词条 | J. K. L. Ross |
释义 |
| name = J. K. L. Ross | image = Commander J.K.L. Ross of Montreal.jpg | imagesize = | caption = | birth_name = John Kenneth Leveson Ross | birth_date = 31 March 1876 | birth_place = Lindsay, Ontario, Canada | death_date = 25 July 1951 | death_place = | residence = Montreal, Quebec Montego Bay, Jamaica | education = Bishop's College School McGill University | occupation = Businessman, philanthropist and racehorse owner/breeder | spouse = Ethel Matthews Iris de Lisser | children = James K. M. Ross Hylda A. M. Ross Hodgson | parents = James Ross and Annie Kerr }} Commander John Kenneth Leveson "Jack" Ross, CBE (1876–1951) was a Canadian businessman, sportsman, thoroughbred racehorse owner/breeder, and philanthropist. He is best remembered for winning the first United States Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing in 1919 with his Hall of Fame colt, Sir Barton. In 1911, he set the world record for catching the largest tuna ({{convert|680|lb|kg|abbr=on|disp=comma|0}}) by rod and line at St. Anns, Nova Scotia. After his father, he was the second Canadian to be made a member of the Royal Yacht Squadron. Early lifeRoss was born in Lindsay, Ontario, the only child of James Leveson Ross, who made his fortune constructing the Canadian Pacific Railway and become a prominent art collector and the first Canadian to be made a member of the Royal Yacht Squadron. His mother, Annie Kerr (1847–1915), was the daughter of John W. Kerr (1824–1904) of Kingston, New York, a prominent politician with the Democratic Party and formerly the Sheriff of Ulster County, New York. Known as "Jack" to his friends, Ross grew up in Montreal's Golden Square Mile at his parents' French château-style mansion at 3644 Peel Street, designed by architect Bruce Price. The home was later bought by John W. McConnell and donated to McGill University, when it was renamed Chancellor Day Hall. Ross was educated at Bishop's College School in Lennoxville, Quebec, and at McGill University. He was an enthusiastic squash and racquets player, and was on the McGill ice hockey team and a member of the university's Canadian football championship team. Business venturesIn co-operation with prominent Montreal businessman Sir Herbert Holt and others, Ross established Côte St. Luc Realties in 1911, which built the town of Hampstead, Quebec. In 1909, a house was built for Ross in Montreal at 3647 Peel Street, opposite his father's mansion.[1] Designed by Edward Maxwell and his brother William Maxwell,[2] it is now known as J.K.L. Ross House and is occupied by the Biomedical Ethics Unit and the Department of Social Studies of Medicine of the McGill University Faculty of Medicine.[3] After his father's death in 1913 (when he inherited $16 million), he moved back to his childhood home and used the second one to house guests, the newer one being too small for parties. It was purchased by Marianopolis College in 1961 and used as administration offices until 1976, when McGill University acquired the property. At one time, his father owned a controlling interest in Dominion Coal Company and Dominion Iron and Steel Company. As a result, Ross built a summer home at St. Anns Bay in the northern part of Victoria County, Nova Scotia, on Cape Breton Island. After his father's death, Ross moved to Nova Scotia, where for a time he was involved in the management of the companies. Tuna fishingIt was while at St. Anns, Nova Scotia, that Ross developed a passion for the sport of deep-sea fishing. He tackled the sport scientifically and was a pioneer among tuna anglers, developing fishing techniques that later became standard practice. He wrote two books on the subject, describing various discoveries and adventures. He had remarkable tenacity, bearing in mind that harnesses were not yet invented, on one occasion he fought a tuna for 19 hours before being forced to cut his line.[4] On 28 August 1911, after a struggle of a mere four hours and forty five minutes, Ross landed a {{convert|680|lb|kg|adj=on|0}} tuna which set a record for the largest fish caught with a rod and reel.[5][6] The record held for several years until he himself bettered it by catching a {{convert|720|lb|kg|adj=on|0}} tuna. That record was broken in 1950 by his son-in-law, Commander Duncan Hodgson, who in the same way landed a {{convert|997|lb|kg|adj=on|0}} tuna off Cape Breton.[7] World War IDuring World War I, Ross donated three large yachts for use in the war effort by the Royal Canadian Navy and took command of one of them, {{HMCS|Tuna}}, in the North Atlantic. He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for distinguished naval service. Afterwards, the media would commonly refer to him as "Commander J.K.L. Ross." Ross was the second Canadian (after his father) to be made a member of the Royal Yacht Squadron. PhilanthropyJames Ross had used his enormous wealth to become a major benefactor to Montreal, and his son continued the family's philanthropy. In 1916, acting on his late father's desire to support the Royal Victoria Hospital, Ross donated $1 million for the building of the first major addition to the hospital, which became known as the Ross Memorial Pavilion, one of Canada's first private patient pavilions.