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Kenneth Thomson, 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet

Kenneth Roy Thomson, 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet (September 1, 1923 – June 12, 2006), known in Canada as Ken Thomson, was a Canadian/British businessman and art collector. At the time of his death, he was listed by Forbes as the richest person in Canada and the ninth richest person in the world, with a net worth of approximately US $19.6 billion.[2]

The Lord Thomson of Fleet
Born(1923-09-01)September 1, 1923
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
DiedJune 12, 2006(2006-06-12) (aged 82)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Alma materSt. John's College, Cambridge
Occupation(s)Chairman, Woodbridge Co. Ltd.[1]
Spouse
Nora Marilyn Lavis
(m. 1956)
Children3, including David and Peter
Parent(s)Roy Thomson
Edna Thomson
Websitethomson.com

Early life and career edit

Thomson was born on September 1, 1923, in Toronto, Ontario.[3][4] He was the son of Roy Thomson, the founder of the Thomson Corporation.[3][5]

Thomson was first educated at Upper Canada College before going up to St. John's College, Cambridge, where he received a degree in economics and law. During World War II, he served in the Royal Canadian Air Force. Following the war, he completed his education and entered the family business, working as a reporter for the Timmins Daily Press, then for the next five years, first as a salesman, later as general manager, for the Galt Reporter. In 1953, he was appointed head of Thomson Newspapers, and lived in Toronto for thirteen years.

Business owner edit

His father purchased The Times in September 1966. Thomson moved to London the following year to become vice-chairman, and a year later chairman, of Times Newspapers Ltd. He returned to Toronto three years later, and in 1971 became joint-chairman, with his father, of the Thomson Organization.[3]

Upon his father's death in August 1976, Ken Thomson became chairman of the Thomson Corporation, and succeeded his father as The Lord Thomson of Fleet. Thomson never used his title in Canada, however, and never took up his seat in the House of Lords. In a 1980 interview with Saturday Night magazine, he spoke of honouring a promise to his father: "In London I'm Lord Thomson; in Toronto I'm Ken. I have two sets of Christmas cards and two sets of stationery. You might say I'm having my cake and eating it too."[6]

At the age of fifty-three, Thomson inherited a media empire of over two-hundred newspaper and television holdings, which also continued to reap profits from a subsidiary North Sea oil investment his father had made a few years earlier. He acquired the Hudson's Bay Company in 1979, and purchased The Globe and Mail in Toronto in 1980.[3][7]

In the 1980s and 90s Thomson presided over a number of divestitures, selling The Times to Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation in 1981, the North Sea oil holdings in 1989, and Thomson Travel in 1998.[3] In 2001, The Globe and Mail was combined with BCE's cable and television assets (including CTV and The Sports Network) to form Bell Globemedia, controlled by BCE with Thomson as a minority shareholder. The company then sold all of its community newspapers to become a financial data services giant and one of the world's most powerful information services and academic publishing companies. Today, the company operates primarily in the US from its headquarters in Stamford, Connecticut. In 2002, The Thomson Corporation began trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol, TOC.[8]

According to Forbes magazine in 2005, the Thomson family was the richest in Canada, and Kenneth Thomson was the fifteenth richest person in the world, with a personal net worth of US $17.9 billion.[9] At the time of his death a year later, he had climbed to ninth richest, with assets of $19.6 billion.[10]

Art collector edit

Throughout the latter half of the 20th century, Thomson distinguished himself as one of North America's leading art collectors. In the 1940s, he began collecting paintings by Cornelius Krieghoff.[3]

In 1977, the famously private Thomson suddenly found his collection had become a top news story—from The Globe and Mail in Toronto, to The Times of London—after he’d quietly invited English art forger Tom Keating to come to his office at the top of Thomson Tower and check if any of his cherished Krieghoffs were fakes. Keating was under investigation by the Art and Antiques squad at Scotland Yard for selling several fake Krieghoffs in the UK, and he claimed to have painted over a hundred of them, mostly in the 1950s. Keating denied finding any of his pastiches in Thomson's office, and said it was a marvellous experience to see such a fine collection.[11][12][13][14] In 1989, Thomson opened an eponymous Gallery in downtown Toronto to display some of these pieces.[3]

