Francis Clergue


Francis Hector Clergue was an American businessman who became the leading industrialist of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario in Canada, at the turn of the 20th century.

Early Years

Born in Brewer, Maine, Clergue studied law at the University of Maine after which he was involved in a number of business ventures until coming to Ontario, Canada.

Career

Clergue came to Sault Ste. Marie backed by Philadelphia businessmen. He saw the potential for industry with the location of the town. He helped establish a hydro-electric dam which provided the town with cheap and abundant electricity. Following the 1895 construction of a new canal and lock, he founded paper mill St. Mary's Paper, Algoma Steel, as well as a portion of the Algoma Central Railway connecting the city to the transcontinental artery of Canada, for which the city is most noted. He also established the Helen and Gertrude mines. He used all of his ventures collectively to build his empire. Algoma Steel was started by using pig iron from the Helen mine to make steel rails. By 1903, Clergue had overextended himself and the companies that he had founded continued under new management.

Later years and death

He spent his latter years in Montreal, Quebec, in Canada where he died in 1939 and his remains were return to the United States for burial at Mount Hope Cemetery in Bangor.

Legacy

Popular Canadian author Alan Sullivan's novel The Rapids is inspired by Clergue's life. In 1946, Sir James Dunn, the then owner of Algoma Steel, commissioned Sullivan to write Clergue's biography. Provisionally titled Before the Tide, it has never been published.
His name lives on in Sault Ste. Marie:
Clergue was inducted into Sault Ste. Marie's Walk of Fame in 2006.