- William Goodhue Perley
William Goodhue Perley (
June 4 1820 –April 1 1890 ) was a businessman and member of theCanadian House of Commons from 1887 to 1890.He was born in
Enfield, New Hampshire in 1820. During the 1840s, he established a lumber business based on timber from northernNew York . As high quality wood became harder to find, Perley and his partner, Gordon B. Pattee, decided to relocate to theOttawa Valley and establishedsawmill s nearOttawa supplying wood to theUnited States .With other timber interests, in 1866, he helped establish the Ottawa City Passenger Railway Company, a system of horse-drawn trams, which provided transportation for people but also moved lumber from the sawmills to ships and trains. Perley, with J.R. Booth and others, helped develop railways in the region, including theCanada Atlantic Railway and theOttawa, Arnprior & Parry Sound Railway .He failed in an attempt to become the
Liberal-Conservative Party candidate for Ottawa City in 1882, but was later elected as a Conservative in the same riding in 1887.Although his business had originally benefited from reciprocal trade agreements between Canada and the United States, later in life, he supported protective tariffs to help develop the economy of Canada.
Perley died in Ottawa in 1890 while still in office.
External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5759 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
* [http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/key/bio.asp?lang=E&query=3035&s=M Synopsis of federal political experience from the Library of Parliament]
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