- Austin Cuvillier
Austin Cuvillier (
August 20 1779 –July 11 1849 ) was a businessman and political figure inLower Canada andCanada East .He was born Augustin Cuvillier in
Quebec City in 1779 and was hired by aMontreal auctioneer, eventually taking over the business when his employer retired. After he formed a partnership with two other men, the business went bankrupt. By this time, Cuvillier had adopted the anglicized first name Austin. By 1807, he was back in the auction business.During the
War of 1812 , he served with the militia. In 1814, he was elected to theLegislative Assembly of Lower Canada representing Huntingdon County, as a member of theParti canadien . He played an important role in the founding of theBank of Montreal and was one of its first directors. He also helped found the Montreal Fire Insurance Company and became president in 1820. In 1821, he was part of a commission negotiating the sharing of customs duties between Lower andUpper Canada . He opposed the union of the two Canadas. In 1828, he helped present petitions against Governor Dalhousie's policies inLondon . In 1829, he began to distance himself from theParti patriote . He opposed theNinety-Two Resolutions that were presented in 1834. By 1836, he was one of the most important auctioneers in Montreal and served as president on the city's Committee of Trade, later the Montreal Board of Trade. He commanded a battalion in the militia during theLower Canada Rebellion .In 1841, he was elected to the
1st Parliament of the Province of Canada representing Huntingdon and was elected speaker. In 1844, he defended GovernorCharles Theophilus Metcalfe against the Reformers when the governor wished to retain exclusive control over patronage. This led to the end of his political career and Cuvillier returned to his auction business.He died of
typhus at Montreal in 1849.External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=3340 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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