Samuel Crane
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Samuel Crane (1794 – November 13, 1858) was a businessman and political figure in Canada West.
He was born in Massachusetts in 1794 and had settled in Lower Canada by 1820. He became a partner in a forwarding business at Lachine, west of Montreal. The firm owned a share in the Ontario, an American steamship operating on the Great Lakes. Crane moved to Prescott in Upper Canada some time later and partnered with John Macpherson of Kingston in the transporting of goods and passengers. The two partners dominated the forwarding business in the area, in part because of their alliance with the Ottawa and Rideau Forwarding Company which controlled the forwarding trade on the lower Rideau Canal. In 1837, Crane became a director of the Commercial Bank of the Midland District. He was elected to the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada for Grenville in 1841. In 1849, he was named to the Legislative Council; in 1858, his seat was declared vacant due to lack of attendance. In the early 1850s, the partners began to sell off their assets due to declining business and the nearing completion of the Grand Trunk Railway in the area. When the company that purchased much of their business failed in 1857, the partnership was dissolved and declared bankruptcy.
Crane died at Prescott in 1858.