Thomas Shaughnessy, 1st Baron Shaughnessy

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Thomas George Shaughnessy

Thomas George Shaughnessy circa 1910
Born 6 October 1853(1853-10-06)
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Died 10 December 1923 (aged 70)
Montreal, Quebec

Thomas George Shaughnessy, 1st Baron Shaughnessy (6 October 185310 December 1923) DCL, LLD, KCVO, FRCI, was an American-born railway administrator who rose from modest beginnings as a clerk and bookkeeper for the Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad (a predecessor of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad) to become the president of the Canadian Pacific Railway, serving in that capacity from 1899 to 1918. In recognition of his stewardship of the CPR and its contributions to the war effort during the Great War, Shaughnessy was elevated to the Peerage of the United Kingdom on 1 January 1916 as Baron Shaughnessy, of the City of Montreal in the Dominion of Canada and of Ashford in the County of Limerick,.

Shaughnessy was born in Milwaukee to Thomas Shaughnessy, of Limerick, Ireland and married Elizabeth Bridget Nagle in 1880 and educated at Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland. The Shaughnessys' had two sons (William James Shaughnessy served as captain and adjutant of the Duchess of Connaught’s Irish-Canadian Rangers; second Baron of Shaughnessy) and three daughters.

Shaughnessy House, his home in Montreal, was declared a national historic site in 1974 and is now part of the Canadian Centre for Architecture. The surrounding district is named Shaughnessy Village. [1]

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Business positions
Preceded by
William Cornelius Van Horne
President of Canadian Pacific Railway Limited
1899 – 1918
Succeeded by
Edward Wentworth Beatty
Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
New Creation
Baron Shaughnessy
1916–1923
Succeeded by
William James Shaughnessy