Tag Archives: Irish Heritage of Canada

Feminist Hero: Anna Jameson

It has been one of the challenges of Fifty Irish Lives in Canada 1661-2017 to find women to profile. It reflects how history, written by men, had eliminated them from the record or simply anonymised them. One of the heroes of Fifty Irish Lives in Canada is Anna Brownell Jameson, née Murphy (born in Dublin in 1794, died in London 1860), profiled by Laura J. Smith. As we celebrate International Women’s Day, the lives of women we recovered, though few, must stand for the unrecorded lives and work of half the population throughout the history of the Irish in Canada.

Anna was a young child when her father Denis Murphy decamped to London to pursue his profession as a miniature portrait artist. By dint of talent and determination, she carved out a life of literary accomplishment, adventure, and fame that spanned England, Germany, France, Italy, and Canada. Ireland was never far from her thoughts. If there is a thread to Anna’s writing life, it is the role of women in society, beginning with her popular study of woman characters in Shakespeare’s play, Characteristics of Women (London, 1832). Her advocacy for women’s rights become more overt as the century unfolded and her own confidence grew.

By the time Anna wrote her famous three-volume travelogue of Canada, Winter Studies and Summer Rambles (London, 1838), she had become an advocate for women’s rights, driven by rage at how society enslaved them through lack of education and careers. In its degree of freedom and agency, she wrote, the position of Indigenous women was “more honest and honoured”[i] compared to that of European women. The lack of education for women made their situation as settlers far worse than their homebound counterparts. Anna writes: “I have not often in my life met with contented and cheerful-minded women, but I never met with so many repining and discontented woman as in Canada.”[ii] To the alarmed male critics of Anna’s feminist views, one woman riposted wittily “well they may be, for when the horse and ass begin to think and argue, adieu to riding and driving.”[iii]

Shooting rapids accompanied by Canadian voyageurs and Indigenous guides, Anna exulted in the pristine landscapes and exposure to Indigenous life. Notes the Dictionary of Canadian Biography: “… we see Anna at her best, an intrepid, adaptable, enthusiastic explorer, intensely interested in everyone she meets …. and everything she experiences. She was delighted to be “the first European female” to shoot the rapids at the Sault, her companion a part-Indian friend, George Johnston. Escorted homeward down Lake Huron in a bateau rowed by four voyageurs, she was awestruck by the unspoiled beauty of the islands around her.” [iv] Her adventures in the wilds of Ontario made her object of fascination to society women back in Toronto.

In her forthcoming profile, Laura writes, “Winter Studies and Summer Rambles has been reprinted countless times since its publication nearly 200 years ago and has been the subject of numerous scholarly analyses. It has been hailed as an important work of early feminism, travel writing, and of epistolary literature. For twenty-first century Canadians the book is a remarkable glimpse of a virtually unrecognizable Ontario covered in dark, forbidding forests, impassable unhealthy swamps, crisscrossed by blazed trails and ineffective corduroy roads.”

Anna’s arduous crossing to Canada had been occasioned by an attempt to rescue her relationship with her dullard husband, at the time Attorney General. He lacked concern for her emotionally or financially. They were contrary in character and her departure from Canada signaled the failure of the marriage.

A talented artist in her own right, Anna converted her landscape sketches into etchings to accompany her publications. In fact, her love of art and her work as an art historian was the mainstay of her intellectual curiosity and publications. Following years of arduous research, she published the Handbook to the Public Galleries of Art in or near London (1842) and the Companion to Private Galleries of Art in London (1844). As Thomas writes, “After them she began to specialize in the field of art, where she was to become one of arbiters of public taste both in Victorian England and in America.” [v] Her writing on art was immensely popular on both sides of the Atlantic because she was guiding a public eager to learn about an area of culture hitherto the preserve of the aristocracy.

As her place in society was established, Anna felt freer to embrace her Irish identity. She returned to Ireland in 1848, touring extensively against the backdrop of the Great Famine. She was horrified by the scenes of starvation, death and dissolution and disgusted at the anti-Irish bigotry of The Times. The pleasant part of the visit was staying with Maria Edgeworth and drinking whiskey punch with reverend fathers in a priory. Anna returned again in 1853 for an Irish exhibition. Her affinity for Ireland was illustrated by her warm response to any fellow countrymen she encountered or sought out on her travels. She felt most comfortable in the company of what she saw as her own people.

Anna’s five-volume work Sacred and Legendary Art was a major intellectual achievement and marked her out as a pioneering art historian. Regrettably, as Clara Thomas notes, Anna’s planned three-volume history of female artists who made their living by the “public exercise of their talents” never came to fruition.

As Anna labored to build her career as a writer and intellectual, she financially and emotionally sustained a household for her long-invalided father, along with her mother, two unmarried sisters, and a niece. Her advocacy for women’s right to education and the opportunities it allowed continued for the rest of her life. She was a mentor to a new generation of feminists.

Eamonn


[i] Clara Thomas, Love and Work Enough (Toronto, 1967), p.141.

[ii] Vol. 1, p. 108.

[iii] Mrs Proctor responding to Thackery’s criticism, cited Love and Work Enough, pp 141-2.

[iv] https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/murphy_anna_brownell_8E.html

[v] Op cit., p 164. The verdict in slightly amended form is repeated in the DIB entry https://www.dib.ie/biography/jameson-anna-brownell-a4254

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Happy Canada Flag Day! Paddy Reid and Canada’s Iconic Flag

REID, WILLIAM ADRIAN LOCKHART PATRICK

Born: 1924, Belfast, Co. Antrim

Died: 2015, Richmond, British Columbia

Author: Mark G. McGowan

Patrick Reid is an example of how Irish immigrants have contributed greatly to Canada’s image in the world and to Canadians’ own self-understanding. Patrick’s father William was an officer in the Royal Ulster Constabulary, which meant Patrick, his sister Muriel, and mother Kathleen, moved frequently in Northern Ireland. Patrick, however, was particularly close to his maternal grandfather Aaron Lockhart, an equestrian, a Great War veteran, and successful farmer in Dunkineely, Donegal. On visits to his grandfather’s farm, he cultivated a lifelong love of horses and the military. Raised in the Church of Ireland, Patrick attended the Methodist College in Belfast, where he excelled in academics and rugby. In 1941, at age sixteen, he entered Queen’s University Belfast, where he spent a year of study before enlisting, under-aged and against his parents wishes, in the British Army.  After officer training at Sandhurst, where he was awarded the “Belt of Honour” as the top cadet, he joined the North Irish Horse, an armoured regiment soon to be deployed on the Italian front. During the Italian Campaign he worked closely with Canadian troops whom he referred to as “the best infantry in the Eighth Army.” Thus began his love-affair with Canada. He was wounded in action and won the Military Cross for bravery before the war’s end. In 1945, he was deployed to Malaya and served with the military constabulary there, and then was seconded by NATO to serve in Norway, with responsibility for overseeing the Scandinavian sector. In 1954, the British Army sent him to the staff College in Kingston, Ontario, which cemented his desire to remain in Canada.

In May 1955, after a brief sojourn in Ireland, Patrick landed in Montreal and registered as an immigrant. His first job was in sales at Crawley Films in Ottawa. It was on a trip to promote filmmaking in British Columbia, that he was hired by Michael O’Brien, owner of one of Vancouver’s leading advertising agencies, and was set to work on commercial accounts and promotions for the Conservative Party. In 1956, while at a St. Patrick’s Day party he met his future wife, Alison Cumming. They were married in 1958 and later had two children, Amanda and Michael. In 1962, Reid was enticed to move to Ottawa to become the Director of Canadian Government Exhibitions Commission, an office responsible for marketing Canada abroad, particularly through international “expos.”  While reluctant to leave Vancouver, where he had become active in the local military regiments, commercial enterprises, and local politics, the move to Ottawa would be life changing.

In 1964, Canadian Prime Minster Lester Pearson was under heavy fire for his initiative to create a new Canadian flag. Opposition politicians and a host of national organizations denounced the “Pearson Pennant”—a flag bounded by two blue boarders, white centre section, containing three red maple leaves—with no homage to the country’s British heritage. The Prime Minister’s Office called Reid at the Exhibition Commission for help to work with a design by historian George F Stanley. Reid enlisted his team, particularly designer Jacques Saint-Cyr to re-create the flag. Later, Reid explained that the flag would have to be simple enough for school children to draw, be seen the same way from both sides, and retain a single maple leaf (which he recalled from the uniforms of the Canadian troops in Italy). His team came up with the modified design, an eleven-pointed maple leaf on a white field, flanked by thick red bands. Reid’s team raised their design on the flagpole one night in front of Pearson’s official residence. Next morning, Pearson awoke to the redesigned pennant and expressed approval. The new flag became official February 15, 1965.

