Joseph Whitehead (Canadian politician)

Source: Library and Archives Canada
Joseph Whitehead (January 1, 1814 – March 12, 1894)[1] was a Canadian railway pioneer and political figure. He represented Huron North in the 1st Canadian Parliament as a Liberal member.
He was born in Guisborough, Yorkshire, England in 1814. Whitehead was a fireman and engineer on railways in Britain, serving as fireman for George Stephenson's Locomotion in 1825. He later became involved in railway construction, helping to build the Caledonian Railway in Scotland. He came to Canada West in 1850 and helped build sections of the Great Western Railway and a section of the Grand Trunk Railway between Buffalo and Goderich. He also served as mayor for the town of Clinton, Ontario. Whitehead won contracts to build two sections of the transcontinental railway, the section between Cross Lake and Kenora and a branch line between Emerson and Saint Boniface, Manitoba. He built a sawmill at Saint Boniface to supply lumber during construction of the rail line. In 1877, he brought the first steam locomotive to Manitoba, The Countess of Dufferin, transporting it by boat up the Red River to Winnipeg. For a time, he worked in the timber trade in Manitoba, but later retired to Clinton, where his descendants still live as of 2018. He died there in 1894.
References
[edit]- Joseph Whitehead (Canadian politician) – Parliament of Canada biography
- Morgan, Henry J., ed. (1871). The Canadian Parliamentary Companion (Sixth ed.). Montreal: Gazette Steam Printing House. p. 155.
- Manitobans who made a difference
- The Canadian album: Men of Canada; or, Success by example ..., W Cochrane (1891) Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- 1814 births
- 1894 deaths
- Liberal Party of Canada MPs
- Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Ontario
- Mayors of places in Ontario
- Canadian people in rail transport
- Canadian railway entrepreneurs
- British railway civil engineers
- People from Guisborough
- 19th-century Canadian businesspeople
- Engineers from Yorkshire