In November 2002, he announced he would donate in trust around two thousand art works to the Art Gallery of Ontario, including two major acquisitions he had purchased that July: Paul Kane's Scene in the Northwest: Portrait of John Henry Lefroy, at CA$5.1 million, the highest price ever paid for a Canadian painting, and the highlight of his European collection, Peter Paul Rubens' 17th-century masterpiece The Massacre of the Innocents for CA$117 million.[3][15][16][17]

The collection features essential works of over a dozen eminent 19th to mid-20th century Canadian artists, including some three hundred paintings from Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven, a hundred and forty-five wintry habitant scenes by Cornelius Krieghoff, a hundred mostly impressionistic, modern landscapes by luminary David Milne, as well as works by Paul Kane, Paul-Emile Borduas and William Kurelek.[17][18]

The lesser-known European Collection includes an assortment of 17th to 20th century British ship models, a series of Medieval and Baroque ivory carvings, and features the 12th-century Malmesbury châsse, an ornate casket which once held the bones of a Scottish missionary.[17][19][20]

The unprecedented donation of his CA$300 million art collection helped lure Toronto-native starchitect Frank Gehry to design a major expansion and renovation of the AGO, towards which Thomson gave an additional CA$50 million. He also gifted a CA$20 million endowment for gallery operations.[19][7][21]

Retirement edit

In 2002, Thomson stepped down as chairman of Thomson Corporation, installing his elder son, David. He retained his positions as Chairman of The Woodbridge Company, the family's holding company, which owned a controlling share of Thomson Corporation.

In his final years, Thomson lived at 8 Castle Frank Road (gated estate) in the Rosedale area. Thomson loved to walk his Wheaton terrier in the Rosedale area. He died in 2006 at his Toronto office of an apparent heart attack.[4]

Personal life edit

In 1956, Thomson married Nora Marilyn Lavis (July 27, 1930 – May 23, 2017)[22][23] They had three children: David (born 1957), Lynne, who changed her name to Taylor (born 1959), and Peter (born 1965). Taylor, a one-time actress and film producer, became known for her lawsuit against Christie's auction house, when in 1994 she bought urns supposedly from Louis XV of France that were discovered instead to be 19th century reproductions.[24][25]

Arms edit

Coat of arms of Kenneth Thomson, 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet
 