Reid’s Special Project Division became responsible for the Canadian historical road show embodied in the Centennial Train and Caravans in 1967 and for support to Expo 67 in Montreal. Internationally, he was Commissioner General of the Milan Exposition of 1964 and became the Senior Canadian delegate to the Bureau International des Expositions (BIE), the global body that approved applications for international exhibitions. He would become director of the BIE in 1972. In 1970, he was head of the Canadian pavilion at Expo 70 in Osaka, Japan, and led the delegation representing all foreign exhibitors. The Canadian pavilion was one of the most visited at the fair, and his superb leadership earned him the Public Service Award of Merit. In 1972, External Affairs appointed Reid their representative to oversee the Canada-Russia Summit hockey series. Reid smoothed over some Soviet-Canadian diplomatic difficulties and was on hand in Moscow to see Paul Henderson score the historic series winning goal. His growing reputation for skill in marketing Canada to the world prompted his appointment, in 1978, as head of Canada House on Trafalgar Square in London, which he transformed into a Canadian cultural “mecca” for Canadian and international tourists.

Reid’s greatest achievement, however, was his convincing the BIE to hold an exposition for communication and transportation in Vancouver in 1986. As the head of Expo ’86 he secured the participation of a record fifty-four countries to build pavilions along Vancouver’s False Creek. The exposition was a triumph in terms of attendance and as a “linchpin” for the development of Vancouver as a world class city. The “man in motion” theme of the fair also inspired his future son-in-law, para-Olympian Rick Hansen, who adopted the fair’s motto as he traversed the earth in a wheelchair to help create an accessible and inclusive world for people with disabilities and find a cure for spinal cord injury. In 1987, for his many achievements, Reid was named an Officer of the Order of Canada. He ended his public service as head of the Vancouver Port Corporation. In his memoire, aptly titled Wild Colonial Boy, Patrick Reid commented that he was very proud of his Irish heritage, but he exuded love for Canada: “As a newcomer I was blessed in another way. I had just become a citizen when I found myself portraying Canada abroad … the task was easy. I had the conviction of a true convert that no other country in the world could compare with my adopted land.”

Further Reading:

Patrick Reid, Wild Colonial Boy. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1995.

Vancouver Sun, 11 December 2015

Globe & Mail, 20 December 2015

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Filed under Irish Heritage of Canada, Uncategorized

Au Revoir Canada

Ambassador’s Message 22 August 2024

Eamonn McKee

We leave after an amazing four years in Canada, enriched by discoveries and encounters, new friends and collaborators, projects and opportunities. Like the beautiful expanse of Canada itself, there are so many treasures of the Irish influence and impact here to be discovered and honored. We are at the start of a reawakening of Irish Canadian heritage and new opportunities for the future.

***

Autumn five years ago, Mary and I sat at the kitchen table and wondered about our next posting. Our number one choice was Canada for family and professional reasons. Canada’s name and iconic flag resonated with promise and adventure too. With the very welcome support of the then Secretary General (Niall Burgess), the Government nominated me just before Christmas. After four wonderful years in Canada, we won’t be second guessing our decision.

A microscopic entity severely restrained the normal start to a posting which is typically dominated by meetings, networking, and receptions, all voided by the pandemic. We arrived in September 2020 to a near-empty Pearson Airport and isolated at the Residence. These constraints have to be seen in perspective. Lives were lost to COVID-19, families denied the solace of last moments with loved ones. We pivoted to virtual conferences, panel discussions, even virtual receptions and Embassy podcasts (listed below, along with blogs and Opinion pieces).[1]

Local Irish radio shows like Austin Comerton (Irish Radio Canada), Ken and Mark (Irish Radio Saturday) and supremo host Hugo Straney (Facebook here) were vital platforms to keep people informed and connected. It was always a pleasure to be on their shows. One of my first and strongest impressions was how Irish groups across Canada and ICAN (the Eamonn O’Loughlin Irish Canadian Immigration Centre) retooled to address the pandemic’s impact on the community, from mental health support to food packages.

Anyone familiar with my blogs knows that I look for new stories of Irish heritage on my postings as Ambassador.[2] Wow, did I hit the jackpot in Canada! Here I discovered an epic story of Irish settlement and influence spanning three centuries, mostly untold and largely unknown.

Some forty blogs later, the story only grows in richness. These explorations uncovered new material to celebrate Irish Heritage Month in Canada, provided fodder from my Opinion pieces in The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star and The Ottawa Citizen, and led me to the project Fifty Irish Lives in Canada 1661-2021.

As I walked to work, my growing knowledge of the depth of Irish settlement in Ottawa turned the town into a home. All around me in the capital region, there is Irish heritage and living Irish communities in the Valleys: Low and Venosta, Arnprior and Smiths Falls, Shawville (with a functioning Orange Lodge!), Eganville, and Douglas to name only a handful.

Prof Mark McGowan, my co-editor for Fifty Irish Lives in Canada (50ILIC), has been an essential collaborator. Mark is the great historian of the Irish in Canada, a man with the integrity and determination of an Old Testament prophet, and a wonderful companion over a pint, whether in Canada or Ireland where I hope to see him often.

Our consortium of writers for 50ILIC is an amazing group of academics who did not hesitate to volunteer profiles: Professors Rosemary O’Flaherty, Michele Holmgren, Elizabeth Smyth, David Wilson, William Jenkins, Laura Smith, and many others. Curator at the Museum of History, historian and skilled editor Tim Foran never refused a request for help, saving me from countless infelicities in some of my blogs about colonization and Indigenous relations.[3] Grant Vogl of the Bytown Museum, another keeper of stories, was a great supporter and contributor.

The 50ILIC manuscript is near completion, many of the profiles are on the Embassy’s social media, and we’re looking for a publisher. Invaluable support from the President of St Michael’s College at the University of Toronto, David Sylvester, boosted our efforts, notably for the Conference last May that the Embassy and College co-hosted on Canada, Ireland and Transatlantic Colonialism.

Historian of the Irish of the Ottawa Valley Michael McBane is our great story keeper and dear friend. Like Donnie Kealey up the Gatineau Valley, Michael was among the first to reveal to me the extent of Irish settlement in the capital region. He pointed me to the final resting place of 360 Irish Famine victims in the heart of Ottawa, forgotten until now. We hosted the first ever commemoration and remembrance event at MacDonald Gardens Park in August 2022.

The exploration of Canada’s Irish heritage also triggered my interest in extending the National Famine Way from Ireland to Canada and indeed beyond. Caroilin Callery at the National Museum at Strokestown Park proved to be a true leader, harnessing up without hesitation to create the Global Irish Famine Way (GIFW), and indispensable to its development. Her father Jim as founder of the Museum has created an incredibly significant institution at Strokestown, a place for remembrance but dialogue about the Famine, historical legacies, and universal messages about humanitarianism.

Caroilin is a talented logistician whose boundless energy also wrangled a diverse group of us last May halfway across Ireland as we followed the Bronze Shoes of the Famine Walk to the Dublin Docks. Glamorous and physically very fit, she must have covered twice the distance moving between the vanguard and the rearguard as we strung out along the Royal Canal over six days! The symbolic departure of the costumed group, which included Caroilin and the great contemporary historian of the Famine Christine Kinealy, aboard the Jenny Johnson was a very moving finale, a weird time-warp back to the traumatic year 1847.

What a sight it was then last May for Caroilin, Mark and I to stand at Pier 12 in St John’s NL to watch the Marine Institute’s Celtic Explorer arrive after its North Atlantic voyage from Galway. Our fifteen emblematic Bronze Shoes were in its hold. We will never forget the reception at The Rooms, the process to and service at the Basilica, all organized by John FitzGerald who combines his passion for heritage and Ireland in the most effective ways.

The installation of Bronze Shoes is now underway at sites in Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick, Quebec and Ontario. After Canada, we plan installations at sites in Australia, South Africa, and the United States. The 40,000km long Global Irish Famine Way is a project with a long life ahead of it, acting as a vital thread collecting the stories of the migration of two million Irish around the world. Caroilin and our network of volunteers have big plans for the GIFW, the Famine Summer School, and the Famine Walk (locals call it the Famino) in the years ahead.

James Maloney MP from Toronto has just been terrific. He leads the Canada Ireland Parliamentary Friendship Group with great passion and was instrumental in designating March as Irish Heritage Month. James has also been my go-to-guy, for tasks great and small. For example, thanks to James’ influence, Prime Minister Trudeau joined us for the first and necessarily virtual launch of Irish Heritage Month back in 2021 and again for a meeting with the Tánaiste in PJ O’Brien’s for St. Patrick’s Day 2024.

