|
K.C.M.G., D.C.L., LL.D., was born in Glasgow
on the 11th day of January, 1815. He was the second son of Mr. Hugh
Macdonald, who lived originally in the parish of Dornoch, Sutherlandshire,
but who early in life removed to Canada. When the emigration movement
began in 1820, Mr. Hugh Macdonald and his family (John Alexander being
then in his fifth year) took passage for British North America. Mr.
Macdonald settled near Kingston, then the most important town in Upper
Canada; and after residing here for upwards of four years, the family
moved to Quinté Bay, leaving John Alexander, then in his tenth year, at
school in Kingston. The lad was placed at the Royal Grammer School, under
the tuition of Dr. Wilson, a fellow of Oxford University, and subsequently
under that of Mr. George Baxter. After he had entered his sixteenth year,
his father took him away from school and articled him in the office of
George Mackenzie, where he applied himself diligently to study of the law.
When he began to practise law, there were heard the first mutterings of
the storm soon to break over the country; and the year following, numbers
of disaffected persons, in Lower Canada under Papineau, and in Upper
Canada under William Lyon Mackenzie, rushed blindly to arms. A body of
hunters, as the invaders were called, under the command of a Pole named
Von Shoultz, crossed from the American side over to Prescott, but Shoultz
was captured, and his followers killed and dispersed. Courts-martial were
established at London and Kingston, and at the latter city Shoultz and his
accomplices were tried for there crimes. Young Macdonald was counsel for
the unfortunate Pole, and by the skill and force of his address attracted
wide notice. In 1844, during the most intolerable portion of Lord
Mercalfe's rule, Mr. Macdonald was elected for Kingston, defeating Mr.
Manahan. On first entering the legislature, he sat unmoved at his desk
while the frays for which that period of parliamentary history was
remarkable went on, "looking", says a gentleman who remembers
having seen him there, "half careless and half contemptuous.
Sometimes in the thick of the mêlée he was busy in and out of the
library. I scarce ever remember seeing him then about the House that he
was not searching up some case either then impending or to come up at a
later date. He was for a great part of his time, too, buried in a study of
constitutional history". His first speech was in reply to the Hon.
Robert Baldwin, and though it was daring, it was based on a wide
foundation of common sense. During the last days of toryism, Mr. Draper,
the Attorney-General, came one day to our subject and said, "Your
turn has come at last, Macdonald". He became Receiver-General, but
after a brief period assumed the management of Crown Lands, where, in a
short time he reduced much confusion to harmony. But in 1849 the reformers
under Mr. Baldwin and M. Lafontaine were triumphant; and during the riot
and incendiarism of that year we see Mr. Macdonald's figure and hear some
of his impassioned utterances. On the downfall of the Hincks-Morin Caninet,
he became Attorney-General-West, under the leadership of Sir Allan MacNab,
but this ministry becoming unpopular, both in and out of Parliament, it
was forced to resign, and Mr. George Brown was called upon to form a
Cabinet. He undertook the task, but the Governor-General having refused
him permission to dissolve the House and appeal to the country, he, after
a few days, resigned, and the old ministry was recalled to power. After a
short time, however, Sir Allan was relegated to the sick-room, and John A.
Macdonald appeared as leader of the Upper Canada section, that ambitious
and persevering spirit, George E. Cartier, leading the Lower Canada
division. Then came the period of transition, during which political
events seem to pass before the eye like objects in the kaleidoscope. There
was a wide gulf between the Upper and Lower Canada, though for a lengthy
period John A. Macdonald in his own personality spanned the chasm. The
seeds of discontent had borne Fruit, and public sentiment was in a
feverish state of unrest. Then came Sandfield Macdonald upon the scene as
premier, but his administration crumbled away as if it had been reared on
sand. The Taché-Macdonald (John A.) administration followed, but is
tenure of life hung by the slimmest thread, and eventually it survived
only by the mercy of those who were really its enemies. It was out of this
dead-lock, or the "fatal balance of parties", that grew the
impulse for a confederation. A coalition was formed, of which George
Brown, Oliver Mowat and William McDougall, on the part of the reformers,
were members. Thereafter the figure of John A. Macdonald stands boldly
out. It was he who led and shaped the movement, and conducted negotiations
in the maritime provinces and in England; and in recognition of his zeal
and service he was called to lead the first administration under
confederation, and had a knighthood conferred upon him. His career since
that date is fresh in the memories of most who watch public events. Though
achieving many brilliant successes, once he found disaster, when in 1873
the Legislature declared him guilty of corrupt collusion with Sir Hugh
Allan in a transaction relating to the construction of the Canadian
Pacific Railway; but whether this most successful and able statesman was
guilty of the charge laid at his door or not, the people forgave him, and
in 1878, with loud acclamation, took him back again to power. Sir John has
always stood in high regard in the mother country, and in 1879 was sworn
in a member of Her Majesty's Privy Council. In 1865, he received the
honorary degree of D.C.L. from Oxford University; he also received the
degree of LL.D. from Queen's University, Kingston; and likewise a D.C.L.
of the University of Trinity College, Toronto. Although he is now well
advanced in years, he does not seem to have lost any of his old vigour;
friends press more closely around him, and the circle of his admirers
seems to grow larger every day. Since 1878 he had been instrumental in
accomplishing several important acts of legislation, noteable among those
being the project, now nearly completed, of building the Canada Pacific
Railway. Sir John resides at Stadacona Hall, Ottawa, and his social
responsibilities are shared with admirable grace and success by his
talented and exceedingly popular wife, Lady Macdonald. The following are
some of the measures of legislation accomplished by the right hon.
gentleman since his entry into public life: The secularization of the
clergy reserves; the extension of the municipal system; reorganization of
the militia; the reorganization of the civil service; the ratification of
the Washington treaty; confederation of B. N. A.; the construction of the
Intercolonial Railway; the extension and consolidation of the Dominion;
the National Policy; and the measure for the construction of the Canadian
Pacific Railway.
You can read a book about him in
.pdf format here! (26.5Mb) |