully develop mentally. Hewitt Bernard, deputy minister of justice and Macdonald's former secretary, also lived in the Macdonald house in Ottawa, together with Bernard's widowed mother. In May 1870, John Macdonald fell ill with gallstones; coupled with his frequent drinking, he may have developed a severe case of acute pancreatitis. In July, he moved to Prince Edward Island to convalesce, most likely conducting discussions aimed at drawing the island into Confederation at a time when some there supported joining the United States. The island joined Confederation in 1873.

Macdonald had once been tepid on the question of westward expansion of the Canadian provinces; as prime minister, he became a strong supporter of a bicoastal Canada. Immediately upon Confederation, he sent commissioners to London who in due course successfully negotiated the transfer of Rupert's Land and the North-Western Territory to Canada. The Hudson's Bay Company received £300,000 (CA$1,500,000) in compensation, and retained some trading posts as well as one-twentieth of the best farmland. Prior to the date of acquisition, the Canadian government faced unrest in the Red River Colony (today southeastern Manitoba, centred on Winnipeg). The local people, including the Métis, were fearful that rule would be imposed on them which did not take into account their interests, and rose in the Red River Rebellion led by Louis Riel. Unwilling to pay for a territory in insurrection, Macdonald had troops put down the uprising before the formal transfer; as a result of the unrest, the Red River Colony joined Confederation as the province of Manitoba, while the rest of the purchased lands became the North-West Territories.

A drawing of a man kicking another man on the steps of a building. A third man and a dog are watching the scene from the top of the steps.
"We don't want you here." Annexation to the United States was a political issue in Canada's early days. In this anti-annexation cartoon by John Wilson Bengough from an 1869 issue of Grinchuckle, Uncle Sam is given the boot by Young Canada as John Bull looks on approvingly.

Macdonald also wished to secure the colony of British Columbia. There was interest in the United States in bringing about the colony's annexation, and Macdonald wished to ensure his new nation had a Pacific outlet. The colony had an extremely large debt that would have to be assumed should it join Confederation. Negotiations were conducted in 1870, principally during Macdonald's illness and recuperation, with Cartier leading the Canadian delegation. Cartier offered British Columbia a railway linking it to the eastern provinces within ten years. The British Columbians, who privately had been prepared to accept far less generous terms, quickly agreed and joined Confederation in 1871. The Canadian Parliament ratified the terms after a debate over the high cost that cabinet member Alexander Morris described as the worst fight the Conservatives had had since Confederation.

There were continuing disputes with the Americans over deep-sea fishing rights, and in early 1871, an Anglo-American commission was appointed to settle outstanding matters between the British, the Canadians and the Americans. Canada was hoping to secure compensation for damage done by Fenians raiding Canada from bases in the United States. Macdonald was appointed a British commissioner, a post he was reluctant to accept as he realised Canadian interests might be sacrificed for the mother country. This proved to be the case; Canada received no compensation for the raids and no significant trade advantages in the settlement, which required Canada to open her waters to American fishermen. Macdonald returned home to defend the Treaty of Washington against a political firestorm.

Second majority and Pacific Scandal, 1872–1873

In the run-up to the 1872 election, Macdonald had yet to formulate a railway policy, or to devise the loan guarantees that would be needed to secure the construction. During the previous year, Macdonald had met with potential railway financiers such as Hugh Allan and considerable financial discussion took place. The greatest political problem Macdonald faced was the Washington treaty, which had not yet been debated in Parliament.

In early 1872, Macdonald submitted the treaty for ratification, and it passed the Commons with a majority of 66. The general election was held through late August and early September. Redistribution had given Ontario increased representation in the House; Macdonald spent much time campaigning in the province, for the most part outside Kingston. Widespread bribery of voters took place throughout Canada, a practice especially effective in the era when votes were publicly declared. Macdonald and the Conservatives saw their majority reduced from 35 to 8. The Liberals (as the Grits were coming to be known) did better than the Conservatives in Ontario, forcing the government to rely on the votes of Western and Maritime MPs who did not fully support the party.

