Herbert Samuel Holt

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Sir Herbert Samuel Holt
Sir Herbert Samuel Holt

Sir Herbert Samuel Holt (February 12, 1856September 29, 1941) was an Irish-born Canadian civil engineer who became a businessman, banker, and corporate director.

He was born in Ballycrystal, Geashill, Co. Offaly, Ireland and emigrated to Canada in 1875, settling in the city of Montreal.

Herbert Holt became a pioneer developer of the energy business in the Province of Quebec and owned the Montreal Gas Company. In 1901 he merged Montreal Gas with Rodolphe Forget's Royal Electric Company to create the Montreal Light, Heat and Power Company. In 1915, their successful conglomerate was nationalized by legislation passed by the provincial government. It came under the control of the Québec Hydro-Electric Commission which eventually became the Provincial Crown Corporation, Hydro-Québec.

Holt served as president of the Royal Bank of Canada from 1908 to 1934, and the bank's chairman from 1934 until his death. He was a director of Montreal Trust Company, Canada Car and Foundry and several other Canadian companies. He was appointed chairman of the Federal Plan Commission in 1913.

In 1915, he was knighted by King George V. On May 7 of the same year his son, William Robert Grattan Holt, survived the sinking of the RMS Lusitania at the age of 15.

Herbert Samuel Holt died in 1941 and was interred in the Mount Royal Cemetery in Montreal.

Following its formation in 1979, Herbert Holt's significant contribution to the Canadian economy was recognized through his election to the Canadian Business Hall of Fame.

However, Holt was also one of the richest and most reviled Montrealers of his time. When his death was announced at a baseball game in 1941, the crowd cheered. To many French Canadians, Holt was the epitome of 'les maudits anglais' ('the damned English').[citation needed]

Herbert is remembered for being a harsh banker who enjoyed large profits while the common man suffered during the great depression. In his own words “If I am rich and powerful, while you are suffering the stranglehold of poverty and the humiliation of social assistance; if I was able, at the peak of the Depression, to make 150% profits each year, it is foolishness on your part, and as for me, it is the fruit of a wise administration.”

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