John Thomas Ryan (son) Patrick William Ryan (son) Alphonso Martin Ryan (son) Mary Alice Ryan (daughter) Marguerite Teresa Ryan (daughter)
Parents
Martin Ryan (father)
Margaret Conway (mother)
Family
John Ryan (brother) Alice Ryan (sister) Margaret Isabelle Doheny (niece, goddaughter) Helen Margaret Ryan (niece, goddaughter) Maya Asha McDonald (descendant)
Signature
The Honourable Hugh Ryan[1] (July 1832 – 13 February 1899) was an Irish-Canadian railway magnate, industrialist, banker, philanthropist and eldest son of John Patrick Ryan and Margaret Conway.[2][3][4][5] His family immigrated to Montreal, Canada, from Limerick, Ireland, in 1841 during the first wave of Irish-Catholic immigration after selling Gortkelly Castle to another branch of the Ryan clan.[6][7][8] He was dubbed "Canada's wealthiest and greatest railroad contractor".[9][10][11]
Early career
In 1850, at the age of eighteen, Ryan began working on the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railway under Canadian engineer Sir C. S. Gzowski; dubbed the "father of the Canadian Railway."[12] The experience solidified public works, especially railways, as Ryan's chosen career.
Founding of H. & J. Ryan
After moving to Perth, Ontario in the 1850s, Hugh Ryan established the firm of H. & J. Ryan with his younger brother John and won the bid to build two sections of the Brockville and Ottawa Railway.[13][14] In the early 1860s, the firm expanded to the United States and undertook several lucrative contracts on railways in Michigan, Maine, Kentucky, and Illinois; including the Chicago and Alton Railway.[12][15]
The expansion of H. & J. Ryan from Canada into the United States allowed the firm to monopolise contracts due to the shortage of domestic railway contractors caused by the American Civil War.[3]
On 31 October 1877, H. & J. Ryan was retained to perform an extensive quality and safety assessment of Prince Arthur's Landing and the Kaministiquia Railway by the Commissioner of Public Works of Ontario, with Hugh Ryan penning the final report.[16]
In 1880, Sir Charles Tupper and the Liberal government awarded H. & J. Ryan several contracts for new railway track (including 100 miles northwest of Winnipeg)[17] and bridge development in Manitoba; most notably a bridge across the Red River to connected the west and east portions of the Pembina St. Boniface line.[18] The Red River pile bridge was completed on 28 July 1880 and formally opened by driving the state-of-the-art locomotive the "Countess of Dufferin" with Ryan, his wife Margaret, and C.P.R Superintendent T. J. Linskey amongst the VIPs.[19]
One of the firm's largest development contracts came in 1887 for the controversial Red River Valley Railway, later the Northern Pacific (or St Paul Minneapolis) and Manitoba Railway, awarded by John Norquay.[20][21][22][23][24] The tender was the single largest ever secured by the firm at $750,000 (the equivalent of $24.3 million in 2024),[25] requiring 6,000 tons of steel rails; and including the building of several bridges.[26][27][28] During construction, Ryan brought legal proceedings against the government of Manitoba for delinquent payments —Ryan's lawsuit would be successful and would award him $50,000 (the equivalent of $1.6 million in 2024).[21][29][30]
Development partnerships
The following list is in chronological order:
Brooks, Foster, Ryan & Co.
In 1865 Ryan joined James Foster and Brockville contractor Alphonse Brooks as subcontractors on the Pictou branch of the Nova Scotia Railway.[31] Ryan would partner with Brooks shortly after, this time building a sizeable portion of the western extension of the European and North American Railway, in New Brunswick and Maine.[32]
Brown, Brooks & Ryan.
Between 1870 – 1875 Ryan, Alphonse Brooks and New Brunswick contractor James Brown, established Brown, Brooks & Ryan to build the most costly sections of the Intercolonial Railway: the two bridges over the Miramichi River and six miles of approaches.[33][34] The firm worked under the direct supervision of chief engineer Sir Sandford Fleming.[35][36]
In 1879 Ryan and Purcell joined their competitors, John Ginty[42] and Thomas Mark,[38] to establish Purcell & Company; responsible for developing a treacherous 118 miles of the CPR (connected to the 112 miles developed by Purcell & Ryan).[43] The firm completed the railway in 1883, receiving bipartisan support for the principals from Prime Minister John A Macdonald, as well as the Conservative (Tory) and Liberal governments of the time (provincial and federal).[44][3]
Hugh Ryan & Co.
