CINXE.COM
SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL – Dictionary of Canadian Biography
<!DOCTYPE html> <html class="js cssanimations"> <!-- vim: set ts=2 sw=2 expandtab : --> <!-- debug jtk 2020-11 a, bio --> <head> <!-- 172.105.29.39 Element 010 comment#ip --> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /> <meta name="msvalidate.01" content="1410A94B8EF57EB5E09DF8429A48077F" /> <meta charset="UTF-8" /> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, user-scalable=no" /> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://platform-api.sharethis.com/js/sharethis.js#property=65b0432b92c73d001906c92a&product=inline-share-buttons" async="async"></script> <!-- insert#seo-tags insert#author-tags 0 Element 011 012 --> <meta property="og:title" content="SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL – Dictionary of Canadian Biography" /> <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> <meta property="og:type-check" content="website" /> <meta property="og:url" content="https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/smith_donald_alexander_14E.html" /> <meta property="og:image" content="http://www.biographi.ca/bioimages/s500.943.jpg" /> <meta property="og:description" content="SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL, HBC officer, businessman, politician, diplomat, and philanthropist; b.&nbsp;6&nbsp;Aug. 1820 in Forres, Scotland, son of Alexander Smith and Barbara Stuart; m.&nbsp;Isabella Sophia Hardisty, sister of Richard Charles* and William Lucas* Hardisty, and they had one daughter; d.&nbsp;21&nbsp;Jan. 1914 in London, England." /> <meta property="og:site_name" content="Dictionary of Canadian Biography" /> <meta property="twitter:card" content="summary_large_image" /> <meta property="twitter:site" content="@dcb_dbc" /> <meta property="twitter:creator" content="@dcb_dbc" /> <meta property="twitter:title" content="SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL – Dictionary of Canadian Biography" /> <meta property="twitter:description" content="SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL, HBC officer, businessman, politician, diplomat, and philanthropist; b.&nbsp;6&nbsp;Aug. 1820 in Forres, Scotland, son of Alexander Smith and Barbara Stuart; m.&nbsp;Isabella Sophia Hardisty, sister of Richard Charles* and William Lucas* Hardisty, and they had one daughter; d.&nbsp;21&nbsp;Jan. 1914 in London, England." /> <meta property="twitter:image" content="http://www.biographi.ca/bioimages/s500.943.jpg" /> <meta name="removed-author" content="DCB/DBC Staff, John Beadle Graphic Designer" /> <!-- insert#seo-tags insert#author-tags 1 Element 011 012 --> <!-- content#html-title Element 020 --> <title>SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL – Dictionary of Canadian Biography</title> <!-- cdn versions bootstrap.min.css TO <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/bootstrap@3.4.1/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css" integrity="sha384-HSMxcRTRxnN+Bdg0JdbxYKrThecOKuH5zCYotlSAcp1+c8xmyTe9GYg1l9a69psu" crossorigin="anonymous"> all.css TO <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="https://use.fontawesome.com/releases/v5.15.1/css/all.css"> jquery-ui.min.css TO <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.12.1/jquery-ui.min.css" integrity="sha512-aOG0c6nPNzGk+5zjwyJaoRUgCdOrfSDhmMID2u4+OIslr0GjpLKo7Xm0Ao3xmpM4T8AmIouRkqwj1nrdVsLKEQ==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> jquery-ui-2.css TO <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.13.2/themes/smoothness/jquery-ui.min.css" integrity="sha512-Mvnc3gzZhD8rZtNMHJkotZpdfvAHunpqankLPnj3hXpphETXpxbfr4+oNMOzF179JYu8B8/EqruGdpsH5fNYww==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> --> <!-- BOOTSTRAP CDN --> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/bootstrap@3.4.1/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css" integrity="sha384-HSMxcRTRxnN+Bdg0JdbxYKrThecOKuH5zCYotlSAcp1+c8xmyTe9GYg1l9a69psu" crossorigin="anonymous"> <!-- FONT AWESOME 5 --> <!-- link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="https://use.fontawesome.com/releases/v5.15.1/css/all.css" --> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="https://use.fontawesome.com/releases/v6.5.1/css/all.css"> <script src="https://kit.fontawesome.com/a5049f3fd8.js" crossorigin="anonymous"></script> <!-- JQUERY UI --> <!-- NOT in JB bio page BUT may be needed for some pages <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.12.1/jquery-ui.min.css" integrity="sha512-aOG0c6nPNzGk+5zjwyJaoRUgCdOrfSDhmMID2u4+OIslr0GjpLKo7Xm0Ao3xmpM4T8AmIouRkqwj1nrdVsLKEQ==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.13.2/themes/smoothness/jquery-ui.min.css" integrity="sha512-Mvnc3gzZhD8rZtNMHJkotZpdfvAHunpqankLPnj3hXpphETXpxbfr4+oNMOzF179JYu8B8/EqruGdpsH5fNYww==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> --> <!-- PLUGINS CSS --> <!-- CDN copies of the owl and lightgallery and sharethis with <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/OwlCarousel2/2.3.4/assets/owl.carousel.css"> with <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/OwlCarousel2/2.3.4/assets/owl.theme.default.css"> with <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lightgallery/1.6.12/css/lightgallery.min.css" integrity="sha512-UMUaaaRK/i2ihAzNyraiLZzT8feWBDY+lLnBnhA3+MEfQn4jaNJMGBad6nyklImf7d0Id6n/Jb0ynr7RCpyNPQ==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> with <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lightgallery/1.6.12/css/lg-transitions.min.css" integrity="sha512-TLkzsbRon8DBy6TwaafTGapb+90/t0ZsGes1jMyHKaImbAUSTaedyS8HbDQOZt3H+j1s4BFKUlWXcPBEJNtPgw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> with <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/share-this/1.3.1/share-this.min.css" integrity="sha512-D2vagE/4+QTyP2FukMZNoZxcO1Uqcd0SsnqczdOm+zu35XDsFDIroYXxDD0WrYbyPFKD1vUmhxaCC3kR8WBNZA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="/css/plugin-shared.css"> --> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/OwlCarousel2/2.3.4/assets/owl.carousel.css"> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/OwlCarousel2/2.3.4/assets/owl.theme.default.css"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lightgallery/1.6.12/css/lightgallery.min.css" integrity="sha512-UMUaaaRK/i2ihAzNyraiLZzT8feWBDY+lLnBnhA3+MEfQn4jaNJMGBad6nyklImf7d0Id6n/Jb0ynr7RCpyNPQ==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lightgallery/1.6.12/css/lg-transitions.min.css" integrity="sha512-TLkzsbRon8DBy6TwaafTGapb+90/t0ZsGes1jMyHKaImbAUSTaedyS8HbDQOZt3H+j1s4BFKUlWXcPBEJNtPgw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/share-this/1.3.1/share-this.min.css" integrity="sha512-D2vagE/4+QTyP2FukMZNoZxcO1Uqcd0SsnqczdOm+zu35XDsFDIroYXxDD0WrYbyPFKD1vUmhxaCC3kR8WBNZA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer" /> <!--LOCAL LINKS --> <!-- javascript_time is used extensively, Element 021 --> <!-- owl and lightgallery customization querystring#?time=#javascript_time Element 021 --> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="/css/plugin-shared.css?time=1729526930"> <!-- classes I need that jb did not include in base.css load before base.css so if he overrides these his code will be used--> <!-- querystring#?time=#javascript_time Element 021 --> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="/css/shared-base.css?time=1729526930"> <!-- base css from JB, querystring#?time=#javascript_time Element 021 --> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="/css/base.css?time=1729526930"> <!-- page-specific style sheet, usually the page name with .css instead of php --> <!-- href#page-css-url Element 030 --> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="/css/bio.css?time=1729526930"> <!-- insert#main-menu-items 0 Element 040 --> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="/css/mod_boot_0_0_css_bio.css?id=1732416183" /> <!-- insert#main-menu-items 1 Element 040 --> <!-- insert#header-post-css 0 Element 042 --> <!-- insert#header-post-css 1 Element 042 --> <style> .owl-dot { display: none; } </style> <style type="text/css">.fb_hidden{position:absolute;top:-10000px;z-index:10001}.fb_reposition{overflow:hidden;position:relative}.fb_invisible{display:none}.fb_reset{background:none;border:0;border-spacing:0;color:#000;cursor:auto;direction:ltr;font-family:"lucida grande", tahoma, verdana, arial, sans-serif;font-size:11px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;letter-spacing:normal;line-height:1;margin:0;overflow:visible;padding:0;text-align:left;text-decoration:none;text-indent:0;text-shadow:none;text-transform:none;visibility:visible;white-space:normal;word-spacing:normal}.fb_reset>div{overflow:hidden}@keyframes fb_transform{from{opacity:0;transform:scale(.95)}to{opacity:1;transform:scale(1)}}.fb_animate{animation:fb_transform .3s forwards} .fb_dialog{background:rgba(82, 82, 82, .7);position:absolute;top:-10000px;z-index:10001}.fb_dialog_advanced{border-radius:8px;padding:10px}.fb_dialog_content{background:#fff;color:#373737}.fb_dialog_close_icon{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yq/r/IE9JII6Z1Ys.png) no-repeat scroll 0 0 transparent;cursor:pointer;display:block;height:15px;position:absolute;right:18px;top:17px;width:15px}.fb_dialog_mobile .fb_dialog_close_icon{left:5px;right:auto;top:5px}.fb_dialog_padding{background-color:transparent;position:absolute;width:1px;z-index:-1}.fb_dialog_close_icon:hover{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yq/r/IE9JII6Z1Ys.png) no-repeat scroll 0 -15px transparent}.fb_dialog_close_icon:active{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yq/r/IE9JII6Z1Ys.png) no-repeat scroll 0 -30px transparent}.fb_dialog_iframe{line-height:0}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_title{background:#6d84b4;border:1px solid #365899;color:#fff;font-size:14px;font-weight:bold;margin:0}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_title>span{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yd/r/Cou7n-nqK52.gif) no-repeat 5px 50%;float:left;padding:5px 0 7px 26px}body.fb_hidden{height:100%;left:0;margin:0;overflow:visible;position:absolute;top:-10000px;transform:none;width:100%}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/ya/r/3rhSv5V8j3o.gif) white no-repeat 50% 50%;min-height:100%;min-width:100%;overflow:hidden;position:absolute;top:0;z-index:10001}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading.centered{background:none;height:auto;min-height:initial;min-width:initial;width:auto}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading.centered #fb_dialog_loader_spinner{width:100%}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading.centered .fb_dialog_content{background:none}.loading.centered #fb_dialog_loader_close{clear:both;color:#fff;display:block;font-size:18px;padding-top:20px}#fb-root #fb_dialog_ipad_overlay{background:rgba(0, 0, 0, .4);bottom:0;left:0;min-height:100%;position:absolute;right:0;top:0;width:100%;z-index:10000}#fb-root #fb_dialog_ipad_overlay.hidden{display:none}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading iframe{visibility:hidden}.fb_dialog_mobile .fb_dialog_iframe{position:sticky;top:0}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header{background:linear-gradient(from(#738aba), to(#2c4987));border-bottom:1px solid;border-color:#043b87;box-shadow:white 0 1px 1px -1px inset;color:#fff;font:bold 14px Helvetica, sans-serif;text-overflow:ellipsis;text-shadow:rgba(0, 30, 84, .296875) 0 -1px 0;vertical-align:middle;white-space:nowrap}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header table{height:43px;width:100%}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header td.header_left{font-size:12px;padding-left:5px;vertical-align:middle;width:60px}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header td.header_right{font-size:12px;padding-right:5px;vertical-align:middle;width:60px}.fb_dialog_content .touchable_button{background:linear-gradient(from(#4267B2), to(#2a4887));background-clip:padding-box;border:1px solid #29487d;border-radius:3px;display:inline-block;line-height:18px;margin-top:3px;max-width:85px;padding:4px 12px;position:relative}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header .touchable_button input{background:none;border:none;color:#fff;font:bold 12px Helvetica, sans-serif;margin:2px -12px;padding:2px 6px 3px 6px;text-shadow:rgba(0, 30, 84, .296875) 0 -1px 0}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header .header_center{color:#fff;font-size:16px;font-weight:bold;line-height:18px;text-align:center;vertical-align:middle}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_content{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/y9/r/jKEcVPZFk-2.gif) no-repeat 50% 50%;border:1px solid #4a4a4a;border-bottom:0;border-top:0;height:150px}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_footer{background:#f5f6f7;border:1px solid #4a4a4a;border-top-color:#ccc;height:40px}#fb_dialog_loader_close{float:left}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile .fb_dialog_close_button{text-shadow:rgba(0, 30, 84, .296875) 0 -1px 0}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile .fb_dialog_close_icon{visibility:hidden}#fb_dialog_loader_spinner{animation:rotateSpinner 1.2s linear infinite;background-color:transparent;background-image:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yD/r/t-wz8gw1xG1.png);background-position:50% 50%;background-repeat:no-repeat;height:24px;width:24px}@keyframes rotateSpinner{0%{transform:rotate(0deg)}100%{transform:rotate(360deg)}} .fb_iframe_widget{display:inline-block;position:relative}.fb_iframe_widget span{display:inline-block;position:relative;text-align:justify}.fb_iframe_widget iframe{position:absolute}.fb_iframe_widget_fluid_desktop,.fb_iframe_widget_fluid_desktop span,.fb_iframe_widget_fluid_desktop iframe{max-width:100%}.fb_iframe_widget_fluid_desktop iframe{min-width:220px;position:relative}.fb_iframe_widget_lift{z-index:1}.fb_iframe_widget_fluid{display:inline}.fb_iframe_widget_fluid span{width:100%}</style><style type="text/css">.st-1 { font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;; direction: ltr; display: block; opacity: 1; text-align: center; z-index: 94034; } .st-1.st-animated { -moz-transition: o 0.2s ease-in, p 0.2s ease-in, a 0.2s ease-in, c 0.2s ease-in, i 0.2s ease-in, t 0.2s ease-in, y 0.2s ease-in; -ms-transition: o 0.2s ease-in, p 0.2s ease-in, a 0.2s ease-in, c 0.2s ease-in, i 0.2s ease-in, t 0.2s ease-in, y 0.2s ease-in; -o-transition: o 0.2s ease-in, p 0.2s ease-in, a 0.2s ease-in, c 0.2s ease-in, i 0.2s ease-in, t 0.2s ease-in, y 0.2s ease-in; -webkit-transition: o 0.2s ease-in, p 0.2s ease-in, a 0.2s ease-in, c 0.2s ease-in, i 0.2s ease-in, t 0.2s ease-in, y 0.2s ease-in; transition: o 0.2s ease-in, p 0.2s ease-in, a 0.2s ease-in, c 0.2s ease-in, i 0.2s ease-in, t 0.2s ease-in, y 0.2s ease-in; } .st-1.st-hidden { opacity: 0; } .st-1.st-hide { display: none; } .st-1 .st-btn { -moz-box-sizing: border-box; -webkit-box-sizing: border-box; box-sizing: border-box; -moz-transition: opacity 0.2s ease-in, top 0.2s ease-in; -ms-transition: opacity 0.2s ease-in, top 0.2s ease-in; -o-transition: opacity 0.2s ease-in, top 0.2s ease-in; -webkit-transition: opacity 0.2s ease-in, top 0.2s ease-in; transition: opacity 0.2s ease-in, top 0.2s ease-in; -moz-border-radius: 0px; -webkit-border-radius: 0px; border-radius: 0px; border: none; cursor: pointer; display: inline-block; font-size: 12px; height: 32px; line-height: 32px; margin-right: 8px; padding: 0 10px; position: relative; text-align: center; top: 0; vertical-align: top; white-space: nowrap; } .st-1 .st-btn:last-child { margin-right: 0; } .st-1 .st-btn > svg { height: 16px; width: 16px; position: relative; top: 8px; vertical-align: top; } .st-1 .st-btn > img { display: inline-block; height: 16px; width: 16px; position: relative; top: 8px; vertical-align: top; } .st-1 .st-btn > span { -moz-transition: all 0.2s ease-in; -ms-transition: all 0.2s ease-in; -o-transition: all 0.2s ease-in; -webkit-transition: all 0.2s ease-in; transition: all 0.2s ease-in; color: #fff; display: inline-block; font-weight: 500; letter-spacing: 0.5px; min-width: 60px; opacity: 1; padding: 0 6px; position: relative; vertical-align: top; } .st-1.st-has-labels .st-btn { min-width: 120px; } .st-1.st-has-labels .st-btn.st-remove-label { min-width: 50px; } .st-1.st-has-labels .st-btn.st-remove-label > span { display: none; } .st-1.st-has-labels .st-btn.st-hide-label > span { display: none; } .st-1 .st-total { color: #555; display: inline-block; font-weight: 500; line-height: 12px; margin-right: 0; max-width: 80px; padding: 4px 8px; text-align: center; } .st-1 .st-total.st-hidden { display: none; } .st-1 .st-total > span { font-size: 16px; line-height: 17px; display: block; padding: 0; } .st-1 .st-total > span.st-shares { font-size: 9px; line-height: 9px; } .st-1.st-justified { display: flex; text-align: center; } .st-1.st-justified .st-btn { -moz-flex: 1; -ms-flex: 1; -webkit-flex: 1; flex: 1; } .st-1 .st-btn:hover { opacity: .8; top: -4px; } .st-1 .st-btn[data-network='facebook'] { background-color: #4267B2; } .st-1 .st-btn[data-network='facebook'] svg { fill: #fff; } .st-1 .st-btn[data-network='facebook'] > span { color: #fff; } .st-1 .st-btn[data-network='twitter'] { background-color: #55acee; } .st-1 .st-btn[data-network='twitter'] svg { fill: #fff; } .st-1 .st-btn[data-network='twitter'] > span { color: #fff; } </style> </head> <body> <!-- WRAPPER --> <div id="bootstrap-wrapper" class="dcb-container container-fluid wrapper"> <!-- START Top nav content --> <nav id="nav_main" class="navbar navbar-default navbar-dcb navbar-fixed-top"> <div class="container-fluid"> <!-- Brand and toggle get grouped for better mobile display --> <div class="navbar-mobile" id="dcb-mobile-1"> <div class="dropdown show-outline" id="dcb-hamburger-mobile"> <button id="dlabel" type="button" data-toggle="dropdown" aria-haspopup="true" aria-expanded="false"><i class="fas fa-bars fa-lg"></i></button> </div><!--END DROPDOWN--> </div> <div class="collapse navbar-collapse" id="dcb-collapse-1"> <ul class="nav navbar-nav"> <!--DROPDOWN--> <div class="dropdown show-outline" id="hamburger"> <button id="eLabel" type="button" data-toggle="dropdown" aria-haspopup="true" aria-expanded="false"> <i class="fas fa-bars fa-lg"></i> </button> </div><!--END DROPDOWN--> <div class="input-group" id="mobile-search"> <input id="search-2" type="text" class="dcb-search form-control" placeholder="Search" data-brx-ls="template_search"></input> <span class="input-group-btn"> <button data-target="#search-2" class="dcb-search btn btn-default" type="button" data-brx-ls="template_go_mobile">Go</button> </span> </div><!-- /input-group --> <!-- insert#main-menu-items 0 Element 110 --> <li class=""><a href="/fr/bio/smith_donald_alexander_14F.html" title="Version française">Français</a></li> <li class=""><a href="/en/" title="Home">Home</a></li> <li class=""><a href="/en/news_feed.html" title="News">News</a></li> <li class=""><a href="/en/about_us.php" title="About Us">About Us</a></li> <li class=""><a href="/en/contact_us_general.php" title="Contact Us">Contact Us</a></li> <li class=""><a href="/en/contact_us_newsletter.php" title="Subscribe">Subscribe</a></li> <li class=""><a target="_blank" href="https://donate.utoronto.ca/dcb/" title="Donate">Donate</a></li> <!-- insert#main-menu-items 1 Element 110 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </ul> <ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right"> <!