Lord
Strathcona
1830 - 1914
Donald
Alexander Smith, 1st Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal. Fur trader,
railway financier, diplomat, and philanthropist. Smith was born
at Forres, Moray, Scotland and joined the Hudson's Bay Company
[HBCo] in 1838. He attained the rank of chief factor in 1862 and
was the company's land commissioner in Manitoba from 1870 to 1874.
He was one of the principal financiers of the Canadian Pacific
Railway (and drove the last spike of the CPR in 1885) and a major
investor in the Bank of Montreal. He represented Selkirk, Manitoba
in the House of Commons from 1871 to 1880, and was MP for Montreal
West from 1887 until 1896 when he formally retired from politics.
He
made a fortune, many times over, from investments in land, railways,
and banking. He was knighted in 1886 and raised to the peerage
as Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal in 1897. He was Canada's high
commissioner to Great Britain from 1896 until 1913.
As
High Commissioner, Lord Strathcona used his influence and his
personal fortune to promote several imperial causes. He is possibly
best known for equipping and maintaining the celebrated cavalry
unit known as Lord Stathcona's Horse during the Boer War (1899-1902).
He also promoted educational causes. He was a generous patron
of McGill University in Montreal, he founded the Royal Victoria
College for women, and was rector and chancellor of the University
of Aberdeen.
Strathcona's
philanthropy, educational interests and imperial enthusiasms converged
in 1909 when he established the Strathcona Trust, an endowment
intended to promote military drill and physical training in the
public schools of Canada. The physical education curriculum in
many provinces, including British Columbia, originated with programmes
funded by the Strathcona Trust.
Lord
Strathcona Elementary School in Vancouver is named after him.
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