Abstracts
Abstract
This article considers how a semi-skilled Scottish stonecutter could rise to become one of Upper Canada’s most accomplished businessmen over the course of a few decades in the second half of the nineteenth century. Although largely unremarked, the man who modestly styled himself “John Brown, Contractor” contributed significantly to the development of his adopted country’s industrial and commercial infrastructure until his unexpected death in 1876. Based in the Niagara region, he became the country’s pre-eminent contractor cum civil engineer: he established the first hydraulic cement mill in British North America in Thorold in 1841, and his professional acumen was instrumental in ensuring the success of major public works, from the Second and Third Welland Canals to the Imperial Tower lighthouses. The manager “loved by his men” and the “fair boss” who advocated for labour rights was overseeing an estimated 500 men on a myriad of contracts throughout Ontario when he died. Brown was also a shrewd real estate speculator whose extensive land and quarry holdings helped to shape Niagara’s economic landscape.