--FACEBOOK TWITTER NAVBAR LINKS--> <li><a class="fa-brands fa-square-x-twitter fa-lg" aria-hidden="true" target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/dcb_dbc" title="Follow us on Twitter" data-brx-ls="template_follow_twitter"></a></li> <li><a class="fab fa-facebook fa-lg" aria-hidden="true" target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/dictionaryofcanadianbiography" title="Follow us on Facebook" data-brx-ls="template_follow_facebook"></a></li> <!-- <li><a href="javascript:void(0)" data-brx-dyn="show:logged-in:0" class="topmenu-login-no" onclick="return showLogin();" title="Log in to My DCB" data-brx-ls="template_login">Log In</a></li> <li><a href="javascript:void(0)" data-brx-dyn="show:logged-in:0" class="topmenu-login-no" onclick="return ajaxRegister();" title="Register for free for My DCB: you can save biographies and searches to a personal list" data-brx-ls="template_register">Register</a></li> <li><a href="javascript:void(0)" data-brx-dyn="show:logged-in:1" onclick="return ajaxLogout();" title="Log out of My DCB" data-brx-ls="template_logout">Log out</a></li> <li><a href="/en/mydcb/" data-brx-dyn="show:logged-in:1" class="topmenu-login-yes" title="Your personal page, where you can save favourite biographies and searches" data-brx-ls="template_my_dcb">My DCB</a></li> --> </ul> </div><!-- /.navbar-collapse --> </div><!-- /.container-fluid --> </nav> <!-- END Top nav content --> <!-- START Header content --> <div id="row-top-section" class="container-fluid"> <div class="row" id="row-breadcrumbs"> <div id="breadcrumbs" class="col-sm-12" data-brx-ls="template_breadcrumbs">Breadcrumbs</div> </div> <!-- jtk 7-apr-2019 reader-mode --> <div class="row reader-mode" id="row-logo"> <div class="col-sm-7" id="col-logo"> <a href="/en/" data-brx-ls="template_home" title="Dictionary of Canadian Biography"><img class="responsive" alt="Dictionary of Canadian Biography" src="/img/dcb_en.svg" data-brx-ls="template_home"></a> </div> <div class="col-sm-5" id="col-search"> <div class="container-fluid"> <div class="row" id="search"> <input type="text" id="simple-search" class="dcb-search simple-input" placeholder="Search" data-brx-ls="template_search"></input> <span data-target="#simple-search" class="dcb-search btn-lg glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-right" id="search_go"></span> </div> <div class="row"> <div class="float-right" id="tools"> <!-- start standard tools menu --> <nav class="navbar navbar-tools navbar navbar-default"> <ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar"> <li><a href="/en/browse.php" title="Browse content by category" data-brx-ls="template_navtools_browse"><span class="btn-sm glyphicon glyphicon-th-list"></span> <span data-brx-ls="template_navtools_browse_span">Browse</span></a></li> <li><a href="/en/search.php" title="Use options such as Boolean operators and limiters" data-brx-ls="template_navtools_search"><span class="btn-sm glyphicon glyphicon-search"></span> <span data-brx-ls="template_navtools_search_span">Advanced Search</span></a></li> <li><a href="javascript:void(1);" onclick="return startReaderMode();" title="“Reader mode” hides everything but the navigation bar and the footer. To return to regular mode, click on "Exit reader mode" at top left." data-brx-ls="template_navtools_reader"><span class="btn-sm glyphicon glyphicon-book"></span> <span data-brx-ls="template_navtools_reader_span">Reader Mode</span></a></li> <li><a href="javascript:void(1);" onclick="return printDocument();" title="Printer-friendly" data-brx-ls="template_navtools_print"> <span class="btn-sm glyphicon glyphicon-print"></span> <span data-brx-ls="template_navtools_print_span">Printer-friendly</span></a></li> </ul> </nav> <!-- end standard tools menu --> </div><!-- #tools --> </div><!-- .row --> </div><!-- .container-fluid --> </div><!-- #col-search --> </div><!-- #row-logo --> </div><!-- #row-top-section --> <!-- END Header content --> <!-- Element 111 112 113 --> <div style="display:none;" id="announcements" class="row alert-warning col-sm-12 announcements" data-brx-dyn="ajax:content:/en/ajax/announcements.php"> </div> <div id="content-container" class="container-fluid"> <div class="row mobile-logo"> <div class="col-md-12"> <!-- Element 114 115 --> <a href="/en/"><img src="/img/dcb_en_sm.svg" alt="mobile"></a> </div> <div class="col-md-12 .bio-jump"> <!-- insert#jump-link 0 element 116 --> <p><a href="javascript:void(0);" class="jump-first-paragraph" alt="Click here to go directly to the biography text">Jump to the biography</a></p> <!-- insert#jump-link 1 element 116 --> </div> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div> <div class="row"> <!-- jtk 7-apr-2019 --> <div class="col-xs-12 col-sm-4 col-lg-3 col-xl-2 content-left reader-mode" id="sidebar"> <div id="sidebar-inner"> <nav class="dcb-generic-sidebar"> <ul class="dcb-pills nav-pills nav-stacked"> <div class="row sidebar-dropdown-extra"> <input type="text" id="nav-search" class="dcb-search simple-input" placeholder="Search" data-brx-ls="template_sidebar_search"></input> <span data-target="#nav-search" class="dcb-search btn-lg glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-right" id="nav-search_go"></span> </div> <div class="row sidebar-french-home sidebar-dropdown-extra"> <!-- custom:dynamic_feed_6:mobile_menu Element 120 --> <!-- insert#mobile-menu-items 0 Element 120 --> <div class="btn-group btn-group-justified" role="group" aria-label="..."> <div class="btn-group" role="group"> <a href="/fr/bio/smith_donald_alexander_14F.html" title="Version française"><button type="button" class="btn btn-primary">Français</button></a> </div> <div class="btn-group" role="group"> <a href="/en/" title="Home"><button type="button" class="btn btn-primary">Home</button></a> </div> </div> <div class="btn-group btn-group-justified" role="group" aria-label="..."> <div class="btn-group" role="group"> <a href="/en/news_feed.html" title="News"><button type="button" class="btn btn-primary">News</button></a> </div> <div class="btn-group" role="group"> <a href="/en/about_us.php" title="About Us"><button type="button" class="btn btn-primary">About Us</button></a> </div> </div> <div class="btn-group btn-group-justified" role="group" aria-label="..."> <div class="btn-group" role="group"> <a href="/en/contact_us_general.php" title="Contact Us"><button type="button" class="btn btn-primary">Contact Us</button></a> </div> <div class="btn-group" role="group"> <a href="/en/contact_us_newsletter.php" title="Subscribe"><button type="button" class="btn btn-primary">Subscribe</button></a> </div> </div> <div class="btn-group btn-group-justified" role="group" aria-label="..."> <div class="btn-group" role="group"> <a target="_blank" href="https://donate.utoronto.ca/dcb/" title="Donate"><button type="button" class="btn btn-primary">Donate</button></a> </div> </div> <!-- insert#mobile-menu-items 1 Element 120 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div> <!-- sidebar-inner --> <!-- nav-OUTLINE --> <!-- Element 550. section-* tags are used to set style to display:none; if the section is not used for the page. --> <nav style="" class="dcb-generic-sidebar col-theme-grey"> <ul class="dcb-pills nav-pills nav-stacked"> <li role="presentation"> <!-- title#outline-description content#outline-caption element 131 132 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#bio-outline-sidenav" class="accordion-toggle collapsed" aria-expanded="true" title="Outline">Outline</a> <div id="bio-outline-sidenav" class="collapse in" aria-expanded="true"> <!-- listgroup syntax :: listgroup:data_source:format format parameter may be all, start, end, li Regardless of format, each generates list items from data_source. Formats allow us to construct a single list group from multiple sources, to add custom li elements all prints <ul class="list-group"> then the items then </ul> start -> ul, li0...liN, end-> li0...liN, /ul li -> just li0...liN --> <!-- insert#outline-content 0 Element 130 --> <ul class="list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="#first" title="First paragraph">First paragraph</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="#second" title="Bibliography">Bibliography</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="#image-gallery" title="Images">Images</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="#citations" title="How to cite">How to cite</a></li> </ul> <!-- insert#outline-content 1 Element 130 --> <!-- {{example:0}} simple --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / #bio-outline-sidenav --> </li> </ul><!-- .dcb-pills .nav-pills --> </nav> <!-- END nav-OUTLINE --> <!-- <nav style="display:none;" class="dcb-generic-sidebar col-theme-grey"> --> <section style="display:none;"> <!-- insert#outline-full-html 0 Element 130 --> <!-- insert#outline-full-html 1 Element 130 --> </section> <!-- </nav> --> <!--JANUARY 18 2021 JB --> <!-- nav THEMES --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <nav style="" class="dcb-generic-sidebar col-theme-grey"> <ul class="dcb-pills nav-pills nav-stacked"> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <li style="" role="presentation"> <!-- title#bio-special-description content#bio-special-caption Element 141 142 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#bio-special-sidenav" class="accordion-toggle" aria-expanded="false" title="Related Themes">Related Themes</a> <div id="bio-special-sidenav" class="collapse" aria-expanded="false" style="height: 0px;"> <!-- format: listgroup Element 140 --> <!-- insert#bio-special-list 0 Element 140 --> <ul class="list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special/107?p=5" title="Confederation">Confederation</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special/70?p=10" title="From the Red River Settlement to Manitoba (1812—70)">From the Red River Settlement to Manitoba (1812—70)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special/98?p=2" title="Sir John A. Macdonald">Sir John A. Macdonald</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special/77?p=11" title="Sir Wilfrid Laurier">Sir Wilfrid Laurier</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special/76?p=3" title="Sports">Sports</a></li> </ul> <!-- insert#bio-special-list 1 Element 140 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / #bio-special-sidenav --> </li> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <li style="" role="presentation"> <!-- title#bio-topics-description content#bio-topics-caption Element 151 152 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#bio-related-topics-sidenav" class="accordion-toggle" aria-expanded="false" title="Related Topics">Related Topics</a> <div id="bio-related-topics-sidenav" class="collapse" aria-expanded="false"> <!-- format: listgroup Element 150 --> <!-- insert#bio-topics-list 0 Element 150 --> <ul class="list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=1761" title="Canadian Pacific Railway">Canadian Pacific Railway</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=1608" title="Clifford Sifton’s immigration policies">Clifford Sifton’s immigration policies</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=2177" title="Hudson’s Bay Company">Hudson’s Bay Company</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=1420" title="Immigration policies in Canada">Immigration policies in Canada</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=1435" title="Métis resistance (1869–1870)">Métis resistance (1869–1870)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=1754" title="Pacific Scandal">Pacific Scandal</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=2171" title="Rupert’s Land">Rupert’s Land</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=1422" title="South African War (1899–1902)">South African War (1899–1902)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-command show-more-item smk-bio-topics"><a href="javascript:void(0)" title="Show more items" class="show-more-toggle use-smk-bio-topics">more</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-bio-topics"><a target="_blank" href="/en/topics/topic-match-list.php?id=2175" title="Wilfrid Laurier’s immigration policies">Wilfrid Laurier’s immigration policies</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-bio-topics"><a href="javascript:void(0)" title="Show fewer items" class="show-more-toggle use-smk-bio-topics">Less</a></li> </ul> <!-- insert#bio-topics-list 1 Element 150 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / #bio-related-topics-sidenav --> </li> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <li style="" role="presentation"> <!-- title#related-bios-description content#related-bios-caption Element 161 162 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#bio-related-bios-sidenav" class="accordion-toggle" aria-expanded="false" title="">Related Biographies</a> <div id="bio-related-bios-sidenav" class="collapse" aria-expanded="false" style="height: 0px;"> <!-- format: listgroup Element 160 --> <!-- insert#related-bios-list 0 Element 160 --> <ul class="list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/bio/angus_richard_bladworth_15E.html" title="ANGUS, RICHARD BLADWORTH">ANGUS, RICHARD BLADWORTH</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/bio/archibald_adams_george_12E.html" title="ARCHIBALD, Sir ADAMS GEORGE">ARCHIBALD, Sir ADAMS GEORGE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/bio/bannatyne_andrew_graham_ballenden_11E.html" title="BANNATYNE, ANDREW GRAHAM BALLENDEN (baptized Andrew Grahme Balenden)">BANNATYNE, ANDREW GRAHAM BALLENDEN (baptized Andrew Grahme Balenden)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/bio/borden_frederick_william_14E.html" title="BORDEN, Sir FREDERICK WILLIAM">BORDEN, Sir FREDERICK WILLIAM</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/bio/bowell_mackenzie_14E.html" title="BOWELL, Sir MACKENZIE">BOWELL, Sir MACKENZIE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/bio/brydges_charles_john_11E.html" title="BRYDGES, CHARLES JOHN">BRYDGES, CHARLES JOHN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/bio/christie_william_joseph_12E.html" title="CHRISTIE, WILLIAM JOSEPH">CHRISTIE, WILLIAM JOSEPH</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/bio/dawson_john_william_12E.html" title="DAWSON, Sir JOHN WILLIAM">DAWSON, Sir JOHN WILLIAM</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-command show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="javascript:void(0)" title="Show more items" class="show-more-toggle use-smk-related-bios">more</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/drummond_george_alexander_13E.html" title="DRUMMOND, Sir GEORGE ALEXANDER">DRUMMOND, Sir GEORGE ALEXANDER</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/fleming_sandford_14E.html" title="FLEMING, Sir SANDFORD">FLEMING, Sir SANDFORD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/grahame_james_allan_13E.html" title="GRAHAME, JAMES ALLAN">GRAHAME, JAMES ALLAN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/greenway_thomas_13E.html" title="GREENWAY, THOMAS">GREENWAY, THOMAS</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/grenfell_wilfred_thomason_16E.html" title="GRENFELL, Sir WILFRED THOMASON">GRENFELL, Sir WILFRED THOMASON</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hardisty_richard_charles_11E.html" title="HARDISTY, RICHARD CHARLES">HARDISTY, RICHARD CHARLES</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hardisty_william_lucas_11E.html" title="HARDISTY, WILLIAM LUCAS">HARDISTY, WILLIAM LUCAS</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hill_james_jerome_14E.html" title="HILL, JAMES JEROME">HILL, JAMES JEROME</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/irumberry_de_salaberry_charles_rene_leonidas_d_11E.html" title="IRUMBERRY DE SALABERRY, CHARLES-RENÉ-LÉONIDAS D’">IRUMBERRY DE SALABERRY, CHARLES-RENÉ-LÉONIDAS D’</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/jaffray_robert_14E.html" title="JAFFRAY, ROBERT">JAFFRAY, ROBERT</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/kittson_norman_wolfred_11E.html" title="KITTSON, NORMAN WOLFRED">KITTSON, NORMAN WOLFRED</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/lacombe_albert_14E.html" title="LACOMBE, ALBERT">LACOMBE, ALBERT</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/luxton_william_fisher_13E.html" title="LUXTON, WILLIAM FISHER">LUXTON, WILLIAM FISHER</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/macdonald_william_christopher_14E.html" title="MACDONALD (McDonald), Sir WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER">MACDONALD (McDonald), Sir WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/macdonald_john_alexander_12E.html" title="MACDONALD, Sir JOHN ALEXANDER">MACDONALD, Sir JOHN ALEXANDER</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mcinnes_donald_12E.html" title="McINNES (MacInnes), DONALD">McINNES (MacInnes), DONALD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mcintyre_duncan_12E.html" title="McINTYRE, DUNCAN">McINTYRE, DUNCAN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/meighen_robert_14E.html" title="MEIGHEN, ROBERT">MEIGHEN, ROBERT</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/morris_alexander_11E.html" title="MORRIS, ALEXANDER">MORRIS, ALEXANDER</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/peterson_william_15E.html" title="PETERSON, Sir WILLIAM">PETERSON, Sir WILLIAM</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/riel_louis_1844_85_11E.html" title="RIEL, LOUIS (1844-85)">RIEL, LOUIS (1844-85)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/rosamond_bennett_13E.html" title="ROSAMOND, BENNETT">ROSAMOND, BENNETT</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/scarth_william_bain_13E.html" title="SCARTH, WILLIAM BAIN">SCARTH, WILLIAM BAIN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/schultz_john_christian_12E.html" title="SCHULTZ, Sir JOHN CHRISTIAN">SCHULTZ, Sir JOHN CHRISTIAN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/scott_thomas_1870_9E.html" title="SCOTT, THOMAS (d. 1870)">SCOTT, THOMAS (d. 1870)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/steele_samuel_benfield_14E.html" title="STEELE, Sir SAMUEL BENFIELD">STEELE, Sir SAMUEL BENFIELD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/stephen_george_15E.html" title="STEPHEN, GEORGE, 1st Baron MOUNT STEPHEN">STEPHEN, GEORGE, 1st Baron MOUNT STEPHEN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/thibault_jean_baptiste_10E.html" title="THIBAULT (Thibaud, Thebo), JEAN-BAPTISTE">THIBAULT (Thibaud, Thebo), JEAN-BAPTISTE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/tupper_charles_14E.html" title="TUPPER, Sir CHARLES">TUPPER, Sir CHARLES</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/van_horne_william_cornelius_14E.html" title="VAN HORNE, Sir WILLIAM CORNELIUS">VAN HORNE, Sir WILLIAM CORNELIUS</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/wolseley_garnet_joseph_14E.html" title="WOLSELEY, GARNET JOSEPH, 1st Viscount WOLSELEY">WOLSELEY, GARNET JOSEPH, 1st Viscount WOLSELEY</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/young_david_11E.html" title="YOUNG, DAVID">YOUNG, DAVID</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/allan_andrew_13E.html" title="ALLAN, ANDREW">ALLAN, ANDREW</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/allan_hugh_11E.html" title="ALLAN, Sir HUGH">ALLAN, Sir HUGH</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/borden_robert_laird_16E.html" title="BORDEN, Sir ROBERT LAIRD">BORDEN, Sir ROBERT