Frederick Williams-Taylor


Sir Frederick Williams-Taylor was a Canadian banker. He was general manager of the Bank of Montreal.

Early life

Frederick was born in Moncton, New Brunswick on October 23, 1863. He was the son of Ezekiel Moore Taylor and Rosalind Taylor, both of whom came from the north of Ireland.
His paternal great-grandfather was Capt. Moore of Buncrana Castle in Inishowen, Ireland and his maternal great-grandfather was Col. Joseph Morse, the United Empire Loyalist commandant of Fort Cumberland in Nova Scotia.
Williams-Taylor was educated privately until he began working in 1878. In 1914, he was honored with the honorary degree of doctor of laws by the University of New Brunswick.

Career

In 1878, Williams-Taylor joined the Bank of Montreal and by 1897, he was appointed Assistant Inspector, Head Office. In 1903, he became the Joint Manager of the bank in Chicago and by 1906, he was promoted to Manager of the bank in London, England, and eventually, and General Manager of the bank in 1913.
In 1913, Frederick Williams-Taylor was knighted by King George V, and combined his middle name and birth surname into a new hyphenated surname. He received an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of New Brunswick in 1915.

Personal life

In athletics, he "earned great distinction in skating, rowing, tennis, squash, racquets, and stroked the Wanderers four-oared crew" in Halifax, in 1886.
In June 1888, he married the former Jane Fayrer Henshaw, a daughter of Mr. Joshua Henshaw of Montreal. Together, they had a daughter:
Just before her daughter's wedding in Montreal in December 1917, Lady Williams-Taylor was painted by the Swiss-born American society artist Adolfo Muller-Ury at his palatial home, Star Acres, in Nassau in the Bahamas, after which he attended the wedding ceremony. While living in the Bahamas, Sir Frederick and Lady Williams-Taylor were close friends of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.
Williams-Taylor died in Montreal, Quebec on August 2, 1945.

Descendants

Through his daughter Brenda, he was the grandfather of Brenda Frazier, known as one of the most famous American debutantes during the Depression era.