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John C. MacIsaac
During his career, Maclsaac and his company have been involved
in completing 26 miles of shafts for 79 projects, 134 miles of
drifts, 37 miles of raises, and 7.5 million tonnes of ore production.
He developed innovative shaft sinking methods and fostered the
development of new shaft sinking equipment all the while maintaining
safety and productivity records that are considered benchmarks
for the industry. He has contributed to every major mining camp
in the country.
MacIsaac was born in Butte, Mont., July 15, 1906. At the age of
four, his family moved to Cape Breton Island and, except for a
two-year period in Cobalt, Ont., from 1914 to 1916, lived in Cape
Breton until he was 18.
He moved to Timmins, Ont. in 1924 and began his mining career
at McIntyre Porcupine Gold Mines as a miner's helper in 1925.
For the next 21 years he worked for various mining firms including
Hudson Bay Mining & Smelting, Algoma Ore, Quemont, DeSantis
Mines, Falconbridge and Hollinger Gold Mines.
In 1947, he began working as a mining contractor incorporating
his firm in April, 1953.
For the past 43 years, his firm has worked in all phases or mining
operations from coast to coast in Canada as well as beyond Canada's
boundaries.
He also founded one of the largest steel fabricating plants in
northern Ontario and the only horse racing facility in northern
Ontario.
In 1983, he received an honorary doctorate from Laurentian University
and in 1987, he received the Inco Medal from the Canadian Institute
of Mining and Metallurgy in recognition of his notable achievement
in the mining industry.
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