Thomas Bassett Macaulay graduated
high school and joined
Sun Life at the age of 17. For the next 40 years he worked for the company as
actuary (aged 20), secretary,
managing director (46), president (55). He served as president for 20 years, before his retirement as
chairman. He was one of four
Canadian charter members of the
Actuarial Society of America. Macaulay represented the actuaries of both Canada and the United States at the International Congresses, held in
Paris and
Berlin, in the years 1900 and 1906. He was also a fellow of the
Royal Statistical Society, president of the Canadian Life Assurance Officers' Association, and president of the Canadian West Indian League and became an honorary president of the
Navy League of Canada. In 1915 he became president of
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada. In 1914 he became one of the inaugural
fellows of the
American Statistical Association. In 1917, he was the chairman of the National Committee on Food Resources, he also was the governor of the
Montreal General Hospital, as well as the
Fraser-Hickson Institute public library in Montreal. Macaulay created a fund of £10,000 to assist the seafaring people of his father's hometown,
Fraserburgh, Scotland. He also gave £10,000 to research into animal breeding at the
University of Edinburgh. He gave money to the public library on the
Isle of Lewis, erected a wing in the Island's hospital and established the Macaulay Experimental Farm. In 1930, he funded the purchase of , to establish the
Macaulay Institute for Soil Research. Macaulay received an
honorary degree from the
University of Aberdeen, and
McGill University, and the town of
Stornoway made him the first freeman of the burgh in 300 years. ==Holstein herd==