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Canada's fourth Governor General was
John Douglas Sutherland Campbell,
Marquis of Lorne. A Scot, in contrast to
his three Irish predecessors, he was the
son and heir to the 8th Duke of Argyll,
head of the powerful Campbell clan.
He was
born on August 6, 1845 at Strafford
House, London, the son of a prominent
author and politician, and received his
education at Edinburgh Academy, Eton, St
Andrews and Cambridge University. In
1868 he entered the House of Commons for
Argyllshire and became Secretary to his
father, the Secretary of State for
India.
In
1871, he married Princess Louise, the
youngest daughter of Queen Victoria and
in 1878, at the age of 33, the young
Marquise came to Canada as Governor
General.
The
appointment caused anxiety in some
Ottawa circles, as it was felt that
having a Princess at Rideau Hall would
result in a stiffly formal royal court.
They were soon reassured however. The
Princess, a sculptress of some note, an
artist and a writer, was as informal and
friendly as her husband. They fished and
played outdoor games, entertained
informally and kept formality to the
essential minimum.
In
1881, the Marquis undertook a tour of
8,000 miles from Halifax to Fort Macleod
in Alberta. He was soon able to talk
publicly and with great familiarity of
places and peoples in Canada about which
his listeners would know very little.
Interested in literature and the Arts,
he founded the Royal Society of Canada,
promoted the Royal Canadian Academy of
At and the National Gallery in Ottawa
fro which he selected the first
collection of pictures which is now
housed in a building bearing his name.
He wrote much verse and prose about
Canada.
Returning to England in 1883, he entered
the House of Commons, and
in 1900 he
succeeded to the Dukedom. He died in
1914. |