From the Montreal Gazette, February 29, 1932. Page 4.
"WESTMOUNT LOSES PROMINENT CITIZEN IN W. RUTHERFORD / Former Mayor and Alderman of Suburban City Dies in 68th Year / LEADING INDUSTRIALIST / Was Director of Lumber Business Bearing Family Name--Had Various Sporting Associations.
Over the city hall of Westmount a flag flew at half mast yesterday. It signified that the municipality is mourning one of its most distinguished sons--William Rutherford, ex-alderman, former mayor, and widely known business man, who died on Saturday evening at his home, 458 Mount Stephen avenue. He was 67 years of age and had been ill for a long time.
Always interested in civic affairs, Mr. Rutherford was elected by acclamation to the highest post the municipality could offer, that of chief magistrate. He occupied the mayoral chair for the term of 1911-12 and previous to that had been an alderman for three years.
His business activities were centred in the Rutherford Lumber Company, formerly known as the William Rutherford and Sons, Company, Limited. This firm was founded by Mr. Rutherford's father. At the time of his death he was a director of this firm having served for many years as treasurer.
Mr. Rutherford had wide business interests and was called upon to serve on the board of many business associations. He was a past president of the Quebec branch of the Canadian Manufacturers Association, a past president of the mechanics institute and a former councillor of the Montreal Board of Trade.
Following his term as mayor of the city of Westmount he was elected chairman of the board of school commissioners of the municipality, a post he filled with distinction for many years.
Keenly interested in sports, Mr. Rutherford was a life member of the Montreal Athletic Association, and, as a younger man, he belonged to many curling and bowling clubs.
He was a lifelong member of St. Andrews Church, Westmount.
BORN IN MONTREAL.
William Rutherford was born in Montreal on April 22, 1864. His father, William, was a native of Scotland, locating here in 1852, and he established his lumber business in 1856. He was one of the pioneers in the development of the Province of Quebec, and was of that famous old Scotch and Presbyterian strain which produced many of the sturdy men of Canada. His mother was Elizabeth (Jackson) Rutherford, also a native of Scotland.
Mr. Rutherford received his education in the high schools of the city, later taking a course at the private school of the late Professor Edward Springrice.
He is survived by his wife, formerly Miss Ida Bulmer; three sons, William Jackson, John Bulmer and Andrew Scott Rutherford; two daughters, Mrs. H.G.D. Ross of Larchmount, New York, and Mrs. R.H. Wallace, of Shawinigan Falls; four brothers, Andrew Rutherford and Stewart S. Rutherford of Montreal, Forest Rutherford of New York, and Gordon S. Rutherford, of Painesville, Ohio, and two sisters, Mrs. William Dunlop of Ottawa, and Mrs. Thomas McIntosh, of Montreal.
The funeral service will be held at 2:30 o'clock in St. Andrews United Church, Westmount. Internment will be made in the Mount Royal Cemetery."
The more I read about William Jr., the more I picture him as a vigorous, active and successful man, comfortable with leadership, and interested in making a mark on his city, which he certainly seems to have done. I'm still trying unsuccessfully to find out more about his mother, Elizabeth Jackson, and her family. Hopefully I'll get a breakthrough soon.
Hi Claire,
ReplyDeleteSeeing your blog on William Rutherford Junior, and the one on Helen Ruthergord Boynton, it becomes clear that william's father, (also William) who came out from Scotland, is the brother of my Great randfather Andrew Rutherford. All the siblings show up in the 1841 census for Linthaugh, near Jedburgh, where all the men were foresters in later years. Two of Andrew's sons, James and my grandfather Alec, went to South Africa in 1898, just prior to the Boer War. Alec served in the Imperial Military Railways, and then joined Jim farming in the LIndley district. Jim's family still farm near Bethlehem in the Free State today. Alec then joined the Bechuanaland (now Botswana) Colonial Administration. He married Molly O'Keeffe in Bulawayo in 1918. He became resident magistrate in Mochudi,(Bechuanaland) and my mother Patricia was the first European baby born in Lobatse hospital in 1934. Alec died in 1939, and is buried in Francistown, Botswana, with my grandmother Molly, who died in 1973 in Salisbury, Rhodesia. Email me on mike@mikemac.org, and I would love to send you the whole African side of the family tree.