Thanks to a dedicated GIFW Committee in Ottawa, Bronze Shoes are soon to be installed at Macdonald Gardens Park as part of the Global Irish Famine Way. This installation is a project that rallied passionate support from the Irish community in Ottawa and from many quarters: Mayor Mark Sutcliffe, Councilors Theresa Kavanagh and Rawlston King, the expertise of Nick McCarthy at Beechwood National Cemetery, generous local fundraisers, and of course the Irish community who flooded public hearings to push the proposal over the line.

Our motto about the Irish in Canada is ‘It’s complicated!’ because it was one colony helping create another. Both Protestant and Catholic Irish were heavily involved in settlement and colonization, as leaders as well as settlers, from the RCMP to the residential schools, from opening up Alberta to widespread land cultivation and the lumber industry. That said, we have to be careful about accountability. This was Britain’s Empire, not Ireland’s. The abolition of the Irish Parliament in 1800 inflicted major macroeconomic damage to the island, set Dublin into a spiral of decline, and denied the middleclass jobs in the apparatus of national government. There were few options for a career outside the British Empire and emigrants followed its expansion east and west. It is notable that most Irish emigration to Canada occurred between 1800 and 1847.

We can explain the Irish role in the Empire but we cannot nor should not ignore this historical record. There is a new generation of young Irish wanting to embrace this complication through ‘a more appropriate relationship with history’, to borrow historian David Olusoga’s fine formulation. The role of the Irish influence in Canada deepened my understanding of Ireland’s own history, how up to 1916 Canada was the future that Ireland never had. Look at from the wider historical narrative, there is far less dividing nationalism from unionism than Northern Ireland, seen alone, would suggest.

Yet for all that we contributed to the disasters visited on the Indigenous, we Irish have a rapport with them. Our respective forebears survived colonization and catastrophic famine, preserved our culture and language, and made a success of forced migration. Against the odds, Ireland achieved Independence and economic prosperity. We proudly assert our values on the world stage.

It is by nature difficult in the course of a mere diplomatic posting to develop relationships with Indigenous communities. However, the discovery and research by Mark McGowan and Jason King, historian at the National Famine Museum, that the Anishinaabe, Wendat and Haudenosaunee gave aid to support Irish Famine relief in 1847 provided opportunities for outreach. The Gratitude event at the Residence last April was very moving. We used the Famine Walk to promote the story, both events captured in the documentary that Jason produced.

Anishinaabe elder and Chancellor of the University of Ottawa, Claudette Commanda spoke movingly at the Residence about her love for the Irish and the significance of the Gratitude event. She had previously spoken at our St Brigid’s Day event where she and Bridget Brownlow, who works on reconciliation in East Belfast, discussed colonization, gender, and reconciliation (podcasted here). Claudette is truly inspirational and I am honored to call her my friend. We have plans to invite her to Ireland to share her wisdom and insights.

No reception at the Residence would have been complete or Irish enough without Pat Marshall, plucking the harp or offering a recitation, nor the music of the Rideau Ramblers or the dancers from Fay Healy’s School of Irish Dance. We have a great Irish community in Ottawa, anchored in St Bridget’s Well in an old Irish Church saved from neglect and decay many years ago by Pat Kelly, Paddy McDonald, Rosemary O’Brien, and Fran Healy. Thanks to them musicians, the Joyce Association, the GAA, the Embassy and many others have a venue we can call a home from home. Our active and beloved Seniors’ group have been a joy and a blessing to Mary and me. President Kay O’Hegarty and leading figures like Claire O’Connell Noon and Norita Fleming organized the Seniors’ glamourous annual summer garden parties, genuine highlights of our time in Ottawa.

Over in Dublin, Nancy Smyth has been an outstanding Ambassador and a wonderful friend. The tempo of our bilateral relations has markedly increased thanks to her ceaseless energy and networking over the past three years She joined us on the Famine Walk for over two days of trudging along the Royal Canal. Every year she supported the Valentia Island Transatlantic Cable conference. When I joined her at the opening of the garden at the Emigrant Museum in New Ross last October, she was greeted ‘Hi Nancy’ by many. Says it all.

Robert Kearns, the visionary founder and leader of the Canada Ireland Foundation, has been a towering advocate for the Irish in Canada, from supporting peace in Northern Ireland through the Canada Ireland Fund to promotion of the Irish story here. We have formed a deep friendship through this and shared interests ranging from Ancient Rome to the minutiae of Irish history. Executive Director William Peat is one of the most talented, skilled, and informed people I know. His impact on the Irish cultural exchange between Dublin and Toronto is immense. Robert and William are building the Corlek Arts Centre in Toronto and it is going to be a jewel.

I met many Irish in Canada whose families had fled Northern Ireland’s sectarianism and conflict from the 1960s onwards. During my twenty-odd years working on the Northern Ireland Peace Process, Canadians made vital appearances. I had worked closely with Supreme Court Justice Peter Cory on his investigations of collusion, a wonderful man of immense integrity. I had often heard the name General John de Chastelain but had never met the man. The decommissioning of paramilitary weapons was the sharp edge of conflict resolution. John was a key figure in that process, literally helping take the gun out of our politics. A scholar, a gentleman, a painter, a genial host with wonderful stories to tell, getting to know John and his wonderful wife Maryanne, is one of the treasures we take home from Ottawa. Likewise, indeed, the warmth and hospitality of neighbours Scott and Elizabeth Heatherington who introduced me to much of Ottawa’s history and Nick McCarthy at Beechwood Cemetery. Scott, a retired Canadian diplomat, and Elizabeth’s joie de vivre, erudition and style is an inspiration.

I joined John and Maryanne when they came to Belfast and Dublin last year to participate in the celebration of 25 years of the Good Friday Agreement, notably at the Queen’s University Belfast Conference, the lunch for them graciously hosted by the Tánaiste Micheál Martin in Iveagh House, and the wonderful dinner hosted by Ambassador Smyth. As I am the last serving official from the GFA Talks Team, the visit had plenty of resonant moments for me. Representing the Canadian Government on the trip, Minister Seamus O’Regan’s eloquence when called upon revealed both the depth of his intellect and his passion for Ireland.

I could go on with all the stories, people, and connections that made this posting so enriching. Let me just say that we are only at the start of the reawakening of the Irish-Canadian relationship and its place in our Diaspora.

There are so many reasons to be confident about the future. We’ve a great Local Market Team and it has been a particular pleasure to work with Deirdre Moran and Mark Shorten at the IDA, David McCaffrey at EI and Sandra Moffat at Tourism Ireland when and where opportunities arose. We all regularly called for support from the Irish Chambers of Commerce, from BC and Alberta to Quebec, and Ontario. Along with benevolent and cultural societies, this network greatly magnifies Ireland’s presence throughout Canada. With anchors in Ireland like the Ireland Canada Business Association and the Ireland Canada University Foundation, the bilateral relationship is in great shape.

Frank Flood and then Cathy Geagan as Consul Generals in Vancouver have shown how it’s done when a new consulate opens, engages with the community and makes an impact. They have been great colleagues and friends. Building on the leadership of our former Honorary Consul Eithne Heffernan and other community leaders there, Janet and William as Consul General and Vice-Consul have gotten the new Consulate in Toronto off to a flying start, tapping into the energy of one of North America’s greatest cities. The city now ranks third among the IDA’s North American offices for inward investor visits to Ireland. Both Consulates, with terrific local staff, are great examples of the outworking of the Government’s Global Ireland strategy.

Mary and I had the pleasure of meeting so many Irish communities bound by heritage and buoyed by their commitment to each other and each new generation. This manifests in many forms, from parades and gala balls, to sponsorship, sports events, and charity. Above all, they care. They range from the big ones in Toronto, Montreal, and Quebec to myriad others seeded by previous generations. New ones are springing up, particularly in Vancouver with the new Irish there.

Mary and I had memorable visits to Irish societies, ones with deep Irish heritage like St John’s and Halifax. In Edmonton, Calgary, and Hamilton, we heard stories of emigration from Ireland in the 1960s and 1970s, inspiring and sometimes painful. They built social and sporting clubs, organized chartered flights to Ireland to assuage their homesickness. The heritage and strength of the Irish communities in Montreal, along with the Irish Studies programme at Concordia University, has always impressed me, not least because of how they sustain their Irishness through successive generations.

Thanks to the McGaherns’ and their wonderful antiquarian bookshop in Byward Market here in Ottawa, I was never short of a resource when I needed it, like the pristine copy I picked up of the ground-breaking Palliser Report and the edition of William F. Butler’s, The Great Lone Land.[4] When I was writing a profile of Lord Dufferin (for the book Forgotten Heros of Ireland’s Great Hunger, just published, edited by Christine Kinealy and Gerard Moran), a box of reference material arrived in the nick of time. Only recently Liam McGahern found a photograph of Thomas D’Arcy McGee which I have long sought to hang in the Residence.

