Alexander Workman Explained

Alexander Workman
Birth Date:28 May 1798
Birth Place:Lisburn, County Antrim, Ireland
Death Place:Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Office:3rd Mayor of Ottawa
Term Start:1860
Term End:1862
Predecessor:Edward McGillivray
Successor:Henry J. Friel
Spouse:Mary Abbot, m. 1820

Alexander Workman (28 May 1798  - 12 December 1891) was an Anglo-Irish-Canadian politician and the mayor of Ottawa from 1860 to 1862.[1]

Life

Workman was born in Lisburn, County Antrim, Ireland. He settled in Huntley Township in Upper Canada in 1820. In 1823, he joined his brother in Montreal, where he helped operate an academy, before moving to Bytown in 1845 and establishing a hardware business there with a fellow Unitarian Edward Griffin. He became influential in attempts to organise a Unitarian Church in Ottawa but was ultimately unsuccessful. He was a city council member for many years, finally becoming mayor in 1860 and 1861. His wife, Mary Abbot, died on 23 April 1874, at the age of 72. She is buried in Beechwood Cemetery. Workman died at the age of 93.[2] [3]

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External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Mullington, Dave . Chain of Office: Biographic Sketches of Ottawa's Mayors (1847-1948) . Renfrew, Ontario . General Store Publishing House . 2005 . 978-1-8971-1317-2 . 32–34 .
  2. Book: Prominent Men of Canada . G. Mercer . Adam . 1892 . 288–289 . Toronto . Canadian Biographical Publishing Co. .
  3. Book: The Canadian Biographical Dictionary and Portrait Gallery of Eminent and Self-made Men . Toronto . American Biographical Publishing Company . 1880 . Ontario . 500–501 .