Pierre St. Jean
Pierre St. Jean | |
---|---|
Mayor of Ottawa | |
In office 1882–1883 | |
Preceded by | Charles Herbert Mackintosh |
Succeeded by | Charles Thornton Bate |
House of Commons of Canada | |
Assumed office 1874 | |
Personal details | |
Born | September 23, 1833 Bytown, Upper Canada |
Died | May 6, 1900 Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
Pierre St-Jean (September 23, 1833 – May 6, 1900) was a Canadian doctor and politician.
He was born in Bytown in 1833. During the 1840s, he established a French language literary society there with J.B. Turgeon. He studied medicine at McGill College in Montreal and received his license to practice medicine in 1855. He worked for a while with another doctor in Ottawa and then practiced in Saint-Denis, Quebec. He married there but his wife died in childbirth in 1857 and he returned to Ottawa in 1858. He was one of only three Franco-Ontarian doctors in Ottawa at the time. He became part of the staff at the hospital operated by Élisabeth Bruyère`s Sisters of Charity, later the Ottawa General Hospital. He served four terms as president of the L'Institut canadien-français d'Ottawa.
In 1874, he became the first French-speaking member from Ontario in the House of Commons of Canada, representing Ottawa City. He was mayor of Ottawa from 1882 to 1883 being the first to have been born in it.[1] During his term as mayor, the Canada Atlantic Railway link to Ottawa was completed.
Following his term as mayor, he remained on staff at the Ottawa General Hospital until 1898 and also worked at the Department of Public Works.
He died in Ottawa in 1900.
External links
- "Pierre St. Jean". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016.
- Pierre St. Jean – Parliament of Canada biography
References
- ^ Dave Mullington "Chain of Office: Biographic Sketches of Ottawa's Mayors (1847-1948)" (Renfrew, Ontario: General Store Publishing House, 2005)
- Bibliography
- Pelletier, Jean Yves (2006), L’Institut canadien-français d’Ottawa (1852 à 2002), Ottawa, Ontario: Jean Yves Pelletier