Our expanded slate of Honorary Consuls in Alberta (Colm O’Carroll and Deirdre Halferty, with Laureen Regan dynamically leading the Ireland Alberta Trade Association), Nova Scotia (Brian Doherty), Quebec (Bryan O’Gallagher), and Newfoundland and Labrador (Mark Dobbin) are terrific resources, bound by their love of Ireland and the Irish. Likewise, our Honorary Consuls in Jamaica and The Bahamas, Brian Denning and Bill Mills, represent Ireland with distinction and never hesitate to answer a call to help the Embassy or an Irish person in distress.

One very visible thing of which I am proud is the new Chancery in Ottawa. Years in the planning and execution, we moved in just a few months ago. We’re very proud of our new space. We hosted our first public event there with international students from the University of Ottawa. Last week we hosted Ireland’s first astronaut Dr. Norah Patten, along with her colleagues Aaron, and Shawna, an incredibly accomplished, visionary, and inspiring group (I wish I’d recorded our conversation because it would have made a fascinating podcast about microgravity, the Irish in space, and the logic of nothing over something!)

One thing less visible of which I am very proud is our team at the Embassy. In a small diplomatic mission, the quality of officers makes a huge difference. Deputy Head of Mission Dymphna Keogh did Trojan work, notably on the successful visit of the Tánaiste’s visit and the planning for the new chancery. Second Secretary Elisabeth O’Higgins’ leadership and management skills affirms my confidence in the latest generation of diplomats joining the Department. Local staff Glauciene, Daniele, Erin and Jenny have joined existing colleagues Breda, Aaron and Anna, and through some alchemical process, we have become one of hardest working, committed and funniest groups that I ever had the pleasure of working with. I will miss them greatly.

There is a special bond between a Head of Mission and Executive Assistant. Daniele has worked with me for just about a year. I could not have asked for more diligent and effective support. Our coordinator for the GIFW, Daniele did a terrific job organizing its launch with historian and passionate heritage advocate John FitzGerald at St John’s Basilica, NL.

It is stating the obvious that while Canada is a large, influential country, its southern neighbour is the big kahuna, the indispensable world leader, the location of our most prominent Diaspora, and the source of most of Ireland’s critical FDI. It gets a lot of attention from HQ. Yet colleagues at Iveagh House spared no effort to support and encourage us, whether from the Canada desk or from HR. HQ have approved new positions at the Embassy and expanded the team. David Guildea and Jennie Quin have been terrific temporary assignments at the Embassy.

All this culminated in the week-long visit last March of the Tánaiste and Minister, Micheál Martin TD, to Canada. He and his delegation, including our own Secretary General Joe Hackett, traversed Canada, from Vancouver to Montreal to Toronto, meeting our communities, launching new Irish companies here, and getting a genuine sense of the energy in the relationship. It was a wonderful way to spend my last St. Patrick’s celebration in Canada. Quite a contrast to my first one during the pandemic!

We have a very friendly diplomatic community with lasting friendships formed through many shared events and informal groups. Global Affairs Canada ingeniously organized virtual speed dating for us Covid Ambassadors to meet key contacts. I will be forever grateful to GAC for taking a group of Ambassadors on the Northern Tour of Arctic Canada through the Yukon, NW Territories and Nunavut. My search for Irish connections became a running joke during the trip but I found them, from the Dublin-born manager of the most northerly grocery store at Cambridge and Kono, an Inuit from Rankin Inlet, whose grandfather was born in Newry. Incredibly, this was only ten miles from the birthplace of my own grandfather in Newtownhamilton so they could have known each other! The trip was a privilege, revelatory, awe-inspiring, and unforgettable.

The career of a diplomat involves family. Separations and reunions, visits and departures have to be navigated in ways uncommon to more settled families, though reflective in ways of the emigrant life. You can be there for some family events but not all. Two of our children were born in the US, one in Ireland. They pay a price they were never asked to make. There are rewards for them too in many ways of course. They are making their own lives now. We gathered Eamonn Jr, Kali and Courtney for magical reunions and temporary stays from time to time in Ottawa.

Through it all, I have had the unstinting support of Mary, her partnership in running the Residence, her engaging presence at events. She turned a capacious Residence into a warm and welcoming space, and well run to boot! I can say, to a certain chorus of support from the community here, that she made this as rewarding a posting as it became. And since we picked up a Canadian son-in-law along the way, Quinten Mitchell, a wonderful lad from Brockville, our family bond with Canada runs deep now.

We have packed up our goods. The twenty-foot container has departed to Montreal for its voyage across the Atlantic. However, the most valuable things we carry in our head and in our hearts. Great memories, unexpected discoveries, a new member of our family, and dear friendships that will all draw us back to Canada.

Canada’s name and flag now have altered connotations and not just because I learned that an Irishman had been integral to its design. Canada now evokes the past four years and all the new treasures that we carry with us on our journey home.

Eamonn

Ottawa

22 August 2024


[1] The Presentation on Ancient Ireland with Prof Mark McGowan of St Michael’s College Toronto has clocked 11,000 views.

[2] In Korea, the heroic role of the Royal Ulster Rifles led to a monument at the War Memorial in Seoul to the Irish who died during the conflict, including members of the Columban fathers. In Israel, the story of John Henry Patterson as the founding father of the Israeli Defence Forces was a revelation about a fascinating character whose life inspired work by Hemingway and Hollywood movies. By coincidence, I was there when his remains were moved from the US to the military cemetery in Moshav Avihayil so they could lie with his comrades in the Jewish Legion.

[3] This was particularly vital when it came to the issue of the Indigenous and the Irish role there, as for example on the colonisation of the Prairie NW, the Irish heritage of the Mounties or indeed the Residential schools and all their terrible legacies.

[4] Searching for the Graves of Palliser and Butler in Ireland in the Summertime | eamonncmckee

Appendix: Op Eds, Blogs and Podcasts

Opinion Pieces

Dr. Eamonn McKee

November 2020Opinion: At its core, Halloween is an Irish celebration of the rhythms of nature – The Globe and Mail
March 2021Opinion: Today’s St. Patrick’s Day is a celebration of diversity – The Globe and Mail  
March, 2022Opinion: Celebrating Irish-Canadian relations past, present and future – The Globe and Mail
March 2022St. Patrick’s Day: What a century of Irish independence tells us (thestar.com)  
December 2023ottawacitizen.com/opinion/mckee-move-over-colonel-by-the-irish-helped-found-ottawa-too  
March 2024Opinion: Celebrating Irish-Canadian relations past, present and future – The Globe and Mail  

Blogs

  
October 2020To Canada! | eamonncmckee  
November 2020Impressions of Ireland-Canada: Building on Progress | eamonncmckee  
December 2020Ireland’s Economic Resilience, Canada’s Market Opportunity | eamonncmckee  
February 2021St Brigid’s Day Festival Vancouver | eamonncmckee  
  March 2021Matonabbee and Mr Dobbs: How an Irishman Accidentally Helped Create Canada | eamonncmckee  
August 2021Canada’s Capital and the Rideau Canal: The Irish Connection | eamonncmckee  
October 2021Reasons to Read the Canadian Journal of Irish Studies | eamonncmckee  
November 2021Confluence, Divergence, and Convergence: the Irish Window at St Bart’s Church, Ottawa. | eamonncmckee  
December 2021 Canada’s Exploring Irish | eamonncmckee  
January 2022Canada is the Future that Ireland Never Had | eamonncmckee  
January 2022A History of Canada and the Irish in Canada in 250 Words | eamonncmckee  
April 2022Ireland at 100: Colonization, Self-Determination and What the Census Tells Us | eamonncmckee  
August 2022Black ’47 Commemoration and Remembrance, Ottawa | eamonncmckee  
September 2022Joseph Quinn, Montréal Irish Person of the Year | eamonncmckee  
October 2022Fifty Irish Lives in Canada: It’s Complicated and That’s Great | eamonncmckee  
October 2022Tadhg O’Brennan, a great candidate as the first recorded Irishman in Canada | eamonncmckee  
October 2022Bram Stoker’s Dracula, A Novel for Our Times | eamonncmckee  
October 2022Wellington and Ottawa: How an Irishman and a Pot of Spanish Silver Transformed Canada | eamonncmckee  
November 2022Memorial Service and Rededication of the Restored Geddes Window | eamonncmckee  
November 2022I’m adding Rideau Hall to the Bytown-Ottawa Irish Heritage Trail | eamonncmckee  
November 2022Irish Night on the Hill, 23 November 2022, Remarks | eamonncmckee  
December 2022John Ahearn, founder of an Irish Canadian Dynasty | eamonncmckee  
December 2022Thomas Ahearn, the ‘King of Electricity’ and the Man who Made Ottawa | eamonncmckee  
December 2022Frank Ahearn: Businessman, MP, and Sports Mogul | eamonncmckee  
December 2022Lilias Ahearn Massey: The Utility of Glamour and the Value of Privacy | eamonncmckee  
December 2022          Christmas Message 2022 | eamonncmckee  
March 2023Fifty Irish Lives in Canada: Preface | eamonncmckee  
March 202350 ILIC: Tadgh O’Brennan and the Irish of New France | eamonncmckee  
March 202350 ILIC: Bishop Michael Fleming, radical pastor with a long legacy in Newfoundland | eamonncmckee  
June 2023Colonial Twins: Ireland, Canada, and the Great Irish Famine | eamonncmckee  
August 2023The Irish and the Colonisation of the Prairie North-West | eamonncmckee  
August 2023Searching for the Graves of Palliser and Butler in Ireland in the Summertime | eamonncmckee  
November 2023Software and the Singularity: Ireland at the Cutting Edge of Quantum Technology | eamonncmckee  
February 2024How the County Meath brothers Richard and Arthur Reshaped the British Empire East and West | eamonncmckee  
March 2024Ottawa Valley Irish: Douglas, where our Canadian journey really began | eamonncmckee  
April 2024Gratitude Event at the Irish Residence | eamonncmckee  
May 2024Global Irish Famine Way: Update! | eamonncmckee  
June 2024Mother Barnes, ‘The Witch of Plum Hollow’ | eamonncmckee  
August 2024Irish Lumber Barons and the Making of Modern Canada | eamonncmckee  

