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Edward Robert Peacock

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In 1912, Peacock married Katherine Coates. Her father was John Coates, an engineer and founder of Turner & Coates Limited on Cannon Street in London (now in Salford, Greater Manchester) and with interests in Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Peacock was subsequently made chairman of the new John
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and died of natural causes in 1962, leaving a large amount of money to Queen's University in Canada. Queen's honoured him by instituting the Sir Edward Peacock Professorships. David Haglund is the current Sir Edward Peacock Professor of Political Studies,
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Peacock's birthplace at St Elmo, Ontario, is marked by a plaque erected by the Glengarry Historical Society, which maintains a scholarship fund endowed by the Peacock family in his memory.
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In 1929, he was made receiver general to the Duchy of Cornwall, which entailed dealing with the Royal finances. For these services, he was knighted by
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Coates and Company Limited. They had no children of their own, but they adopted two daughters.
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and the Bank of England. Just before the war, he and Montagu Norman were asked by Admiral
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in Toronto. In 1902, he left the teaching profession to work for the investment company
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to find a personal assistant for the admiral. Peacock found and recruited
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Peacock later resigned from the Bank of England to become a partner of
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People from the United Counties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry
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is the current Sir Edward Peacock Professor of Econometrics, and
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After a distinguished career, Peacock retired to his estate near
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minister who died when Peacock was 12. His mother moved to
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Canadian Knights Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order
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is the Sir Edward Peacock Professor of Economic Theory.
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Edward Peacock portrait courtesy of the Baring Archive
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in 1934. He was receiver general until the death of
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Index

GCVO
merchant banker
Bank of England
receiver general
Duchy of Cornwall
Prince of Wales
Glengarry County, Ontario
Congregationalist
Almonte, Ontario
Queen's University
Adam Shortt
political economy
Upper Canada College
Dominion Securities
George Albertus Cox
Montagu Norman
Barings Bank
Hudson's Bay Company
Rhodes Trust
George V
George VI
World War II
Washington
United States government
John Henry Godfrey
British Naval Intelligence
Ian Fleming
James Bond
Ascot
James G. MacKinnon

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