A drawing of Macdonald with one foot on the neck of a woman, who is laying down with her head to the ground
"Whither are we drifting?" Macdonald is shown triumphant at obtaining a prorogation, but is trampling a weeping Canada and apparently drunk with bottle in pocket in this August 1873 cartoon by John Wilson Bengough. Macdonald is depicted claiming clean hands, but with "Send me another $10,000" written on his palm.

Macdonald had hoped to award the charter for the Canadian Pacific Railway in early 1872, but negotiations dragged on between the government and the financiers. Macdonald's government awarded the Allan group the charter in late 1872. In 1873, when Parliament opened, Liberal MP Lucius Seth Huntington charged that government ministers had been bribed with large, undisclosed political contributions to award the charter. Documents soon came to light which substantiated what came to be known as the Pacific Scandal. The Allan-led financiers, who were secretly backed by the United States's Northern Pacific Railway, had donated $179,000 to the Tory election funds, they had received the charter, and Opposition newspapers began to publish telegrams signed by government ministers requesting large sums from the railway interest at the time the charter was under consideration. Macdonald had taken $45,000 in contributions from the railway interest himself. Substantial sums went to Cartier, who waged an expensive fight to try to retain his seat in Montreal East (he was defeated, but was subsequently returned for the Manitoba seat of Provencher). During the campaign Cartier had fallen ill with Bright's disease, which may have been causing his judgment to lapse; he died in May 1873 while seeking treatment in London.

Before Cartier's death, Macdonald attempted to use delay to extricate the government. The Opposition responded by leaking documents to friendly newspapers. On 18 July, three papers published a telegram dated August 1872 from Macdonald requesting another $10,000 and promising "it will be the last time of asking". Macdonald was able to get a prorogation of Parliament in August by appointing a Royal Commission to look into the matter, but when Parliament reconvened in late October, the Liberals, feeling Macdonald could be defeated over the issue, applied immense pressure to wavering members. On 3 November, Macdonald rose in the Commons to defend the government, and according to one of his biographer, P.B. Waite, he gave "the speech of his life, and, in a sense, for his life". He began his speech at 9 p.m., looking frail and ill, an appearance which quickly improved. As he spoke, he consumed numerous glasses of gin and water. He denied that there had been a corrupt bargain, and stated that such contributions were common to both political parties. After five hours, Macdonald concluded,

I leave it with this House with every confidence. I am equal to either fortune. I can see past the decision of this House either for or against me, but whether it be against me or for me, I know, and it is no vain boast to say so, for even my enemies will admit that I am no boaster, that there does not exist in Canada a man who has given more of his time, more of his heart, more of his wealth, or more of his intellect and power, as it may be, for the good of this Dominion of Canada.

Macdonald's speech was seen as a personal triumph, but it did little to salvage the fortunes of his government. With eroding support both in the Commons and among the public, Macdonald went to the governor general, Lord Dufferin on 5 November, and resigned; Liberal leader Alexander Mackenzie became the second prime minister of Canada. He is not known to have spoken of the events of the Pacific Scandal again.

On 6 November 1873, Macdonald offered his resignation as party leader to his caucus; it was refused. Mackenzie called an election for January 1874; the Conservatives were reduced to 70 seats out of the 206 in the Commons, giving Mackenzie a massive majority. The Conservatives bested the Liberals only in British Columbia; Mackenzie had called the terms by which the province had joined Confederation "impossible". Macdonald was returned in Kingston but was unseated on an election contest when bribery was proven; he won the ensuing by-election by 17 votes. According to Swainson, most observers viewed Macdonald as finished in politics, "a used-up and dishonoured man".

Opposition, 1873–1878

A group of men sitting on an elephant. The elephant has the phrase "National Policy" on their side
In this Bengough cartoon, Macdonald (centre, ankles crossed) rides the elephant of the National Policy into power in the 1878 election, trampling the Liberals underfoot. Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie is also being strangled by the elephant's trunk.

