Albert William Austin

Albert William Austin (1857–1934), by John Wycliffe Lowes Forster.

Albert William Austin (1857–1931) was a Canadian businessman and golfer. The founder of Winnipeg's first streetcar system, he later served as president of Dominion Bank. He also founded the Lambton Golf and Country Club and represented Canada in golf at the 1904 Olympics.

Austin was born in Toronto, the youngest child of James Austin a prominent businessman who founded the Dominion Bank. He attended Upper Canada College until age 14. That year his father ended his formal schooling to apprentice him in the world of business. He was given a posting as a junior clerk at the bank. Three years later he took a position in the grocery and import business of Senator Frank Smith.[1]

In 1880, Austin moved to Winnipeg and with investments from his father and Edmund Boyd Osler founded the Winnipeg Street Railway Company, a horse drawn streetcar service that was Winnipeg's first mass transit system. In 1892, the rival Winnipeg Electric Street Railway Company was formed. Running more modern cars, it sparked a price war. Austin challenged the rival firm's right to share the streets of Winnipeg, and fought a legal battle that extended to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. Austin's firm lost and in 1894 the company was sold to its rival for $175,000. Soon after Austin and his family moved back to Toronto.[2]

In 1882, Austin married Mary Richmond Kerr, daughter of newspaper publisher Dawson Kerr. They had five children. James Percival (Percy) (1885–1954), Adele (1886–1968), Albert (Bertie) (1888–1913), Anna Kathleen (1892–1983), and Constance Margaret (1894–1966).[3]

In 1897, Austin's father died and as the only surviving son, Albert inherited his business interests. Eventually Albert Austin would succeed his father as president of both the Dominion Bank and the Consumer's Gas Company.[4] He also inherited Spadina House, the large home James Austin had built for his family in 1866. Albert moved his family to the home, and would live there for the rest of his life. Today Spadina House is a museum restored to how it would have been in the 1920s when Albert and his family lived there. While he preserved the basic form of the home, many of the features that today survive date from his renovations.[3]

Golf was a longstanding interest of Austin's. He first set-up a small course on his estate for family and friends. This expanded into the Spadina Golf Club, with a course at Spadina and St Clair. That land could not permanently serve as a golf course, so in 1903 he purchased land along the Humber River and founded the Lambton Golf and Country Club. In the 1904 Olympics a team from the Lambton club represented Canada in the golf tournament. The team consisted of Austin, his son Bertie, and the club champion George Lyon. At the Olympics, Austin finished 73rd out of 75 and did not qualify, while Bertie also did not pass the qualifier. Lyon did, and went on to win the gold medal.

References

  1. Austin Seton Thompson (1988). Spadina: A Story of Old Toronto. Pagurian Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-88932-025-3.
  2. Brian K. Darragh (5 March 2015). The Streetcars of Winnipeg – Our Forgotten Heritage: Out of Sight – Out of Mind. FriesenPress. pp. 18–. ISBN 978-1-4602-4653-5.
  3. 1 2 John Goddard (11 June 2014). Inside the Museum — Spadina House. Dundurn. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-4597-3004-5.
  4. Christopher Armstrong, "AUSTIN, JAMES," in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 12, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed May 29, 2016.
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