James Skead

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James Skead  Source: Library and Archives Canada
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James Skead
Source: Library and Archives Canada

James Skead (December 31, 1817July 5, 1884) was an Ontario businessman and politician. He was a Conservative member of the Senate of Canada for Rideau division from 1867 to 1881 and from 1881 until his death in 1884.

He was born in Moresby, England in 1817 and studied there, coming to Lower Canada with his father in 1832. The family later settled in Bytown. Skead entered the lumber business, setting up operations on the Madawaska River. As a result of his experience in building timber slides along that river, he was contracted to build a slide on the Ottawa River at Bytown. His lumber operations expanded to include forests along the Mississippi River in Ontario. He was elected to the city council of Ottawa in 1861; he was elected to the Legislative Council of the Province of Canada in 1862. After Confederation, he was named to the Senate.

In 1871, he built a large steam-powered sawmill on the Ottawa River; a community sprang up around it which later became the Britannia neighbourhood of Ottawa. He helped promote the Upper Ottawa Steamboat Company, later becoming its president. Skead was also an investor in several railway companies as well as vice-president of the Canada Central Railway and the Montreal and City of Ottawa Junction Railway. On his farm, he raised Ayrshire and Durham cattle; Skead was president of the Ottawa Agricultural Insurance Company and the Ontario Fruit Growers' Association. He was also a member and later president of the Ottawa Board of Trade and the Dominion Board of Trade.

Skead resigned from the Senate in January 1881 because he was suffering financial difficulties at the time; he was named again to the Senate again later that same year and served until his death in Ottawa in 1884. He had suffered damage to his lungs when he fell from his carriage in 1882; this eventually led to his death two years later.

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