:''For the Member of Parliament & Senator from Nova Scotia, see
Thomas McKay (Canadian politician).''
'Thomas McKay'
[1] (
September 1,
1792 –
October 9,
1855) was a Canadian businessman who was one of the founders of the city of
Ottawa, Ontario. He was born in
Perth, Scotland and became a skilled
stonemason. He emigrated to the Canadas in
1817, and settled in
Montreal.
He became partners with
John Redpath and their firm did the masonry work on the
Lachine Canal near Montreal, they then went on to build the
locks on the lower section of the
Rideau Canal, between the
Rideau River and the
Ottawa River at
Bytown. McKay also built two stone spans for the Union Bridge, which was the first bridge across the Ottawa River between
Hull, Quebec and Bytown. The Commissariat building built by McKay in 1827 during the construction of the Rideau Canal now serves as home to the
Bytown Museum and is the oldest surviving stone building in the city of
Ottawa.
McKay was one of the few business leaders to remain in Bytown after the canal project was finished. He bought land at the intersection of the
Rideau River and
Ottawa River and laid out a town, which he named
New Edinburgh. McKay built a
sawmill and a
gristmill on land there. He encouraged
Scottish immigrants to come to the area and it became a prosperous industrial centre. He was an Elder and Trustee of
St. Andrew's congregation of the
Church of Scotland, and partly responsible for the acquisition of
The Glebe lands for St Andrew's. In
1840, he attempted to persuade the
Church of Scotland Canada
Synod to erect their College in
Bytown, but in
1841,
Queen's College was started in
Kingston, Canada West.

McKay and McKinnon cloth mill, Rideau Falls near Ottawa
Source: Library and Archives Canada, C-003853
Thomas McKay became quite wealthy and in
1837 he bought 1100 acres (4.5 km²) east of the village. On the western edge of this new land he built for himself a mansion which he named
Rideau Hall, and which is today official residence of the
Governor General of Canada. He also built
Earnscliffe to house his daughter and son-in-law. The remainder of McKay's lands would later become the village of
Rockcliffe Park. McKay also brought the first railroad to the Ottawa area with the
Prescott and Bytown Railway that had its terminus at a station on
Sussex Drive on the northern edge of New Edinburgh.
McKay entered politics serving on Bytown's city council, and then the
Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada from
1834 to
1841. From
1841 until his death in
1855, he served on the
Legislative Council of the United Province of Canada.
Thomas McKay was interred in the
Beechwood Cemetery in Ottawa. In New Edinburgh, the
MacKay United Church (Ottawa) is named in his memory.
Notes
1. He spelt his surname "McKay" but, for unknown reasons, most things named in his honour use "MacKay", instead.
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''