, Ottawa Lord Strathcona is commemorated in Montreal by several McGill University buildings; he gave freely of his time to this institution, and a great quantity of his wealth. In Westmount, a street was named in his honour. In the greater Montreal West Island community, the Strathcona Desjardins Credit Union bears his name, with offices in downtown Montreal and in Kirkland. The credit union members were historically from the English-speaking hospitals of Montreal, but since then recent mergers also include Montreal area, English-speaking teachers. The Strathcona family mansion in Montreal on Dorchester Street (now
René Lévesque Boulevard) near Fort Street was torn down in 1941 to make way for an apartment building. Strathcona Avenue, located in Westmount (a suburb on the island of Montreal) is named in his honour. Strathcona is commemorated in Manitoba by the
Rural Municipality of Strathcona and by three streets in Winnipeg:
Donald Street and Smith Street in the downtown core, and Strathcona Street in the city's
West End. In Alberta he is commemorated by the
Calgary neighbourhood of
Strathcona Park by the Edmonton neighbourhood of
Strathcona, and by the municipality of
Strathcona County. In British Columbia, the
Vancouver neighbourhood of Strathcona takes its name from Lord Strathcona School built in 1891, and
Mount Sir Donald in
Glacier National Park is named after him. BC's oldest provincial park,
Strathcona Park, on Vancouver Island was named after him when it was founded in 1911. There are oil portraits of Lord Strathcona by many artists, but the Swiss-born American artist
Adolfo Müller-Ury seems to have made a number of head and shoulder portraits of him from 1898 (examples may be found at the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad offices and in the Hudson's Bay Company [this has a repainted background]), and the artist also presented his 1899 bust-length charcoal and crayon drawing of Strathcona to McGill University in Montreal in 1916. The Town of
Fort Smith in the Northwest Territories is named after Donald Smith. There is a
stained glass window memorializing him in
Westminster Abbey. His coat of arms appears over the main entrance of
Marischal College in Aberdeen.
Strathcona Park, which was erected by the city of Ottawa in 1907, is dedicated to him. The Town of
Transcona, Manitoba, incorporated in 1912 as a community to support the new railway shops of the
Grand Trunk Pacific and
National Transcontinental railways, takes half its name from Lord Strathcona, and the other half from the word
transcontinental. Strathcona was inducted into the
Canadian Curling Hall of Fame in 1973.
Ships named for Lord Strathcona At least three ships were named for Lord Strathcona during his lifetime. These were: •
Strathcona, a 598-ton, 142-foot wooden sidewheel paddle steamer, was built in 1898 by J. Macfarlane at
New Westminster, British Columbia for the
Hudson's Bay Company. The vessel was operated on the Pacific Northwest coast and in 1898-99 carried elements of the
Yukon Field Force. In 1902
Strathcona was sold to S.J.V. Spratt, later passing into the hands of the Sidney & Nanaimo Transportation Company. On 17 November 1909, the vessel was wrecked on a snag near Pages Landing on the Fraser River. In 1910
Strathcona was refloated and towed to New Westminster, where the engines and boilers were removed and the hull abandoned. •
Strathcona, a 1,881-ton, 253-foot steel canal-sized
Great Lakes freighter, was built in 1900 by the Caledon Shipbuilding Company in
Dundee, Scotland. This steamer was converted from a bulk carrier to a package freighter in 1911 by the Collingwood Shipbuilding Company at
Collingwood, Ontario.
Strathcona sailed for Inland Lines, Ltd., of
Hamilton, Ontario until 1913, whereupon it passed into the hands of
Canada Steamship Lines when that fleet was established. In 1915
Strathcona was requisitioned for ocean service during the
First World War. While bound from the Tyne to
Marseilles, France,
Strathcona was sunk by a scuttling charge from
SM U-78 on 13 April 1917 when some 145 miles west-northwest of
North Ronaldsay,
Orkney Islands. •
Lord Strathcona, a 495-ton, 160-foot steel salvage tug, was built in 1902 by J.P. Renoldson & Sons, Ltd., at
South Shields, England. Owned by George T. Davie & Sons of
Lauzon, Quebec, this tug arrived on its delivery voyage on 4 May 1902.
Lord Strathcona was sold in 1912 to the Quebec Salvage & Wrecking Company, Ltd., a
Canadian Pacific subsidiary, and remained in service through the end of the
Second World War. Ownership passed to
Foundation Maritime in 1944, and
Lord Strathcona was scrapped in 1947. A fourth ship,
Lord Strathcona, was a 7,335-ton, 455-foot ocean steamer built in 1915 by W. Doxford & Sons Ltd. at
Sunderland, England. Owned by the
Dominion Line,
Lord Strathcona was bound from
Wabana, Newfoundland to
Sydney, Nova Scotia with iron ore when the vessel was torpedoed and sunk by
U-513 on 5 September 1942.
Lord Strathcona's crew of 44, including Captain Charles Stewart, were rescued. ==Gallery==