LAIRD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/boulton_charles_arkoll_12E.html" title="BOULTON, CHARLES ARKOLL">BOULTON, CHARLES ARKOLL</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/bourassa_henri_18E.html" title="BOURASSA, HENRI (baptized Joseph-Henry-Napoléon)">BOURASSA, HENRI (baptized Joseph-Henry-Napoléon)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/connolly_william_7E.html" title="CONNOLLY, WILLIAM">CONNOLLY, WILLIAM</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/elliot_gilbert_john_murray_kynynmound_14E.html" title="ELLIOT, GILBERT JOHN MURRAY-KYNYNMOUND, Viscount MELGUND and 4th Earl of MINTO">ELLIOT, GILBERT JOHN MURRAY-KYNYNMOUND, Viscount MELGUND and 4th Earl of MINTO</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/fraser_john_arthur_12E.html" title="FRASER, JOHN ARTHUR">FRASER, JOHN ARTHUR</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/galt_alexander_tilloch_12E.html" title="GALT, Sir ALEXANDER TILLOCH">GALT, Sir ALEXANDER TILLOCH</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hamilton_gordon_john_campbell_16E.html" title="HAMILTON-GORDON, JOHN CAMPBELL, 7th Earl and 1st Marquess of ABERDEEN and TEMAIR">HAMILTON-GORDON, JOHN CAMPBELL, 7th Earl and 1st Marquess of ABERDEEN and TEMAIR</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/howard_robert_palmer_11E.html" title="HOWARD, ROBERT PALMER">HOWARD, ROBERT PALMER</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/jacobi_otto_reinhold_13E.html" title="JACOBI, OTTO REINHOLD">JACOBI, OTTO REINHOLD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/johnson_francis_godschall_12E.html" title="JOHNSON, Sir FRANCIS GODSCHALL">JOHNSON, Sir FRANCIS GODSCHALL</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/king_edwin_henry_12E.html" title="KING, EDWIN HENRY">KING, EDWIN HENRY</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/krieghoff_cornelius_10E.html" title="KRIEGHOFF (Kreighoff), CORNELIUS">KRIEGHOFF (Kreighoff), CORNELIUS</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/laidlaw_george_11E.html" title="LAIDLAW, GEORGE">LAIDLAW, GEORGE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/langevin_adelard_14E.html" title="LANGEVIN, ADÉLARD (baptized Louis-Philippe-Adélard)">LANGEVIN, ADÉLARD (baptized Louis-Philippe-Adélard)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/laurier_wilfrid_14E.html" title="LAURIER, Sir WILFRID (baptized Henry-Charles-Wilfrid)">LAURIER, Sir WILFRID (baptized Henry-Charles-Wilfrid)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mackenzie_alexander_12E.html" title="MACKENZIE, ALEXANDER">MACKENZIE, ALEXANDER</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mactavish_william_9E.html" title="MACTAVISH, WILLIAM">MACTAVISH, WILLIAM</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mair_charles_15E.html" title="MAIR, CHARLES">MAIR, CHARLES</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/maxwell_edward_15E.html" title="MAXWELL, EDWARD">MAXWELL, EDWARD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/paton_andrew_12E.html" title="PATON, ANDREW">PATON, ANDREW</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/price_bruce_13E.html" title="PRICE, BRUCE">PRICE, BRUCE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/sifton_clifford_15E.html" title="SIFTON, Sir CLIFFORD">SIFTON, Sir CLIFFORD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/simpson_george_8E.html" title="SIMPSON, Sir GEORGE">SIMPSON, Sir GEORGE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/sise_charles_fleetford_14E.html" title="SISE, CHARLES FLEETFORD">SISE, CHARLES FLEETFORD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/stuart_john_1813_82_11E.html" title="STUART, JOHN (1813-82)">STUART, JOHN (1813-82)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/watson_homer_ransford_16E.html" title="WATSON, HOMER RANSFORD">WATSON, HOMER RANSFORD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/whitney_henry_melville_15E.html" title="WHITNEY, HENRY MELVILLE">WHITNEY, HENRY MELVILLE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/abbott_maude_elizabeth_seymour_16E.html" title="ABBOTT, MAUDE ELIZABETH SEYMOUR (baptized Elizabeth Maud Seymour Babin)">ABBOTT, MAUDE ELIZABETH SEYMOUR (baptized Elizabeth Maud Seymour Babin)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/abbott_john_joseph_caldwell_12E.html" title="ABBOTT, Sir JOHN JOSEPH CALDWELL">ABBOTT, Sir JOHN JOSEPH CALDWELL</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/barnston_george_11E.html" title="BARNSTON, GEORGE">BARNSTON, GEORGE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/begg_alexander_1839_97_12E.html" title="BEGG, ALEXANDER (1839-97)">BEGG, ALEXANDER (1839-97)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/bernard_mary_agnes_16E.html" title="BERNARD, MARY (May) AGNES (FitzGibbon), known as Lally Bernard">BERNARD, MARY (May) AGNES (FitzGibbon), known as Lally Bernard</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/black_john_1817_79_10E.html" title="BLACK, JOHN (1817-79)">BLACK, JOHN (1817-79)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/brokovski_edwin_frederick_thomas_14E.html" title="BROKOVSKI (Brokouski), EDWIN (Edward) FREDERICK THOMAS">BROKOVSKI (Brokouski), EDWIN (Edward) FREDERICK THOMAS</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/bryce_george_16E.html" title="BRYCE, GEORGE">BRYCE, GEORGE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/bunn_thomas_10E.html" title="BUNN, THOMAS">BUNN, THOMAS</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/campbell_alexander_12E.html" title="CAMPBELL, Sir ALEXANDER (d. 1892)">CAMPBELL, Sir ALEXANDER (d. 1892)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/chipman_clarence_campbell_15E.html" title="CHIPMAN, CLARENCE CAMPBELL">CHIPMAN, CLARENCE CAMPBELL</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/clouston_edward_seaborne_14E.html" title="CLOUSTON, Sir EDWARD SEABORNE">CLOUSTON, Sir EDWARD SEABORNE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/cochrane_douglas_mackinnon_baillie_hamilton_16E.html" title="COCHRANE, DOUGLAS MACKINNON BAILLIE HAMILTON, 12th Earl of DUNDONALD">COCHRANE, DOUGLAS MACKINNON BAILLIE HAMILTON, 12th Earl of DUNDONALD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/davis_robert_atkinson_13E.html" title="DAVIS, ROBERT ATKINSON">DAVIS, ROBERT ATKINSON</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/dawson_arthur_osborne_16E.html" title="DAWSON, ARTHUR OSBORNE">DAWSON, ARTHUR OSBORNE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/desbarats_george_edouard_12E.html" title="DESBARATS, GEORGE-ÉDOUARD (baptized George-Édouard-Amable) (George Edward)">DESBARATS, GEORGE-ÉDOUARD (baptized George-Édouard-Amable) (George Edward)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/desjardins_alphonse_1841_1912_14E.html" title="DESJARDINS, ALPHONSE (baptized Charles-Alphonse) (1841-1912)">DESJARDINS, ALPHONSE (baptized Charles-Alphonse) (1841-1912)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/eaton_wyatt_12E.html" title="EATON, WYATT (baptized Charles Wyatt)">EATON, WYATT (baptized Charles Wyatt)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/edwards_robert_chambers_15E.html" title="EDWARDS, ROBERT CHAMBERS">EDWARDS, ROBERT CHAMBERS</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/geoffrion_felix_12E.html" title="GEOFFRION, FÉLIX (baptized Félix-Éleuthère)">GEOFFRION, FÉLIX (baptized Félix-Éleuthère)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/girard_marc_amable_12E.html" title="GIRARD, MARC-AMABLE">GIRARD, MARC-AMABLE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/greenshields_edward_black_14E.html" title="GREENSHIELDS, EDWARD BLACK">GREENSHIELDS, EDWARD BLACK</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/grey_albert_henry_george_14E.html" title="GREY, ALBERT HENRY GEORGE, 4th Earl GREY">GREY, ALBERT HENRY GEORGE, 4th Earl GREY</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hall_john_smythe_13E.html" title="HALL, JOHN SMYTHE">HALL, JOHN SMYTHE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hardisty_isabella_clarke_16E.html" title="HARDISTY, ISABELLA (BELLE) CLARKE (Lougheed)">HARDISTY, ISABELLA (BELLE) CLARKE (Lougheed)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hargrave_joseph_james_12E.html" title="HARGRAVE, JOSEPH JAMES">HARGRAVE, JOSEPH JAMES</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hill_george_william_16E.html" title="HILL, GEORGE WILLIAM">HILL, GEORGE WILLIAM</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hudon_victor_12E.html" title="HUDON, VICTOR">HUDON, VICTOR</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hunter_adelaide_sophia_13E.html" title="HUNTER, ADELAIDE SOPHIA (Hoodless)">HUNTER, ADELAIDE SOPHIA (Hoodless)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/hurlbatt_ethel_16E.html" title="HURLBATT, ETHEL">HURLBATT, ETHEL</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/la_palme_beatrice_15E.html" title="LA PALME, BÉATRICE (baptized Marie-Anne-Béatrice-Alice) (Issaurel)">LA PALME, BÉATRICE (baptized Marie-Anne-Béatrice-Alice) (Issaurel)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/laird_david_14E.html" title="LAIRD, DAVID">LAIRD, DAVID</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/laporte_hormisdas_16E.html" title="LAPORTE, Sir HORMISDAS">LAPORTE, Sir HORMISDAS</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/lougheed_james_alexander_15E.html" title="LOUGHEED, Sir JAMES ALEXANDER">LOUGHEED, Sir JAMES ALEXANDER</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/louise_caroline_alberta_16E.html" title="LOUISE, CAROLINE ALBERTA (Campbell), Marchioness of LORNE; Duchess of ARGYLE">LOUISE, CAROLINE ALBERTA (Campbell), Marchioness of LORNE; Duchess of ARGYLE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/macbeth_roderick_george_16E.html" title="MacBETH, RODERICK GEORGE">MacBETH, RODERICK GEORGE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mactavish_dugald_10E.html" title="MACTAVISH (MacTavish, McTavish), DUGALD">MACTAVISH (MacTavish, McTavish), DUGALD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mann_donald_16E.html" title="MANN, Sir DONALD">MANN, Sir DONALD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/marjoribanks_ishbel_maria_16E.html" title="MARJORIBANKS, ISHBEL MARIA (Hamilton-Gordon, Marchioness of ABERDEEN and TEMAIR)">MARJORIBANKS, ISHBEL MARIA (Hamilton-Gordon, Marchioness of ABERDEEN and TEMAIR)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mcbeath_robert_11E.html" title="McBEATH (McBeth), ROBERT">McBEATH (McBeth), ROBERT</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mcdermot_andrew_11E.html" title="McDERMOT, ANDREW">McDERMOT, ANDREW</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mcintyre_james_13E.html" title="McINTYRE, JAMES">McINTYRE, JAMES</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mckay_angus_12E.html" title="McKAY (he sometimes signed Mackay), ANGUS (baptized Auguste Augustin)">McKAY (he sometimes signed Mackay), ANGUS (baptized Auguste Augustin)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mckay_william_16E.html" title="McKAY, WILLIAM (1852-1932)">McKAY, WILLIAM (1852-1932)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/mcmicken_gilbert_12E.html" title="McMICKEN, GILBERT">McMICKEN, GILBERT</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/molson_anne_12E.html" title="MOLSON, ANNE (Molson)">MOLSON, ANNE (Molson)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/muir_henrietta_louise_16E.html" title="MUIR, HENRIETTA LOUISE (Edwards)">MUIR, HENRIETTA LOUISE (Edwards)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/nairn_stephen_12E.html" title="NAIRN, STEPHEN">NAIRN, STEPHEN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/nanton_augustus_meredith_15E.html" title="NANTON, Sir AUGUSTUS MEREDITH">NANTON, Sir AUGUSTUS MEREDITH</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/norman_nathan_11E.html" title="NORMAN, NATHAN">NORMAN, NATHAN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/norquay_john_11E.html" title="NORQUAY, JOHN">NORQUAY, JOHN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/notman_william_12E.html" title="NOTMAN, WILLIAM">NOTMAN, WILLIAM</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/perley_george_halsey_16E.html" title="PERLEY, Sir GEORGE HALSEY">PERLEY, Sir GEORGE HALSEY</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/petty_fitzmaurice_henry_charles_keith_15E.html" title="PETTY-FITZMAURICE, HENRY CHARLES KEITH, 5th Marquess of LANSDOWNE">PETTY-FITZMAURICE, HENRY CHARLES KEITH, 5th Marquess of LANSDOWNE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/phillips_mary_martha_16E.html" title="PHILLIPS, MARY MARTHA (May)">PHILLIPS, MARY MARTHA (May)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/pope_john_henry_11E.html" title="POPE, JOHN HENRY">POPE, JOHN HENRY</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/roddick_thomas_george_15E.html" title="RODDICK, Sir THOMAS GEORGE">RODDICK, Sir THOMAS GEORGE</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/rogers_benjamin_tingley_14E.html" title="ROGERS, BENJAMIN TINGLEY">ROGERS, BENJAMIN TINGLEY</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/ross_james_1835_71_10E.html" title="ROSS, JAMES (1835-71)">ROSS, JAMES (1835-71)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/scott_henri_thomas_15E.html" title="SCOTT, HENRI-THOMAS (baptized Thomas-Henri)">SCOTT, HENRI-THOMAS (baptized Thomas-Henri)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/shaughnessy_thomas_george_15E.html" title="SHAUGHNESSY, THOMAS GEORGE, 1st Baron SHAUGHNESSY">SHAUGHNESSY, THOMAS GEORGE, 1st Baron SHAUGHNESSY</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/stuart_john_1780_1847_7E.html" title="STUART, JOHN (1780-1847)">STUART, JOHN (1780-1847)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/su_a_pu_luck_13E.html" title="SU-Á-PU-LUCK (Joseph Capilano)">SU-Á-PU-LUCK (Joseph Capilano)</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/tache_alexandre_antonin_12E.html" title="TACHÉ, ALEXANDRE-ANTONIN">TACHÉ, ALEXANDRE-ANTONIN</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="/en/bio/tilley_samuel_leonard_12E.html" title="TILLEY, Sir SAMUEL LEONARD">TILLEY, Sir SAMUEL LEONARD</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-related-bios"><a href="javascript:void(0)" title="Show fewer items" class="show-more-toggle use-smk-related-bios">Less</a></li> </ul> <!-- insert#related-bios-list 1 Element 160 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / #bio-related-topics-sidenav --> </li> </ul><!-- .dcb-pills .nav-pills --> </nav> <!--END nav THEMES --> <!-- nav PUBLICATION --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <nav style="" id="content-doc-history-1" class="dcb-generic-sidebar col-theme-grey"> <ul class="dcb-pills nav-pills nav-stacked"> <li role="presentation"> <!-- title#bio-history-description content#bio-history-caption Element 171 172 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#doc-history-1" class="accordion-toggle collapsed" aria-expanded="true" title="View the previous version of this text">Publication History</a> <div id="doc-history-1" class="collapse in" aria-expanded="true"> <!-- format: listgroup Element 170 --> <!-- insert#bio-history-list 0 Element 170 --> <ul class="list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"><div title="Published:: 1998">Published: 1998</div></li> </ul> <!-- insert#bio-history-list 1 Element 170 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / # --> </li> </ul><!-- .dcb-pills .nav-pills --> </nav> <!--END nav PUBLICATION --> <!-- nav metadata --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <nav style="" id="content-doc-history-2" class="dcb-generic-sidebar col-theme-grey"> <ul class="dcb-pills nav-pills nav-stacked"> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <li style="" id="content-doc-history-2-identifiers" role="presentation"> <!-- title#metadata-identifiers-description content#metadata-identifiers-caption Element 181 182 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#doc-history-2-identifiers" class="accordion-toggle" aria-expanded="false" title="Occupations and Other Identifiers">Occupations and Other Identifiers</a> <div id="doc-history-2-identifiers" class="collapse" aria-expanded="false"> <!-- format: listgroup Element 180 --> <!-- insert#metadata-identifiers-list 0 Element 180 --> <ul class="list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=41" title="Identifier -- Fur Trade">Fur Trade</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=51" title="Identifier -- Philanthropists and Social Reformers">Philanthropists and Social Reformers</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=34&term2=234" title="Identifier -- Business -- Financial institutions">Business – Financial institutions</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=34&term2=235" title="Identifier -- Business -- Manufacturing">Business – Manufacturing</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=34&term2=238" title="Identifier -- Business -- Real estate">Business – Real estate</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=34&term2=240" title="Identifier -- Business -- Transportation">Business – Transportation</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=34&term2=241" title="Identifier -- Business -- Energy and resources">Business – Energy and resources</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=35&term2=249" title="Identifier -- Communications -- Telegraph and telephone">Communications – Telegraph and telephone</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-command show-more-item smk-metadata-identifiers"><a href="javascript:void(0)" title="Show more items" class="show-more-toggle use-smk-metadata-identifiers">more</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-metadata-identifiers"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=50&term2=344" title="Identifier -- Office Holders -- Federal Government">Office Holders – Federal Government</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-metadata-identifiers"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=35&term2=248&term3=418" title="Identifier -- Communications -- Newspapers and magazines -- Owners and editors">Communications – Newspapers and magazines – Owners and editors</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-metadata-identifiers"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=53&term2=354&term3=422" title="Identifier -- Politicians -- British government -- Appointed">Politicians – British government – Appointed</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-metadata-identifiers"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=53&term2=344&term3=423" title="Identifier -- Politicians -- Federal Government -- Elected">Politicians – Federal Government – Elected</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-metadata-identifiers"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=53&term2=349&term3=422" title="Identifier -- Politicians -- Provincial and territorial governments -- Appointed">Politicians – Provincial and territorial governments – Appointed</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-metadata-identifiers"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=identifier&term1=53&term2=349&term3=423" title="Identifier -- Politicians -- Provincial and territorial governments -- Elected">Politicians – Provincial and territorial governments – Elected</a></li> <li class="list-group-item show-more-item smk-metadata-identifiers"><a href="javascript:void(0)" title="Show fewer items" class="show-more-toggle use-smk-metadata-identifiers">Less</a></li> </ul> <!