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James Richardson (1819-1892)

James Richardson
Born James Richardson
1819
Aughnacloy, Northern Ireland
Died 15 November 1892
Kingston, Ontario
Nationality Irish, Canadian
Occupation merchant, tailor, politician, benefactor
Known for grain exporting, founder of James Richardson and Sons, Limited
Spouse(s) Roxanna Day (m. 1 March 1845, d. 1848)
Susannah Wartman(m. 11 March 1850)

James Richardson (1819 – 15 November 1892) was a Canadian businessman, founder of James Richardson and Sons, Limited, politician, and a colleague and personal friend of Sir John A. Macdonald. James had two sons: George Armstrong Richardson and Henry Westman Richardson. James died on 15 November 1892 leaving a business enterprise that survives today as James Richardson and Sons, Limited, the largest grain firm in the British Commonwealth. It is a privately owned agribusiness that is also involved with real estate, energy exploration, and food processing. He is buried in Cataraqui Cemetery in Kingston, in the same cemetery as John A. Macdonald.

James Richardson was born in 1819 in Aughnacloy, Northern Ireland to Daniel Richardson and Janet Armstrong. He emigrated to Canada in approximately 1823 and at the age of ten years moved to Kingston. His business interests started in tailoring and soon moved to grain and potash speculation. In 1844, based on an advertisement in the 17 January 1844 Chronicle & Gazette, he and "Little" started their own merchant tailor's business on Princess Street in Kingston. The advertisement indicated that their specialties included "broad cloths, plain and figured beavers, cassimeres, doe skine [sic], tweeds, fancy and clan tartans, and an assortment of vestings". And those cloths were promised to be "made to order in the latest and most approved fashionable styles, on moderate terms, and at the shortest possible notice".

Richardson lived above his merchant tailor's shop where he accepted grain as payment for some of his tailoring work. Sometime between the 1840s and the late 1860s, Richardson focused solely on the grain trade. In 1857, he founded James Richardson and Sons, Limited The firm purchased "a wharf and warehouse on the Kingston waterfront" in 1868 becoming the first to export grain from Kingston. The 1871 Canada Federal Census lists James' occupation as "grain dealer". In the 1873–74 Kingston Directory, the business was referred to as "Richardson & Sons, Grain Dealers, Commercial Wharf, Foot of Princess St.". At this time his sons, George Algernon Richardson and Henry Westman Richardson became managing partners in the business. In 1880, the Richardsons built the first grain elevator in Kingston with a capacity of 60,000 bushels.

Richardson exported grain to several countries in Europe and South America. As early as 1855, Richardson had been shipping grain to Liverpool to help feed British troops during the Crimean War. He also traded in many other commodities and invested in other businesses in the Kingston area such as the Kingston and Pembroke Railway, and the Kingston Railway Company. His firm took an interest in the promising mining operations north of Kingston in the area of Canada known as the Canadian Shield.


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