In 1888 Ryan, his brother John Ryan, and Michael John Haney established Hugh Ryan & Co.;[2] and secured the contract from the Conservative government to build the Sault Ste. Marie Canal, Ontario.[45][46][47] The specifications for the canal were changed twice during construction —Ryan was responsible for one of these occasions[48]— thus necessitating renegotiation of the contract price with the Deputy Minister of Railways and Canals,[49][50] Toussaint Trudeau (ancestor of Prime Ministers Pierre Trudeau and Justin Trudeau).[51] The final contract price was a win for Ryan at $1.2 million (the equivalent of $38.9 million in 2024).[52]
While Mr. Ryan could justly feel gratified at his wonderful success as a railway contractor, his supreme effort was on the construction of the Canadian Sault Canal, requiring six years of time. The structure will itself prove a monument to his business ability and mechanical genius.[53]
Role as Superintendent of Construction
Between 1883 and 1884, Ryan served as the Superintendent of Construction for the Toronto–Ottawa line of the Ontario and Quebec Railway Company, which was leased by the CPR.[54] In his official capacity, Ryan drove the last spike of the Ontario & Quebec Railway approximately 8 kilometers (5 miles) east of Agincourt on 5 May 1884.[55][56]
Business ventures
During the 1880s and 90s, Ryan aggressively expanded his business portfolio beyond development contracting by founding the Dominion Cable Company and becoming a director of various concerns, among them: the Imperial Bank of Canada,[57][5][58] the Freehold Loan and Savings Company, the Toronto General Trusts Company, the Toronto Electric Light Company, the Canadian General Electric Company; the Dominion Cattle Company;[59] and the Canadian Locomotive and Engine Company in Kingston, Ontario.[6][60][61][62][63]
Dominion Cattle Company
The Dominion Cattle Company was established in 1882 for the purposes of breeding, raising, buying and selling cattle, horses and sheep on 500,000 acres of land stretching between Oklahoma and Texas (including Day Ranch and the Box T Ranch).[64][65] The founders included Hugh Ryan, American-Canadian rancher J.P. Wiser, the Hon. Rufus Henry Pope, the Hon. William Bullock Ives, the Hon. A.W. Ogilvie and William Herring.[66] Ryan lobbied for the company to be listed on the Montreal Stock Exchange in 1884 and was subsequently elected as a director in 1885 alongside Senator Matthew Henry Cochrane.[67] By 1887 the company owned 30,000 cattle and 400 horses and Ryan owned the second largest number of company stocks with a value of $130,000 (the equivalent to $4.2 million in 2024); which he sold before the company filed for bankruptcy 1888.[68][64][69]
Philanthropy at St Michael's Hospital
A devout Roman Catholic, Ryan was approached by Archbishop John Walsh in 1893 to fund a major extension of St Michael's Hospital —where Ryan served as vice-president of the board.[70] Ryan agreed, building a three-storey surgical wing that included an operating theatre designed to accommodate fifty medical students and ten wards each containing ten beds.[71][72] The wards also boasted a remarkable feature for the time: hot-and-cold-air registers so that the temperature of each ward could be customised to fit the needs of patients.[73] As a result, the hospital became the second largest of the city's twenty-eight hospitals, after Toronto General where Ryan also served as a board member.[74]
The Hugh Ryan wing —the building a gift of Mr. Ryan, the furnishings a gift of his wife, Margaret— was opened on Thanksgiving Day, 1895. The only condition Ryan made part of the deed was that the hospital be kept open night and day to receive anyone in need of its services, without consideration for creed, colour or nationality. The public wards faced Bond Street and boasted an adjoining convalescent room on each of the three floors, filled with easy chairs, a bookcase, and writing table. But it was for the private and semi-private rooms that Mrs. Ryan must have really given her imagination (and her pocket book) free rein —brass bedsteads, oak bedroom sets, engravings on the walls, a service of china and silver, and soft rugs on the hardwood floors.[75]
The Hugh Ryan Wing was opened by Archbishop John Walsh on Canadian Thanksgiving, 1895, with speakers including Ryan himself, M.P. Oliver Aiken Howland, M.P. George Ralph Richardson Cockburn, and the extension's chief architect John A. Pearson.[76][77] An enthusiastic press wrote glowingly of the new addition as a model for sanitation, lighting and ventilation.[71] The wing ultimately cost Ryan $40,000 (the equivalent of $1.48 million in 2024).[78]
That same year Ryan also built the nurses' residence, named the "Margaret Ryan Home for Nurses" after his wife, who oversaw the furnishing of said residences; like she had with the public, private and semi-private hospital rooms.[79] The residence consisted of three houses and was connected to the hospital by a covered passage —one house was occupied by the Sisters of Saint Joseph and the other two by nurses in training, at that time numbering between thirty and forty.[79]
