Alfred Boyd ~ Sarah Warner
Canada
Alfred Boyd, businessman, office holder, JP, and politician; b. c. 1836 in
England, son of Alfred Boyd; m. Sarah Warner (Warriner); they had no
children; d. 16 Aug. 1908 in England.
Alfred Boyd may have been in Rupert’s Land as early as 1858. An entry in the
journal of daily occurrences at Fort Ellice (Man.) mentions that on 9 July
1858 "Mr. Boyd arrived here from Red River." A later note by trader Isaac
Cowie describes this Boyd as a "British sportsman." By the eve of the Red
River troubles, however, Alfred Boyd was a wealthy trader. He had a store in
St John’s parish, but engaged in the fur trade with the Inkster family on a
far greater scale. Although precise measures of his wealth are not possible,
indirect evidence provides some clues. On 9 Dec. 1869 he wrote to his
brother Thomas in England expressing concern that the natives would not trap
furs during the troubles and that he would be ruined. He owed £4,000 to the
London forwarding firm of Frederick E. Kew (whose agent in Red River was
John Inkster) and £2,000 to his brother. He concluded with instructions to
his brother to sell all his property and divide it among his creditors. The
letter was written from Hawthorne Lodge, near Lower Fort Garry, one of the
most impressive houses in the settlement. Later, when political enemies
attacked him, they alleged that he had submitted an exaggerated claim for
$56,000 to cover losses sustained during the troubles and that he had
received $2,000. Boyd replied that these sums were for goods supplied to the
government forces and were not compensation, but he did not dispute the
figures cited.
Just how badly he suffered financially is not clear. He seems to have been
at least temporarily embarrassed, for in September 1870 he was obliged to
borrow £100 from Inkster. It may have been for financial reasons that about
1870 he moved to Redwood, a house built by William Inkster in St John’s
parish. The residence appears to have passed to Boyd as a result of the
arbitrated settlement of William Inkster’s estate.
If Boyd was wealthy, he was not prominent. In fact, he seems to have gone
out of his way to maintain a low profile. He was never mentioned as having
attended meetings in the settlement, or as having contributed to worthy
causes. In the 1860s suits for debt were common, but Boyd appears neither as
plaintiff nor as defendant. He does not seem to have served on any juries.
Despite this lack of leadership and visibility, he was selected in January
1870 as one of the representatives from
St Andrew’s parish to the convention of 40 proposed by Métis
leader Louis Riel. As might have been expected, he was not a leading member.
He had already privately expressed some anti-Métis sentiments. At the
convention he refused to vote in the election that chose Riel as president
and he spoke in favour of territorial status rather than provincial status
should the Red River settlement enter confederation. Riel described him a
few months later as "one of the most decided against us."
Notwithstanding this animus, Boyd was seen by Adams George Archibald, first
lieutenant governor of Manitoba and the North-West Territories, as "not
obnoxious to the French." Since Archibald found him "a man of fair
abilities, of considerable means, and very popular among English
half-breeds," Boyd was selected as provincial secretary in September 1870.
(He was also made a commissioner to administer oaths of allegiance and
office, a justice of the peace, and a member of the board of health.)
Archibald acted as his own premier; consequently, Boyd and the other
ministers served as "secretaries rather than advisors." The old claim that
Boyd was Manitoba’s first premier is quite untenable.
Boyd was returned for St Andrews North in the first elections for the
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, held in December 1870. The following month
he relinquished the secretaryship and was appointed minister of public works
and agriculture. From July onwards, the ministry was under bitter attack
from recent Ontario immigrants, mainly English-speaking and Protestant, who
were settling in Manitoba in large numbers. Meetings in his constituency
condemned Boyd for doing nothing to build bridges or a jail. His vote in
favour of a grant of £500 to the Hôpital de Saint-Boniface and his support
of a bill to incorporate the diocese of St Boniface which permitted it
unlimited landholding were hurled against him. His response in part was that
he was bound by cabinet solidarity, a misleading reply since his voting
record showed that he was often prepared to vote against his fellow
ministers.
On 9 Dec. 1871 he resigned as minister, citing the need for English
half-breed representation in the cabinet; John Norquay was his replacement.
The pro-government Weekly Manitoban in commenting on his resignation could
find nothing more positive to say than that he was "calm, shrewd, always
cool," and "moderate in his views."
Boyd was a founding member of the Council of the North-West Territories,
established in December 1872; he attended seven meetings and would remain a
member until the council’s reorganization in 1875. In March 1873 he was
appointed minister of education for Manitoba, a post he held until October.
He was not a candidate in the next provincial elections.
Boyd’s end was as shadowy as his beginning. It is said that he left Manitoba
about 1889 to live in England. In
1902 he was living in Pimlico, London, but owned numerous
properties in Essex and was a wealthy man. At his death six years later he
left an estate valued at over £83,000. In addition to the many properties he
left his wife, he made generous cash bequests to her, their relatives and
servants, and the Royal National Life-boat Institution. He left the
remainder of his estate in trust to his wife.
Source: Dictionary of Canadian biography; [Toronto, Ontario] : University
of Toronto Press. FHL US/CAN Book.
NOTE: Use this data as a finding tool, just as you would any other
secondary source. When you find the name of an ancestor
listed confirm the facts in original sources.
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