 
Crest
A beaver sejant erect Proper blowing upon a hunting-horn Argent slung over his dexter shoulder by a riband of the dress tartan Proper to Thomson of that Ilk and his dependers.
Escutcheon
Argent a stag's head cabossed Proper on a chief azure between two mullets a hunting-horn of the first stringed Gules.
Supporters
Dexter a Mississauga Indian habited in the proper costume of his tribe holding in his dexter hand a bow all Proper; sinister a shepherd bearing in his sinister hand a shepherd's crook on his head a bonnet all Proper and wearing a kilt of the usual tartan Proper to Thomson of that Ilk and his dependers.
Motto
Never A Backward Step [26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Thomson.com. Management. Accessed March 23, 2006.
  2. ^ . Forbes. Archived from the original on April 11, 2006.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "Kenneth Roy Thomson". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  4. ^ a b "Ken Thomson, Canada's richest man, dies". CBC.
  5. ^ Newman, Peter C (October 14, 1991). "The Private Life of Canada's Richest Man". Maclean's.
  6. ^ Martin, Sandra (June 12, 2006). . The Globe and Mail. Toronto: CTVglobemedia. Archived from the original on June 14, 2006. Retrieved May 8, 2008.
  7. ^ a b Olive, David (January 5, 2015). "Thomson family's legacy lies in the art world". thestar.com. Retrieved April 11, 2023.
  8. ^ Carruthers, Rory (archivist). "Company history: Historical highlights from across Thomson Reuters". thomsonreuters.com. Retrieved April 9, 2003.
  9. ^ "The World's Billionaires: #15 Kenneth Thomson and family". forbes.com. Retrieved April 9, 2023.
  10. ^ "The Richest People In The World - Forbes World's Billionaires List: #9 Kenneth Thomson & family". forbes.com. Retrieved April 9, 2023.
  11. ^ Plommer, Leslie (September 18, 1976). "Degas? Renoir? Or did Keating do it?". The Globe and Mail. pp. 1, 31.
  12. ^ Parker, Robert (February 1, 1977). "Krieghoff paintings 'genuine'". The Times. p. 3.
  13. ^ Schroeder, Andreas (April 4, 1977). "The magnificent fraud: Tom Keating's life is imitating art". Maclean’s: Canada's Newsmagazine. pp. 1, 36–40.
  14. ^ Keating, Tom; Norman, Frank; Norman, Geraldine (1977). The Fake's Progress. Hutchinson of London. p. 268. ISBN 0091294207.
  15. ^ CTV: , July 13, 2002.
  16. ^ Adams, James (November 20, 2002). "Thomson hands AGO $370-million donation". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved April 9, 2023.
  17. ^ a b c Holberton, Paul; Art Gallery of Ontario (2009). The Thomson Collection at the Art Gallery of Ontario (Illustrated ed.). London: Paul Holberton Publishing. ISBN 978-1903470862.
  18. ^ "The Thomson Collection". Art Gallery of Ontario. Retrieved April 9, 2023.
  19. ^ a b CBC Arts (June 12, 2006). "Canada loses great Canadian, arts benefactor in Thomson". cbc.ca. Retrieved April 11, 2023.
  20. ^ Ross, Val (June 20, 2007). "A 'Thomson moment' at the AGO". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved April 11, 2023.
  21. ^ Gehry Partners (2008). "Project: Art Gallery of Ontario (renovation)". Archello.com. Retrieved April 9, 2023.
  22. ^ "Beloved matriarch of the Thomson family". The Globe and Mail. June 2, 2017. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
  23. ^ "Obituary of Nora Marilyn Thomson". humphreymiles.com. May 23, 2017.
  24. ^ "Canadas rich troubled Thomson family". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved August 30, 2019.
  25. ^ Bennett, Will (May 20, 2004). "Judge orders Christie's to pay damages over £2m urns". www.telegraph.co.uk.
  26. ^ Debrett's Peerage. 2000.

External links edit

  • Forbes Magazine profile in 2006
  • Forbes Magazine – 25 richest people in 2006

