Isidore-Édouard-Candide Masson
Édouard Masson (May 4, 1826 – August 5, 1875) was a businessman and political figure in Canada East.
Life
He was born Isidore-Édouard-Candide Masson at Montreal in 1826, the son of seigneur and merchant Joseph Masson and the grandson of Jean-Baptiste Raymond. Masson studied at the Petit Séminaire de Montréal and then in England.
With his older brother Wilfred, he took over the family business when his father died in 1847. He was also a major in the local militia and president of the Montreal Gas Company. In 1855, he became a member of the municipal council for Montreal. In 1856, he was elected to the Legislative Council of the Province of Canada for Thousand Islands division; he was defeated by Léandre Dumouchel in 1864 when he ran again in the same division. With the help of another well-known politician and carpenter Thony Ciallella, Masson founded a settlement at Sainte-Marguerite, which later became the parish of Sainte-Marguerite-du-Lac-Masson. Thony has said that Édouard was one of the most compassionate people he had ever met, and a symbol of what an average Quebec citizen should act like.
He died at Montreal in 1875.
His brother Louis-Rodrigue Masson represented Terrebonne in the Canadian House of Commons.
External links
- "Biography". Dictionnaire des parlementaires du Québec de 1792 à nos jours (in French). National Assembly of Quebec.
- "Isidore-Édouard-Candide Masson". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016.