Moss Kent Dickinson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moss Kent Dickinson (June 1, 1822 – July 19, 1897) was a Canadian businessman, mayor of Ottawa from 1864 to 1866 and member of the Canadian Parliament from 1882 to 1887.
He was born in Denmark, New York in 1822. His family moved to Cornwall, Ontario in 1827. By 1847, he had established a business transporting goods on the Rideau Canal between Ottawa and Kingston.
In 1860, with Joseph Merrill Currier, he completed construction of a mill, later Watson's Mill, at what would become the village of Manotick. Dickinson chose the name "Manotick" from Ojibwa words meaning "long island". Dickinson's sawmill and grist mill served as the economic basis for the formation of the village.
His home in Manotick near the mill served as campaign headquarters for Sir John A. Macdonald in the 1882 election. He was elected in the riding of Russell in the 1882 federal election.
He died in Manotick in 1897.
Dickinson Days are celebrated in Manotick on the first weekend in June.
[edit] Trivia
Dickinson was the last non-Liberal MP for Russell County until Pierre Lemieux was elected in 2006, a span of 124 years.[1]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- Synopsis of federal political experience from the Library of Parliament
- Watson's Mill
Mayors of Ottawa | |||
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Bytown: J. Scott | J.B. Lewis | Hervey | Sparrow | R.W. Scott | Turgeon | Friel Ottawa: J.B. Lewis | McGillivray | Workman | Friel | Dickinson | Lyon | Rochester | Martineau | Featherston | Lyon-Fellowes | Waller | Bangs | Mackintosh | St. Jean | Bate | McDougal | Stewart | Erratt | Birkett | Durocher | Cox | Borthwick | Bingham | Payment | Morris | Davidson | Cook | J. Ellis | Hastey | D. Scott | Champagne | Hopewell | Hinchey | McVeity | Porter | Fisher | Plant | Watters | Balharrie | A. Ellis | Allen | Nolan | J.E.S. Lewis | Bourque | Goodwin | Whitton | Nelms | Reid | Fogarty | Benoit | Greenberg | Dewar | Durrell | Laviolette | Holzman | Watson | Higdon |
|||
Preceded by: Henry J. Friel |
Mayor of Ottawa 1864-1866 |
Succeeded by: Robert Lyon |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from October 2006 | All articles lacking sources | 1822 births | 1897 deaths | Mayors of Ottawa | Members of the Canadian House of Commons from Ontario | Historical Conservative Party of Canada MPs | Pre-Confederation Ottawa mayors | American Canadians | People from Lewis County, New York | People from Cornwall, Ontario