kenneth, thomson, baron, thomson, fleet, kenneth, thomson, redirects, here, other, people, kenneth, thomson, disambiguation, kenneth, thomson, baron, thomson, fleet, september, 1923, june, 2006, known, canada, thomson, canadian, british, businessman, collector. Kenneth Thomson redirects here For other people see Kenneth Thomson disambiguation Kenneth Roy Thomson 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet September 1 1923 June 12 2006 known in Canada as Ken Thomson was a Canadian British businessman and art collector At the time of his death he was listed by Forbes as the richest person in Canada and the ninth richest person in the world with a net worth of approximately US 19 6 billion 2 The Right HonourableThe Lord Thomson of FleetBorn 1923 09 01 September 1 1923Toronto Ontario CanadaDiedJune 12 2006 2006 06 12 aged 82 Toronto Ontario CanadaAlma materSt John s College CambridgeOccupation s Chairman Woodbridge Co Ltd 1 SpouseNora Marilyn Lavis m 1956 wbr Children3 including David and PeterParent s Roy ThomsonEdna ThomsonWebsitethomson com Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Business owner 3 Art collector 4 Retirement 5 Personal life 6 Arms 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and career editThomson was born on September 1 1923 in Toronto Ontario 3 4 He was the son of Roy Thomson the founder of the Thomson Corporation 3 5 Thomson was first educated at Upper Canada College before going up to St John s College Cambridge where he received a degree in economics and law During World War II he served in the Royal Canadian Air Force Following the war he completed his education and entered the family business working as a reporter for the Timmins Daily Press then for the next five years first as a salesman later as general manager for the Galt Reporter In 1953 he was appointed head of Thomson Newspapers and lived in Toronto for thirteen years Business owner editHis father purchased The Times in September 1966 Thomson moved to London the following year to become vice chairman and a year later chairman of Times Newspapers Ltd He returned to Toronto three years later and in 1971 became joint chairman with his father of the Thomson Organization 3 Upon his father s death in August 1976 Ken Thomson became chairman of the Thomson Corporation and succeeded his father as The Lord Thomson of Fleet Thomson never used his title in Canada however and never took up his seat in the House of Lords In a 1980 interview with Saturday Night magazine he spoke of honouring a promise to his father In London I m Lord Thomson in Toronto I m Ken I have two sets of Christmas cards and two sets of stationery You might say I m having my cake and eating it too 6 At the age of fifty three Thomson inherited a media empire of over two hundred newspaper and television holdings which also continued to reap profits from a subsidiary North Sea oil investment his father had made a few years earlier He acquired the Hudson s Bay Company in 1979 and purchased The Globe and Mail in Toronto in 1980 3 7 In the 1980s and 90s Thomson presided over a number of divestitures selling The Times to Rupert Murdoch s News Corporation in 1981 the North Sea oil holdings in 1989 and Thomson Travel in 1998 3 In 2001 The Globe and Mail was combined with BCE s cable and television assets including CTV and The Sports Network to form Bell Globemedia controlled by BCE with Thomson as a minority shareholder The company then sold all of its community newspapers to become a financial data services giant and one of the world s most powerful information services and academic publishing companies Today the company operates primarily in the US from its headquarters in Stamford Connecticut In 2002 The Thomson Corporation began trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol TOC 8 According to Forbes magazine in 2005 the Thomson family was the richest in Canada and Kenneth Thomson was the fifteenth richest person in the world with a personal net worth of US 17 9 billion 9 At the time of his death a year later he had climbed to ninth richest with assets of 19 6 billion 10 Art collector editThroughout the latter half of the 20th century Thomson distinguished himself as one of North America s leading art collectors In the 1940s he began collecting paintings by Cornelius Krieghoff 3 In 1977 the famously private Thomson suddenly found his collection had become a top news story from The Globe and Mail in Toronto to The Times of London after he d quietly invited English art forger Tom Keating to come to his office at the top of Thomson Tower and check if any of his cherished Krieghoffs were fakes Keating was under investigation by the Art and Antiques squad at Scotland Yard for selling several fake Krieghoffs in the UK and he claimed to have painted over a hundred of them mostly in the 1950s Keating denied finding any of his pastiches in Thomson s office and said it was a marvellous experience to see such a fine collection 11 12 13 14 In 1989 Thomson opened an eponymous Gallery in downtown Toronto to display some of these pieces 3 In November 2002 he announced he would donate in trust around two thousand art works to the Art Gallery of Ontario including two major acquisitions he had purchased that July Paul Kane s Scene in the Northwest Portrait of John Henry Lefroy at CA 5 1 million the highest price ever paid for a Canadian painting and the highlight of his European collection Peter Paul Rubens 17th century masterpiece The Massacre of the Innocents for CA 117 million 3 15 16 17 The collection features essential works of over a dozen eminent 19th