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  1. John A. Macdonald

    John A. Macdonald

    1st prime minister of Canada from 1867 to 1873 and 1878 to 1891

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  1. Oct 30, 2017 · Please watch: "5BX "Five Basic Exercises"- Royal Canadian Air Force Training Film (1959)" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMGQzMjeO1k --~--

    • 28 min
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    • Canada 150 Archive
  2. Mar 17, 2014 · January 11th is Sir John A. Macdonald Day in Canada, marking the birth, in 1815, of Sir John Alexander Macdonald, the first Prime Minister of Canada and one ...

    • Mar 17, 2014
    • 95.7K
    • cpac
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  4. Feb 7, 2017 · Drama, intrigue, scandal, and a massive, continent-spanning railroad - all this and more in the story of Sir John A. Macdonald's life and legacy.The very fir...

    • Feb 7, 2017
    • 25.5K
    • Retrospect
  5. Revelations of this scandal forced his resignation in 1873, and the brief term of Canada’s second prime minister, Alexander Mackenzie (1822-1892), but Macdonald was re-elected back to power in 1878, where he served four more terms until his death in 1891. Name: Sir John Alexander MacDonald. Born: January 11, 1815, Glasgow, Scotland.

    • Early Life and Education
    • Early Career
    • Legal Career and Business Interests
    • Entry Into Politics
    • Premier of The Province of Canada
    • Macdonald and Confederation
    • Nation Builder
    • Pacific Scandal
    • Return to Power
    • National Policy

    Macdonald and his parents, Hugh and Helen (née Shaw) Macdonald, immigrated to Kingston, Upper Canada, from Scotland when he was five years old. (See also Scottish Canadians.) His father opened a series of businesses in the area. Macdonald grew up in Kingston and in the nearby Lennox, Addington and Prince Edward counties. He attended the Midland Dis...

    At age 15, Macdonald began to article with a prominent Kingston lawyer. He showed promise both at school and as an articling student. At 17, he managed a branch legal office in Napaneeby himself. At 19, he opened his own office in Kingston. Two years later, he was called to the Law Society of Upper Canada. Macdonald’s early professional career coin...

    Macdonald practiced law for the rest of his life with a series of partners; first in Kingston (until 1874) and then in Toronto. His firm engaged primarily in commercial law; his most valued clients were established businessmen or corporations. He was also personally involved in a variety of business concerns. He began to deal in real estate in the ...

    Macdonald entered politics at the municipal level. He served as alderman in Kingston from 1843 to 1846. He took an increasingly active part in Conservative politics. In 1844, at age 29, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada. Parties and government were in a state of transition. A modern departmental structure had begu...

    Back in office, Macdonald assumed the prestigious post of attorney general of Canada West (formerly Upper Canada). When Conservative leader Sir Allan MacNab retired in 1856 — an event Macdonald helped engineer — Macdonald succeeded him as joint-premier of the Province of Canada; first with Étienne-Paschal Taché, then with George-Étienne Cartier(185...

    During the years 1854–64, Macdonald faced growing opposition in Canada West to the political union with Canada East (formerly Lower Canada). In 1841, the Province of Canada had been created, uniting the two colonies under one parliament. (See Act of Union.) The Reform view, voiced by George Brown of the Toronto Globe, complained that the needs and ...

    During Macdonald’s first administration (1867–73), the new country expanded dramatically. The original four provinces of Confederation were joined by Manitoba (1870); the North-West Territories (1870; present-day Alberta and Saskatchewan); British Columbia (1871); and Prince Edward Island (1873). The Intercolonial Railway between Quebec City and Ha...

    Macdonald’s involvement in the negotiations for a contract to build the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) to British Columbia formed the heart of the Pacific Scandal. Macdonald and senior members of his Conservative cabinet accepted large campaign contributions for the 1872 election from shipping magnate Sir Hugh Allan; in exchange, Allan received the...

    Macdonald’s defeat in 1874 coincided with the onset of a depression in Canada. This made the Liberal government of Alexander Mackenzie appear ineffective. In 1876, at the urging of a group of Montreal manufacturers, Macdonald began to advocate a policy of “readjustment” of the tariff. This policy helped him return to power in 1878. He remained prim...

    The promised changes in tariff policy were introduced in 1879. They were frequently revised in close collaboration with leading manufacturers. This formed the basis for Macdonald’s National Policy. It was a system that protected Canadian manufacturing by imposing high tariffs on foreign imports, especially from the United States. (See Protectionism...

  6. Jan 6, 2015 · Canada's Father Figure. Sir John A. Macdonald has been caricatured as a drunkard and a crook. But without him there would be no Canada. by Richard J. Gwyn. — Posted January 6, 2015. Sir John A. Macdonald, 1877. Notman & Sandham, McCord Museum/11-46604.2. On July 1, 1867, and for quite a time afterwards, it would have been difficult to find ...

  7. John A. Macdonald helped create the Conservative Party in 1854. He was Attorney General of Canada West from 1854 to 1858, 1858 to 1862 and from 1864 to 1867. Along with with Étienne-Paschal Taché, he served as Joint Premier of the Province of Canada, from 1856 to 1857.