Helen Margaret "Nellie" Ryan (daughter) Isabelle Teresa "Rita" Ryan (daughter) Maj. John Raymond Ryan (son) Patrick Hugh Ryan (son) Roderick McSween Ryan (son) Charles Alexander Ryan (son) Hugh Alexander Ryan (son)
John RyanEsq. (25 December 1834 – 21 March 1902) was an Irish-Canadian railway magnate and the younger brother of Toronto-based industrialist Hugh Ryan and socialite Alice Ryan.[1][2] The son of John Patrick Ryan and Margaret Conway, Ryan immigrated from Limerick, Ireland, to Montreal, Canada, in 1841 at the age of seven —after his father sold Gortkelly Castle and their ancestral lands to a distant branch of Ryan family.[3][4][5]
Career at H. & J. Ryan
John Ryan was a co-founder and chairman of the industrial firm H. & J. Ryan, known best for railway development, alongside his elder brother Hugh Ryan who served as the CEO.[6] The firm went on to become one of the most successful in Canada and predated the formal establishment of the country.[6]
In 1880, Ryan and his brother were awarded the railway development contracts for the new Pembina-St. Boniface line track —including 100 miles northwest of Winnipeg— by Sir Charles Tupper and the Manitoba provincial government.[9] In addition to the railway development, the contracts also included the building of a covered bridge to connect the west and east portions of the Pembina-St. Boniface line across the Red River.[10]
In 1888, Ryan joined his elder brother Hugh Ryan and Michael John Haney in establishing Hugh Ryan & Co.;[15] which secured the contract to build the now historic Sault Ste. Marie Canal in Ontario.[16][17][18] The specifications for the canal were changed twice during construction, thus necessitating renegotiation of the contract price with the Deputy Minister of Railways and Canals, Toussaint Trudeau (ancestor of Prime Ministers Pierre Trudeau and Justin Trudeau).[19] The final contract price was a boon for the firm coming in at $1.2 million (the equivalent of $38.9 million in 2024).[20]
It will thus be seen that Mr. John Ryan was one of the most extensive contractors in Canada; he was also a prominent resident of Ontario, and was well known throughout the Dominion.[21]
Marriage, Children & Extended Family
On 27 July 1863 John Ryan married Scottish-Canadian Margaret Isabella McSween, fourth daughter of Roderick McSween, in a widely attended ceremony in Brockville, Ontario.[22][21] The couple lived in Brockville following their marriage for three decades until 1894 when they moved, along with their four live-in house staff, into a red-brick mansion on the storied Jarvis Street in Toronto, Ontario.[23][24] They had seven children: Helen Margaret "Nellie" Ryan, Isabelle Teresa "Rita" Ryan, Maj. John Raymond Ryan, Patrick Hugh Ryan, Roderick McSween Ryan, Charles Alexander Ryan, and Hugh Alexander Ryan[23]
Mr. and Mrs. Ryan resided in Brockville over thirty years, and were devoted and loyal citizens, deeply interested in its welfare and advancements. In 1894 they moved to a newly constructed mansion in Toronto.[21]
Upon the death of his father-in-law on 4 September 1877, John Ryan inherited the "McSween Lands" in Brockville, Ontario, in trust to his wife Margaret Isabella Ryan (née McSween); which included several residential properties and the historic McSween Inn.[25][26] Their daughter Isabelle Teresa Pettit (née Ryan) was still receiving payments from this Trust Fund in 1929.
On 14 June 1892, Ryan's eldest daughter Helen Margaret "Nellie" Ryan married prominent Montreal-based railway developer Allan Ronald "A.R." Macdonell in Brockville, Ontario.[27][28] Their daughter Elinor Claire Macdonell married British painter Raoul Millais, grandson of Pre-Raphaelite painter Sir John Everett Millais and the son of naturalist John Guille Millais.[29][30][31] A portrait of Elinor by Raoul is housed in the National Portrait Gallery, London.[32]
On 3 April 1908, Ryan's younger daughter Isabelle Teresa "Rita" Ryan married Colonel Hubert Ronal Pettit —appointed Deputy Lord Lieutenant of Herefordshire by King George V[33]— in a ceremony in Prescott, Ontario, followed by a reception on the Ryan family's private train which took the wedding attendees to Montreal, Quebec.[34]
Both of Ryan's daughters, Helen and Isabelle, were the goddaughters of his eldest brother and business partner Hugh Ryan; and were subsequently beneficiaries of Hugh Ryan's sizeable estate.[35][36]
Ryan's elder sister was heiress Alice Ryan, known for her work in the Canadian suffragette movement and lavish lifestyle.[37][38][39] Through his sister, Ryan was the uncle of Margaret Isabelle McHenry (née Doheny), the president of the Catholic Women's League of Canada.[40] His eldest daughter, Helen Margaret "Nellie" Ryan, was the maid of honour at Margaret Isabelle's wedding to whiskey magnate William John "W.J." McHenry on 28 October 1885.[41]
John Ryan died from heart failure on 21 March 1902 in Toronto, Ontario; with his remains being moved by private train on 24 March 1902 to Brockville, Ontario, for internment.[23][42] Ryan's requiem mass was conducted by Catholic Archbishop Charles-Hugues Gauthier at the Our Lady of Lourdes Church and was attended by the Irish Bishop of Lancaster, Thomas Flynn.[43]
Ryan left a sizeable estate which included liquid assets valued at over half a million dollars (the equivalent of $18.5 million in 2024).[46][47] Three weeks after Ryan's death the executors of the estate announced in the Toronto Star that the fortune would revert to his widow and children; with special allotments made for Raymond Ryan who was finishing his studies in England at the time.[48]