Podcasts

Embassy of Ireland

March 2022Arrivals: The Voyage of St. Brendan – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify   Arrivals: The Voyage of St. Brendan, part two – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
April 2022The Voyage of St. Brendan: 1 Barrind’s Story – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
May 2022Visit to Newfoundland and Labrador May 2022 – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
October 2022Ambassador Eamonn McKee in Conversation with Jillian van Turnhout – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
January 2023The Women of Ulysses – with Ambassador Eamonn McKee and Mary Durkan – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
February 2023Brigid: Resistance and Resilience – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
February 2023Ancient Gaelic Ireland and All That Remains of It – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
March 2023Irish Heritage Month – Three Irish Governors-General – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
March 2023Irish Heritage Month – the Aherns – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
March 2023Irish Heritage Month – Richard Bulkeley – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
March 2023Irish Heritage Month – Fifty Irish Lives Launch – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
March 2023Embassy of Ireland Book Club – Canadian Spy Story: Irish Revolutionaries and the Secret Police by David Wilson – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
November 2023Embassy of Ireland Book Club – The Imperial Irish by Dr. Mark McGowan – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
December 2023Embassy of Ireland – Discussion with Ambassador Jacqueline O’Neill – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
February 2024Embassy of Ireland – Elisabeth Barnes, The Witch of Plum Hollow – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
February 2024Embassy of Ireland – Panel Discussion with Chan. Claudette Commanda and Prof. Bridget Brownlow – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
March 2024Embassy of Ireland – Saturday Irish Radio with Amb. McKee – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
April 2024Ambassador McKee reads out the Irish Heritage Month Declaration – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  
June 2024Embassy of Ireland – Global Irish Famine Way – Embassy of Ireland to Canada | Podcast on Spotify  

ENDS

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Filed under Canada, Irish Heritage of Canada

Irish Lumber Barons and the Making of Modern Canada

Perhaps the item that best captures the connection between Canada and the Irish lumber barons is the moose head that greets you on entering Hamwood House, Dunboyne. It will confuse Irish visitors who know little if anything of Canada’s rich Irish heritage. But you will know.

The impact and influence of the Irish in Canada is an epic story that deserves to be remembered as a hugely consequential part of the wider story of the global Irish Diaspora. Aside from the many Irish who came to Canada as labourers, farmers, wives, mothers, home-builders, and soldiers, a select few emerged as leaders who helped shape the development of Canada. Best known among them were political figures, like Thomas D’Arcy McGee for his role in Canadian Confederation in when it became the first Dominion of the British Empire in 1867. Others played leading though unsung roles shaping Canada’s colonial administration, jurisprudence, science, journalism, literature, science, exploration, and policing.

The story of these Irish leaders and pioneers defies the stereotype of the Irish as labouring in the lower ranks of whatever they did, as brawn not brain, as workers and definitively not as managers, entrepreneurs, and architects of society. I hazard that this explains why the Irish role in Canada has been ignored and forgotten. Stereotypes are powerful because they reinforce, even define power structures about who is deigned to lead and who to follow. They are a foundational and sustaining trope of imperial projects shaping public opinion and academic biases.

One such group of Irish leaders exemplifies this tension between their influence and their obscurity, the Irish lumber barons. There were pioneers, indeed architects, of Canada’s lumber industry, the mainstay of the country’s economy for almost two centuries.

The key role of the Irish lumber barons was that more impressive where success required mastery of complex logistics, the management of large dispersed workforces, acute business acumen, a capacity for risk taking, an understanding of finance, and a capacity to leverage political influence. Moreover, it required a high degree of physical robustness in a vast, harsh, unforgiving, and largely undeveloped landscape. This was not a business for the feint hearted.

Lumber exports succeeded beaver pelts as British North America’s leading commodity as the 18th century turned to the 19th. They remained the engine of Canada’s economy throughout much of the 20th century.  Lumber is still a multi-billion Canadian export. As an export industry, lumber began in earnest with Henry Caldwell, born near Belleek, Fermanagh in 1738.

Caldwell had a distinguished role fighting in the Seven Years War (French Indian War, 1754-1763), rising to become assistant to Quarter Master General Guy Carleton (born 1724 in Strabane) at the 1760 Siege of Quebec, the climatic defeat of the French. Retiring from the army in 1774, he bought land and a house in Quebec, and built a gristmill. The ink was barely dry on the lease when the American Continental Army invaded, led by Benedict Arnold, and seized Caldwell’s house. The Revolutionary Army marched on Quebec City. Caldwell again teamed up with Carleton who was leading the defence of the city. The main attack was led by Brigadier General Richard Montgomery (from Swords), who faced off against Caldwell in a series of attacks in December. The attacks were countered by Caldwell and petered out after Montgomery died in a hail of grapeshot. Caldwell was honoured with the task of taking the news of the victory to the king in England.

On his return to Quebec, Caldwell became a member of the Legislative Council, was appointed the chief tax collector (a dubious source of some of his fortune), resumed his business milling and selling flour to the British Army (£22,000 worth in 1810 alone), acquiring some 600,000 acres of land and building Caldwell Manor and his estate at Belmont. He cut such a dash in Quebec society that he was the model for the hero of Frances Brooke’s The history of Emily Montague (1769), Canada’s first novel.  

By the 1790s, Napoleon had emerged from the turmoil of Revolutionary France waging a new type of warfare based on national mobilization. The centuries-long global rivalry with Britain entered its final decisive stage. Caldwell recognized the strategic value of Canadian lumber when war broke out between Britain and France in 1803.  In 1804, he persuaded Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville, the Lord of the Admiralty, that Canadian timber provide for the Royal Navy what it had formerly secured in the Baltic. Caldwell converted his flour mills to saw mills. The Canadian lumber industry experienced exponential growth with Napoleon’s Berlin Decree of 1806 which made trade with England an offence.  England responded with heavy tariffs on imports, notably lumber.  The Admiralty’s agreement to source lumber in British North American effectively created Canada’s main export economy for the rest of the 19th century, thanks to Caldwell’s strategic vision and business acumen.

Enter the next Irish lumber baron, George Hamilton from Dunboyne, related to Caldwell by his marriage to Anne Hamilton. She was the daughter of Alexander Hamilton who had settled in Knock, County Dublin from the family base in Armagh. The Hamiltons had been part of Ireland’s history for almost two centuries. Originally from Scotland, they were a famously talented lineage. The first Hamilton in Ireland had been Hugh, arriving from Scotland around 1616 and settling in Co Down.  (Hugh was the son of Sir James Hamilton of Evandale and Helen Cunningham.   Of Norman lineage, the storied Hamiltons had been in Scotland since at least 1271 with a record of one Walter FitzGilbert Hamilton.) Hugh’s great grandson, Alexander, established Newtownhamilton in Co Armagh but he himself had settled in Knock, Co Dublin.  Alexander’s son Charles sold the townland of Newtownhamilton and purchased 500 acres in Dunboyne.  There he built Hamwood House between 1779 and 1783 at a cost of £2,500. 