Macdonald was content to lead the Conservatives in a relaxed manner in opposition and await Liberal mistakes. He took long holidays and resumed his law practice, moving his family to Toronto and going into partnership with his son Hugh John. One mistake that Macdonald believed the Liberals had made was a free-trade agreement with Washington, negotiated in 1874; Macdonald had come to believe that protection was necessary to build Canadian industry. The Panic of 1873 had led to a worldwide depression; the Liberals found it difficult to finance the railway in such a climate, and were generally opposed to the line anyway – the slow pace of construction led to British Columbia claims that the agreement under which it had entered Confederation was in jeopardy of being broken.

By 1876, Macdonald and the Conservatives had adopted protectionism as party policy. This view was widely promoted in speeches at a number of political picnics, held across Ontario during the summer of 1876. Macdonald's proposals were popular with the public, and the Conservatives began to win a string of by-elections. By the end of 1876, the Tories had picked up 14 seats as a result of by-elections, reducing Mackenzie's Liberal majority from 70 to 42. Despite the success, Macdonald considered retirement, wishing only to reverse the voters' verdict of 1874 – he considered Charles Tupper his heir apparent.

When Parliament convened in 1877, the Conservatives were confident and the Liberals defensive. After the Tories had a successful session in the early part of the year, another series of picnics commenced in the areas around Toronto. Macdonald even campaigned in Quebec, which he had rarely done, leaving speechmaking there to Cartier. More picnics followed in 1878, promoting proposals which would come to be collectively called the "National Policy": high tariffs, rapid construction of the transcontinental railway (the Canadian Pacific Railway or CPR), rapid agricultural development of the West using the railway, and policies which would attract immigrants to Canada. These picnics allowed Macdonald venues to show off his talents at campaigning, and were often lighthearted – at one, the Tory leader blamed agricultural pests on the Grits, and promised the insects would go away if the Conservatives were elected.

The final days of the 3rd Canadian Parliament were marked by explosive conflict, as Macdonald and Tupper alleged that MP and railway financier Donald Smith had been allowed to build the Pembina branch of the CPR (connecting to American lines) as a reward for betraying the Conservatives during the Pacific Scandal. The altercation continued even after the Commons had been summoned to the Senate to hear the dissolution read, as Macdonald spoke the final words recorded in the 3rd Parliament: "That fellow Smith is the biggest liar I ever saw!"

The election was called for 17 September 1878. Fearful that Macdonald would be defeated in Kingston, his supporters tried to get him to run in the safe Conservative riding of Cardwell; having represented his hometown for 35 years, he stood there again. In the election, Macdonald was defeated in his riding by Alexander Gunn, but the Conservatives swept to victory. Macdonald remained in the House of Commons, having quickly secured his election for Marquette, Manitoba; elections there were held later than in Ontario. His acceptance of office vacated his parliamentary seat, and Macdonald decided to stand for the British Columbia seat of Victoria, where the election was to be held on 21 October. Macdonald was duly returned for Victoria, although he had never visited either Marquette or Victoria.

Third and fourth majorities, 1878–1887

A drawing of a steamroller running over a group of men while a larger group of men are pushing it. Macdonald is sitting on top of the machine. The steamroller has the phrase, "Government Majority" printed on the side
Macdonald uses his parliamentary majority to roll to victory over Liberal leader Edward Blake and his party in this 1884 cartoon by John Wilson Bengough.

Part of the National Policy was implemented in the budget presented in February 1879. Under that budget, Canada became a high-tariff nation like the United States and Germany. The tariffs were designed to protect and build Canadian industry – finished textiles received a tariff of 34%, but the machinery to make them entered Canada free. Macdonald continued to fight for higher tariffs for the remainder of his life.

In January 1879, Macdonald commissioned politician Nicholas Flood Davin to write a report regarding the industrial boarding-school system in the United States. Now known as the Davin Report, the Report on Industrial Schools for Indians and Half-Breeds was submitted to Ottawa on 14 March 1879, providing the basis for the Canadian Indian residential school system. It made the case for a cooperative approach between the Canadian government and the church to implement the "aggressive assimilation" pursued by President of the United States, Ulysses S. Grant. In 1883, Parliament approved $43,000 for three industrial schools and the first, Battleford Industrial School, opened on 1 December of that year. By 1900, there were 61 schools in operation. In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission concluded that the assimilation amounted to cultural genocide.