-- insert#metadata-identifiers-list 1 Element 180 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / # --> </li> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <li style="" id="content-doc-history-2-birth" role="presentation"> <!-- title#metadata-birth-description content#metadata-birth-caption Element 191 192 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#doc-history-2-birth" class="accordion-toggle" aria-expanded="false" title="Region of Birth">Region of Birth</a> <div id="doc-history-2-birth" class="collapse" aria-expanded="false"> <!-- format: listgroup Element 190 --> <!-- insert#metadata-birth-list 0 Element 190 --> <ul class="list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=birth&term1=20&term2=119&term3=390" title="Place -- Europe -- United Kingdom -- Scotland">Europe – United Kingdom – Scotland</a></li> </ul> <!-- insert#metadata-birth-list 1 Element 190 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / # --> </li> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <li style="" id="content-doc-history-2-activity" role="presentation"> <!-- title#metadata-activity-description content#metadata-activity-caption Element 201 202 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#doc-history-2-activity" class="accordion-toggle" aria-expanded="false" title="Region of Activities">Region of Activities</a> <div id="doc-history-2-activity" class="collapse" aria-expanded="false"> <!-- format: listgroup Element 200 --> <!-- insert#metadata-activity-list 0 Element 200 --> <ul class="list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=career&term1=21&term2=126" title="Place -- North America -- United States of America">North America – United States of America</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=career&term1=20&term2=119&term3=387" title="Place -- Europe -- United Kingdom -- England">Europe – United Kingdom – England</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=career&term1=21&term2=121&term3=392" title="Place -- North America -- Canada -- Manitoba">North America – Canada – Manitoba</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=career&term1=21&term2=121&term3=394&term4=489" title="Place -- North America -- Canada -- Newfoundland and Labrador -- Labrador">North America – Canada – Newfoundland and Labrador – Labrador</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=career&term1=21&term2=121&term3=399&term4=490" title="Place -- North America -- Canada -- Quebec -- Lower St. Lawrence-Gaspé/North Shore">North America – Canada – Quebec – Lower St. Lawrence-Gaspé/North Shore</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/browse.php?type=career&term1=21&term2=121&term3=399&term4=492" title="Place -- North America -- Canada -- Quebec -- Montréal/Outaouais">North America – Canada – Quebec – Montréal/Outaouais</a></li> </ul> <!-- insert#metadata-activity-list 1 Element 200 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / # --> </li> </ul><!-- .dcb-pills .nav-pills --> </nav> <!--END nav metadata --> <!-- nav SOCIAL 1 --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <div class="row" style="" id="sidebar-social-1"> <div class="col-md-12 share-this"> <div class="sharethis-inline-share-buttons st-center st-lang-en st-has-labels st-inline-share-buttons st-animated st-1"> <div class="st-btn st-first" data-network="facebook" style="display: inline-block;"> <img alt="facebook sharing button" src="/img/facebook.svg"> <span class="st-label" data-brx-ls="template_share_facebook">Share</span> </div><!-- .st-btn --> <div class="st-btn st-last" data-network="twitter" style="display: inline-block;"> <img alt="twitter sharing button" src="/img/twitter.svg"> <span class="st-label" data-brx-ls="template_share_twitter">Tweet</span> </div><!-- .st-btn --> </div><!-- .sharethis-inline-share-buttons --> </div><!-- .col-md-12 .share-this --> </div><!-- .row --> <!-- END nav SOCIAL 1 --> <!-- nav RED --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <nav style="" id="sidebar-main-menu" class="dcb-generic-sidebar dcb-generic-sidebar col-theme-red"> <ul class="dcb-pills nav-pills nav-stacked"> <li role="presentation"><a href="/en/new_biographies.html" title="New Biographies" data-brx-ls="template_sidebar_new_bios">New Biographies</a></li> <li role="presentation"><a href="/en/updated_biographies.html" title="Minor Corrections" data-brx-ls="template_sidebar_updated_bios">Minor Corrections</a></li> <li role="presentation"> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#panelBioOfTheDay" class="accordion-toggle collapsed" aria-expanded="true" title="Read the story of a subject who died or was born on this day" data-brx-ls="template_sidebar_botd">Biography of the Day</a> <div id="panelBioOfTheDay" class="collapse in" aria-expanded="true"> <div class="dcb-image-panel dcb-panel panel"> <div class="panel-body"> <div class="botd-dynamic feed-item-sidebar" data-brx-dyn="ajax:content:/en/ajax/botd.php"> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!--feed-item-sidebar--> <div class="see-all"> <strong><a href="/en/bio_of_the_day.html" class="see-all" title="See all previous entries for Biography of the Day" data-brx-ls="template_sidebar_botd_all">See previous</a></strong> </div><!--see-all--> </div><!-- .panel-body --> </div><!-- .dcb-image-panel .dcb-panel .panel --> </div><!-- .collapse / #panelBioOfTheDay --> </li> <li role="presentation"> <!-- title#special-project-description content#special-project-caption Element 211 212 --> <a data-toggle="collapse" href="#panelSpecialProjects" class="accordion-toggle collapsed" aria-expanded="true" title="Significant themes in Canadian history and guides for educators">Themes, Essays, and Guides</a> <div id="panelSpecialProjects" class="collapse in" aria-expanded="true"> <!-- format: listgroup-items Element 210 --> <ul class="list-group"> <!-- insert#special-project-items 0 Element 210 --> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special_confederation.html" title="Confederation">Confederation</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special_first_world_war.html" title="The First World War">The First World War</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special_femmes.html" title="Women in the DCB/DBC">Women in the DCB/DBC</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special_sports.html" title="Sports">Sports</a></li> <li class="list-group-item"><a href="/en/special_acadians_c19.html" title="The Acadians">The Acadians</a></li> <!-- insert#special-project-items 1 Element 210 --> <div class="dcb-image-panel dcb-panel panel"> <div class="panel-body"> <div class="see-all"> <a href="/en/gallery_special_projects.html" class="see-all" title="See all Themes, Essays, and Guides" data-brx-ls="template_sidebar_themes_all">See complete list</a> </div> </div><!-- .panel-body --> </div><!-- .dcb-image-panel .dcb-panel .panel --> </ul> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!-- .collapse / #panelSpecialProjects --> </li> </ul><!-- .dcb-pills .nav-pills --> </nav> <!--END nav RED--> <!-- nav SOCIAL 2 --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <div class="row" style="display:none;" id="sidebar-social-2"> <div class="col-md-12 share-this"> <div class="sharethis-inline-share-buttons st-center st-lang-en st-has-labels st-inline-share-buttons st-animated st-1"> <div class="st-btn st-first" data-network="facebook" style="display: inline-block;"> <img alt="facebook sharing button" src="/img/facebook.svg"> <span class="st-label" data-brx-ls="template_share_facebook">Share</span> </div><!-- .st-btn --> <div class="st-btn st-last" data-network="twitter" style="display: inline-block;"> <img alt="twitter sharing button" src="/img/twitter.svg"> <span class="st-label" data-brx-ls="template_share_twitter">Tweet</span> </div><!-- .st-btn --> </div><!-- .sharethis-inline-share-buttons --> </div><!-- .col-md-12 .share-this --> </div><!-- .row --> <!-- END nav SOCIAL 2 --> </ul> </nav> </div> </div><!-- /#sidebar --> <div class="col-xs-12 col-sm-8 col-lg-9 col-xl-10 content-area" id="content-area"> <!-- page-content used when bio not published and non-bio pages --> <!-- insert#page-content 0 Element 240 used by non-bio pages --> <!-- insert#page-content 1 Element 240 --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <section style="display:none;" id="summary" class="summary bio"> <!-- insert#summary-paragraphs 0 Element 250 --> <!-- insert#summary-paragraphs 1 Element 250 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </section> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <section style="" id="first" class="bio"> <!-- Element 260 family --> <div style="" class="pull-left inset-area" id="bio-primary-image"> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <div id="bio-main-image" class="image-container left w600"> <!-- src#primary_image_href alt#primary_alt title#primary_description element 260 261 262 --> <a class="open-gallery" href="javascript:void()"><img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/w600.943.jpg" alt="Original title: Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal. " title="Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal. "></a> <!-- insert#primary_source_link 0 element 263 --> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3221445" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3221445</a></p> <!-- insert#primary_source_link 1 element 263 --> </div> </div> <!-- insert#bio-paragraphs 0 element 270 --> <p id="paragraph_317992" class="FirstParagraph"><strong>SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL</strong>, HBC officer, businessman, politician, diplomat, and philanthropist; b. 6 Aug. 1820 in Forres, Scotland, son of Alexander Smith and Barbara Stuart; m. Isabella Sophia Hardisty, sister of <a href="/en/bio/hardisty_richard_charles_11E.html" hreflang="en">Richard Charles*</a> and <a href="/en/bio/hardisty_william_lucas_11E.html" hreflang="en">William Lucas*</a> Hardisty, and they had one daughter; d. 21 Jan. 1914 in London, England.</p> <p id="paragraph_317993" class="NormalParagraph">Donald Smith was born on Scotland’s northeast coast. After attending Forres Academy he was briefly apprenticed to the town clerk. Inspired by the exploits of fur trader John <a href="/en/bio/stuart_john_1813_82_11E.html" hreflang="en">Stuart*</a>, his mother’s brother, he sought to join the Hudson’s Bay Company. He embarked for Lower Canada on 16 May 1838. Soon after his arrival he was hired as an apprentice clerk in Lachine. A few weeks later he was seconded to Tadoussac under William <a href="/en/bio/connolly_william_7E.html" hreflang="en">Connolly*</a>. His starting salary was £20 per annum and rose yearly until he was made clerk in 1842 at a salary of £100. Late in 1843 he was appointed to take charge of the seigneury of Mingan, a territory east of Tadoussac extending to the Labrador coast. Although he was considered thoughtful and enterprising, his administrative methods provoked the ire of HBC governor Sir George <a href="/en/bio/simpson_george_8E.html" hreflang="en">Simpson*</a> during an inspection tour of Smith’s post in the summer of 1845. Simpson rebuked him for the slovenly condition of the counting-house, irregular methods of bookkeeping, and the late submission of the annual accounts. Simpson’s frustration may also have been prompted by Smith’s poor handwriting, which only deteriorated over time. In 1846 the Mingan post burned down, but Smith remained in charge until late in 1847 when he left for Montreal to get attention for his eyes, which had apparently been injured in the fire.</p> <p id="paragraph_317994" class="NormalParagraph">In January 1848 Smith was sent to relieve chief factor William Nourse in the Esquimaux Bay district (Hamilton Inlet), Labrador. Accompanied by three native guides and a distant cousin, apprentice clerk James Grant, he travelled overland, reaching North West River in June. On the arrival of chief trader Richard Hardisty and his family in August, Smith was left to manage the post at Rigolet. Hardisty went on furlough in 1852 and partly on his recommendation Smith was appointed chief trader on 7 April. Hardisty’s daughter Isabella moved in with Smith and gave birth to their daughter, Margaret Charlotte, on 17 Jan. 1854. Isabella, whose mother was of native and Scottish parentage, had married James Grant in July 1851, likely in a ceremony performed by her father. She had given birth to a son, James Hardisty Grant, in July 1852, but the couple had separated soon after, apparently by mutual consent. The circumstances of Smith’s marriage proved to be a lifelong embarrassment to him. His wife’s first alliance, <em>à la façon du pays</em>, and its termination had no legal standing. Smith was impelled to have his union solemnized on several occasions. Partly at Simpson’s suggestion and to put an end to gossip, he conducted his own wedding ceremony in North West River in June 1859, although he generally used 9 March 1853 as the official date of their marriage. Later in life they were married at the Windsor Hotel in New York City on 9 March 1896 before his Wall Street lawyers, John William Sterling and Thomas Gaskell Shearman. Throughout their lives the couple endured gossip, but it did not affect Smith’s devotion to his wife. When apart he wrote or cabled her every day. Her son took his surname and Smith assisted him in numerous ways. At Smith’s death, newspapers speculated that his stepson would demand a share of the estate, but he renounced any claim. James Hardisty Smith was left his stepfather’s country house in Pictou, N.S., and the income from a trust fund of $125,000 established for his children.</p> <p id="paragraph_317995" class="NormalParagraph">In his Labrador post Smith had proved to be enterprising and innovative. His administrative methods earned him occasional reproaches from Simpson, but he developed profitable sidelines to the fur trade, encouraging the HBC to invest in transport ships and developing a successful salmon cannery. In 1862 he was promoted chief factor in charge of the Labrador district. His promotion brought him more frequently to the company headquarters in Montreal, where in 1865 he first met his cousin George <a href="/en/bio/stephen_george_15E.html" hreflang="en">Stephen*</a>. By that time Stephen was a substantial investor in textile mills and rolling-stock companies. Within several years they would be in partnership with leaders of the Montreal business community. Stephen provided investment advice and Smith offered him help selling his woollen goods to the HBC. In 1868 Smith joined Stephen, Richard Bladworth <a href="/en/bio/angus_richard_bladworth_15E.html" hreflang="en">Angus*</a>, and Andrew <a href="/en/bio/paton_andrew_12E.html" hreflang="en">Paton*</a> in the Paton Manufacturing Company of Sherbrooke. The following year he was a partner with Stephen, <a href="/en/bio/allan_hugh_11E.html" hreflang="en">Hugh*</a> and <a href="/en/bio/allan_andrew_13E.html" hreflang="en">Andrew*</a> Allan, Edwin Henry <a href="/en/bio/king_edwin_henry_12E.html" hreflang="en">King*</a>, and Robert James Reekie in the Canada Rolling Stock Company.</p> <p id="paragraph_96461" class="NormalParagraph">Smith’s knowledge of the HBC’s operations and opportunities was remarked on when, on furlough in London in 1865, he met its new administrators. Controlling interest in the HBC had been acquired by the International Financial Society in 1863 in a transaction which transformed it from a privately held company into a public firm with shares trading on the London stock exchange. The new directors were as much interested in land development as they were in the fur trade, a point which caused endless anxiety to the wintering partners in Canada, most of whom believed colonization to be incompatible with the fur trade. After having ingratiated himself with the London committee, Smith was promoted commissioner of the Montreal department in 1868 to manage the HBC’s eastern operations.</p> <p id="paragraph_317996" class="NormalParagraph">In the spring of 1869 negotiations for the transfer of the HBC territories to Canada were concluded in London. In the Red River settlement (Man.) Métis leader Louis <a href="/en/bio/riel_louis_1844_85_11E.html" hreflang="en">Riel*</a> assumed leadership of the resistance to the proposed transfer. On 10 Dec. 1869 Prime Minister Sir John A. <a href="/en/bio/macdonald_john_alexander_12E.html" hreflang="en">Macdonald*</a> appointed Smith a special commissioner to help defuse the growing tensions. He was to join two other commissioners, Jean-Baptiste <a href="/en/bio/thibault_jean_baptiste_10E.html" hreflang="en">Thibault*</a> and Charles-René-Léonidas d’<a href="/en/bio/irumberry_de_salaberry_charles_rene_leonidas_d_11E.html" hreflang="en">Irumberry*</a> de Salaberry. Smith arrived at Upper Fort Garry (Winnipeg) on 27 Dec. 1869 accompanied by Richard Charles Hardisty. He used his influence as an HBC officer and bribes to attempt a peaceful settlement and to secure the release of members of the Canadian party [<em>see</em> Sir John Christian <a href="/en/bio/schultz_john_christian_12E.html" hreflang="en">Schultz*</a>] who had been incarcerated since 7 December. After his meeting with Riel on 6 Jan. 1870, he concluded that negotiations with Riel’s council would not accomplish anything. A public meeting was held on 19 and 20 January at which Smith presented the instructions he had received from Macdonald and the government’s promise to confirm the inhabitants’ land titles and to grant representation on a territorial council. Riel responded by proposing a convention of 40 representatives to consider Smith’s instructions. On 7 February Smith invited the convention to send a delegation to Ottawa to negotiate. In the meantime Schultz, Charles <a href="/en/bio/mair_charles_15E.html" hreflang="en">Mair*</a>, and Thomas <a href="/en/bio/scott_thomas_1870_9E.html" hreflang="en">Scott*</a> had raised a group of volunteers to overthrow Riel and rescue those he had imprisoned. Most of the volunteers were promptly captured by Riel’s men near Upper Fort Garry on the 15th of that month. Charles Arkoll <a href="/en/bio/boulton_charles_arkoll_12E.html" hreflang="en">Boulton*</a> and three others were sentenced to death, but Riel relented after he obtained a promise from Smith to secure support for the provisional government from the English parishes of the settlement. Smith’s pleas for clemency were not successful, however, in averting the execution of Scott on 4 March. Smith and Hardisty left Upper Fort Garry 15 days later to report to Macdonald in Ottawa.