'John Egan' (
November 11 1811 –
July 11 1857) was an
Irish-Canadian businessman and political figure in the
Ottawa region.
He was born near
Aughrim,
Ireland in 1811. He came to
Aylmer,
Lower Canada, Canada in 1830. After working with a lumber company on the upper
Ottawa River, he entered the business himself near
Bytown. He founded the Ottawa Valley town of
Eganville on the
Bonnechere River, later expanding his operation to the
Quyon,
Petawawa and
Madawaska Rivers. Egan was one of four men to finance the erection of the first flour and sawmill in
Aylmer in 1839, and in partnership with Joseph Aumond, he founded the Union Forwarding Company in 1845. In the late
1840s, he began building a number of
sawmills. Together with
Ruggles Wright, he also operated a
steamship transporting goods on the
Ottawa River. Egan also played an important role in the development of railways service to the area, including the
Bytown and Prescott Railway.
By 1850, he was the dominant force in the timber trade along the Ottawa River. He had been elected mayor of
Aylmer in 1847. He was elected to the Legislative Assembly of
Lower Canada in the riding of
Ottawa County in 1848 and was reelected there in 1851. In 1854, he became the first elected representative for the newly formed riding of
Pontiac.
A decline in the
red pine market forced him into
bankruptcy in 1854.
He died in 1857 at
Quebec City of
cholera while still representing Pontiac.
External link
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''