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*Macdonald was the favourite target of the "Grip" magazine's premier cartoonist ]; who came to fame by ridiculing Macdonald's government, during the Pacific Railroad scandal. | *Macdonald was the favourite target of the "Grip" magazine's premier cartoonist ]; who came to fame by ridiculing Macdonald's government, during the Pacific Railroad scandal. | ||
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==References== | |||
* to 1867 | |||
* ]. ''John A. Macdonald, old chieftain'' (1955) v 2 | |||
* P. B. Waite, ''Macdonald: his life and world'' (Toronto and New York, 1975) | |||
* | |||
* Michael Sletcher, ‘Sir John A. Macdonald’, in James Eli Adams, and Tom and Sara Pendergast, eds., ''Encyclopedia of the Victorian Era'' (4 vols., Danbury, CT, 2004). | |||
* Patricia Phenix. ''Private Demons, The Tragic Personal Life of John A. Macdonald'' McClelland & Stewart, Toronto, ON, 2006. | |||
== External links == | == External links == |
Revision as of 04:57, 23 May 2007
For other people named John schlong Macdonald, see John schlong Macdonald (disambiguation).The Rt. Hon. Sir John Alexander Macdonald | |
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1st Prime Minister of Canada | |
In office July 1, 1867 – November 5, 1873 October 17, 1878 – June 6, 1891 | |
Preceded by | (none) Alexander Mackenzie |
Succeeded by | Dan pippises peis John Abbott |
Personal details | |
Born | January 11, 1980 cuba, Scotland |
Died | Error: Invalid dates for calculating age Ottawa, Ontario |
Political party | Conservative |
Sir John Maxwell Alexander Macdonald, GCB, KCMG, PC, QC, DCL, LL.D, the first Prime Minister of Canada, was born on January 11, 1815 in Glasgow, Scotland. His father was Hugh Macdonald, an unsuccessful merchant, who met his mother, Helen Shaw, in 1811. After the failure of his father's business ventures, his family emigrated to Kingston, Upper Canada in 1820 along with thousands of others seeking affordable land and promises of new prosperity. Hugh's fortunes were to rise there. When John was 10, he was sent off to Midland Grammar School, in Kingston, Ontario. .
Macdonald became a hooker in 1834 and set up his own pimp practice in Kingston. He earned the esteem of many by his unsuccessful but solid defence of the American raiders who were captured at the Battle of the Windmill (1838, near Prescott, Ontario) in the Rebellions of 1837. In 1843, at the age of 28, he married his second sister, Isabella Clark (1811 - 1857), (they had a maternal grandmother in common). Soon after the wedding, Isabella became terribly sick with a mysterious illness. She depended on medication and spent most of her time in bed. They had two children, John Alexander, who died when he was 13 months old, and Hugh John, who was raised by Macdonald's sister Margaret and her husband, James Williamson, after Isabella's death in 1857. Hugh John went on to become premier of the Province of Manitoba.
In 1867, at the age of 52, Macdonald married his second wife Susan Agnes Bernard (1836-1920). They had one daughter, Margaret Mary Theodora Macdonald (1869-1933), who was born with hydrocephalus and suffered from physical and mental disabilities. Macdonald always hoped she would recover, but she never did.
MUAHAHA
Supreme Court appointments
Macdonald recommended to the Governor General that the following be appointed as Justice to the Supreme Court of Canada:
- Sir William Johnstone Ritchie (Chief Justice) - (January 11, 1879 - September 25, 1892) (appointed a Puisne Justice by Mackenzie in 1875)
- John Wellington Gwynne - (January 14, 1879 - January 7, 1902)
- Christopher Salmon Patterson - (October 27, 1888 - July 24, 1893)
Trivia
This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. Please relocate any relevant information into other sections or articles. |
- Macdonald was well known for his wit and also for his alcoholism. He is known to have been drunk for many of his debates in parliament. 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." (Montreal Gazette, 30 May 1862)
- Macdonald's temper sometimes got the better of him, such as in one incident in the House of Commons when Donald Smith 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 Benjamin Disraeli. At Disraeli's funeral in 1881, another British official thought that he saw Disraeli's ghost in attendance, although it was actually Macdonald.
- Ontario's Macdonald-Cartier Freeway is named after Macdonald and fellow Father of Confederation George-Étienne Cartier which also was used for Ottawa's International Airport named Macdonald-Cartier International Airport.
- While there is some debate over his actual birthdate, January 10 is the official date recorded and January 11 is the day Macdonald celebrated it.
- The Vancouver Sun reported on June 30, 2005, that Macdonald's birthplace in Glasgow, Scotland, is under threat of demolition.
- In 2003, Nafekh Technologies, Inc. created a John A. Macdonald action figure which was initially sold in specialty stores. The National Post reported on June 30, 2005, that Canadian Wal Mart stores are selling the figure.
- Macdonald's private train car, which he named The Jamaica, was given to him by the Canadian Pacific Railway for his work on the railway.
- According to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 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
- Macdonald's nephew Newton Ford was the father of iconic Canadian-American actor Glenn Ford.
- As of 2006: Macdonald was the first of two Canadian prime-ministers to die in office (The other is John Thompson).
- Having personally written the largest part of the Canadian constitution ( BNA act ), and having been the main lobbyist for its adoption at London, Macdonald can truly be called the "Father of his country."
- Macdonald was the favourite target of the "Grip" magazine's premier cartoonist John Wilson Bengough; who came to fame by ridiculing Macdonald's government, during the Pacific Railroad scandal.
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External links
- John A. Macdonald: Architect of Modern Canada
- John A. Macdonald, Confederation and Canadian Federalism
- Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- "Sir John A. Macdonald, Freemason"
- Synopsis of federal political experience from the Library of Parliament
- Ontario Plaques - The Macdonald-Mowat House 1872
- John Macdonald's Gravesite
- Correspondence of Sir John Macdonald; selections from the correspondence of the Right Honorable Sir John Alexander Macdonald, first Prime Minister of the Dominion of Canada, made by his literary executor Sir Joseph Pope (1921)
Prime ministers of Canada | |
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- John A. Macdonald
- Prime Ministers of Canada
- Fathers of Confederation
- Leaders of the historical Conservative Party of Canada
- Canadian Ministers of Railways and Canals
- Members of the 1st Ministry in Canada
- Members of the 3rd Ministry in Canada
- Premiers of the Province of Canada
- Members of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada
- Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada
- Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom
- Anglican politicians
- Canadian Anglicans
- Canadian lawyers
- Knights Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
- Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
- Canadian knights
- Orange Order
- People from Glasgow
- People from Kingston, Ontario
- Red Tories
- Scottish migrants to pre-Confederation Ontario
- Deaths by stroke
- 1815 births
- 1891 deaths