Mair, Charles National Historic Person

Lanark, Ontario
Portrait of Charles Mair © Expired; Credit: William James Topley / Library and Archives Canada / PA-025944
Portrait
© Expired; Credit: William James Topley / Library and Archives Canada / PA-025944
Portrait of Charles Mair © Expired; Credit: William James Topley / Library and Archives Canada / PA-025944Portrait of Charles Mair © Expired; Credit: Topley Studio / Library and Archives Canada / PA-033763
Address : 73 George Street, Lanark, Ontario

Recognition Statute: Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date: 1937-05-20
Life Date: 1838 to 1927

Other Name(s):
  • Mair, Charles  (Designation Name)

Importance: Journalist, poet, advocate of western expansion

Plaque(s)


Existing plaque: 1948 in auditorium of Lanark Town Hall / 1984 Lanark Post Office 73 George Street, Lanark, Ontario

Poet, journalist, western pioneer and civil servant, Author of Tecumseh, 1886. A founder of the Canada First Movement, 1868, and an advocate of western expansion, he participated in the Red River Insurrection, 1869-70, and in the Northwest Rebellion, 1885

Existing plaque: outside wall of the Lanark Post Office 73 Geroge Street, Lanark, Ontario

Journalist, poet, advocate of western expansion, and an original member of the Canada First movement, Mair was born at Lanark, Upper Canada. A controversial figure during the Red River uprising (1869-1870), he was subsequently a pioneer businessman of Portage la Prairie, Prince Albert, and Kelowna, and an official of the Dominion immigration service. His literary works included Dreamland and Other Poems, Tecumseh, and Through the Mackenzie Basin. He died at Victoria, B.C.