</p> <p id="paragraph_96463" class="NormalParagraph">Fresh from his success in Red River, Smith was appointed president of the HBC’s Council of the Northern Department, since William <a href="/en/bio/mactavish_william_9E.html" hreflang="en">Mactavish*</a>, HBC governor of Rupert’s Land and governor of Assiniboia, had resigned because of ill health. In June he attended its meeting at Norway House (Man.) and then left for Red River, arriving in August with Colonel Garnet Joseph <a href="/en/bio/wolseley_garnet_joseph_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Wolseley</span></a>, leader of the military expedition sent to pacify the rebellion. At Wolseley’s request he served briefly as acting governor of Assiniboia until the arrival of Adams George <a href="/en/bio/archibald_adams_george_12E.html" hreflang="en">Archibald*</a>, lieutenant governor of Manitoba and the North-West Territories. Asked to stay on as temporary head of the Northern Department, Smith would play a leading role in negotiating with the Canadian government the implications of the transfer and in reorganizing the HBC’s operations in the northwest. A deed poll of 1871 transformed the profit-sharing arrangement with the wintering partners which had governed the company’s fur trade operations since 1821. Henceforward, chief factors and chief traders were to be guaranteed an annual income and were to share in the profits of the fur and general trade, but not in the profits from the sale of HBC land or territories. Smith’s role in this negotiation was vital for the company and for his career. At Norway House the previous spring he had been mandated by the wintering partners to represent them before the governor and committee. The resulting agreement pleased the majority of them, but evoked bitter criticism from several who accused Smith of sacrificing them to advance his own career and of forfeiting their claim to a share of the company’s land sales. Smith was rewarded for his deft negotiation with the nomination of chief commissioner, which brought him a salary of £1,500 and exempted him from the profit-sharing agreement he had negotiated. As the HBC’s executive officer in Canada, he would lead the firm’s transformation into a land and colonization company.</p> <p id="paragraph_317997" class="NormalParagraph">Apparently encouraged by his superiors, Smith had become increasingly active in the politics of the northwest. On 20 Oct. 1870 he had been appointed to the executive council by Archibald, who had, however, unknowingly exceeded his authority [<em>see</em> Sir Francis Godschall <a href="/en/bio/johnson_francis_godschall_12E.html" hreflang="en">Johnson*</a>]. Late that December he defeated Schultz in his bid to sit for Winnipeg and St John in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. In a by-election on 2 March 1871 Smith was elected to the House of Commons for Selkirk, and he was re-elected in the general election of 1872. Although a Conservative, Smith did not take an active role in partisan politics. So one-dimensional were his interventions that he was referred to as the honourable member for the HBC. He spoke sparingly in the commons, on issues touching Manitoba and the northwest.</p> <p id="paragraph_317998" class="NormalParagraph">On 5 Nov. 1873 Smith helped to bring down Macdonald’s government. He had long been angry that Macdonald had ignored his repeated requests for repayment of his expenses as commissioner to Red River. Called to vote on a motion to censure the government over the Pacific Scandal, he pressed his claim once more, but Macdonald, in an advanced state of depression and intoxication when the two men met, only made matters worse. With Smith’s defection Macdonald’s already diminished majority was lost. The event left Macdonald embittered and strained the relations between the two men in the years to follow.</p> <p id="paragraph_317999" class="NormalParagraph">The federal government had abolished the double mandate in May 1873, so Smith resigned his provincial seat the following January. In the federal election of 1874 his opponent was his sometime partner and friend Andrew Graham Ballenden <a href="/en/bio/bannatyne_andrew_graham_ballenden_11E.html" hreflang="en">Bannatyne*</a>, who the <em>Manitoba Free Press</em> suggested was a straw man put forward to ensure Smith’s victory. His relationship with Conservative members of the commons was characterized by bitter exchanges and insults. Smith’s bill was not settled until 1875, when the motion to pay him £600 plus interest passed only after a rancorous debate. In the general election of 1878 Smith defeated former lieutenant governor of Manitoba Alexander <a href="/en/bio/morris_alexander_11E.html" hreflang="en">Morris*</a> in Selkirk by 10 votes, aided by generous support from the <em>Free Press</em>. Two ardent Conservatives, David <a href="/en/bio/young_david_11E.html" hreflang="en">Young*</a> and Archibald Wright, protested the election on the grounds of corrupt practices. They were at first unsuccessful, but appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada and Smith was unseated in 1880. In the ensuing by-election on 10 September Smith was defeated and withdrew from politics.</p> <p id="paragraph_96467" class="NormalParagraph">As chief commissioner of the HBC, Smith modernized the company’s slow and costly transportation network. The HBC, and many of its principal shareholders acting as private investors, became directly involved in these developments, which transformed the northwest. He encouraged the company to build its own fleet of steamboats to move goods on lakes Winnipeg and Winnipegosis. In May 1872 the HBC launched the <em>Chief Commissioner</em>, named in his honour, but it proved unsuitable for the rough waters of Lake Winnipeg. Other vessels were more successful and were soon profitable. Although Smith’s early transportation efforts showed all the signs of ill planning, subsequent attempts rapidly demonstrated their effectiveness.</p> <p id="paragraph_318000" class="NormalParagraph">During the early 1870s Smith was involved in the formation of businesses in Manitoba. In 1872 he sponsored bills to incorporate the Bank of Manitoba, the Central Telegraph Company, and the Manitoba Insurance Company, which he founded with Bannatyne and Sir Hugh Allan. While none of these businesses were very prosperous, they indicate that he was increasingly the individual through whom many in the Montreal financial community were investing in Manitoba. His business interests elsewhere were also multiplying. In 1872, along with Stephen, Bennett <a href="/en/bio/rosamond_bennett_13E.html" hreflang="en">Rosamond*</a>, and Donald <a href="/en/bio/mcinnes_donald_12E.html" hreflang="en">McInnes*</a>, he became a shareholder in the Canada Cotton Manufacturing Company, and 10 years later he would join with Stephen and Stephen’s brother-in-law, James Alexander Cantlie, to provide capital to found the Almonte Knitting Company, an expansion of Rosamond’s firm.</p> <p id="paragraph_96469" class="NormalParagraph">Smith profited from his position in the HBC to survey business opportunities both for the company and for himself. In the early 1870s the HBC was being solicited to take an interest in railways and Smith himself was involved in a number of ventures. A syndicate which included Smith, Stephen, Sir Alexander Tilloch <a href="/en/bio/galt_alexander_tilloch_12E.html" hreflang="en">Galt*</a>, George <a href="/en/bio/laidlaw_george_11E.html" hreflang="en">Laidlaw*</a>, and others applied for a charter to build the Manitoba Junction Railway from Pembina (N.Dak.) to Fort Garry in 1871 and many of the same men sought a charter to build from Fort Garry to Fort William (Thunder Bay, Ont.). By 1872 Smith’s name was linked with the proposed railway to the Pacific, although he publicly denied his involvement. In 1875 he was among the incorporators of the Manitoba Western Railway, which was to run from Lake Manitoba to St Joseph (Walhalla, N.Dak.).</p> <p id="paragraph_318001" class="NormalParagraph">Undoubtedly, Smith’s business ventures distracted him from his management of the HBC’s affairs. He received periodic rebukes from Governor Sir Stafford Henry Northcote who complained that he had to report on land sales based on information gleaned from newspapers. Inspecting chief factor William Joseph <a href="/en/bio/christie_william_joseph_12E.html" hreflang="en">Christie*</a>, after his return from an inspection of the company posts in January 1873, fumed that Smith was neglecting the fur trade. Christie travelled to England to report to the London committee about the negligent management of the company’s affairs. Smith followed to plead his own case. Christie eventually resigned when no action was taken. In July 1873, however, the HBC formally separated the fur trade and land sales operations and made Smith land commissioner, placing him in charge of the company’s western operations other than the fur trade. James Allan <a href="/en/bio/grahame_james_allan_13E.html" hreflang="en">Grahame*</a> succeeded him as chief commissioner in 1874.</p> <p id="paragraph_318002" class="NormalParagraph">Smith’s interest in steamers had brought him in close contact with businessmen from St Paul, Minn., including James Jerome <a href="/en/bio/hill_james_jerome_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Hill</span></a> and Norman Wolfred <a href="/en/bio/kittson_norman_wolfred_11E.html" hreflang="en">Kittson*</a>, a shipping agent for the HBC since 1862. Smith had met Hill during the Riel rebellion and they shared an interest in improving transportation in the northwest. In 1872 Hill, Kittson, and Smith (acting for the HBC) formed the profitable Red River Transportation Company. During 1873 and 1874 Smith conferred with Hill about the possibility of acquiring the St Paul and Pacific Railroad. Under construction from St Paul north to the Red River since the 1860s, it had fallen into receivership. In March 1876 Hill met Smith in Ottawa to finalize a partnership agreement. Although he and Kittson had extensive experience in transportation, they had little capital. Smith went to Stephen. Stephen turned to the established New York banking house of J. S. Kennedy and Company and to the Bank of Montreal, of which he was president. By March 1878 the group had obtained control of the railway and had begun building north to the border. At the same time Stephen and Smith attempted to negotiate an agreement with the Liberal government of Alexander <a href="/en/bio/mackenzie_alexander_12E.html" hreflang="en">Mackenzie*</a> to lease the line it was building from St Boniface to Pembina, and encountered strong opposition from Conservative leaders in parliament. The syndicate completed the line to the border in November 1878 and then went on to connect with the Canadian line. The first train arrived in St Boniface on 3 December. The following May the St Paul, Minneapolis and Manitoba Railroad Company was created with Smith as a director, owning one-fifth of its shares. The investment was the foundation of his, Stephen’s, and several other fortunes. Soon after its completion the line showed an operating profit and consistently produced extraordinary dividends and returns.</p> <p id="paragraph_96472" class="NormalParagraph">In 1878 Smith was delegated by the wintering partners of the HBC to present their demand for an annual salary of £200 for each share to the London committee. The HBC offered £150, which the officers at first rejected. In the face of obdurate directors and shareholders, Smith was able to persuade his colleagues to accept the offer. Although he had lost the support of some commissioned officers, most acknowledged that Smith was the best person to represent them since no one else had the same weight with the board or the shareholders.</p> <p id="paragraph_318003" class="NormalParagraph">On 25 Feb. 1879 Smith resigned as land commissioner, claiming that his “private affairs” required more of his attention, but he remained as an adviser to the company. His growing involvement in railways brought him into direct conflict with his successor, Charles John <a href="/en/bio/brydges_charles_john_11E.html" hreflang="en">Brydges*</a>, who had been appointed to consolidate the company’s operations. Smith and Brydges would feud on several occasions. Brydges suspected that Smith schemed to ruin the reputation of the HBC and then buy its reduced shares. Smith did indeed acquire considerable stock. By 1882 he had 2,000 shares and between 1883 to 1891 his holdings rose to 4,000 shares. Smith saw Brydges as a challenge to his plans and reputation and as an enemy of the Canadian Pacific Railway. In 1882 a review of Brydges’s administration vindicated him, but a supervisory committee consisting of Smith and Sandford <a href="/en/bio/fleming_sandford_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Fleming</span></a> was appointed two years later to advise the London board. Smith’s troubles with Brydges may have pushed him to seek control of the HBC, which he would effectively achieve by 1889 when he was the principal shareholder and was elected governor.</p> <p id="paragraph_318004" class="NormalParagraph">In 1880 Stephen had begun negotiations with Macdonald for the contract to build and operate the transcontinental railway. Smith’s place in the syndicate organized by Stephen was well known but not publicly announced in deference to the lingering animosity Macdonald and other Conservatives had towards him. Although annoyed by the omission, Smith did not officially become a director until 1883, following Hill’s resignation. While he played a secondary role in the management of the railway and its construction, he was a faithful financial lieutenant to Stephen. In addition to being a substantial shareholder in the CPR, he was also a principal shareholder in the railways which had been acquired in order to complete the CPR’s eastern lines, the Toronto, Grey and Bruce, the Credit Valley, the Ontario and Quebec, and the New Brunswick. Throughout 1884–85, when financing the CPR became increasingly difficult, Stephen and Smith pledged their homes, their investments, and their holdings in the St Paul, Minneapolis and Manitoba as collateral and took money from their own accounts to provide operating funds. Smith’s major importance to the syndicate lay in his financial and moral support; he did not desert the railway as directors Duncan <a href="/en/bio/mcintyre_duncan_12E.html" hreflang="en">McIntyre*</a>, Hill, and others had done. On 7 Nov. 1885 he drove the last spike during a modest ceremony in Craigellachie, B.C., one of many places in the west named in honour of Smith, Stephen, or their homeland.</p> <p id="paragraph_318005" class="NormalParagraph">When Stephen resigned from the presidency of the CPR on 7 Aug. 1888, Smith apparently expected to be named his successor, but the post went to the vice-president and general manager, William Cornelius <a href="/en/bio/van_horne_william_cornelius_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Van Horne</span></a>. Smith remained on the executive committee long after Stephen had retired. As the CPR began its transformation into an operating railway, Smith and Stephen became large investors in the many companies which were its dependencies, such as the Lake of the Woods Milling Company Limited [<em>see</em> Robert <a href="/en/bio/meighen_robert_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Meighen</span></a>], the Canada North West Land Company [<em>see</em> William Bain <a href="/en/bio/scarth_william_bain_13E.html" hreflang="en">Scarth*</a>], and the Canadian Salt Company Limited. Along with Van Horne and Stephen, Smith invested heavily in Vancouver real estate. Although less than enamoured of the returns of the CPR, Stephen and Smith combined to protect it from competitors. In 1888 they extended its reach into the United States by acquiring the Minneapolis, St Paul and Sault Ste Marie and the Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic. In 1888 Smith was a founding partner, along with R. B. Angus, Van Horne, and Charles Rudolph Hosmer, in the Federal Telephone Company, which ran the telephone service in Montreal until it sold out to the Bell Telephone [<em>see</em> Charles Fleetford <a href="/en/bio/sise_charles_fleetford_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Sise</span></a>] in 1891. In 1893 Smith was part of the syndicate put together by Boston financier Henry Melville <a href="/en/bio/whitney_henry_melville_15E.html" hreflang="en">Whitney*</a> to form the Dominion Coal Company Limited. Smith’s holdings in the CPR were relatively minor. In 1901 he held only 5,000 shares. He and Stephen reserved their most substantial railway investments for Hill’s expanding railway empire. Their St Paul shares were converted on several occasions, after Hill acquired controlling interest in the Great Northern and other railroads. When the Northern Pacific, the Great Northern, and a third line, the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, were briefly combined in 1901 into a holding company, the Northern Securities Company Limited, Smith was the third largest shareholder after Hill and John Stewart Kennedy, with 54,000 shares then worth $115 each.</p> <p id="paragraph_96476" class="NormalParagraph">Smith was involved in a legion of corporations as a shareholder, director, or chairman. His involvement with the Bank of Montreal began in 1872 when he was first appointed to the board. He was made vice-president in June 1882 and president in 1887. Although not entirely ceremonial, his role at the bank was largely limited to board and annual meetings. George Alexander <a href="/en/bio/drummond_george_alexander_13E.html" hreflang="en">Drummond*</a> acted as <em>de facto</em> president for much of Smith’s tenure. In 1904 Smith asked to be replaced and the following year he was appointed honorary president, a title he held until his death. Guaranteed to bring respectability and a personal investment, Smith was often asked to serve as chairman of fledgling financial institutions. In 1891 he became the first president of the Montreal Safe Deposit Company (later Montreal Trust). In 1899 he took on the presidency of the Royal Trust Company, largely formed by directors of the Bank of Montreal. He sat on many boards, including those of the London and Lancashire Life Assurance Company, the Paton Manufacturing Company, the New Brunswick Railway Company, the Dominion Coal Company, the Northern Life Assurance Company, the London and Canadian Loan and Agency Company, the International Commercial Association, and the Canadian Bankers’ Association.</p> <p id="paragraph_318006" class="NormalParagraph">Sometimes on his own behalf, sometimes acting for others, Smith had interests in several Canadian newspapers. In 1882 he unsuccessfully attempted to acquire the Toronto <em>Globe</em> in order to stem its criticism of the CPR [<em>see</em> Robert <span class="SmallCaps"><a href="/en/bio/jaffray_robert_14E.html" hreflang="en">Jaffray</a></span>]. In 1888 he loaned money to the editor of the <em>Manitoba Free</em> Press, William Fisher <a href="/en/bio/luxton_william_fisher_13E.html" hreflang="en">Luxton*</a>. He called in the loan five years later and took control of the paper. Luxton was removed and replaced with one of the CPR’s publicity agents. The paper was sold to Clifford <a href="/en/bio/sifton_clifford_15E.html" hreflang="en">Sifton*</a> in 1898.</p> <p id="paragraph_318007" class="NormalParagraph">After re-entering the House of Commons as an independent Conservative for Montreal West in 1887, Smith was re-elected in 1891 with the largest majority in Canada. At the urging of the Governor General Lord Aberdeen [<a href="/en/bio/hamilton_gordon_john_campbell_16E.html" hreflang="en">Hamilton-Gordon*</a>], in February 1896 he attempted to broker an agreement between the Manitoba government of Thomas <a href="/en/bio/greenway_thomas_13E.html" hreflang="en">Greenway*</a> and Roman Catholic leaders who opposed the creation of a single, publicly funded, non-denominational school system. His negotiations with Father Albert <span class="SmallCaps"><a href="/en/bio/lacombe_albert_14E.html" hreflang="en">Lacombe</a></span>, Archbishop Adélard <span class="SmallCaps"><a href="/en/bio/langevin_adelard_14E.html" hreflang="en">Langevin</a></span>, and Greenway were not sufficient to generate support for the remedial legislation introduced by the government of Sir Mackenzie <a href="/en/bio/bowell_mackenzie_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Bowell</span></a>. In his last speech in the commons, on 19 March 1896, Smith urged passage of the remedial bill. Bowell, who would resign on 27 April, preferred Smith to Sir Charles <a href="/en/bio/tupper_charles_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Tupper</span></a> as his successor, but Smith had declined the post. Tupper had become effectively leader of the government after his election in February and he appointed Smith to replace him as high commissioner in London on 24 April 1896.