McGill Library
McLennan Library Building3459 rue McTavish
Montreal, Quebec
H3A 0C9
Rev. Robert Blackwood was born on October 14, 1787, in Coldrain, Fossoway and Tullibole Parish, Kinross-shire, Scotland, the son of William Blackwood (1750-1812) and Janet Keltie (1761-?). He studied theology and graduated from Divinity Hall at the University of Edinburgh. That same year he left Scotland with the intention of settling in the state of Ohio. On his way to the United States, he stopped in Halifax, where he was persuaded to remain since there was a demand for Presbyterian ministers. In October 1816, he became pastor for the congregation of Nine Mile River, Gay's River, and Shubenacadie, residing at Shubenacadie. In 1840, he left Shubenacadie to preach at Tatamagouche. Prior to his arrival in Nova Scotia, Blackwood had acquired some medical training and was known to occasionally treat members of his congregation. In 1852, he resigned his charge at Tatamagouche but continued to minister in New Annan, Nova Scotia at Willow Church.
In 1816, he married Ann Macara of Perth, Scotland, with whom he had nine children. He died on 12 December 1857.
Thomas Blackwood was born in 1773 in Lanarkshire, Scotland, and died in 1842 in Montreal. He moved to Quebec in May 1790 and on December 27, 1806, Blackwood married Margaret Grant, who was the eldest daughter of John Grant of Lachine. They had two children. Blackwood was employed by John Blackwood (not a relative) from 1790 until 1795. In 1798, Blackwood worked with James McGill (1744-1813, founder of McGill University) in establishing a French royalist colony in Windham, Upper Canada, under Joseph-Genevieve de Puisaye, Comte de Puisaye. In 1800, Blackwood joined the Montreal firm of James and Andrew McGill and Company. Blackwood was ensigned in Montreal’s 1st Militia Battalion in 1804 and was promoted to captain in 1821 and may have served in 1812-13 as a lieutenant of artillery in the Montreal Incorporated Volunteers. In 1806-07, he was in Michilimackinac (now known as Mackinac Island, Michigan) to represent James and Andrew McGill and Company. In 1807, Blackwood was one of twenty Scots who founded the Montreal Curling Club, in which he became the president. Along with Peter Harkness and Francois Desrivieres (1764-1830, stepson of James McGill), Blackwood formed Desrivieres, Blackwood and Company in 1810 to continue the fur trade activities in the southwest, following the dissolution of James and Andrew McGill and Company. Before 1815, Blackwood had partnered with his brother John in the grain and lumber trade. In 1819, Blackwood was charter director of the Montreal General Hospital, and director and secretary-treasurer of the Montreal Savings Bank. He received a commission of the peace in 1821. Since his move to Montreal, Blackwood was invested in the Scotch Presbyterian Church (later known as St. Gabriel Street Church) and he fought the Church of England, arguing against the Church of England’s assumption that it was the established church in all the British dominions.