By the 1880s, Macdonald was becoming frailer, but he maintained his political acuity. In 1883, he secured the "Intoxicating Liquors Bill" which took the regulation system away from the provinces, in part to stymie his foe Premier Mowat. In his own case, Macdonald took better control of his drinking and binges had ended. "The great drinking-bouts, the gargantuan in sobriety's of his middle years, were dwindling away now into memories." As the budget moved forward, Macdonald found that the railway was progressing well: although little money had been spent on the project under Mackenzie, several hundred miles of track had been built and nearly the entire route surveyed. In 1880, Macdonald found a syndicate, led by George Stephen, willing to undertake the CPR project. Donald Smith (later Lord Strathcona) was a major partner in the syndicate, but because of the ill will between him and the Conservatives, Smith's participation was initially not made public, though it was well-known to Macdonald. In 1880, the Dominion took over Britain's remaining Arctic territories, which extended Canada to its present-day boundaries, with the exception of Newfoundland, which did not enter Confederation until 1949. Also in 1880, Canada sent its first diplomatic representative abroad, Sir Alexander Galt as High Commissioner to Britain. With good economic times, Macdonald and the Conservatives were returned with a slightly decreased majority in 1882. Macdonald was returned for the Ontario riding of Carleton.

The transcontinental railroad project was heavily subsidised by the government. The CPR was granted 25,000,000 acres (100,000 km; 39,000 sq mi) of land along the route of the railroad, and $25 million from the government. In addition, the government had to spend $32 million on the construction of other railways to support the CPR. The entire project was extremely costly, especially for a nation with only 4.1 million people in 1881. Between 1880 and 1885, as the railway was slowly built, the CPR repeatedly came close to financial ruin. The terrain in the Rocky Mountains was difficult and the route north of Lake Superior proved treacherous, as tracks and engines sank into the muskeg. When Canadian guarantees of the CPR's bonds failed to make them salable in a declining economy, Macdonald obtained a loan to the corporation from the Treasury – the bill authorizing it passed the Senate just before the firm would have become insolvent.

A drawing of Macdonald standing on two horses facing opposite directions. Louis Riel is sitting on his shoulders. The caption says, "A Riel Ugly Position". A crowd is in the background.
Protestants demanded Riel be executed; Catholics wanted him to live. The decision for execution alienated Francophones.

The Northwest again saw unrest. Many of the Manitoban Métis had moved into the territories and negotiations between the Métis and the Government to settle grievances over land rights proved difficult. Riel, who had lived in exile in the United States since 1870, journeyed to Regina with the connivance of Macdonald's government, who believed he would prove a leader they could deal with. Instead, the Métis rose the following year under Riel in the North-West Rebellion. Macdonald put down the rebellion with Canadian troops who were transported by rail, and Riel was captured, tried for treason, convicted, and hanged. Macdonald refused to consider reprieving Riel, who was of uncertain mental health. The hanging of Riel was controversial, and alienated many Quebecers from the Conservatives and they were, like Riel, Catholic and culturally French Canadian; they soon realigned with the Liberals. Following the North-West Rebellion of 1885, Macdonald's government implemented restrictions upon the movement of indigenous groups, requiring them to receive formal permission from an Indian Department Official in order to go off-reserve. The federal government under Macdonald sought to keep the indigenous ill-fed and dependent on government food supplies, a policy which has been blamed for many deaths.

The CPR was almost bankrupt, but Canada's decision to deploy troops in response to the crisis showed that the railway was helpful to maintain the territory's status as part of the British Empire, and the British Parliament provided money for its completion. On 7 November 1885, CPR manager William Van Horne wired Macdonald from Craigellachie, British Columbia, that the last spike had been driven, completing the railway. That same year, the Macdonald government enacted the Chinese Immigration Act, 1885. Macdonald told the House of Commons that, if the Chinese were not excluded from Canada, "the Aryan character of the future of British America should be destroyed". In the summer of 1886, Macdonald travelled by rail to western Canada. On 13 August 1886, Macdonald used a silver hammer and pounded a gold spike to complete the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway.

