- Hugh Allan
Sir Hugh Allan, KCMG (
September 29 ,1810 –December 9 ,1882 ) was a Scottish-born Canadian financier and shipowner.Hugh Allan was born in 1810 at
Saltcoats , Ayrshire, the second son of Captain Alexander Allan (1780-1854) ofSaltcoats (a first cousin of the poetRobert Burns ), by his wife Jean Crawford (1782-1856). Hugh's father had founded the already important Allan Shipping Line in 1815, connecting Scotland and Canada, but it was Hugh who developed it from Montreal and made it into the huge financial success which it is remembered for today.One of Hugh's five brothers, Andrew Allan (1822-1901), followed him to Montreal in 1839 and later succeeded him as President of the Allan Steamship Line. Their eldest brother, James Allan (1808-1880) of Ashcraig House,
Skelmorlie , ran the shore-based aspects of the business in Scotland. Another brother, Bryce Allan (1812-1874), ran the company in England, and later bought Aros House on the Isle of Mull in 1874, which his son, Alexander (1844-1927) succeeded to two months later and gave up the shipping business to devote his life to the running of the estate [http://www.btimaging.co.uk/ArosPark/parkweb-3.html] .Hugh went to
Canada in 1826, settling inMontreal ,Lower Canada , where he worked as a clerk in a merchandising business. [McCallum, Margaret E. "Allan, Sir Hugh", in "The Canadian Encyclopedia" (Edmonton: Hurtig Publishers, 1988), Volume 1, p.63.] After ten years there, by now a partner in the company, [McCallum, p.63.] he got a loan from his family back inScotland and bought sailing ships and steamers, expanding the company's shipping business. [McCallum, p.63.]Allan became President of the Montreal
Board of Trade in 1851 (remaining until 1854), [McCallum, p.63.] using his position to help persuade the Canadian government to subsidize a regular mail ship from Montreal to London. [McCallum, p.63.] His firm, Montreal Ocean Steamship Company (commonly the Allan Line), using sophisticated ships built in Clyde and political contacts, [McCallum, p.63.] took control of the mail contract in 1856. [McCallum, p.63.] The Allan Line also carried immigrants under government subsidy. [McCallum, p.63.] He soon became the richest man in Canada with a personal estate estimated between to have been between six and ten million dollars.Allan had interests in new communications technology, [McCallum, p.63.] manufacturing, [McCallum, p.63.] aand mining. [McCallum, p.64.] In 1852, he became president of the
Montreal Telegraph Company , [McCallum, p.64.] ultimately selling MTC's "telephone plant" toBell Telephone for $75,000. [McCallum, p.64.] He also establishedcoal mine s inNova Scotia and factories fortextile s, shoes, paper, tobacco, and iron and steel inCentral Canada . [McCallum, p.64.]Thanks to
Quebec 's support forrailway construction, Allan expanded in that area. He created asyndicate to build the national railway, promised as a condition ofBritish Columbia joining Confederation. To get the contract, he bribed Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald, suscribing over $350,000 [McCallum, p.63.] for Macdonald's re-election campaign in 1872, but thePacific scandal (and Macdonald's defeat) meant the plan fell through.Hugh Allan was
knight ed byQueen Victoria in 1871, [McCallum, p.64.] died inEdinburgh , of a heart attack after his wife's death, and was buried in Montreal. [McCallum, p.63.] . Sir Hugh was one of the wealthiest men in the world at his death. The shipping line was passed on to his second [Farr, D.M.L. "Allan, Sir Hugh Andrew Montagu", "op.cit.", p.64.] son,H. Montagu Allan .Ravenscrag, Sir Hugh's Montreal home built in 1863 [http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/scripts/large.php?accessnumber=II-144763.1&Lang=1&imageID=144101]
Ravenscrag, showing the conservatory [http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/scripts/large.php?accessnumber=II-143392&Lang=1&imageID=144083]
The view from Ravenscrag in 1869 [http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/scripts/large.php?accessnumber=MP-0000.194.4&Lang=1&imageID=150410]
Sir Hugh Allan in 1871 [http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/scripts/large.php?accessnumber=I-63540&Lang=1&imageID=142427]
Biography on Sir Hugh's father, with a picture of his brother James Allan (1808-1880) [http://gdl.cdlr.strath.ac.uk/mlemen/mlemen002.htm]
Sir Hugh's brother, Andrew, in 1871 [http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/scripts/large.php?accessnumber=I-63830&Lang=1&imageID=142440]
Sir Hugh's brother's, Andrew's, carriage outside his home [http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/scripts/large.php?accessnumber=II-138291&Lang=1&imageID=143944]
Full biography of Sir Hugh Allan [http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=39458&query=allan]
ources
Notes
References
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5336 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
* [http://www.1upinfo.com/encyclopedia/A/Allan-Si.html Biography of Hugh Allan]
*McCallum, Margaret E. "Allan, Sir Hugh", in "The Canadian Encyclopedia", Volume 1, pp.63-4. Edmonton: Hurtig Publishers, 1988.
*Farr, D.M.L. "Allan, Sir Hugh Andrew Montagu",in "The Canadian Encyclopedia", Volume 1, p.64. Edmonton: Hurtig Publishers, 1988.
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