[8][9] During World War I, Ross donated $500,000 in cash to the Royal Navy. He also gave a further $500,000 to be distributed between the families of enlisted men killed in the war. He donated money to fund a new building (Ross Boarding House) at his alma mater, Bishop's College School, Lennoxville, and also gave liberally to McGill University. Thoroughbred racingRoss owned several riding horses that led to an interest in Thoroughbred horse racing and breeding. In 1915, he purchased twelve Thoroughbreds that immediately paid dividends when Damrosch won the 1916 Preakness Stakes. Later that year, he acquired a {{convert|2000|acre|km2|adj=on}} farm property at Vercheres, Quebec where he established his own breeding operation. Ross contracted jockeys Earl Sande, Carroll Shilling and Johnny Loftus, all of whom would be elected to the United States Racing Hall of Fame, plus he hired H. Guy Bedwell who became one of America's leading trainers and who, too, was inducted in the US Racing Hall of Fame. Running one of the most successful racing stables in North America, at Toronto's Old Woodbine Race Course, his horses won numerous races including five editions each of the Maple Leaf Stakes, the Connaught Cup, and the Grey Stakes. Racing success led Jack Ross to build a second breeding and racing stable near Toronto he called Agincourt Farms and a third such operation in the State of Maryland called the Yarrow Brae Stud Farm. Sir BartonIn 1919, Ross owned two of the best three-year-olds in North America. Sir Barton and the 1918 American Champion Two-Year-Old Colt, Billy Kelly, finished one-two in the 1919 Kentucky Derby. Sir Barton then went on to win the Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes to become the first-ever winner of the US Triple Crown. For 1919, Sir Barton was voted American Horse of the Year. The following year, Sir Barton set a world record for 1 3/16 miles on dirt in winning the 28 August 1920, Merchants and Citizens Handicap at the Saratoga Race Course. However, plagued by tender hooves, Sir Barton was beaten in a now-famous match race on the hard dirt surface of the Kennilworth Park in Windsor, Ontario by Man o' War. In 1957, Sir Barton was inducted in the US Racing Hall of Fame. [10]In addition to Sir Barton, notable among the Ross stable of racehorses were:
Financial reverses forced Ross to disband his entire racing operations in 1927. In 1920, he had been appointed president of Blue Bonnets Raceway in Montreal, and although no longer a stable owner after 1927, he held the position until 1931, when he retired to a home in Jamaica. ReputationRoss was widely respected for his good manners and sportsmanship, and the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame says that the United States press called him "the best sportsman Canada has ever sent to this country."[12] On one race he put down $20,000 and won back $160,000, but he spotted an irregularity, and although legally he was allowed to keep his winnings, he gave $40,000 back to the bookies. Though he betted frequently, he won as often as he lost, but he is remembered on one occasion for winning $50,000 from a notoriously sharp New Yorker. The Rosses lived lavishly, even by many of his contemporaries' standards. Princess Patricia of Connaught became engaged to Alexander Ramsay at Ross' fishing lodge on the Bay of St. Anns, Nova Scotia. She was heard to remark that the Rosses lived more royally than royalty. He did keep thirty servants, but many of his supposed trappings were fictional: he had one or sometimes two Rolls-Royces, not eight, and his single private railway car was not an entire private train. BankruptcyThere was no doubt that Ross was very generous with his money and spent a fortune on parties, horse racing and yachts, but there was no single cause for the financial downfall that befell him in 1928, when he was down to his final $300 after inheriting $16 million fifteen years earlier.[11] His investments in Turner Valley and the Mexican oil wells had been premature, and he had been exceedingly generous in his philanthropy and to many friends alike. His saddest memory was when his friends to whom he'd been so generous before crossed the street when they saw him coming.[11] Certainly his passion for horse racing cost him dearly, as his only son, Jim Ross, explained: "To own a few mediocre horses is an expensive luxury. To own many good ones demands a truly vast sum of money. In those days a large racing establishment, even a highly successful one, never made back its expenses."[11] Family and final yearsIn 1902, at St. James Cathedral, Toronto, Ross married his first wife, Ethel (Etheldine) Alice Matthews, daughter of Wilmot Deloui Matthews (1850–1919), one of Toronto's most influential businessmen, by his wife Annie Jane Love. One of Ethel's brothers was married to Annabel, daughter of Sir Edmund Boyd Osler, and the other married the New York City socialite Constance Greening. Her sister lived with the Rosses for some time in Nova Scotia before marrying Bruce MacKinnon and moving to Switzerland.[13] The Rosses were the parents of a son and a daughter,