</p> <p id="paragraph_318008" class="NormalParagraph">After Wilfrid <a href="/en/bio/laurier_wilfrid_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Laurier</span></a> took office in July 1896, he retained Smith as high commissioner, but he also permitted his ministers to bypass the high commissioner’s office at will. Since the high commissioner was responsible for the supervision of immigration, Sifton, the minister of the interior, worked with him to extend the clandestine network for the enticement of immigrants from Europe by paying bonuses to steamship agents. Although the strategy provoked official protests from the German government, it was maintained. Smith generally advocated liberal immigration policies. His scheme to promote immigration from Barbados was discouraged by Sifton, who thought blacks unsuitable as prairie settlers. Frustrated by Smith’s independence, Sifton appointed Liberal organizer William Thomas Rochester <a title="This biography is not yet published" href="javascript:void(0)" onclick="return showNotPublished();" hreflang="en">Preston*</a> to direct new immigration offices in London on 13 Jan. 1899. Smith and Preston established the North Atlantic Trading Company to bring together steamship agents for the promotion of emigration but rapidly crossed swords on a variety of matters. Preston was eventually removed from office. His dismissal provoked him to write a biography of Smith, <em>The life and times of Lord Strathcona</em> (London, 1914), replete with insinuations that Smith’s fortune was built on financial improprieties.</p> <p id="paragraph_318009" class="NormalParagraph">During the politically charged debate over Canadian participation in the South African War, Smith made a public offer to the British government early in 1900 to raise and equip a regiment at his own expense. To avoid controversy the unit was to be recruited in Canada but was to be part of the British army. Samuel Benfield <a href="/en/bio/steele_samuel_benfield_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Steele</span></a> of the North-West Mounted Police was selected to recruit and to command the unit, subsequently known as Lord Strathcona’s Horse. The equipping of the regiment, which consisted of 28 officers and 572 non-commissioned officers, was estimated to have cost in excess of $1 million, one of Smith’s most munificent donations. Although Smith’s offer provided an escape for the Laurier government and was well received by the Canadian public, it was denounced by Henri <a href="/en/bio/bourassa_henri_18E.html" hreflang="en">Bourassa*</a> and other anti-imperialists.</p> <p id="paragraph_318010" class="NormalParagraph">In spite of his age Smith was a tireless worker. He refused to accept his salary of $10,000 as high commissioner. He tendered his resignation in 1909, but Laurier asked him to remain in office. On 30 June 1911 the prime minister announced that he would be replaced by Sir Frederick William <span class="SmallCaps"><a href="/en/bio/borden_frederick_william_14E.html" hreflang="en">Borden</a></span>, but his government fell before the appointment was made. Smith again offered his resignation when Robert Laird <a href="/en/bio/borden_robert_laird_16E.html" hreflang="en">Borden*</a> took office, but it was refused and he remained at the post until his death.</p> <p id="paragraph_318011" class="NormalParagraph">By the conclusion of the South African War Smith was perhaps the most identifiable imperial figure in London. Combining the assets of wealth, maturity, generosity, and vigour, he had an immensely broad appeal. His stature was confirmed in 1904 when he was approached by William Knox D’Arcy, who was searching for oil in Persia, to head a syndicate which would include the Burmah Oil Company. The venture appealed to Smith’s belief in the empire and had the approval of various departments of the British government, anxious for a foothold in Persia and for fuel for the British navy. Smith subscribed £50,000 with little hesitation. He also played a role in the Anglo-Persian Oil Company Limited, which was formed out of Burmah Oil to exploit its discoveries in Persia. He became the company’s first chairman in February 1909. Although by then an octogenarian, he was far from a titular chairman. He participated in the establishment of the company and its share structure and in the choice of bankers, brokers, and directors. He was the largest individual shareholder, with 30,000 of its 1,000,000 ordinary shares. His influence was also vital in establishing the company as the principal supplier to the British navy. He played a key role in staving off amalgamation with Royal Dutch Shell, persuading the British government to acquire two-thirds of the company’s shares, the embryo of British Petroleum. Smith remained chairman until his death and his family continued as substantial shareholders.</p> <p id="paragraph_318012" class="NormalParagraph">Smith’s accomplishments brought him a series of honours. Appointed a <span class="SmallCaps">kcmg</span> in May 1886 for his role in building the CPR, ten years later he was made a <span class="SmallCaps">gmcg</span>. On 14 April 1896 he had become a member of the Privy Council of Canada. In the spring of 1897 Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain informed him that he was to be made a peer. When news leaked out that he had chosen the title Lord Glencoe, after a glen where Scottish chieftains had been slaughtered in 1692, a glen he had only recently acquired, colleagues prevailed on him to reconsider. He created the name Strathcona, a Gaelic variant on Glencoe. Lobbying by Tupper and Chamberlain allowed his first peerage to be superseded by a second, created on 26 June 1900, permitting the title to pass to the male heirs of his daughter. Smith delivered his maiden speech in the House of Lords in the summer of 1898. He was named a fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1904, when he was given the Albert Medal for his services to railways. He was made a <span class="SmallCaps">gcvo</span> in 1908 and a knight of grace of the Order of St John of Jerusalem in 1910.</p> <p id="paragraph_264646" class="NormalParagraph">Ranking among the most generous philanthropists of the early 20th century, Smith gave in excess of $7,500,000 in donations and bequests. His first significant benefaction came in 1883, when he contributed $30,000 to the Trafalgar Institute, a girl’s school in Montreal. His most important donations came after the completion of the CPR and were often made jointly with Stephen. In 1887 they announced a gift of $1,000,000 for the construction of a free hospital in Montreal and purchased a site on Mount Royal for $86,000. The Royal Victoria Hospital opened in 1893. During 1897 and 1898 Smith endowed the hospital with $1,000,000 in Great Northern Railroad securities. In 1902 he matched Stephen’s donation of £200,000 to the King Edward’s Hospital Fund, established to assist London’s hospitals. He left a bequest of £10,000 to the Leanchoil Hospital in Forres, and £8,000 to other hospitals in the United Kingdom.</p> <p id="paragraph_318013" class="NormalParagraph">Smith’s greatest benefactions were reserved for McGill University. On 11 Sept. 1884 he asked Sir John William <a href="/en/bio/dawson_john_william_12E.html" hreflang="en">Dawson*</a>, the principal of McGill, whether the university would accept a gift of $50,000 to endow the first two years of separate classes for women. Although his offer came without prompting from Dawson and did not entirely concur with his views about educating women, McGill accepted. The reasons for Smith’s interest in women’s education are not known, but historian Margaret Gillett has suggested that Smith was encouraged in these donations to McGill by Montreal educator Lucy Stanynought (Simpson). McGill’s first women students were styled the Donaldas, in recognition of the donor. He gave a further $70,000 on 16 Oct. 1886 to pay for the third and fourth years, completing what was to be known as the Donalda Endowment for the Higher Education of Women. In 1896 he began the realization of his promise to build a separate college for women students. He gave $300,000 for the construction of Royal Victoria College and engaged architect Bruce <a href="/en/bio/price_bruce_13E.html" hreflang="en">Price*</a> to design the building. When another of McGill’s benefactors, Sir William Christopher <a href="/en/bio/macdonald_william_christopher_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Macdonald</span></a>, suggested that the new building would be a financial burden to McGill, Smith established an endowment of $1,000,000. The college was formally opened in 1900.</p> <p id="paragraph_318014" class="NormalParagraph">A generous supporter of McGill’s faculty of medicine, Smith had contributed $50,000 to its endowment in 1883. In 1888 his only child, Margaret, married Dr Robert Jared Bliss Howard, son of Dr Robert Palmer <a href="/en/bio/howard_robert_palmer_11E.html" hreflang="en">Howard*</a>, dean of the faculty. Although Smith and his wife had not viewed the marriage entirely favourably, Smith thereafter became a major benefactor of the faculty, donating $750,000 during his lifetime. He gave funds for the construction of a building at McGill for the Young Men’s Christian Association which took the name Strathcona Hall. He provided $100,000 to the minister of militia and defence for officers’ training quarters at McGill. Made a trustee of McGill soon after his first gift, he was elected chancellor in 1888 and performed ceremonial roles until his death. In 1894–95 he was responsible for recruiting William <a href="/en/bio/peterson_william_15E.html" hreflang="en">Peterson*</a> as principal.</p> <p id="paragraph_318015" class="NormalParagraph">Smith did not confine his donations to McGill. In 1899 he was induced by Joseph Chamberlain, the chancellor of the University of Birmingham, to make a gift of £50,000 to the university’s fund-raising campaign. In 1904 he pledged $20,000 to the University of Manitoba. He had been involved in the affairs of the colleges which would eventually form the university since the early 1870s when he offered a land grant from the HBC as the site for Wesley College and began 40 years’ service (1874–1914) on the board of management of Manitoba College. Nevertheless, he ignored the university in his bequests. He was rector of the University of Aberdeen from 1899 to 1902 and acted as chancellor until his death. For its quatercentenary in 1906 he gave a feast that was legendary in its time, building a 3,000-seat hall for the event. He gave $500,000 to Yale University, £10,000 to the University of Aberdeen and £30,000 to its Marischal College, and donations to other universities and colleges in Canada, Great Britain, and the United States too many to mention. His chancellorships and benefactions prompted at least 14 universities to grant him honorary degrees.</p> <p id="paragraph_318016" class="NormalParagraph">His other gifts are so numerous that they cannot be fully itemized. In 1902, for instance, he made about 120 donations, large ones to universities and smaller ones to such organizations as churches, snowshoe clubs, boys’ brigades, and monasteries. His benefactions were sometimes anonymous and at other times highly publicized. A patron of music, he endowed scholarships in Montreal and at the Royal College of Music in England to enable Canadians to study there. Encouraged by the minister of militia and defence, Sir Frederick William Borden, Smith made a donation towards military training for the young. The Strathcona Trust, as the fund came to be known, was the catalyst which led communities and schools to promote drill and physical training. With his gifts of more than $500,000, the trust developed the cadet movement, which by 1913 had 40,000 members. He donated $150,000 to fund YMCA buildings in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and Nova Scotia. Godfather to the son of Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, he assisted the formation of the Boy Scout movement and left a bequest to aid its development in Canada. He was the principal supporter of Wilfred Thomason <a href="/en/bio/grenfell_wilfred_thomason_16E.html" hreflang="en">Grenfell*</a>, the English doctor who founded missions to the communities along the coasts of Newfoundland and Labrador. He gave Grenfell a steamer, the <em>Sir Donald</em>, for use as a hospital ship and replaced it in 1899 with the steel steamer <em>Strathcona</em>. A parishioner of St Paul’s Presbyterian Church in Montreal, he made an anonymous donation of an organ to it and left a bequest of $25,000 to the Presbyterian College of Montreal.</p> <p id="paragraph_318017" class="NormalParagraph">Smith earned a reputation for his lavish hospitality. In Manitoba he bought Silver Heights, formerly the residence of Lieutenant Governor Archibald. Dignitaries marvelled at his gardens and the Highland cattle he introduced to Canada. In Montreal he purchased a house on Dorchester Street (Boulevard René-Lévesque) which he expanded three times, transforming it into a brownstone mansion with an extensive conservatory and a staircase that reportedly cost $50,000. In 1895 he acquired Duncan McIntyre’s adjacent mansion to use as a guest house. In 1900 he commissioned Edward <a href="/en/bio/maxwell_edward_15E.html" hreflang="en">Maxwell*</a> to add a conservatory to connect the two residences.</p> <p id="paragraph_318018" class="NormalParagraph">In his mansion he exhibited his collection of paintings and decorative arts. Smith acquired largely academic paintings, mostly those which had been included in exhibitions of the Paris Salon or the Royal Academy of Arts in London. In 1891 he was president of the Art Association of Montreal and his collection included works by Canadian artists Cornelius <a href="/en/bio/krieghoff_cornelius_10E.html" hreflang="en">Krieghoff*</a>, Otto Reinhold <a href="/en/bio/jacobi_otto_reinhold_13E.html" hreflang="en">Jacobi*</a>, John Arthur <a href="/en/bio/fraser_john_arthur_12E.html" hreflang="en">Fraser*</a>, and Homer Ransford <a href="/en/bio/watson_homer_ransford_16E.html" hreflang="en">Watson*</a>. He frequently invited visitors to see his collection; some, such as Lord Minto [<a href="/en/bio/elliot_gilbert_john_murray_kynynmound_14E.html" hreflang="en"><span class="SmallCaps">Elliot</span></a>], thought the “taste of the house appalling.” His mansion was also home to an enormous collection of <em>objets d’art</em>, including a large selection from the Orient. The contents of the house were valued at $550,000, $219,000 for the pictures and $210,000 for Japanese antiques. More than 100 paintings were donated to the Art Association of Montreal by his grandson in 1928.</p> <p id="paragraph_318019" class="NormalParagraph">Vice-regal and royal visitors frequently stayed in Smith’s houses. Both in London and in Montreal, he was one of the leaders of society. The Dominion Day event he hosted annually in London saw more than 1,000 Canadian and imperial dignitaries mingling in their finery at his expense. Indeed, the popularity of the event and the advantage of having a rich man in the high commissioner’s office may have been one reason why Laurier kept him there. Smith leased Knebworth House in Hertfordshire from Lord Lytton in 1899 and then purchased Debden Hall in Essex for £138,000 for use as a country house in 1903. In 1894 he had acquired a large estate in the Scottish Highlands, the site of the battle of Glencoe. There he built a spacious house equipped with electricity and central heating and employed a large staff. The glen would be acquired by the National Trust for Scotland in 1935. In 1904 Smith purchased Colonsay in the Inner Hebrides. He rarely visited the island but it became the favourite haunt of his reclusive family. He is credited with having stabilized its economy and with stemming its depopulation.</p> <p id="paragraph_96492" class="NormalParagraph">Smith’s personal tastes were plain: he preferred soda water to whisky, slept no more than six hours a night, and ate two simple meals per day, citing porridge as his favourite dish. His endurance was remarkable. Even as an octogenarian he outworked most men in his office.</p> <p id="paragraph_318020" class="NormalParagraph">Isabella Smith died in London on 12 Nov. 1913. Once she and her husband had left the fur trade outposts and moved into Winnipeg, Montreal, and then London society, she had endured derision and prejudice. She was privately dismissed as “a dour old hoddy doddy squaw,” and “our lady of the snows,” by the English aristocrats who accepted her hospitality. Smith and his daughter were protective of her reputation, and ensured under threat of legal action that passages regarding her native blood and her marital history were excised from several biographies. Smith died on 21 Jan. 1914 and was interred next to his wife in a magnificent mausoleum in London’s Highgate Cemetery. His entire estate was valued at $28,867,635. Since his early days in Labrador, he had provided financial support to his extended family. He established trusts worth more than $26,500,000 for his heirs and successors.</p> <p id="paragraph_96494" class="NormalParagraph">Already a prominent figure in Canadian life at the time of his appointment to London, he came to personify the image of success which the empire offered its citizens. His public image of a refined philanthropist was cultivated to mask a career which had included enormous hardship and occasional ruthlessness. His rapid rise within the HBC in the 1860s was propelled by good timing, effective salesmanship, and solid connections. He was the only one in his generation of HBC officers who combined experience with financial interests in Montreal and a seat in Ottawa. This unique combination enabled him to seize the opportunities which were presented and to advance the HBC’s interests and his own.</p> <p id="paragraph_318021" class="NormalParagraph">Smith initiated the HBC’s aggressive development of western transportation. He realized more clearly than his superiors that railways and land were the future for both the west and the company. Even when his interests multiplied, he never left the HBC, but he gave it sporadic attention for the final 30 years of his life. The last of the HBC’s imperial governors, he was also the only one in the company’s history to have risen from the lowest rank to the highest one. His 75-year association with the firm remains a record.