Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Thomas McGreevy

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Succeeded by
  
John Hearn

Preceded by
  
John Hearn

Name
  
Thomas McGreevy


Succeeded by
  
Richard Reid Dobell

Role
  
Poet

Succeeded by
  
John Sharples, Sr.

Thomas McGreevy wwwucdiecoseigallerycapacgif

Born
  
July 29, 1825 Quebec City, Lower Canada (
1825-07-29
)

Died
  
March 16, 1967, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Books
  
Richard Aldington, an Englishman, Thomas Stearns Eliot: A Study, Collected Poems

Political party
  
Liberal-Conservative

Education
  
Trinity College, Dublin

Thomas McGreevy (July 29, 1825 – January 2, 1897) was a Canadian politician and contractor.

Born in Quebec, he was the son of Robert McGreevy, a blacksmith, and Rose Smith. In 1867 he was elected MP for Quebec West (as a liberal conservative), and was re-elected in 1872, 1874, 1878, 1882, 1887 and 1891.

He was expelled from the House of Commons for corruption on September 29, 1891, and following his conviction for defrauding the government was sentenced to a year in prison. (Other MPs to be expelled from the Canadian House of Commons include Louis Riel and Quebec communist Fred Rose.) Following his release on March 1, 1894, he was re-elected to Parliament in 1895.

He was the contractor for the building of the Parliament of Canada.

He was married three times: to Mary Ann Rourke on July 13, 1857, to Bridget Caroline Nolan on February 4, 1861 and to Mary Georgina Woolsey on January 30, 1867. He had several children by Mary Georgina including Stella and Herbert. Mary Georgina Woolsey came from a wealthy Quebec family, now most famous for being the subject of William Berczy's portrait of The Woolsey Family (1809).

References

Thomas McGreevy Wikipedia