Two years after Ross was declared bankrupt, Ethel divorced him in 1930. She continued to live in Montreal, remarrying a Boston attorney, which also ended in divorce. Ross was saved from penury by a trust fund. A few years before, the home he had built for himself on Peel Street was valued at over a million dollars but by 1930, with Montreal in a recession following the Wall Street Crash, there were no takers for a mansion that size. As an act of charity Ross's friend, the 2nd Lord Shaughnessy, purchased it from him for $51,000 in 1935. Ross briefly moved into an apartment before leaving for Jamaica, where he met and married in 1931 his new wife, Iris de Lisser, the daughter of a Jamaican planter and sister of H. G. de Lisser. He bought a house on Montego Bay (that after his death was purchased by Lord Beaverbrook) and was made deputy governor of the island. Apart from occasional visits to Montreal, he remained in Jamaica, fishing and sailing until his death in 1951 – happier (he told his confidantes), than when he was rich. In accordance with his wishes, J. K. L. Ross was buried at sea. On its formation in 1976, he was inducted posthumously into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame. References1. ^J.K.L. Ross House, McGill University 2. ^3647 Peel Street, Montreal, McGill University 3. ^[https://www.mcgill.ca/medbuildings/ Director of Buildings website for the Faculty of Medicine], McGill University 4. ^[https://archive.is/20130121035404/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1131724/2/index.htm Sports Illustrated – Test Time for Tuna] 5. ^{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/?id=ZaoLdlkxv6gC&pg=PT19&lpg=PT19&dq=j-k-l-ross+tuna+1911 |title=Amazing Fishing Stories: Incredible Tales from Stream to Open Sea |date=2011 |first=Paul |last=Knight|isbn=9781119951629 }} {{page needed|date=March 2017}} 6. ^{{cite news|last=Phillips |first=Hartie I. |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9A0DE1D6123FE233A25757C0A9619C946496D6CF |title=Salt Water Fishing Near Here |newspaper=The New York Times |date=4 July 1915 |accessdate=4 March 2017 |subscription=yes}} 7. ^{{cite magazine|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,813264,00.html |title=Sport: Good Catch |date=18 September 1950 |magazine=Time |accessdate=4 March 2017 |subscription=y}} 8. ^{{cite web |url=http://digital.library.mcgill.ca/hospitals/bldg/bldg03.htm |title=The Ross Pavilion |publisher=McGill University |accessdate=4 March 2017}} 9. ^{{cite book|last=Adams |first=Annmarie |title=Medicine by Design: The Architect and the Modern Hospital, 1893–1943 |date=2008 |publisher=University of Minnesota Press |isbn=978-0-8166-5113-9}} 10. ^{{cite web|author=Special to The New York Times |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9E02E1DC103FE432A2575AC2A96E9C946195D6CF |title=Sir Barton Sets New World Mark |newspaper=The New York Times |date=29 August 1920 |accessdate=4 March 2017 |subscription=y}} 11. ^1 2 3 {{cite book|last=Ross |first=James K. M. |title=Boots and Saddles : The Story of the Fabulous Ross Stable in the Golden Days of Racing |date=1956 |publisher=E. P. Dutton |location=New York City}} 12. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20070902200418/http://www.canadianhorseracinghalloffame.com/builders/1976/Commander_Ross.asp] 13. ^{{Cite book |title=Restoring the Spirit: The Beginnings of Occupational Therapy in Canada, 1890–1930 |first=Judith |last=Friedland |date=2011}} {{page needed|date=March 2017}} 14. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.ross-ter.com/JamesLRoss.html |title=James Ross – Railroad Builder and Philanthropist |publisher=ross-ter.com |accessdate=4 March 2017}} 15. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1946&dat=19601124&id=SV0rAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Pp0FAAAAIBAJ&pg=2787,4488740 |title=Mr. Archibald Arthur Hodgson |newspaper=The Gazette|location=Montreal |date=24 November 1960}} 16. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1946&dat=19530529&id=a4ItAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZJkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5509,5096626 |newspaper=The Gazette|location=Montreal |date=29 May 1953 |title=Honor For Montreal Angler |last=Hunter |first=Izaak}} 17. ^{{cite magazine |url=http://capebretonsmagazine.com/modules/publisher/item.php?itemid=3706 |title=Tuna Fishing in St. Ann's Bay – From a Talk with Commander Duncan M. Hodgson |date=1 January 1991 |magazine=Cape Breton's Magazine |accessdate=4 March 2017 |pages=63}} External links
16 : Bishop's University alumni|McGill University alumni|Businesspeople from Ontario|Businesspeople from Montreal|Canadian philanthropists|Canadian military personnel of World War I|Canadian Commanders of the Order of the British Empire|Canadian racehorse owners and breeders|Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame inductees|Canadian socialites|Owners of U.S. Thoroughbred Triple Crown winners|People from Kawartha Lakes|Burials at sea|1876 births|1951 deaths|Canadian people of Scottish descent |
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