- Adam Oliver
Adam Oliver (
December 11 1823 –October 9 1882 ) was anOntario businessman and political figure. He representedOxford South in theLegislative Assembly of Ontario as a Liberal member from 1867 to 1876.He was born in
Queens County, New Brunswick in 1823, grew up there and went to London inUpper Canada in 1836, where he became a carpenter. He moved to Ingersoll in 1850 and established a construction business there and later a lumber yard. He served on the village council and was reeve from 1859 to 1862. Although he was opposed to Ingersoll becoming a town, he served as its first mayor in 1865 and 1866. He was also a captain in the local militia and a magistrate. He was elected to represent Oxford South in the Ontario legislature in 1867 and 1871.After fire destroyed his lumber yard in
Orillia in 1871, he set up asawmill andplaning mill near Fort William in partnership with aToronto lumberman and two lawyers from Ingersoll. After Fort William was selected as a major station on theCanadian Pacific Railway , this company profited from land sales to the government and contracts. The residents of nearby Port Arthur protested that this site had been chosen as a result of Oliver's political connections; a federal Liberal government was in power at the time. The Conservative-controlled Senate which conducted an investigation found that there was some substance to these allegations. He had already resigned in 1874 because his company had sold timber to a buyer for the provincial government; members of parliament were not allowed to conduct business with the government. He was reelected in a by-election held later in the same year. He was elected again in 1875 but was unseated after evidence of bribery was found. He died in Ingersoll in 1882.References
* "Adam Oliver of Ingersoll, 1823-1882: Lumberman, Millowner, Contractor, and Politician", George Emery and Glenna Oliver Jamieson. Ingersoll: Ingersoll Historical Society 2002
External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5741 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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