Henry Judah

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Henry Judah (1808February 10, 1883) was a lawyer and political figure in Canada East. He was also known as Henry Hague Judah.

He was born in London in 1808. He studied law at Trois-Rivières, was called to the bar in 1829 and set up practice at Trois-Rivières. Judah was one of the first Jews to become a lawyer in early Canada; the first was a distant cousin, Aaron Ezekiel Hart, called to the bar in 1824. He married Harline, the daughter of doctor René-Joseph Kimber, in 1834. In 1840, he moved his practice to Montreal. Judah was elected to the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada for Champlain in an 1843 by-election held after his father-in-law was named to the Legislative Council. He was named Queen's Counsel in 1854. He helped found the Montreal City and District Savings Bank (now the Laurentian Bank of Canada) and later served as its president. Judah also helped promote the Montreal and Bytown Railway.

He died at Montreal in 1883.

Judah was a cousin of Ezekiel Hart, who was expelled from his seat in the legislative assembly of Lower Canada because he was a Jew.

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