</p> <p id="paragraph_96496" class="NormalParagraph">In his political career Smith demonstrated poor judgement bred by indifference to the political process. Never comfortable with the boundaries imposed by the electorate or the party, he was initially viewed as the member for the HBC, but he more properly became known as the member for his own interests. His peripheral involvement in politics none the less allowed him to play key roles in major events of Canadian parliamentary life. In contrast, he exhibited both daring and brilliance in his investments and business associations. As the individual who brought Hill and Stephen together, he provided the impetus for some of the most profitable railways in North America. Although he was rarely the leading member in business endeavours, he was involved in many of the major corporate successes of the 1880s and 1890s. An investor rather than a financier, he could be counted on for the twin virtues of a substantial investment and enormous patience. As chairman of several large financial and trust companies, he was an ideal figurehead, providing a well-recognized image of grace, success, and solidity.</p> <p id="paragraph_96497" class="NormalParagraph">In society Smith sought a large role and assumed his place with vigour. Never entirely at ease because of the stigmas attached to his wife’s native blood and the rumours about their marriage, he acquired all the trappings of Victorian society. Unlike many of his business colleagues on both sides of the Atlantic, however, he was generous with his ideas and time, and he was a donor of remarkable range and generosity. While he built no enduring business empire or charitable trusts, neither did he wield power to the detriment of people or continents. He remains the foremost example of the Canadian rags-to-riches story.</p> <p class="AuthorParagraph"><a href="/en/contrib/14"><span class="SmallCaps">Alexander Reford</span></a></p> <!-- insert#bio-paragraphs 1 element 270 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </section> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <section style="" id="second" class="biblio"> <!-- insert#biblio-paragraphs 0 280 --> <p id="paragraph_264644" class="BibliographyFirstParagraph">[Several published addresses by Donald Alexander Smith, including <em>Imperialism and the unity of the empire</em> . . . ([London?, 1900?]), can be found in the CIHM, <em>Reg</em>. In addition to the archival sources cited below, the files on Smith in the Bank of Montreal Arch. and the Canadian Pacific Arch. (Montreal) proved useful in the preparation of this biography<span class="SmallCaps">. a.r</span>.]</p><p id="paragraph_318022" class="BibliographyParagraph">GA, M477, M5908. James Jerome Hill Reference Library (St Paul, Minn.), J. J. Hill papers. NA, MG 26, A; F; G; MG 29, A5; A6; A 11; A60; MG 30, D5; E86. National Library of Scotland (Edinburgh), Dept. of Manuscripts, <span class="SmallCaps">mss </span>12446–587 (4th Earl of Minto, corr. and papers). Private arch., Skene, Edwards & Garson, W.S., D. A. Smith papers (National Reg. of Arch. (Scotland), Edinburgh, Survey no.1883), deed box A32 [researchers wishing to consult these papers should contact the National Reg. of Arch.]; Anthony Beckles Willson (Twickenham [London]), Family papers. PAM, HBCA, A.42/16–34; A.68/5–12. Yale Univ. Library, <span class="SmallCaps">mss</span> and Arch. Dept. (New Haven, Conn.), J. W. Sterling papers.</p><p id="paragraph_318023" class="BibliographyParagraph"><em>Gazette</em> (Montreal), 14 Sept. 1888, 29 Jan. 1927, 7 May 1928. <em>Globe</em>, 1 Oct. 1911, 3 Feb. 1914. <em>Monetary Times</em> (Toronto), 8 Oct. 1880, 3 Feb. 1893. <em>Montreal Daily Star</em>, 13 Nov. 1913, 21 March 1941. <em>Sun</em> (New York), 5 Feb. 1914. <em>World</em> (Toronto), 22 Jan. 1914.</p><p id="paragraph_318024" class="BibliographyParagraph">Christopher Armstrong and H. V. Nelles, <em>Monopoly’s moment: the organization and regulation of Canadian utilities, 1830–1930</em> (Philadelphia, 1986). Janet Brooke, <em>Discerning tastes: Montreal collectors, 1880–1900</em> (exhibition catalogue, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, 1989). Can., House of Commons, <em>Debates</em>, 1871–72, 1875–78; Royal commission to inquire into a certain resolution moved by the Honourable Mr. Huntingdon, in Parliament, on April 2nd, 1873, relating to the Canadian Pacific Railway, <em>Report</em> (Ottawa, 1873). <em>Canada Gazette</em>, 9 Dec. 1871. <em>Canadian men and women of the time</em> (Morgan; 1898 and 1912). L. C. Clark, “A history of the Conservative administrations, 1891 to 1896” (<span class="SmallCaps">phd</span> thesis, Univ. of Toronto, 1968). E. A. Collard, A <em>very human store: a brief history of the Royal Trust Company, its first 75</em> <em>years</em> ([Montreal], 1975). T. A. B. Corley, <em>A history of the Burmah Oil Company</em> (2v., London, 1983). <em>CPG</em>, 1871–80, 1887–96. P. E. Crunican, “Father Lacombe’s strange mission: the Lacombe-Langevin correspondence on the Manitoba school question, 1895–96,” CCHA, <em>Report</em>, 26 (1959): 57–71. N. F. Davin, <em>Strathcona Horse: speech</em> . . . <em>at Lansdowne Park</em> . . . (<em>Ottawa</em>, 1900). J. A. Eagle, <em>The Canadian Pacific Railway and the development of western Canada, 1896–1914</em> (Kingston, Ont., 1989). R. W. Ferrier, <em>The history of the British Petroleum Company</em> (2v. to date, New York and Cambridge, Eng., 1982– ). S. B. Frost, <em>McGill University: for the advancement of learning</em> (2v., Montreal, 1980–84). J. S. Galbraith, “Land policies of the Hudson’s Bay Company, 1870–1913,” <em>CHR</em>, 32 (1951): 1–21. Heather Gilbert, <em>The life of Lord Mount Stephen</em> . . . (2v., Aberdeen, Scot., 1965–77). Margaret Gillett, <em>We walked very warily: a history of women at McGill</em> (Montreal, 1981). Dolores Greenberg, <em>Financiers and railroads, 1869–1889: a study of Morton, Bliss & Company</em> (Cranbury, N.J., 1979). D. J. Hall, “Clifford Sifton: immigration and settlement policy, 1896–1905,” in <em>The settlement of the west</em>, ed. Howard Palmer (Calgary, 1977), 60–85. <em>Lord Minto’s Canadian papers: a selection of the public and private papers of the fourth Earl of Minto, 1898–1904</em>, ed. Paul Stevens and J. T. Saywell (2v., Toronto, 1981–83). Donna McDonald, <em>Lord Strathcona: a biography of Donald Alexander Smith</em> (Toronto and Oxford, 1996). Donald MacKay, <em>The square mile: merchant princes of Montreal</em> (Vancouver, 1987). R. C. Macleod, <em>The NWMP and law enforcement, 1873–1905</em> (Toronto, 1976). Albro Martin, <em>James</em> <em>J</em>. <em>Hill and the opening of the northwest</em> (New York, 1976; repr., intro. W. T. White, St Paul, 1991). Don Morrow, “The Strathcona Trust in Ontario, 1911–1939,” <em>Canadian Journal of Hist</em>. <em>of Sport and Physical Education</em> (Windsor, Ont.,), 8 (1977), no.1 : 72–90. A. A. den Otter, “The Hudson’s Bay Company’s prairie transportation problem, 1870–85,” in <em>The developing west: essays on Canadian history in honor of Lewis</em> <em>H</em>. <em>Thomas</em>, ed. J. E. Foster (Edmonton, 1983), 25–47; “Transportation and transformation, the Hudson’s Bay Company, 1857–1885,” <em>Great Plains Quarterly</em> (Lincoln, Nebr.), 3 (1983): 171–85. J. G. Pyle, <em>The life of James</em> <em>J</em>. <em>Hill</em> (2v., Garden City, N.Y., 1917). Gerald Redmond, “Apart from the Trust Fund: some other contributions of Lord Strathcona to Canadian recreation and sport,” <em>Canadian Journal of Hist</em>. <em>of Sport and Physical Education</em>, 4 (1973), no.2: 59–69. W. R. Richmond, <em>The life of Lord Strathcona</em> (London, n.d.). L. W. Sawula, “Notes on the Strathcona Trust,” <em>Canadian Journal of Hist</em>. <em>of Sport and Physical Education</em>, 5 (1974), no.1: 56–61. <em>Standard dict</em>. <em>of Canadian</em> biog. (Roberts and Tunnell). G. F. G. Stanley, “The fur trade party,” <em>Beaver</em>, outfit 284 (Sept. 1953): 35–39; (Dec. 1953): 21–25. Beckles Willson, <em>The life of Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal, <span class="SmallCaps">g.c.m.g</span>., <span class="SmallCaps">g.c.v.o</span>.</em> (2v., Boston and New York, 1915).</p> <!-- insert#biblio-paragraphs 1 280 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> <!-- insert#general-bibliography 0 element 290 --> <div id="general_biblio" class="col-xs-12 GeneralBibliography BibliographyParagraph"><a href="/en/biblio/14" onclick="return true;" title="General Bibliography">General Bibliography</a></div> <!-- insert#general-bibliography 1 --> <!-- insert#copyright 0 element 300 --> <div id="copyright" class="col-xs-12 CopyrightBiography BibliographyParagraph"><a href="/en/notices.php" onclick="return true;" title="© 1998–2024 University of Toronto/Université Laval">© 1998–2024 University of Toronto/Université Laval</a></div> <!-- insert#copyright 0 --> </section> <!--END BIBLIOGRAPHY--> <!-- jtk 7-apr-2019 reader-mode --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <div style="" class="container-fluid reader-mode" id="bottom-content"> <div class="row"> </div> <!-- .row --> <!-- element 550 section-* tags --> <div style="" id="content-image-gallery" class="row"> <div id="image-gallery" class="col-xs-12 col-theme-white"> <h2 data-brx-ls="template_bio_image_gallery">Image Gallery</h2> <!-- ContainerBioGalleryTiles startControl --> <div class="container-fluid"> <!-- LIGHTBOX CAPTIONS --> <!-- insert#bio-images-captions 0 element 310 --> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption1" style="display:none"> <h4> Description Donald Alexander Smith, 1st Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal (Original text: Donald Alexander Smith, later Lord Strathcona, National Archives of Canada, C-5489 } updated file cleaned up in paintshop ) Date ca. 1890 Source National Archives of Canada, C-5489 This image is available from Library and Archives Canada under the reproduction reference number C-5489 This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing for more information. Library and Archives Canada does not allow free use of its copyrighted works. See Category:Images from Library and Archives Canada. Originally uploaded to en:Wikipedia (log) 03:56, 9 March 2005 (UTC) by Fawcett5 (talk) and 15:25, 12 May 2009 (UTC) by Billreid (talk). Author unknown Permission (Reusing this file) Public domainPublic domainfalsefals</h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:LordStrathcona.jpg" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Description Donald Alexander Smith, 1st Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal (Original text: Donald Alexander Smith, later Lord Strathcona, National Archives of Canada, C-5489 } updated file cleaned up in paintshop ) Date ca. 1890 Source National Archives of Canada, C-5489 This image is available from Library and Archives Canada under the reproduction reference number C-5489 This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing for more information. Library and Archives Canada does not allow free use of its copyrighted works. See Category:Images from Library and Archives Canada. Originally uploaded to en:Wikipedia (log) 03:56, 9 March 2005 (UTC) by Fawcett5 (talk) and 15:25, 12 May 2009 (UTC) by Billreid (talk). Author unknown Permission (Reusing this file) Public domainPublic domainfalsefals" target="_blank">Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption2" style="display:none"> <h4>Sir Donald Smith, M. P. [image fixe]</h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collections.banq.qc.ca/ark:/52327/1956873" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Sir Donald Smith, M. P. [image fixe]" target="_blank">Courtesy of Bibliothèque et Archives Nationales du Québec / 52327/1956873</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption3" style="display:none"> <h4>"Ravenscrag" Residence (Late) Sir Hugh Allan; Residence Sir Donald Smith. </h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3335428" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: "Ravenscrag" Residence (Late) Sir Hugh Allan; Residence Sir Donald Smith. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3335428</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption4" style="display:none"> <h4>Résidence de Sir Donald A. Smith [image fixe]</h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collections.banq.qc.ca/ark:/52327/2081231" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Résidence de Sir Donald A. Smith [image fixe]" target="_blank">Courtesy of Bibliothèque et Archives Nationales du Québec / 52327/2081231</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption5" style="display:none"> <h4>Lord Strathcona. </h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3333408" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Lord Strathcona. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3333408</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption6" style="display:none"> <h4>Lord Strathcona. </h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3241487" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Lord Strathcona. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3241487</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption7" style="display:none"> <h4>Lord Strathcona. </h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3221450" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Lord Strathcona. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3221450</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption8" style="display:none"> <h4>Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal. </h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3221445" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3221445</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption9" style="display:none"> <h4>Résidence de Lord Strathcona [image fixe]</h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collections.banq.qc.ca/ark:/52327/2081230" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Résidence de Lord Strathcona [image fixe]" target="_blank">Courtesy of Bibliothèque et Archives Nationales du Québec / 52327/2081230</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption10" style="display:none"> <h4>Lord Strathcona and his daughter leaving the Quebec Tercentenary military review. </h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3193138" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Lord Strathcona and his daughter leaving the Quebec Tercentenary military review. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3193138</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption11" style="display:none"> <h4>Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal High Commissioner for Canada. </h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3221449" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal High Commissioner for Canada. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3221449</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption12" style="display:none"> <h4>Mr. Mulock's group. [Lord Strathcona seated left and Sir William Mulock seated 2nd from left.]. </h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3193327" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Mr. Mulock's group. [Lord Strathcona seated left and Sir William Mulock seated 2nd from left.]. " target="_blank">Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN 3193327</a></p> </div> <div class="image-gallery-caption" id="caption13" style="display:none"> <h4>Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal Present Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company.</h4> <p>Source: <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42279/42279-h/42279-h.htm" onclick="return true;" title="Original title: Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal Present Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company." target="_blank">Link</a></p> </div> <!-- insert#bio-images-captions 1 element 310 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> <!-- LIGHTBOX DATA --> <!--CAPTIONS METHODS--> <div class="demo-gallery"> <ul id="captions" class="list-unstyled row"> <!-- insert#bio-images-data 0 element 311 --> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.936.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption1"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.936.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.937.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption2"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.937.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.938.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption3"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.938.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.939.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption4"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.939.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.940.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption5"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.940.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.941.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption6"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.941.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.942.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption7"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.942.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.943.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption8"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.943.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.944.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption9"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.944.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.945.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption10"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.945.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.946.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption11"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.946.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.947.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption12"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.947.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <li class="image-gallery-entry col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-4" data-src="/bioimages/original.2856.jpg" data-sub-html="#caption13"> <a href=""> <img class="img-responsive" src="/bioimages/s500.2856.jpg"> <div class="demo-gallery-poster"> <img src="/img/zoom.png"> </div> </a> </li> <!-- insert#bio-images-data 1 element 311 --> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </ul> </div><!-- demo-gallery --> </div><!-- .container-fluid --> <!-- ContainerBioGalleryTiles endControl --> </div> </div><!-- .row --> <div class="row"> <div id="citations" class="column-section col-theme-white col-xs-12"> <!-- insert#bio-citation 0 Element 320 --> <!