Aeneas McDonell Dawson (30 July 1810 – 29 December 1894) was a Scottish-Canadian Roman Catholic priest and writer.
Life
Dawson studied at the seminary of Paris and was ordained a priest in 1835. Until 1840 he laboured on the mission of Dumfries, Scotland, and subsequently in Edinburgh. He was in Dunfermline in 1846.[1] Before immigrating to Canada in 1855, he had successive charge of the counties of Fife, Kinross, and Clackmannan.
On his arrival in Canada he was given the parish of St. Andrew's, Ottawa,[2] and later became preacher at the cathedral. Dawson was a lecturer of repute and a frequent contributor to the provincial press. He was the brother of two politicians: William McDonell Dawson and Simon James Dawson.
Works
The Temporal Sovereignty of the Pope (Ottawa and London, 1860), the first book printed and published in Ottawa
Seven Letters together with a Lecture on the Colonies of Great Britain (Ottawa, 1870)
The Late Hon. Thomas D'Arcy McGee. A Funeral Oration (Ottawa, 1870)
Our Strength and Their Strength: The Northwest Territory and Other Papers, Chiefly Relating to the Dominion of Canada (Ottawa, 1870) - the first title heads a refutation of Goldwin Smith's anti-clerical views; under the last comes a series of poems, discourses, lectures, critical reviews
Maître Pierre. Conversations on Morality, by M. Delcasott (Paris, 1836)
The Parish Priest and His Parishioners, or Answer to Popular Prejudices against Religion, by M. B. D'Exauvillez (Glasgow, 1842), reviewed in The Tablet, London, 12 Feb., 1842