In 1886, another dispute arose over fishing rights with the United States. Americans fishermen had been using treaty provisions allowing them to land in Canada to take on wood and water as a cover for clandestine inshore fishing. Several vessels were detained in Canadian ports, to the outrage of Americans, who demanded their release. Macdonald sought to pass a Fisheries Act which would override some of the treaty provisions, to the dismay of the British, who were still responsible for external relations. The British government instructed the governor general, Lord Lansdowne, to reserve the bill for royal assent, effectively placing it on hold without vetoing it. After considerable discussion, the British government allowed royal assent at the end of 1886, and indicated it would send a warship to protect the fisheries if no agreement was reached with the Americans.

Fifth and sixth majorities, 1887–1891

A drawing of Macdonald seated on the shoulders of a farmer and a worker. He is holding a flag. Conservative election poster from 1891

Fearing continued loss of political strength as poor economic times continued, Macdonald planned to hold an election by the end of 1886, but had not yet issued the writ when an Ontario provincial election was called by Liberal Ontario premier Oliver Mowat. The provincial election was seen as a bellwether for the federal poll. Despite considerable campaigning by Macdonald, Mowat's Liberals were reelected in Ontario and increased their majority. Macdonald dissolved the federal Parliament on 15 January 1887, for an election on 22 February. During the campaign, the Quebec provincial Liberals formed a government (four months after the October 1886 Quebec election), forcing the Conservatives from power in Quebec City. Nevertheless, Macdonald and his cabinet campaigned hard in the winter election, with Tupper (the new High Commissioner to London) postponing his departure to try to bolster Conservative votes in Nova Scotia. The Liberal leader, Edward Blake, ran an uninspiring campaign, and the Conservatives were returned nationally with a majority of 35, winning easily in Ontario, Nova Scotia, and Manitoba. The Tories also took a narrow majority of Quebec's seats despite resentment over Riel's hanging. Macdonald became MP for Kingston once again. Even the younger ministers, such as future prime minister John Thompson, who sometimes differed with Macdonald on policy, admitted Macdonald was an essential electoral asset for the Conservatives.

Blake resigned after the defeat and was replaced by Wilfrid Laurier. Under Laurier's early leadership, the Liberals, who previously supported much of the National Policy, campaigned against it and called for "unrestricted reciprocity", or free trade, with the United States. Macdonald was willing to see some reciprocity with the United States, but was reluctant to lower many tariffs. American advocates of what they dubbed "commercial union" saw it as a prelude to political union, and did not scruple to say so, causing additional controversy in Canada.

A group of people are gathered in front of a casket
Funeral of Sir John A. Macdonald in Cataraqui Cemetery, Kingston, Ontario

Macdonald called an election for 5 March 1891. The Liberals were heavily financed by American interests; the Conservatives drew much financial support from the CPR. The 76-year-old prime minister collapsed during the campaign, and conducted political activities from his brother-in-law's house in Kingston. The Conservatives gained slightly in the popular vote, but their majority was reduced to 27. The parties broke even in the central part of the country but the Conservatives dominated in the Maritimes and Western Canada, leading Liberal MP Richard John Cartwright to claim that Macdonald's majority was dependent on "the shreds and patches of Confederation". After the election, Laurier and his Liberals grudgingly accepted the National Policy; when Laurier later became prime minister, he adopted it with only minor changes.

Death

In May 1891, Macdonald suffered a stroke which left him partially paralysed and unable to speak. His health continued to deteriorate and he died in the late evening of 6 June 1891. Thousands filed by his open casket in the Senate Chamber; his body was transported by funeral train to his hometown of Kingston, with crowds greeting the train at each stop. On arrival in Kingston, Macdonald lay in state in City Hall, wearing the uniform of an Imperial Privy Counsellor. He was buried in Cataraqui Cemetery in Kingston, his grave near that of his first wife, Isabella.

