- John O'Donohoe
John O'Donohoe (
April 18 1824 –December 7 1902 ) was a Canadian politician.Background
Born in
Tuam ,Galway ,Ireland , O'Donohoe was educated at St. Jarlath's College. In 1839, he emigrated toToronto and married Charlotte Josephine Bradley in 1848. He was called to the Bar of Ontario in 1869 and was appointed Q.C. in 1880.Before entering politics, O'Donohoe was an auctioneer and a land speculator. On one piece of land on Shuter Street in Toronto, O'Donohoe had constructed in 1856 a row of terrace homes named "O'Donohoe Row". Although renamed
Walnut Hall in 1903, the building survived until 2007.Political career
O'Donohoe served as an alderman on
Toronto City Council in 1857 and 1859.O'Donohoe ran unsuccessfully for the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1871 election and in a 1872 by-election. He ran for theCanadian House of Commons in the 1872 federal election for the riding ofToronto East and was defeated. He was elected in the 1874 election but was unseated on petition in November 1874 and lost the resulting 1875 by-election. He was appointed to the Senate on the advice ofJohn Alexander Macdonald in May 1882 representing thesenatorial division of Erie, Ontario. ALiberal-Conservative , he served 21 years until his death in 1902. [cite book|title=Personnel of the Senate and House of Commons, eighth Parliament of Canada, elected June 23, 1896|url=http://www.archive.org/details/personnelofsenat00montuoft|accessdate=2007-04-24 |publisher=Lovell|location=Montreal|pages=page 77]References
External links
*
s-ttl|title=
Member of Parliament forToronto East
years=1874–1875
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