Philip Ross

Philip Dansken Ross (January 1, 1858 – July 5, 1949) was a Canadian journalist, newspaper publisher, and ice hockey administrator.

Philip Ross
Born(1858-01-01)January 1, 1858
DiedJuly 5, 1949(1949-07-05) (aged 91)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Resting placeBeechwood Cemetery, Ottawa
Education
Occupation(s)journalist, publisher
Known forStanley Cup trustee
Ottawa Journal owner
Spouse
Mary Little-John
(m. 18911949)
RelativesPhilip Simpson Ross (father)
AwardsHockey Hall of Fame (1976)

Early life

Philip Dansken Ross was born in Montreal to parents Christina Chalmers Dansken and Montreal accountant Philip Simpson Ross.[1]

Ross studied at McGill University as a science major in 1875. At McGill, Ross played for the football and rowing clubs,[2] later captaining the McGill football club to victory against Harvard University in the first Canada-U.S. international football game in 1878. He was provincial single sculling champion twice. He also played lacrosse and founded several golf clubs.[3] He graduated from McGill in 1875, with honours.[1]

Career

Upon graduation, Ross worked for the Montreal Harbour Commission.[2] He left the Commission and joined the staff at the Montreal Star in 1880. He joined the Toronto Daily Mail as a journalist.[2] He returned to Montreal and joined the Montreal Star in 1885, eventually becoming its managing editor.[4]

In 1886, Ross became co-owner of the near-bankrupt Ottawa Evening Journal newspaper.[5] In 1891 he bought out his partner and made it into a highly successful and respected paper. He served as its president for 60 years during which time he helped found the Canadian Press newspaper association.[1]

He was a builder and sometimes player of the Ottawa Hockey Club, later to be known as the Ottawa Senators. With this club, he befriended the sons of Lord Stanley, the Governor-General of Canada.[5] In 1892, Lord Stanley appointed him to be a trustee for his championship ice hockey trophy, known today as the Stanley Cup. He helped found the Ontario Hockey Association in 1890. He played in the first Ontario championship game in 1891 at the Rideau Rink in Ottawa, helping Ottawa win 5-0 over Toronto St. George's.

Ross was one of the two original Trustees of the Stanley Cup named by Lord Stanley in 1894, and so served for 56 years until his death. He also served as trustee for the Minto Cup of lacrosse. He turned down the trusteeship for the Grey Cup of Canadian football. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1976.[5]

Politics

He also went into politics. In 1912, Ross was nominated by the Civic Improvement League to be their mayoral candidate. This upset Wilson Southam, publisher of the Ottawa Citizen, who disliked that Ross and the League promoted "compulsory vaccination and elitism." Ross would end up losing in the election.[6]

In 1928, Ross served as president of the Liberal-Conservative Association of Ottawa.[1] On September 10, 1929, Ross was elected chairman of the Ontario Royal Commission on Public Welfare "to investigate provision of services in hospitals, prisons and other provincial institutions."[7]

In 1931, he turned down the opportunity to be appointed lieutenant governor of Ontario.[1] In 1933, he served as president of McGill's Graduate Society.[8]

Legacy and personal life

Ross family grave at Beechwood Cemetery

The Ontario Heritage Foundation erected a plaque commemorating Philip Dansken Ross 1858–1949 at the Journal Towers, Kent Street between Laurier and Slater, Ottawa. "A distinguished journalist widely admired for his candour of expression and depth of knowledge, P.D. Ross was publisher-owner of the Ottawa Journal and one of the founders of the Canadian Press".[9]

Ross married Mary Littlejohn in 1891.[1] Ross died on July 5, 1949, in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.[1] He was interred at Beechwood Cemetery in Ottawa.[10]

References

General

  • Kitchen, Paul (2008). Win, Tie or Wrangle. Manotick, Ontario: Penumbra Press. ISBN 978-1-897323-46-5.
  • Ross, John Alastair (1978). The Ross Clan.
  • Roberts, Sir Charles (1938). Canada's Who's Who.

Specific

  1. "P. D. Ross". Lethbridge Herald. Alberta. July 5, 1949. p. 2.icon of an open green padlock
  2. Kitchen 2008, p. 37.
  3. "Legends of Hockey Biography".
  4. Kitchen 2008, p. 38.
  5. Laurel Zeisler (December 19, 2012). Historical Dictionary of Ice Hockey. Scarecrow Press. p. 273. ISBN 9780810878631. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  6. Warfe, Chris (June 1979). "The Search for Pure Water in Ottawa: 1910-1915" (PDF). Urban History Review. 8 (1): 96. doi:10.7202/1019392ar. PMID 11633447. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  7. "Royal commissions and commissions of inquiry 1792-1991" (PDF). ontla.on.ca. p. 73. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  8. Stanley Brice Frost (1980). McGill University: For the Advancement of Learning, Volume II, 1895-1971. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 138. ISBN 9780773504226. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  9. Ontario Heritage Foundation plaque
  10. Ontario Cemetery Finding Aid
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