| |
Home
History of Buildings
General History
People in History
Further Reading
Send Comments
|
|
Sir Edward Wentworth Beatty (1877-1943)
Sir Edward Wentworth Beatty was the fourth Chancellor of Queen's,
serving from 1919-1923. He is much better known to Canadians, however,
as the man who was President of the Canadian Pacific Railway for 25
years. Born in Thorold, Ontario on October 16, 1877, Beatty
was the son of Henry Beatty and Harriet Powell. Beatty
attended the University of Toronto, from which he obtained a B.A. in
1898, and then studied law at Osgoode Hall.
After being admitted to the bar and articling at a law firm very
briefly in Toronto, Beatty joined the CPR in 1901. It was quite by
chance: A.R. Creelman, a partner in the firm, was appointed Canadian
Pacific Railway General Counsel in 1901, and took Beatty to
Montreal as his assistant. Beatty became the General Counsel for
the CPR in 1913, and was appointed as the CPR's first Canadian-born
President in 1918. Beatty led the CPR through very difficult times,
overcoming the instability of both WWI and WWII, and battling
competition from the Canadian National Railway. Beatty expanded the
CPR in the railway, steamship, and hotel divisions, and also created
the Canadian Pacific Airlines. In recognition of the importance of his
work for Canada, Beatty was knighted in 1935.
Sir Edward Beatty's duties as the President of the CPR (a position he held until 1943) limited the amount of time he was able to devote to Queen's. Sir Edward therefore left his position at Queen's in 1923 to take up the Chancellorship of McGill University. He died in Montreal on March 23, 1943.
|