Legacy and memorials

See caption
Canadian stamp honouring Macdonald, 1927

Macdonald served just under 19 years as prime minister, a length of service surpassed only by William Lyon Mackenzie King. In polls, Macdonald has consistently been ranked as one of the greatest prime ministers in Canadian history. No cities or political subdivisions are named for Macdonald (with the exception of a small Manitoba village), nor are there any massive monuments. A peak in the Rockies, Mount Macdonald (c. 1887) at Rogers Pass, is named for him. In 2001, Parliament designated 11 January as Sir John A. Macdonald Day, but the day is not a federal holiday and generally passes unremarked. He appears on Canadian ten-dollar notes printed between 1971 and 2018. In 2015, the Royal Canadian Mint featured Macdonald's face on the two-dollar coin, the toonie, to celebrate his 200th birthday. Macdonald's name is also used in Ottawa's Ottawa Macdonald–Cartier International Airport (renamed in 1993) and Ontario Highway 401 (the Macdonald–Cartier Freeway c. 1968). His name is being phased out on Ottawa's Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway (River Parkway before 2012), being renamed to an indigenous term, Kichi Zibi Mikan. Macdonald also had a street named after him in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. This street was renamed miyo-wâhkôhtowin, a Cree word meaning good relations, on 7 December 2023. This was done as a response to Macdonald playing a significant role in developing the Indian residential school system.

See caption
The statue in the Macdonald Monument in Montreal in 2011

A number of sites associated with Macdonald are preserved. His gravesite has been designated a National Historic Site of Canada. Bellevue House in Kingston, where the Macdonald family lived in the 1840s, is also a National Historic Site administered by Parks Canada, and has been restored to that time period. His Ottawa home, Earnscliffe, is the official residence of the British High Commissioner to Canada. Statues have been erected to Macdonald across Canada; one stands on Parliament Hill in Ottawa (by Louis-Philippe Hebert c. 1895). A statue of Macdonald stands atop a granite plinth originally intended for a statue of Queen Victoria in Toronto's Queen's Park, looking south on University Avenue. Macdonald's statue also stood in Kingston's City Park; the Kingston Historical Society annually holds a memorial service in his honour. On 18 June 2021, following the discovery of 215 unmarked graves at the Kamloops Indian Residential School, the statue of Macdonald was removed from Kingston's City Park after city council voted 12–1 in favour of its removal, and is set to be installed at Cataraqui Cemetery where Macdonald is buried. In 2018, a statue of Macdonald was removed from outside Victoria City Hall, as part of the city's program for reconciliation with local First Nations. The Macdonald Monument in Montreal has been repeatedly vandalized, and on 29 August 2020, the statue in the monument was vandalized, toppled and decapitated. Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante condemned the actions and said the city plans to restore the statue.

Macdonald's biographers note his contribution to establishing Canada as a nation. Swainson suggests that Macdonald's desire for a free and tolerant Canada became part of its national outlook and contributed immeasurably to its character. Gwyn said Macdonald's accomplishments of Confederation and building the Canadian railroad were great, but he was also responsible for scandals and bad government policy for the execution of Riel and the head tax on Chinese workers. In 2017, the Canadian Historical Association had voted to remove Macdonald's name from their prize for best scholarly book about Canadian history. Historian James Daschuk acknowledges Macdonald's contributions as a founding figure of Canada, but states "He built the country. But he built the country on the backs of the Indigenous people." A biographical online article about Macdonald was deleted from the Scottish government's website in August 2018. A spokesperson for the Scottish government stated: "We acknowledge controversy around Sir John A Macdonald's legacy and the legitimate concerns expressed by Indigenous communities". On 5 July 2021, Canada's national library, Library and Archives Canada, deleted its web page on Canada's prime ministers, "First Among Equals", calling it "outdated and redundant".