Charles married Elizabeth Chetwood and they had fifteen children, of whom six survived to adulthood, five sons and one daughter.  His son Charles (1772-1857) inherited Hamwood on the death of his father in 1818. George (born 1781) was the third son after Robert.  Since he was not in line to inherit the estate, George was apprenticed to a miller, learning what was thought to be a rewarding business in the flour trade.  William, the fourth son, joined the navy.  John got a commission in the army.  Eventually George and Robert established a business at Liverpool Cove importing timber from the Baltic, Madeira wines, and other goods.

Just as Napoleon’s Continental Blockade had boosted Caldwell’s prospects, it cut off George’s Baltic supply of lumber. No doubt advised by Caldwell of the new opportunities in Canada, George arrived in Quebec sometime between 1804 and 1806. In his early twenties, and backed by Caldwell’s introductions to the social elite of Quebec City, George was soon a man about town, a successful merchant, and a leading voice for the Tories. 

By 1807 George was providing Quebec with Madeira wine and other fineries supplied by his brother Robert in Liverpool. William soon joined him and in 1806 was working with the Northwest Company, the upstart company competing with the Hudson Bay Company in the fur trade.  By 1809, George and William were business partners as Auctioneers and Brokers, selling a wide variety of goods.  By now, imports of European lumber to Britain had plummeted while Canada’s lumber exports were soaring in direct response. That year, the Hamilton brothers took a twenty-year lease of 425 acres from their uncle across the river from the city and called it New Liverpool Cove, named after the location of their business back in England.  They were ready to enter the burgeoning transatlantic lumber trade.  As the Dictionary of Canadian Biography records, ‘By early 1807 [George] was already among the 21 leading merchants and office holders of conservative convictions who constituted the exclusive Barons’ Club.’

While the small lumber industry had been well established in New Brunswick (Miramichi, St Croix and St John rivers) and Nova Scotia, the Ottawa Valley wilderness offered vast potential to meet the new demand from England as well as the burgeoning ship building industry in Quebec.  Infiltration of the Valley by New England settlers had begun in 1800 when Philemon Wright, guided by an Algonquin, arrived from Massachusetts with a group to settle where the Gatineau and Ottawa Rivers met, overlooking the rapids at Chaudière Falls. They cleared two farms, the ‘Gateno’ and Columbia where Wright built a log cabin, sardonically called the Wigwam. The settlement of Wright’s Town followed, with a forge, bakery, tailor, cobbler and eventually a school. This became Hull, today’s Gatineau.

The local Ottawa Algonquin Anishinaabe community, led by Constant Pinesi, had been devastated by European diseases like smallpox and measles.  They were in no position to offer resistance to the influx of settlers. Dams and forest clearance by settlers were ruining his traditional hunting grounds. The Algonquin had fought with the French in the wars against the British but had allied with the British with the defeat of the French at Quebec. Pinesi in vain protested to the authorities about the occupation and seizure of his lands either side of the Rideau River, lodging twenty fruitless petitions.

In 1806 Wright floated the first raft of timber and lumber to Quebec: 700 hundred logs, 9,000 boards and countless staves, all hand cut.   He sold boards and staves along the way during the journey of sixty-two days to help pay for it.  Thanks to Napoleon’s blockade, lumber from the Ottawa Valley was now greatly in demand.  As the new industry developed, the system for cutting, hewing and transportation was improving.  By 1813, the journey from Hull reduced to thirteen days. Wright shipped twenty rafts a year and employing over two-hundred men.  

The Napoleonic wars in Europe created a lumber industry boom in Canada.  George Hamilton soon had an expanded mill at Hawkesbury up and running. In the War of 1812, George became an officer of the Militia in Quebec and later Lotbinière.  With his relentless energy, business acumen, and hardiness, George was a major figure in the business, social, military, and political communities of Upper and Lower Canada. As his business prospered so did the development of the Ottawa Valley. Meanwhile Constant Pinesi and his son joined the British to fight the invading Americans in the War of 1812-14, though his service did nothing to advance his claim to his lands.

Drawn to the Valley by the nascent lumber industry, and in partnership with Montreal businessman John Shuter, Americans David Pattee and Thomas Mears leased land from the Algonquins and Nipissings for use of the two islands at Hawkesbury (named after Robert Banks Jenkinson, Baron Hawkesbury and, as Lord Liverpool, British Prime Minister 1812-1827).  At the head of the Long Sault Rapids, they built dams and the first saw mills on the Upper Canada (Quebec) side of the Ottawa River.  By 1809, orders for timber from the Admiralty were worth £2,500,000 a year. Across the river at Grenville on the Quebec side, Scotsman Archibald McMillan established himself in 1810 with 19,000 acres.  The Hawkesbury mills became the lynchpin in the supply of lumber from the Ottawa and Gatineau Valleys to Quebec, Montreal and across the Atlantic to Ireland and Britain.

Pattee and Mears lost control of their mills at Hawkesbury in 1811. They had found themselves over-stretched and in debt to Quebec merchants including the Hamiltons.  George Hamilton took possession of the mill with the intention of selling it.  However, he changed his mind and moved to Hawkesbury to run the operation.  It was the start of a long and bitter feud with Mears and Pattee, beginning with a suspicious fire that destroyed Hamilton’s mill and stock the following year.

The rivalry was certainly primarily about control of the lumber business but there was too a clash between the aristocratic and conservative values of Hamilton and the democratic instincts of the American settlers like Wright, Pattee and Mears. Hamilton viewed these republican Americans with deep suspicion as seditious of the natural and aristocratic order of society. Hamilton believed in big business and sought to eliminate the small lumber operators who he believed added instability to a famously capricious and unstable lumber trade. This did not stop his own illegal logging on crown lands.

In 1816, the 34 years old George married 17 years old Lucy Susannah Christiana Craigie. They would have at least seven and upwards of ten children. When George’s brother William retired, George moved to Hawkesbury to oversee his mill, supported by brothers Robert in Liverpool and John in New Liverpool. The DCB explains their business model:

‘The mill-site, at the head of the Long Sault Rapids, was ideal. It was within easy reach of the timber stands on the Ottawa River and its tributaries. The rapids provided ample power and an obstacle to the rafting of timber to market at Quebec; lumberers unwilling to break up and then rebuild their rafts sold them to Hamilton. Finally, the Ottawa valley was opening up, and settlers were happy to sell logs from their lands in return for merchandise from the store that Hamilton had the astuteness to build. Unlike other up-country lumberers, Hamilton, as part of an integrated company, could avoid the costs and delays occasioned by middlemen at Quebec and in England. The Hawkesbury operation grew; by 1818 it employed 80 men, a large number for the time, and in 1822 it reportedly ran 40 saws.’

The lumber boom ended with the final defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo in 1815.  However, this was just part of the industry’s cyclical nature and exports would resume to the UK and in later decades to supply the rapidly expanding housing market in the United States. 

Barely escaping financial ruin with another downturn in the market in the early 1820s, and losing three of his young children when their canoe overturned on the Ottawa River, as well as his house at Hawkesbury to fire, Hamilton undaunted rebuilt the business and by 1825 his mills were employing 200. By the 1830s, Hamilton and the other lumber barons were eyeing the white and red pines of the Gatineau Valley. Along with Peter Alyn, Philemon Wright and Sons, and Charles Low, Hamilton formed an Association and won approval for the Gatineau Privilege, designed to limit logging to the members of the Association, the intention to exclude and suppress smaller operators. The Association in turn invested in improvements to facilitate transport of the logs out of the Gatineau, into the Ottawa River and onward to the mills at Hawkesbury. Employment at Hawkesbury grew accordingly.

While on manoeuvres with the militia, Hamilton caught a cold and died in January 1839. The DCB sums up his influence:

George Hamilton was among the first of the great timber barons who played an important part in the public life of British North America in the 19th century. At his worst he was headstrong and opinionated, an inveterate tory of undemocratic principles and élitist sensibilities, prepared even to overstep the law in order to get his way. At his best he brought to the crude and brutal frontier that was the Ottawa valley in the early years of the timber trade a rare politeness of manners and generosity of spirit. Significantly, Hamilton was a gifted businessman and lobbyist. He bent his energy, determination, and influence to building an important firm in a fundamental sector of the colonial economy and to bringing a modicum of stability to a trade plagued by the fluctuating markets and the repeated spates of oversupply that generate the boom-and-bust syndrome of staple-producing colonies.

By now, one of the greatest strategists produced by the Irish Protestant Ascendancy, Arthur Wellesley (the Duke of Wellington) was putting into action his plan to fortify Canada against another attempted invasion by the US. Shocked by the War of 1812, Wellington believed that British North America was the key to Britain’s global hegemony. He wanted a canal to supply Montreal from Kingston via the Ottawa River should the Americans lay siege from the St Lawrence. Canals were to be vital part of a defensive network that included Martello Towers, rebuilt fortifications at Quebec City and Halifax, organized militias of retired soldiers (many Irish) and arms depots. Though designed to be militarily strategic, this infrastructure was a boon to the nascent Canadian economy. The construction of the Rideau Canal between 1826 and 1832 prompted the establishment of Bytown, called after the Colonel John By, the British Army engineer who designed and oversaw the Canal’s construction.

