Richard Secord | |
Member of the Legislative Assembly of the North-West Territories for Edmonton | |
Term Start: | May 21, 1902 |
Term End: | September 1, 1905 |
Predecessor: | Matthew McCauley |
Successor: | District abolished |
Title2: | Alderman on the Edmonton Town Council |
Term Start2: | December 12, 1898 |
Term End2: | December 11, 1899 |
Birth Date: | July 19, 1860 |
Birth Place: | Brant, Canada West |
Death Place: | Edmonton, Alberta |
Party: | Northwest Territories Liberal-Conservative Party |
Otherparty: | Conservative Party of Canada |
Spouse: | Anna Ada York (4 children) |
Profession: | Businessman, teacher |
Signature: | Richard Secord Signature.svg |
Richard Secord known as Dick, (July 19, 1860 - January 12, 1935) was a politician in western Canada, a member of the Legislative Assembly of the North-West Territories, a municipal councillor in Edmonton, and a candidate for the House of Commons of Canada.
Secord was born in Brant, Canada West, on July 19, 1860. He was a great-grandnephew of War of 1812 heroine Laura Secord. He was educated in Brant, and graduated with honours from Brantford Collegiate Institute. He came to Edmonton by way of Chicago and Winnipeg, arriving September 1, 1881.
Upon arriving, he helped build the first public school in Edmonton, and then moved to Pakan, Alberta, to teach First Nations children for a year. He returned to Edmonton in 1883 and taught for four years, and then entered the employ of John Alexander McDougall as a clerk. He started his own fur-trading business in 1888, and sold it to the Hudson's Bay Company in 1890. He married schoolteacher Anna Ada York in 1891; the couple had four children. Thereafter, he partnered with McDougall.
In 1897, the pair founded McDougall & Secord, which advertised itself as "general merchants, wholesale and retail; buyers and exporters of raw furs; dealers in land scrip and north west lands; outfitters for survey parties, traders, trappers, miners and others for the north, and suppliers for country stores." The two ran the company until 1907, when they sold it and went into business as a financial house and mortgage corporation called McDougall & Secord, Limited, which still existed up until the 20th century and is now permanently closed.
Richard Secord was a land speculator known for Métis scrip dealings with the local Métis of Edmonton. Both he and his business partner McDougall became wealthy off of this process. In one case, he and McDougall redeemed 48 land scrips for a total of $286,000 covering an area of 11, 520 acres.[1] McDougall and Secord were able to become “Edmonton’s First Millionaire Teachers”. The Scrip system allowed those with resources to purchase a certificate for face value or perhaps a marginal increase, then redeem the certificate on behalf, sometimes through fraud, of the original holder and re-sell for profit. Once a sale was undertaken, unbeknownst to Métis, their claims and rights would be extinguished in the eyes of the Crown.[2]
Secord first sought political office during the 1898 municipal election, running for alderman on Edmonton Town Council. He was elected to a one-year term, and did not seek re-election at its conclusion.
He next ran for the Legislative Assembly of the North-West Territories in the 1902 territorial election as a Conservative in the riding of Edmonton. He was elected, and served until 1905, when Alberta was created and Edmonton therefore ceased to be part of the North-West Territories. While in the legislature, he introduced the bill that incorporated Edmonton as a city.
Secord ran in the 1904 federal election as a Conservative candidate in Edmonton, but was handily defeated by Liberal Frank Oliver.
Secord had a significant impact on Edmonton through his expenditures of money and financial support to the community. He arranged temporary financing (with McDougall and others) for the construction of the city's Low Level Bridge. He also provided financial support to the Thistle Rink and the Misericordia Hospital, and financially backed the Edmonton Journal (which was intended as a Conservative alternative to Oliver's Liberal Edmonton Bulletin).
Secord died January 12, 1935. Edmonton's Secord neighbourhood and École Richard Secord School are named in his honour.