Honorary degrees

Macdonald was awarded the following honorary degrees:

Location Date School Degree
Canada West 1863 Queen's University at Kingston Doctor of Laws (LL.D)
 England 1865 University of Oxford Doctor of Civil Law (D.C.L.)
Ontario 1889 University of Toronto Doctor of Laws (LL.D)

Arms

Coat of arms of Sir John Alexander Macdonald
Crest
"A dexter forearm couped palewise proper the hand holding a balance fesswise together with a sprig of three maple leaves Or"
Escutcheon
"Quarterly: first, Argent a lion rampant Gules armed and langued Azure; second, Or a dexter hand couped fessways proper holding a cross-crosslet fitchée Azure; third, Or a lymphad sails furled and oars in action Sable flagged Gules; fourth, barry wavy of six Argent and Azure a salmon naiant proper; overall on a fess Vert a covered cup between two sprigs of three maple leaves Or"
Motto
PER AQUAM ET TERRAM (By sea and land)

References

Notes

  1. ^ The official birth record for John Alexander Mcdonald, proving the original spelling of the surname and official date of birth can be found in the National Records of Scotland or online at ScotlandsPeople using the following details:Parish: Glasgow, Parish Number: 644/1, Ref: 210 201, Parents/ Other Details: FR2265 (FR2265).
  2. ^ Although 10 January is the official date recorded in the General Register Office in Edinburgh, 11 January is the day Macdonald and those who commemorate him have celebrated his birthday. See Gwyn 2007, p. 8.

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Works cited

Further reading

See also: List of books about Prime Ministers of Canada

Historiography

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Political offices
Preceded byRobert Baldwin Attorney General of Canada West
1854–1862
Succeeded byJohn Sandfield Macdonald
Preceded byJohn Sandfield Macdonald Attorney General of Canada West
1864–1867
Office replaced
Preceded bySir Allan Napier MacNab Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada – Canada West
1856–1858
Succeeded byGeorge Brown
Preceded byGeorge Brown Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada – Canada West
1858–1867
Office replaced
New title Leader of the Conservative Party
1867–1891
Succeeded bySir John J.C. Abbott
Prime Minister of Canada
1867–1873
Succeeded byAlexander Mackenzie
Minister of Justice and Attorney General
1867–1873
Succeeded byAntoine Dorion
Preceded byAlexander Mackenzie Leader of the Opposition
1873–1878
Succeeded byAlexander Mackenzie
Prime Minister of Canada
1878–1891
Succeeded bySir John J.C. Abbott
Preceded byDavid Mills Minister of the Interior
1878–1883
Succeeded byEdgar Dewdney
Superintendent-General of Indian Affairs
1878–1887
Succeeded byThomas White
Preceded byArchibald McLelan President of the Privy Council
1883–1889
Succeeded byCharles Carrol Colby
Preceded byThomas White Superintendent-General of Indian Affairs
1888
Succeeded byEdgar Dewdney
Minister of the Interior
1888
Preceded byJohn Henry Pope Minister of Railways and Canals
1889–1891
Succeeded byMackenzie Bowell (acting)
Parliament of Canada
New title Member of Parliament for Kingston
1867–1878
Succeeded byAlexander Gunn
Preceded byJoseph Ryan Member of Parliament for Marquette
1878
Succeeded byJoseph Ryan
Preceded byFrancis James Roscoe Member of Parliament for Victoria
1878–1882
Succeeded byE.C. Baker
Preceded byEdmund Hooper Member of Parliament for Lennox
1882
Succeeded byDavid W. Allison
Preceded byJohn Rochester Member of Parliament for Carleton
1882–1887
Succeeded byGeorge Dickinson
Preceded byAlexander Gunn Member of Parliament for Kingston
1887–1891
Succeeded byJames H. Metcalfe
John A. Macdonald
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Reform (1987–2000)
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Conservative Party of Canada (1867–1942)
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Ministers of justice and attorneys general
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Ministers of Marine (1930–36)
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The offices of Minister of Marine and Minister of Railways and Canals were abolished and the office of Minister of Transport was created in 1936
Superintendents-general of Indian affairs
The offices of Minister of Immigration and Colonization, Minister of the Interior, Minister of Mines and Superintendent-General of Indian Affairs were abolished and the office of Minister of Mines and Resources was created and came in force on December 1, 1936.
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