Samuel Gerrard

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Samuel_Gerrard an entity of type: Thing

صموئيل غيرارد هو شخصية أعمال كندي، ولد في 1767 في Gibstown ‏ في جمهورية أيرلندا، وتوفي في 24 مارس 1857 في مونتريال في كندا. rdf:langString
Samuel Gerrard (1767 – March 24, 1857) was a Canadian fur trader, businessman, militia officer, justice of the peace, politician, and seigneur. He was the second president of the Bank of Montreal. From 1838 to 1841, he was a member of the Special Council of Lower Canada. In 1841, he acquired the seigneuries of Lanaudière and Carufel. rdf:langString
rdf:langString صموئيل غيرارد
rdf:langString Samuel Gerrard
rdf:langString Samuel Gerrard
rdf:langString Samuel Gerrard
xsd:date 1857-03-24
rdf:langString Gibbstown House, Co. Meath
xsd:integer 21249472
xsd:integer 1045212105
xsd:date 1857-03-24
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString Member of the Special Council of Lower Canada
xsd:integer 1826 1841
xsd:integer 1820 1838
rdf:langString President of the Bank of Montreal
xsd:integer 1820
rdf:langString صموئيل غيرارد هو شخصية أعمال كندي، ولد في 1767 في Gibstown ‏ في جمهورية أيرلندا، وتوفي في 24 مارس 1857 في مونتريال في كندا.
rdf:langString Samuel Gerrard (1767 – March 24, 1857) was a Canadian fur trader, businessman, militia officer, justice of the peace, politician, and seigneur. He was the second president of the Bank of Montreal. From 1838 to 1841, he was a member of the Special Council of Lower Canada. In 1841, he acquired the seigneuries of Lanaudière and Carufel. Gerrard was born in Ireland at Gibbstown House, County Meath. The Gerrards were a prosperous Anglo-Irish family who had held Gibbstown, an estate of some 1,270 acres, since the mid 17th century, and previous to that were seated at nearby Clongill Castle. Samuel was probably a grandson of the Samuel Gerrard of Gibbstown who was a friend of Jonathan Swift and visited London and Bath in 1740. Samuel was probably a younger brother of the John Gerrard (d.1838) who was High Sheriff of Meath in 1818. By 1785, at the age of eighteen, Samuel Gerrard was established at Montreal as a merchant concerned with the fur trade from Timiskaming. In 1791, he went into partnership with his future brother-in-law, William Grant, and Étienne-Charles Campion. Gerrard acted as the firm's accountant, receiving a quarter of the profits.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4043

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