-- START bbb ContentCitation --> <h3>Cite This Article</h3><p>Alexander Reford, “SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL,” in <em>Dictionary of Canadian Biography</em>, vol. 14, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed <span class="today-mdy">November 23, 2024</span>, <span class="permalink">https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/smith_donald_alexander_14E.html</span>. <h4> The citation above shows the format for footnotes and endnotes according to the <em>Chicago manual of style</em> (16th edition). Information to be used in other citation formats:</h4> <br /> <table cellpadding="3"> <tbody> <tr> <td> <strong>Permalink: </strong></td> <td> <span class="permalink">https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/smith_donald_alexander_14E.html</span></td> </tr> <tr> <td> <strong>Author of Article: </strong></td> <td> Alexander Reford</td> </tr> <tr> <td> <strong>Title of Article: </strong></td> <td> SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL</td> </tr> <tr> <td> <strong>Publication Name: </strong></td> <td> <em>Dictionary of Canadian Biography</em>, vol. 14</td> </tr> <tr> <td> <strong>Publisher: </strong></td> <td> University of Toronto/Université Laval</td> </tr> <tr> <td> <strong>Year of publication: </strong></td> <td> 1998</td> </tr> <tr> <td> <strong>Year of revision: </strong></td> <td> 1998</td> </tr> <tr> <td> <strong>Access Date: </strong></td> <td> <span class="today-mdy">November 23, 2024</span></td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <br /> </p> <!-- END ContentCitation --> <!-- insert#bio-citation 1 Element 320 --> </div> </div> <!-- {{example:0}} --><!-- {{example:1}} --> </div><!--END bottom-content --> </div><!-- /#content-area --> </div><!-- /.container-fluid --> </div> <!-- row->mainrow --> <a id="button" data-brx-ls="template_return_to_top" title="Return to Top of Page"></a> </div><!-- /#bootstrap-wrapper --> <!-- insert#footer 0 Element 400 --> <footer> <div class="container"> <div class="row"> <div class="col-md-4"> <div class="row"> <!-- jtk-footer-4-apr added target --> <div class="col-md-8 ut_laval"> <a target="_blank" href="https://www.utoronto.ca/"><img class="img-responsive" src="/img/uoft3.svg"></a> <a target="_blank" href="https://www2.ulaval.ca/en/"><img class="img-responsive" src="/img/laval.svg"></a> </div> <!-- jtk-footer-4-apr added target --> <div class="col-md-4 cmh"> <a target="_blank" href="https://www.historymuseum.ca/"><img class="img-responsive" src="/img/cmh-logo.svg"></a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-md-4"> <div class="row"> <div class="col-md-6 cmh-text-left"> We acknowledge the financial support of the Canadian Museum of History through the Online Works of Reference Program funded by the Government of Canada. </div> <div class="col-md-6 cmh-text-right"> Nous reconnaissons l'aide financière du Musée canadien de l'histoire à travers les œuvres du programme de référence en ligne financés par le gouvernement du Canada. </div> </div> </div> <!--FEBRUARY 7 2024 --> <div class="col-md-4"> <div class="row"> <!-- jtk-footer-4-apr added target --> <div class="row chc-full"> <div class="col-md-12"> <a href="https://www.canada.ca/home.html"><img class="img-responsive" src="/img/govCan.svg"></a> </div> <div class="col-md-12"> <p>We acknowledge the support of the Government of Canada.</p> <hr class="chc-full"> <p>Nous reconnaissons l’appui du gouvernement du Canada.</p> </div> </div> </div> </div> <!--END FEBRUARY 7 2024 --> </div><!--END ROW--> <article id="involved"> <div class="col-md-12"> <p><span>© 2003-2024 University of Toronto/Université Laval</span></p> <p><a href="/en/contact_us_corrections.php" title="Suggest corrections or additions">Suggest corrections or additions</a></p> <p><a href="/en/notices.html" title="Terms governing use of website and the collection and use of personal information">Important Notices</a></p> <p><a href="/en/links.php" title="Links to related sites">Websites of Interest</a></p> </div> </article> </div> </footer> <!-- insert#footer 1 Element 400 --> <!-- was includes/login.php --> <div id="login-holder" class="dcb-dialog"> </div> <div id="forgot-holder" class="dcb-dialog"> </div> <div id="forgot-user-holder" class="dcb-dialog"> </div> <div id="register-holder" class="dcb-dialog"> </div> <div id="contact-holder" class="dcb-dialog"> </div> <div id="choose-language" class="dcb-dialog"> </div> <div id="change-holder" class="dcb-dialog"> </div> <!-- was includes/msgbox.php --> <div style="display:none;" class="msgbox" id="msgbox"> <div class="text"> </div> <div class="twobuttons" id="msgbox_buttons"> <a class="okay" href="javascript:void(0)">OK</a> <a class="cancel" href="javascript:void(0)">Cancel</a> </div> <div class="onebutton" id="msgbox_buttons_one"> <a class="okay" href="javascript:void(0)">OK</a> </div> </div> <!-- <div id="reader-mode-toast" class="alert alert-info"><span class="glyphicon glyphicon-arrow-up"></span>Exit reader mode</div> --> <div id="reader-mode-exit"> <button type="button" class="btn btn-primary reader-mode-exit" data-brx-ls="template_reader" title="Exit reader mode">Exit reader mode</button> </div> <!-- insert#show-keys 0 Element 500 --> <!-- insert#show-keys 1 Element 500 --> <!-- Compiled and minified JavaScript for jquery, jquery-ui and bootstrap js load order: jquery.min.js, jquery-ui.js, bootstrap.min.js with <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.12.4/jquery.min.js" integrity="sha512-jGsMH83oKe9asCpkOVkBnUrDDTp8wl+adkB2D+//JtlxO4SrLoJdhbOysIFQJloQFD+C4Fl1rMsQZF76JjV0eQ==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> with <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.12.1/jquery-ui.min.js" integrity="sha512-uto9mlQzrs59VwILcLiRYeLKPPbS/bT71da/OEBYEwcdNUk8jYIy+D176RYoop1Da+f9mvkYrmj5MCLZWEtQuA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> with <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery-easing/1.3/jquery.easing.min.js" integrity="sha512-ahmSZKApTDNd3gVuqL5TQ3MBTj8tL5p2tYV05Xxzcfu6/ecvt1A0j6tfudSGBVuteSoTRMqMljbfdU0g2eDNUA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> replace bootstrap.min.js with <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/bootstrap@3.4.1/dist/js/bootstrap.min.js" integrity="sha384-aJ21OjlMXNL5UyIl/XNwTMqvzeRMZH2w8c5cRVpzpU8Y5bApTppSuUkhZXN0VxHd" crossorigin="anonymous"></script> --> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.12.4/jquery.min.js" integrity="sha512-jGsMH83oKe9asCpkOVkBnUrDDTp8wl+adkB2D+//JtlxO4SrLoJdhbOysIFQJloQFD+C4Fl1rMsQZF76JjV0eQ==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.12.1/jquery-ui.min.js" integrity="sha512-uto9mlQzrs59VwILcLiRYeLKPPbS/bT71da/OEBYEwcdNUk8jYIy+D176RYoop1Da+f9mvkYrmj5MCLZWEtQuA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery-easing/1.3/jquery.easing.min.js" integrity="sha512-ahmSZKApTDNd3gVuqL5TQ3MBTj8tL5p2tYV05Xxzcfu6/ecvt1A0j6tfudSGBVuteSoTRMqMljbfdU0g2eDNUA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/bootstrap@3.4.1/dist/js/bootstrap.min.js" integrity="sha384-aJ21OjlMXNL5UyIl/XNwTMqvzeRMZH2w8c5cRVpzpU8Y5bApTppSuUkhZXN0VxHd" crossorigin="anonymous"></script> <!-- todo what is this <iframe id="pxcelframe" style="display: none;" src="t_.html"></iframe> <script async="" src="/js/5e1c80aec17cd7001217700d.js"></script> <script id="facebook-jssdk" src="/js/all_002.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="/js/all.js"></script> --> <!-- add base javascript. required for all or most --> <!-- querystring#?time=#javascript_time Element 021 --> <script type="text/javascript" src="/js/js_strings.js?time=1729526930"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="/js/modernizr-3.6.js?time=1729526930"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="/js/shared-base.js?time=1729526930"></script> <!-- for all: jquery 3.3.7 --> <!-- why jtk-2020-01-a <iframe id="pxcelframe" style="display: none;" src="t_.html"> </iframe> --> <!-- todo update google code --> <script type="text/javascript"> var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E")); </script> <script type="text/javascript"> try { var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("UA-25429501-1"); pageTracker._trackPageview(); } catch (err) { } </script> <!-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async="None" src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-HJG3WCKTF7"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-HJG3WCKTF7'); </script> <script charset="utf-8" src="/js/button.js"></script> <!-- <script charset="utf-8" src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/OwlCarousel2/2.3.4/owl.carousel.min.js"></script> --> <script charset="utf-8" src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/OwlCarousel2/2.3.4/owl.carousel.min.js"></script> <!-- todo update facebook code --> <style type="text/css">.fb_hidden{position:absolute;top:-10000px;z-index:10001}.fb_reposition{overflow:hidden;position:relative}.fb_invisible{display:none}.fb_reset{background:none;border:0;border-spacing:0;color:#000;cursor:auto;direction:ltr;font-family:"lucida grande", tahoma, verdana, arial, sans-serif;font-size:11px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;letter-spacing:normal;line-height:1;margin:0;overflow:visible;padding:0;text-align:left;text-decoration:none;text-indent:0;text-shadow:none;text-transform:none;visibility:visible;white-space:normal;word-spacing:normal}.fb_reset>div{overflow:hidden}@keyframes fb_transform{from{opacity:0;transform:scale(.95)}to{opacity:1;transform:scale(1)}}.fb_animate{animation:fb_transform .3s forwards} .fb_dialog{background:rgba(82, 82, 82, .7);position:absolute;top:-10000px;z-index:10001}.fb_dialog_advanced{border-radius:8px;padding:10px}.fb_dialog_content{background:#fff;color:#373737}.fb_dialog_close_icon{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yq/r/IE9JII6Z1Ys.png) no-repeat scroll 0 0 transparent;cursor:pointer;display:block;height:15px;position:absolute;right:18px;top:17px;width:15px}.fb_dialog_mobile .fb_dialog_close_icon{left:5px;right:auto;top:5px}.fb_dialog_padding{background-color:transparent;position:absolute;width:1px;z-index:-1}.fb_dialog_close_icon:hover{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yq/r/IE9JII6Z1Ys.png) no-repeat scroll 0 -15px transparent}.fb_dialog_close_icon:active{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yq/r/IE9JII6Z1Ys.png) no-repeat scroll 0 -30px transparent}.fb_dialog_iframe{line-height:0}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_title{background:#6d84b4;border:1px solid #365899;color:#fff;font-size:14px;font-weight:bold;margin:0}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_title>span{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yd/r/Cou7n-nqK52.gif) no-repeat 5px 50%;float:left;padding:5px 0 7px 26px}body.fb_hidden{height:100%;left:0;margin:0;overflow:visible;position:absolute;top:-10000px;transform:none;width:100%}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/ya/r/3rhSv5V8j3o.gif) white no-repeat 50% 50%;min-height:100%;min-width:100%;overflow:hidden;position:absolute;top:0;z-index:10001}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading.centered{background:none;height:auto;min-height:initial;min-width:initial;width:auto}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading.centered #fb_dialog_loader_spinner{width:100%}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading.centered .fb_dialog_content{background:none}.loading.centered #fb_dialog_loader_close{clear:both;color:#fff;display:block;font-size:18px;padding-top:20px}#fb-root #fb_dialog_ipad_overlay{background:rgba(0, 0, 0, .4);bottom:0;left:0;min-height:100%;position:absolute;right:0;top:0;width:100%;z-index:10000}#fb-root #fb_dialog_ipad_overlay.hidden{display:none}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile.loading iframe{visibility:hidden}.fb_dialog_mobile .fb_dialog_iframe{position:sticky;top:0}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header{background:linear-gradient(from(#738aba), to(#2c4987));border-bottom:1px solid;border-color:#1d3c78;box-shadow:white 0 1px 1px -1px inset;color:#fff;font:bold 14px Helvetica, sans-serif;text-overflow:ellipsis;text-shadow:rgba(0, 30, 84, .296875) 0 -1px 0;vertical-align:middle;white-space:nowrap}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header table{height:43px;width:100%}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header td.header_left{font-size:12px;padding-left:5px;vertical-align:middle;width:60px}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header td.header_right{font-size:12px;padding-right:5px;vertical-align:middle;width:60px}.fb_dialog_content .touchable_button{background:linear-gradient(from(#4267B2), to(#2a4887));background-clip:padding-box;border:1px solid #29487d;border-radius:3px;display:inline-block;line-height:18px;margin-top:3px;max-width:85px;padding:4px 12px;position:relative}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header .touchable_button input{background:none;border:none;color:#fff;font:bold 12px Helvetica, sans-serif;margin:2px -12px;padding:2px 6px 3px 6px;text-shadow:rgba(0, 30, 84, .296875) 0 -1px 0}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_header .header_center{color:#fff;font-size:16px;font-weight:bold;line-height:18px;text-align:center;vertical-align:middle}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_content{background:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/y9/r/jKEcVPZFk-2.gif) no-repeat 50% 50%;border:1px solid #4a4a4a;border-bottom:0;border-top:0;height:150px}.fb_dialog_content .dialog_footer{background:#f5f6f7;border:1px solid #4a4a4a;border-top-color:#ccc;height:40px}#fb_dialog_loader_close{float:left}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile .fb_dialog_close_button{text-shadow:rgba(0, 30, 84, .296875) 0 -1px 0}.fb_dialog.fb_dialog_mobile .fb_dialog_close_icon{visibility:hidden}#fb_dialog_loader_spinner{animation:rotateSpinner 1.2s linear infinite;background-color:transparent;background-image:url(https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v3/yD/r/t-wz8gw1xG1.png);background-position:50% 50%;background-repeat:no-repeat;height:24px;width:24px}@keyframes rotateSpinner{0%{transform:rotate(0deg)}100%{transform:rotate(360deg)}} .fb_iframe_widget{display:inline-block;position:relative}.fb_iframe_widget span{display:inline-block;position:relative;text-align:justify}.fb_iframe_widget iframe{position:absolute}.fb_iframe_widget_fluid_desktop,.fb_iframe_widget_fluid_desktop span,.fb_iframe_widget_fluid_desktop iframe{max-width:100%}.fb_iframe_widget_fluid_desktop iframe{min-width:220px;position:relative}.fb_iframe_widget_lift{z-index:1}.fb_iframe_widget_fluid{display:inline}.fb_iframe_widget_fluid span{width:100%}</style> <!-- SHARE THIS--> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/share-this/1.3.1/share-this.js" integrity="sha512-YQH3AWzoNd5UBgAzelMJ0L74JzsE1RfD7zrTDfveB5Xm5j9PBCU+Q2tD4RavX2iVVAt4iJ/gi1mSRCbX/X55pw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/share-this/1.3.1/sharers/email.min.js" integrity="sha512-4+h27jVJhdlqWwk0hvKQX2Ow5TYcyRWaYwj5hhDem63JbmslVJHqJu29zQN/ZRM/Dbg4qi9nbbx6wRwmf/S2Yw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/share-this/1.3.1/sharers/facebook.min.js" integrity="sha512-Wh1ZDYa/KLkn2iK8a0D4FoZSqXbw1bRFCPjVs490MpcMFs1zHtMQMpqBVAqheGpRFLcGEMy/jnFmFx+6rbGJzw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/share-this/1.3.1/sharers/twitter.min.js" integrity="sha512-p0d6Rkeb1XLqCBlKVz7aF+UQNu4tGmAxT5NjJPYasGU8KmXvL8iEd8j/cvuJbqYK3HnVJqmf4ulWZvLx+2a4Fw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <!-- insert#share-this-link 0 element 044 (moved from header) --> <!-- insert#share-this-link 1 element 044 (moved from header) --> <!-- src#page_script_src, page-specific script. Element 031 (moved from header to here) --> <script type="text/javascript" src="/js/bio.js?time=1729526930"></script> <!-- #insert#page-scripts 0 Element 041 (moved from header to here) --> <script type="text/javascript"> var m_languageId = '1'; var m_title = "SMITH, DONALD ALEXANDER, 1st Baron STRATHCONA and MOUNT ROYAL"; var m_url_pch = 'http://www.pch.gc.ca/eng/1266037002102/1265993639778'; var m_url_ut = 'http://www.utoronto.ca/'; var m_url_ul = 'http://www2.ulaval.ca/en/'; var m_loggedIn = ''; // BasePublicHelper variables var m_pageId = 'public_bio-7710-34018'; var m_pageIdIsUnique = '1'; // BioHelper variables var m_biography_id = '7710'; var m_revision_id = '34018'; var m_volume_id = '14'; var m_volume_name = 'Volume XIV (1911-1920)'; var m_publicationYear = '1998'; var m_revisionYear = '1998'; var m_print = false; $(document).ready(function() { // here:getJavascriptOnReady renderBreadcrumbs(); }); </script> <!-- #insert#page-scripts 1 Element 041 --> <script> var affixSettings = { offset: { top: 100, bottom: function() { return (this.bottom = $('.footer').outerHeight(true)) } } }; $('#myAffix').affix(affixSettings); </script> <!--LIGHT GALLERY --> <script src="/js/prettify.js"></script> <!-- replaced <script src="/js/picturefill.js?id=<?=$version?>"></script> recent <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/picturefill/3.0.3/picturefill.min.js" integrity="sha512-Nh/FthCqOFq56kGp1DsNb6GKK29iIv2ZJc7Fylln1WRrWpeE5LjSBWeAp61dkBASDxZT12aL9mZyIrhsAqgRpw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> with <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/picturefill/2.3.1/picturefill.min.js" integrity="sha512-O5Diz2AkqKWK7Lw4t8BnHF/47CLMPiGH9nT4A6U6+tZHCAq+jj3dA/Ngkc1LK3HmrThtjIemw5MtMrHwsV8tTg==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> --> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/picturefill/2.3.1/picturefill.min.js" integrity="sha512-O5Diz2AkqKWK7Lw4t8BnHF/47CLMPiGH9nT4A6U6+tZHCAq+jj3dA/Ngkc1LK3HmrThtjIemw5MtMrHwsV8tTg==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <!-- missing jtk-2020-01-a <script src="/js/video.js?id=1001"></script> --> <script src="/js/transition.js"></script> <!-- if link is replace locally on update. restore it to: with <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lightgallery/1.6.12/js/lightgallery-all.js" integrity="sha512-ib6swbZG+2gcZ5gtx5NIi4enGrvMry+1bAJRXG2KlWr+3rPkB8sPUmzBuKZBPegm8pD1IiRsXbQ1XWd+5HSLbA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> --> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lightgallery/1.6.12/js/lightgallery-all.js" integrity="sha512-ib6swbZG+2gcZ5gtx5NIi4enGrvMry+1bAJRXG2KlWr+3rPkB8sPUmzBuKZBPegm8pD1IiRsXbQ1XWd+5HSLbA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <!-- replace <script src="/js/lg-fullscreen.js?id=<?=$version?>"></script> with <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lg-fullscreen/1.2.1/lg-fullscreen.min.js" integrity="sha512-GvMYZx1AUxtd+OYSc33H9DYX9qeT/OY90+O8kJ65cLXvSelNSgeytaxDV8bY58TeoZxz1HiqgAfpchczH7S8qA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> --> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lg-fullscreen/1.2.1/lg-fullscreen.min.js" integrity="sha512-GvMYZx1AUxtd+OYSc33H9DYX9qeT/OY90+O8kJ65cLXvSelNSgeytaxDV8bY58TeoZxz1HiqgAfpchczH7S8qA==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <!-- replace <script src="/js/lg-autoplay.js?id=<?=$version?>"></script> with <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lg-autoplay/1.0.4/lg-autoplay.min.js" integrity="sha512-MzBa78b0IGK8BBiW2gMkSkruc9ppE9bQVBMqiFf1fcMNQ2mDuNJejZh/aWGDvhtPDpChaevAAI8WRCeHBlYqRw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> --> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lg-autoplay/1.0.4/lg-autoplay.min.js" integrity="sha512-MzBa78b0IGK8BBiW2gMkSkruc9ppE9bQVBMqiFf1fcMNQ2mDuNJejZh/aWGDvhtPDpChaevAAI8WRCeHBlYqRw==" crossorigin="anonymous" referrerpolicy="no-referrer"></script> <!-- insert#header-post-js 0 Element 043 --> <!-- insert#header-post-js 1 Element 043 --> <!-- replace <script src="/js/demos.js?id=<?=$version?>"></script> with nothing but if it turns out to be required with --> <!--BACK TO TOP --> <!-- <div id="reader-mode-toast" class="alert alert-info"><span class="glyphicon glyphicon-arrow-up"></span><?=$reader_caption?></div> --> <!-- Element 510 --> <div id="reader-mode-exit"><button type="button" class="btn btn-primary reader-mode-exit">Exit reader mode</button></div> <!--AFFIX--> </body> </html>