Yet if the Canal originated the settlement at Bytown, the lumber industry of the Ottawa and Gatineau Valleys sustained the town as well as providing a ready market for agricultural produce to feed the growing labour force army cutting, hewing, milling, and transporting lumber. As land was cleared of timber, it became farms that fed the lumber workforce and that income sustained towns and hamlets throughout the Ottawa Valley.

All of this economic activity attracted waves of Irish emigrants. The ships that took Canadian lumber across the Atlantic came back with stone ballast and their owners were more than happy to accommodate passengers for cheap fares. This facilitated the first large wave of Irish emigrants to Canada, Protestant farmers, mainly from Wexford and south Wicklow. This region in Ireland had witnessed terrible scenes of sectarian violence during the Irish rebellion of 1798 and in its bloody suppression by the local Yeomanry.

The canals (Lachine at Montreal, the Rideau, and the Grenville at the Long Sault rapids at Hawkesbury) and fortifications to create Wellington’s fortress Canada attracted the second wave of Irish emigrants into the area; Catholics leaving Ireland because of the agricultural depression that followed the conclusion of the Napoleon wars in 1815 (thanks again to Wellington!)

Among the emigrants was Nicholas Sparks (Catholic) from Wexford who got a job working with Philemon Wright’s son Ruggles.  Soon he had graduated from labouring to buying supplies in Montreal and Quebec. Having accumulated some money, he bought the John ‘Honey’ Burrows land, 200 acres where the Rideau entered the Ottawa. It cost him ₤95. Today it is downtown Ottawa.

Construction of the Rideau Canal began in 1826. Many of its Irish labourers followed its builder, Thomas McKay, from the newly completed Lachine Canal at Montreal. Because he owned the land at the head of the canal, Nicholas Sparks was suddenly sitting on a fortune.  As he said, he also became landlord to a town.  Daniel O’Connor, attracted by this business opportunities, arrived from Tipperary. O’Connor became a successful businessman and civic leader, holding several government posts.  Named in his honour, O’Connor Street Bridge across Patterson Creek opened up the Glebe to development. In 1826, O’Connor’s daughter Mary Anne By O’Connor was the first European girl born in Bytown (a boy had been born that year too but died in June 1827).

John Egan who arrived in Bytown from Galway in 1830, got a job as a clerk and soon had established a dry goods store at Aylmer, near Wright’s Town. It was not long before he began his lumber business, eventually becoming one of the richest and most influential lumber barons in the Ottawa Valley (thanks to the historian of the Ottawa Valley, Michael McBane has written Egan’s biography, a rare exception to the general amnesia about the Irish lumber barons). 

By 1844, Egan was rafting 2.5 million feet of lumber on 55 rafts to Quebec each season. Ten years later his company employed 3800 men in 100 lumber camps, most of them Irish, the largest operation owned and managed by one individual. Egan advertised in ports like Cork, New Ross and Donegal for workers to come and he sold them land at 50c an acre. Once the emigrants had earned enough in the tough and dangerous work of culling timber, they bought land and became farmers. Like Sparks, Egan was close friends with Ruggles Wright. As the elected representative of Ottawa County (then ‘Pontiac’), Egan worked to develop its infrastructure and helped secure the reserve that is today’s Algonquin Anishinaabe’s Kitigan Zibi.

McBane writes:

‘From birth into a poor Catholic farming family in the west of Ireland to wealthy lumber baron and much loved Member of the Parliament, John Egan’s life was a spectacular transformation wrought by the combination of his natural talents and the opportunities provided in the Ottawa Valley.  He had left for Canada aged 20 with few resources and little education.  By the time he died of cholera aged 46, Egan had used his business and political pre-eminence to develop the lumber industry, encourage Irish settlement, secure land for the Anishinaabe reserve, support the campaign to make Bytown a capital city, and help lay the foundations for liberal democracy in pre-Confederation Canada.’

Army officers and the affluent settled on and to the west of the Hill overlooking the canal works at Bytown. The workers congregated in the swampy reaches of the riverbanks and what would become Lowertown, today’s Byward Market. The dense mix of mainly Irish, French, Scots and Indigenous craftsmen and labourers were a business opportunity.  Supplying them with food and alcohol, Mother McGinty’s tavern was a famous haunt, run with fearsome oversight by the woman herself.  As Grant Vogl of the Bytown Museum writes, “Sarah Ritchie was born in County Monaghan, Ireland about 1803 and became a somewhat legendary figure in early Bytown, specifically among the navvies (inland navigators) of Corktown along the works of the Rideau Canal. Family history recounts that Sarah was born into a well-to-do Protestant family and at an early age, fell in love with the family’s Catholic stable hand John McGinty (b.1799).”

Chief Pinesi continued to protest in vain against his land being stolen. Even though he and his son had proven their loyalty in the War of 1812, the authorities ignored him. Pinesi and his wife died of cholera of 1834. None of the Ottawa or Gatineau Valleys were ever subject to a treaty and they remain to this day unsurrendered. The Algonquin Anishinaabe still fight to undo this and reclaim their territory.

By now, with the Rideau Canal finished, the Irish looked to muscle in on the French control of the lumber industry. They were led by Peter Aylen, most likely born in Liverpool of Irish parents. Charismatic, cunning and violent, Aylen led the Irish in the Shiners’ war, a period of criminal chaos that terrorized Bytown throughout most of the 1830s. Estimates vary but fatalities perhaps numbered upwards of forty. When it was over, Aylen settled across the river and, as we have seen, became a respectable businessman and one of the Association that had won the Gatineau Privilege.

Andrew Leamy’s family arrived from Tipperary while he and his siblings were still children. Born in 1816, Andrew got his first job rafting Aylen’s lumber to Quebec and in at least one incident disrupted a meeting in Bytown as part of the Shiners’ War. Leamy then worked with Philemon Wright. Handsome and charming, Leamy earned a reputation for great physical strength and hardiness in a community of tough lumbermen. He used his fists when needed, tragically killing a young Scotsman, though he was acquitted having successfully argued self-defence. Despite this, Leamy became an enormously popular figure, known for his generosity and compassion.

The Irish leaders of Ottawa were tightknit. Nicholas Sparks had stayed close to the Wrights, married Philemon Jr’s widow Sally Olmstead and adopted his daughter, Erexina, and after he had died in a carriage accident a year after her birth. Leamy married Erexina; they were aged 19 and 15 respectively.  They would have ten children. He eventually bought 160 hectares of the farm that he had worked, along with its pond and reputedly the famous ‘Wigwam’. With money to be made in lumber, Leamy decided to build a mill there, along with a canal connecting Lake Leamy to the Gatineau River to move the timber to the Ottawa River and on to Montreal.

A young carpenter building Leamy’s mill was J.R. Booth, son of Irish emigrants. Fascinated since boyhood with the mills and dams of the lumber industry all around him, Booth methodically learned the business. Having leased the mills at Chaudière Falls in 1857, two years later Booth won the contract to supply Thomas McGreevey, another son of Irish immigrants, who in turn had won the contract to build the new parliament. With this money, Booth bought the rights to the pines of the Madawaska River from John Egan’s widow. This would become the source of Booth’s fortune, eventually making J.R., as he was known, the richest man in Canada (and some say for a time the richest man in the world), and the largest private railway owner in the world. With lumber storage facilities at Rouses Point NY, a lumber operation in Burlington VT, a sales office in Boston, and a network of railways, lumber slides and canals, Booth’s lumber supplied the booming US market as its economy took off after the American Civil War.

McGreevey and Booth were great examples of the success of the first generation of Irish Canadians.  Another was Tom Ahearn, whose father John and mother Nora had arrived from Ireland in rough and tumble Bytown. Tom was born in 1855 when Bytown became Ottawa. A precocious inventor, Ahearn became the Edison of Canada, bringing electricity to his home town (before it arrived in the US Congress), creating the electric tram system that defined the city’s residential development, and inventing the electric oven. And at the heart of the city were Sparks and O’Connor streets in tribute to their founding roles. One of the leading figures in Bytown-Ottawa from the 1840s to the 1860s was alderman and three-time Mayor Thomas J. Friel, son of Irish parents from Montreal.