to mid 20th century Canadian artists including some three hundred paintings from Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven a hundred and forty five wintry habitant scenes by Cornelius Krieghoff a hundred mostly impressionistic modern landscapes by luminary David Milne as well as works by Paul Kane Paul Emile Borduas and William Kurelek 17 18 The lesser known European Collection includes an assortment of 17th to 20th century British ship models a series of Medieval and Baroque ivory carvings and features the 12th century Malmesbury chasse an ornate casket which once held the bones of a Scottish missionary 17 19 20 The unprecedented donation of his CA 300 million art collection helped lure Toronto native starchitect Frank Gehry to design a major expansion and renovation of the AGO towards which Thomson gave an additional CA 50 million He also gifted a CA 20 million endowment for gallery operations 19 7 21 Retirement editIn 2002 Thomson stepped down as chairman of Thomson Corporation installing his elder son David He retained his positions as Chairman of The Woodbridge Company the family s holding company which owned a controlling share of Thomson Corporation In his final years Thomson lived at 8 Castle Frank Road gated estate in the Rosedale area Thomson loved to walk his Wheaton terrier in the Rosedale area He died in 2006 at his Toronto office of an apparent heart attack 4 Personal life editIn 1956 Thomson married Nora Marilyn Lavis July 27 1930 May 23 2017 22 23 They had three children David born 1957 Lynne who changed her name to Taylor born 1959 and Peter born 1965 Taylor a one time actress and film producer became known for her lawsuit against Christie s auction house when in 1994 she bought urns supposedly from Louis XV of France that were discovered instead to be 19th century reproductions 24 25 Arms editCoat of arms of Kenneth Thomson 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet nbsp nbsp Crest A beaver sejant erect Proper blowing upon a hunting horn Argent slung over his dexter shoulder by a riband of the dress tartan Proper to Thomson of that Ilk and his dependers Escutcheon Argent a stag s head cabossed Proper on a chief azure between two mullets a hunting horn of the first stringed Gules Supporters Dexter a Mississauga Indian habited in the proper costume of his tribe holding in his dexter hand a bow all Proper sinister a shepherd bearing in his sinister hand a shepherd s crook on his head a bonnet all Proper and wearing a kilt of the usual tartan Proper to Thomson of that Ilk and his dependers Motto Never A Backward Step 26 See also editCanadian peers and baronets Family tree of Thomson familyReferences edit Thomson com Management Accessed March 23 2006 9 Kenneth Thompson amp Family Forbes Archived from the original on April 11 2006 a b c d e f g h Kenneth Roy Thomson The Canadian Encyclopedia a b Ken Thomson Canada s richest man dies CBC Newman Peter C October 14 1991 The Private Life of Canada s Richest Man Maclean s Martin Sandra June 12 2006 A man of small economies and grand generosities The Globe and Mail Toronto CTVglobemedia Archived from the original on June 14 2006 Retrieved May 8 2008 a b Olive David January 5 2015 Thomson family s legacy lies in the art world thestar com Retrieved April 11 2023 Carruthers Rory archivist Company history Historical highlights from across Thomson Reuters thomsonreuters com Retrieved April 9 2003 The World s Billionaires 15 Kenneth Thomson and family forbes com Retrieved April 9 2023 The Richest People In The World Forbes World s Billionaires List 9 Kenneth Thomson amp family forbes com Retrieved April 9 2023 Plommer Leslie September 18 1976 Degas Renoir Or did Keating do it The Globe and Mail pp 1 31 Parker Robert February 1 1977 Krieghoff paintings genuine The Times p 3 Schroeder Andreas April 4 1977 The magnificent fraud Tom Keating s life is imitating art Maclean s Canada s Newsmagazine pp 1 36 40 Keating Tom Norman Frank Norman Geraldine 1977 The Fake s Progress Hutchinson of London p 268 ISBN 0091294207 CTV Thomson family buyer of 117 million painting July 13 2002 Adams James November 20 2002 Thomson hands AGO 370 million donation The Globe and Mail Retrieved April 9 2023 a b c Holberton Paul Art Gallery of Ontario 2009 The Thomson Collection at the Art Gallery of Ontario Illustrated ed London Paul Holberton Publishing ISBN 978 1903470862 The Thomson Collection Art Gallery of Ontario Retrieved April 9 2023 a b CBC Arts June 12 2006 Canada loses great Canadian arts benefactor in Thomson cbc ca Retrieved April 11 2023 Ross Val June 20 2007 A Thomson moment at the AGO The Globe and Mail Retrieved April 11 2023 Gehry Partners 2008 Project Art Gallery of Ontario renovation Archello com Retrieved April 9 2023 Beloved matriarch of the Thomson family The Globe and Mail June 2 2017 Retrieved July 3 2017 Obituary of Nora Marilyn Thomson humphreymiles com May 23 2017 Canadas rich troubled Thomson family The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved August 30 2019 Bennett Will May 20 2004 Judge orders Christie s to pay damages over 2m urns www telegraph co uk Debrett s Peerage 2000 External links editForbes Magazine profile in 2006 Forbes Magazine 25 richest people in 2006 Peerage of the United Kingdom Preceded byRoy Thomson Baron Thomson of Fleet1976 2006 Succeeded byDavid Thomson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kenneth Thomson 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet amp oldid 1193698641, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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