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Authority record

Grant, J. A. (James Alexander), 1831-1920

  • n 2017190081
  • Person
  • 1831-1920

Sir James Alexander Grant was born on August 11, 1831, in Inverness, Scotland.

He was a physician and politician. He came to Canada with his parents and studied at the University of Queen's College and McGill College (M.D., 1854). He served as president of the College of Surgeons of Ontario and president of the Mechanics' Institute and Athenaeum of Ottawa. He was a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, president of the Tuberculosis Association of Canada, the Canadian Medical Association, and was a delegate to many international medical congresses. He was an honorary member of the American Academy of Medicine. Grant represented Russell in the House of Commons of Canada as a Conservative Party of Canada member from 1867 to 1874. He also represented the City of Ottawa in the federal parliament from 1893 to 1896. He published a number of articles in medical journals in England and Canada and served as a physician to several Governors-General from 1867 to 1905. He was also a member of the Geological Society of England and also published articles on geological subjects. He was knighted in 1887.

In 1856, he married Maria Malloch (1835–1922). He died on February 6, 1920, in Ottawa, Ontario.

Grant, J.C.

  • Person
  • Active 1826

J.C. Grant was a legal professional who lived in Quebec in 1826.

Grant, William, 1743-1810

  • Person
  • 1743-1810

William Grant (also known as William Grant “of Three Rivers”) was born in 1743 in Kirkmichael, Scotland, and died in 1810 near William Henry (Sorel), Lower Canada. He was the son of John Grant and Genevieve Forbes and came from a large family that had many members active in the fur trade during the early decades of British rule. In 1787, Grant married Marguerite Fafard in Trois-Rivières, and they had five children. Grant moved to Montreal in 1767 and worked as a merchant in the fur trade, pursuing this career for nearly twenty years. He worked with associates in the region southwest of Michilimackinac (Mackinaw City, Michigan) and in the vicinity of Lake Superior and Lake Nipigon. Grant engaged in wholesale and retail trading of products imported from Great Britain, conducting his business primarily in Trois-Rivières where he lived with his family. In 1791, Grant joined Étienne-Charles Campion, a Michilimackinac trader, and Samuel Gerrard, a Montreal merchant, in establishing the firm of Grant, Campion and Company, which played a large role in the trade southwest of the Great Lakes and the Timiskaming region. While active in this firm, he supplied James Mackenzie, one of his business partners, with imported merchandise for the local market. Soon after, Grant chose a new associate named Claude Laframboise and remained in partnership with him until 1800, doing business under the name of William Grant and Company in Trois-Rivières and Grant and Laframboise in Montreal. In 1801, he settled in Nicolet with his family. In 1792, Grant was appointed justice of the peace for the Trois-Rivières district.

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