Catholic endowments
For his philanthropic efforts, Hugh Ryan was nicknamed the "model millionaire" in Ontario's Catholic circles —of which he was an active and prominent member.[71][80]
Hugh Ryan gave freely of his business advice to the Catholic Church and was always a generous supporter of charities, with Catholic organisations receiving the greatest share.[3]
In 1895, Ryan was approached once again by his longtime friend, Archbishop John Walsh of Toronto, and the Premier of Ontario, Edward Blake, to support the idea of an Irish Race Convention in Dublin the following year.[86] Though Ryan initially declined the offer, he did ultimately attend the 1896 convention as part of the official Canadian delegation representing the city of Toronto, alongside John Costigan, Sir William Mulock and Sir Frank Smith (his daughter Marys's father-in-law).[87][88][89]
Family
Hugh Ryan, the eldest son of John Patrick Ryan and Margaret Conway, was born into a wealthy Irish-Catholic family, who owned Gortkelly Castle before his father sold the estate to "invest in the new world."[90][91] The family immigrated post sale to Montreal, Canada, when Ryan was nine years old.[92] Ryan had three younger siblings: John Ryan, Patrick Ryan, and Catherine Ryan; and one older sibling in Alice Ryan.[93]
On 20 March 1858 Ryan married Mary Margaret Walsh in Perth, Ontario.[94] The couple lived in Hollydene House a High Victorian-style mansion in the prestigious Rosedale neighbourhood of Toronto,[95][96] with their five children: Mary "Minnie" Alice Ryan, John Thomas Ryan, Patrick William Ryan, Alphonso Martin Ryan, and Marguerite "Rita" Teresa Ryan.[97][98] Hollydene House, now Branksome Hall, is classified as a building of historical significance under Part V of the Ontario Heritage Act.[99][100][101]
Hugh Ryan's daughter Mary "Minnie" Alice Ryan married James Austin Smith, son of Canadian Senator and business tycoon Sir. Frank Smith, on 5 June 1888 at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in a "fashionable ceremony."[103][88][104] The bridesmaids included the bride's sister Miss Rita Ryan, the bride's cousin Miss Nellie Ryan, and socialite Miss Kathleen Harty (daughter of Ontario politician William Harty).[105][106]
Ryan's wife Margaret died on 23 February 1904 while vacationing in Cairo, Egypt with their daughters, and was interned in the family mausoleum at the Mount Hope Catholic Cemetery, Toronto.[107][108]
Hugh Ryan was godfather to Alice Ryan's daughter Margaret Isabelle McHenry (née Doheny) and John Ryan's daughters Isabelle Teresa Pettit (née Ryan) and Helen Margaret "Nellie" MacDonell (née Ryan).[109] Helen's youngest son, Hugh MacDonell, was named after her uncle.[110] All three goddaughters received sizeable sums in Ryan's last will and testament.[111][112]
Death
In October 1898 Hugh Ryan contracted Bright's disease and died four months later on 13 February 1899 as "one of the richest men in Toronto" with his estate valued at $1.4 million (the equivalent of $52 million in 2024).[6][113][112][114] Ryan's estate held property assets in Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba, The Northwest Territories and New York City.[115]
The majority of Ryan's estate was bequeathed to his wife, two daughters, and three goddaughters.[85][116] Ryan's youngest sister, socialite Alice Ryan, with whom he was reportedly close, also received a generous sum along with all of Ryan's landholdings in Winnipeg, Manitoba.[117][118]
Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier sent a telegram of condolences to the Ryan family the morning of his passing.[119] Speaking of his death, the leading Toronto paper said: "In the death of Mr. Ryan, Canada has lost one of her strongest characters and keenest intellects, and Toronto one of her most benevolent citizens."[31]
The funeral was held two days later on 15 February 1899 at St. Michael's Cathedral Basilica, Toronto, with the requiem mass celebrated by Archbishop John Walsh.[120] Notable attendees included Ontario politician, William Harty; Liberal cabinet member the Honourable E.J. Davis;[121] Speaker of the Legislature Alfred Évanturel; and Kingston Mayor Dr. Edward Ryan.[122]
Hugh Ryan was one of the best-known men in Canada, and he left an imperishable monument of behind him in the hundreds of miles of railway he constructed, opening up a new empire to the world. At the time of his death, he was one of the oldest railway contractors on the American continent, having spent forty-six years in the occupation. In all of his enterprises, involving the expenditure of millions of dollars, he never entered an action at law against any man —a fact which alone speaks volumes for his business tact.[53]
^Fleming, Sir Sandford (1876). "The Intercolonial Railway". The Chung Collection at The University of British Columbia. Montreal, Quebec: Dawson Bros. p. 312.
^Gemmill, John Alexander (1889). "The Canadian Parliamentary Companion, 1889". www.canadiana.ca. J. Durie – via Canadiana: Scanned from a CIHM microfiche of the original publication held by the Library of the Public Archives of Canada.