George Albertus Cox

The Hon.
George Albertus Cox
Senator for Saugeen, Ontario
In office
November 13, 1896  January 16, 1914
Appointed by Wilfrid Laurier
Personal details
Born May 7, 1840
Colborne, Upper Canada
Died January 16, 1914 (aged 73)
Toronto, Ontario
Political party Liberal
Religion Methodist

George Albertus Cox (May 7, 1840 January 16, 1914) was a very prominent Canadian businessman and a member of the Canadian Senate.

He was born in Colborne, Upper Canada in 1840. He began work as a telegrapher for the Montreal Telegraph Company (acquired by Great North Western Telegraph Company in 1881 and finally merged into Canadian National Telegraph in 1915) and became their agent in Peterborough, Ontario. In 1861, he became an agent for the Canada Life Assurance Company. He served seven years as mayor of Peterborough and accumulated real estate in that area. In 1878, he became president of the Midland Railway of Canada, later leasing it to the Grand Trunk Railway. In 1884, he founded the Central Canada Loan and Savings Company, moving to Toronto in 1888 and becoming president of the Canadian Bank of Commerce in 1890.

During the 1890s, he was involved in the purchase of the Toronto Globe and the Toronto Evening Star. In 1896, he was appointed to the Senate of Canada by Sir Wilfrid Laurier. In 1898 Cox and Edward Rogers Wood incorporated the National Trust Company in Toronto that became the Scotia Trust in 1997 and part of the Bank of Nova Scotia. In 1900, he became president and general manager of Canada Life Assurance. In 1901 Cox and Edward Rogers Wood established investment dealer Dominion Securities Corporation Limited, today a part of the Royal Bank of Canada.

By this time, he controlled many of the important Canadian companies in the insurance and finance sectors. His companies helped finance the Canadian Northern Railway, the Crow's Nest Pass Coal Company and utilities developments in Brazil which became consolidated under Brazilian Traction, Light and Power Company. Cox was one of the few Canadian millionaires of his era. A number of the young men who got their start in Cox companies, such as William Thomas White, James Henry Gundy, Edward Robert Peacock, and Frank Porter Wood, younger brother of Edward Rogers Wood.

He was also a member of the Executive Committee of the Victorian Order of Nurses, a founding member of the Canadian Red Cross and an active member of the Methodist Church.

He died in Toronto in 1914 and was buried in the Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto.

References

Marchildon, Gregory P.; Duncan McDowall (1992). Canadian Multinationals and International Finance. London: Routledge. p. 184. ISBN 0-7146-3481-6, ISBN 978-0-7146-3481-4.

External links