Leamy became fast friends with Canada’s most famous Irishman, Thomas D’Arcy McGee, one of the architects of Canada’s new constitutional status as a Confederation and Dominion. Both friends must have celebrated well in 1867. With Confederation, D’Arcy McGee saw his dreams of a Canadian nation realised. He had been supported in this great project by the Irish Governor General Charles Monck who had visited Ottawa and picked Rideau Hall to be the official residence. While three of Leamy’s children had died, seven had survived to adulthood. He had invested heavily in the development of Hull and was instrumental in the creation of the Independent School Board the previous year. They had many reasons to raise a glass together in 1867.

Both Leamy and D’Arcy McGee were surrounded by their fellow Irish, with the Irish language commonly heard in the streets of Byward and throughout the Valleys. From Byward Market to the settlements of Douglas, Arnpior, Shawville and Sheenboro, to the towns of Almonte, Renfrew and Smiths Falls to the farms and settlements of the Gatineau Valley like Low and Brennan’s Hill, there were thriving Irish communities throughout the region.

Tragically, both Leamy and D’Arcy McGee were murdered just a year later.  On 13 April 1868, a Fenian gunman shot D’Arcy McGee in the back of his head as he entered his lodgings. Eight days later, Leamy was found in the morning barely alive at the side of the road near his home, suffering from a bad head injury and bruising to his ribs. Evidently attacked the previous night on his return from Ottawa, his gold watch and chain were missing.  He never regained consciousness and died later that day. He was buried in the cemetery of Notre Dame in Hull, on the land he had donated to the Oblate Fathers. Enquiries came to nothing and the authorities at Aylmer entered an open verdict. Ten years later, a disgruntled employee was arrested for his murder.  

What does the role of the Irish in the lumber industry tell us?  That they were pioneers, innovators, entrepreneurs, as well as community leaders. That they played critical early roles in its early development, notably Caldwell and Hamilton. In a very real way, they were the founders of Ottawa because while Wellington had commissioned the Rideau Canal and thereby created Bytown, the town itself would have failed without the lumber industry simply because the canal was never a commercial venture. Its purpose after all had been military. The next generation developed these pioneering businesses. By the 1870s, Hamilton Brothers (Georges’ sons Robert based in New Liverpool and John in Hawkesbury) were employing 1000 men, producing 700,000 feet of lumber per day, 40 million board feet a year, and generating almost $550,000 annually. John went on to become a Senator and a highly respected banker. And because lumber was so important to Canada, figures like Caldwell, Hamilton, Egan, Leamy and first-generation Irish Canadians like Booth and the Hamilton brothers played leading roles in the development of Canada itself.

Ottawa was famously polluted by sawdust choking the river and smoke from paper mills casting a poisonous smog over the town, leading Oscar Wilde to harangue his audience when he visited in 1881. Logs bobbed from shore to shore of the Ottawa River up to the 1970s. Yet there is little or no evidence of the industry now. Nor is there much if any physical evidence of this significant Irish heritage. The Hawkesbury Mills were literally swallowed by history when the Carillon Dam flooded the Long Sault Rapids in 1964. Few remember or know the origins of Lake Leamy’s name, that Sparks and O’Connor were from Ireland, or that Wellington played a key role in developing Canada’s early infrastructure and indeed its capital city.

Yet if you look hard enough, you can find it. The office of the Hawkesbury Mill (built in the early 1830s) survives as Le Chenail Cultural Centre. In street names like Dufferin, Lisgar, and Booth. The memorial to Thomas Ahearn in the Glebe. The graves of Egan and the Ahearns in Beechwood Cemetery and the graves in Hull of Sparks and Leamy. The granite bench unveiled last year memorializing John Egan in Aylmer. Irish placenames throughout the Ottawa Valley. Irish inflected accents in Douglas. Geddes’s stained-glass window in St Bartholemew’s Church. The Celtic Cross to those who died building the Rideau Canal. We’ll add to these traces soon: Bronze Shoes will be placed in Macdonald Gardens Park to mark the resting place of 360 Irish Famine emigrants who died in Bytown in 1847 (again thanks to Michael McBane who preserved the memory of this site, hitherto forgotten).

There is little if any appreciation of the Irish heritage of Canada though thankfully historians like Mark McGowan, David Wilson, Donal Akenson, Jane McGaughey, William Jenkins, and Michele Holmgren continue to explore it, regularly publish immensely valuable research. Thanks to their efforts and the survival of Irish studies courses, there is a strong foundation on which to develop awareness.

As for awareness in Ireland of Irish emigration to Canada, the twists and turns of our history conspired against it. The horrific drama of the Famine, the scale of emigration to the US in the generations that followed, the rise of Irish America, and the upheavals of 1916-1922 that took Ireland out of the British Empire and separated it from Canada within it, obliterated the memory of the Irish in Canada in the Irish public imagination.

Perhaps the item that best captures the connection between Canada and the Irish lumber barons is the moose head that greets you on entering Hamwood House, Dunboyne. On a trip to Ireland in April last year, I had sought out the current resident of Hamwood House, Charles Hamilton, the seventh in line to occupy the Hamilton seat at Hamwood.  Affable and quietly spoken, he had returned to Hamwood after a career in England when he inherited the house and what was left of the estate.  Too small to be a viable farm, Charles has opened the house to the public to defray the cost of repair and maintenance. Smaller than some of Ireland’s grand houses from the highpoint of the Ascendancy in the 18th century, Hamwood is a delightful place to visit.  Centuries of artefacts sit in easy comfort and the atmosphere is redolent with memories of times past and Ireland’s complex colonial and colonizing history. The moose head in the hall will confuse Irish visitors who know little if anything of Canada’s rich Irish heritage. But you will know.

Eamonn

1 August 2024

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Gratitude Event at the Irish Residence

Remarks in Honour of Indigenous Famine Relief, 1847

11 April 2024

H.E. Eamonn McKee, Ambassador of Ireland

Fáilte roimh, bienvenue, welcome, biindigen!  Distinguished visitors, guests, friends.

I want to begin by formally thanking the representatives of the Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee and Wendat nations who gave us aid in the worst year of the long history of the Irish, 1847. They saw our refugees arrive on these shores and river banks, stricken and starving. They collected food for those already here.  They collected money to send to Ireland.  That act of compassion, of agency in the face a catastrophe that had befallen another people, shines out from the pages of history.  Go raibh míle maith agaibh! Thank you! Merci! Kitchi Megwitch.

That page in our shared history would have remained closed were it not for the story keepers and on this occasion the story finders.  I want to acknowledge Jason King, historian at the National Famine Museum and Professor Mark McGowan for not only finding this story but for promoting it. Their efforts have shone a light on this page of history and led this event and other events of gratitude and commemoration for the historic support of our Indigenous friends.

I want to acknowledge Jason King, the Museum and the Irish Heritage Trust for inspiring these events. I want to sincerely thank the team at the Embassy, particularly Anna McCready, for organising this event at the Residence.  She’s done a magnificent job.

Thank you to Ross Davison for his wonderful music on the Uilleann pipes and to Two-Spirit David Charette for his powerful singing and drumming.

As always, to Anishinaabe Elder and Chancellor of the University of Ottawa, Claudette Commanda, your land acknowledgement and words were beautiful and inspiring.

In gratitude and commemoration, we are planting a copse of River Birch here at the Irish Residence. We could not think of a more appropriate symbol of thanks for this occasion. It is a native species, one used often to sustain lndigenous life, like the birch bark and resin used to make the emblematic canoe. The gardener, Ian Lawford, who planted the first one told me that by the time he had begun to plant the second tree, a small bird had landed on the first one to watch him.  I like to think this was a good omen. I want to thank Ian and his team for the great job that Urban Tree Works have done.  We look forward to seeing this copse grow in the years to come, just as we look forward to the growth of our relationship with our Indigenous friends.

In May, we are launching the Global Irish Famine Way.  It is a heritage trail that will mark the passage of Irish famine emigrants in Britain and Canada, and later in the US, South Africa and Australia, even as far as Tasmania. With QR codes, it will be both a physical and a digital telling of this story, one of agency and resilience in the face of catastrophe, in the main man-made.

Each location will have a set of Bronze Shoes, cast from a pair found in the thatched roof of a 19th century cottage in Ireland. They were bound together and hidden as if to say that though we may depart, we remain bound to our home.

One plinth will mark the grave of some 300 Irish famine refugees who died here in Ottawa and lie somewhere in Macdonald Gardens Park.  Ottawa City Council will vote on a very strong motion of support for this on 1 May.

We also plan to put a plinth and Bronze Shoes here in this Birch copse to tell the story of the help we got from our Indigenous friends and allies. 

The Global Irish Famine Way will be dedicated to all those who gave hope through compassion and success through opportunity to the strangers on their shores.

To me, this sums up the philosophy of the Indigenous, demonstrated not just in 1847 but throughout history and sustained to this day.

Thank you.

Go raibh míle maith agaibh. Kitchi megwetch

Embassy of Ireland

Ottawa

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