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Robert Mackay

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Appointed by
  
Wilfrid Laurier

Name
  
Robert Mackay

Children
  
Cairine Wilson


Political party
  
Liberal

Succeeded by
  
George Green Foster

Role
  
Mathematician

Robert Mackay

Preceded by
  
Alexander Walker Ogilvie

Born
  
February 24, 1840 Caithness, Scotland (
1840-02-24
)

Died
  
December 25, 1916(1916-12-25) (aged 76)

Short Talk: Professor Robert MacKay, University of Warwick


Robert Mackay (February 24, 1840 – December 25, 1916) was a Canadian businessman and statesman.

Contents

Life and career

Mackay was born in Caithness, Scotland. An 1855 emigrant to Montreal, Canada from his birthplace in Caithness, Mackay got his start working at the Henry Morgan & Company department store. He then went to work for Mackay Brothers wholesalers, owned by his uncles. Highly successful in business, he became a close business associate of powerful Montreal entrepreneurs: Rodolphe Forget, stockbroker; Herbert S. Holt, President of the Royal Bank of Canada; and Vincent Meredith, President of the Bank of Montreal.

Robert Mackay was president of Herald Publishing Company, vice-president of the Bell Telephone Company of Canada, and sat on the board of directors of Canadian Pacific Railway, Royal Trust Company, Bank of Montreal, Montreal Light, Heat & Power Company, Dominion Textile Company, Limited, and others.

A member of the Liberal Party of Canada, he twice ran unsuccessfully for the Canadian House of Commons as the Liberal Party of Canada candidate for the St. Antoine, Quebec riding in the 1896 and 1900 Canadian federal elections. In 1901, he was appointed by Prime Minister Laurier to the Canadian Senate where he served until his death on Christmas Day in 1916.

Robert Mackay is interred with his wife Jane in the Mount Royal Cemetery in Montreal. His daughter, Cairine Mackay Wilson, became the first woman appointed to the Canadian Senate. His home in Montreal's Golden Square Mile was demolished in 1930.

His brother Hugh served in Quebec's Legislative Council.

References

Robert Mackay Wikipedia