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{{Short description|Defunt Canadian accounting & consultancy firm based in Toronto}}
{{Short description|Defunct Canadian accounting & consultancy firm based in Toronto}}
{{refimprove|date=October 2020}}

{{Infobox company
{{Infobox company
| image =
| name = Clarkson Gordon
| name = Clarkson Gordon
| type = Partnership
| type = Partnership
Line 10: Line 9:
| location_city = [[Toronto, Ontario|Toronto]], [[Ontario]]
| location_city = [[Toronto, Ontario|Toronto]], [[Ontario]]
| location_country = Canada
| location_country = Canada
| area_served = {{plainlist|1=
| area_served = {{plain list|
* Canada
* Canada
* the United States
* the United States
* Brazil
* Brazil
}}
}}
| key_people = {{Plain list|
| key_people = [[Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada)]]<br>{{small|(Founder)}}<br>[[Walter L. Gordon]]<br>{{small|(Name Partner)}}<br>Geoffrey Teignmouth Clarkson<br>{{small|(Managing Partner)}} <br>[[Edward Roper Curzon Clarkson]] <br>{{small|(Managing Partner - 1871-1931)}}
[[Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada)]] {{small|(Founder)}}
| divisions = {{plainlist|1=
* [[Walter L. Gordon]] {{small|(Name Partner)}}
* ERC Clarkson & Sons
* Geoffrey Teignmouth Clarkson {{small|(Managing Partner)}}
* [[Edward Roper Curzon Clarkson]] {{small|(Managing Partner - 1871-1931)}}
}}
| divisions = {{Plain list|
* ERC Clarkson & Sons (The Clarkson Company Limited)
* Woods, Gordon & Co
* Woods, Gordon & Co
* Clarkson, Gordon & Co
* Clarkson, Gordon & Co
* Arthur Young Clarkson Gordon
}}
}}
| services =
| services = {{plain list|
{{plainlist|1=
* [[Accounting]]
* [[Accounting]]
* [[Auditing]]
* [[Auditing]]
Line 30: Line 34:
}}
}}
}}
}}
'''Clarkson Gordon''' (also known as '''Clarkson Gordon & Co''') was a national Canadian accounting and receivership business founded in Toronto, Upper Canada in 1864 and operated for 125 years until the partnership elected to merge with the EY network of firms in 1989 following the merger between Ernsty & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co. The firm was considered a ''finishing school'' for Canadian business elite and was known as the ''the pedigreed accounting firm'' whose reputation for creating a "Clarkson Man" was that of .<ref>Globe & Mail ‘Flaherty will get you nowhere’ (Aug 31, 2007)</ref>


'''Clarkson Gordon''' (also known as '''Clarkson Gordon & Co''') was a national Canadian accounting and receivership business founded in Toronto, Upper Canada in 1864 by [[Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada)|Thomas Clarkson]] and operated for 125 years until the partnership elected to merge with the EY network of firms in 1989 following the merger between Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co.
==Structure and Influence==


The firm was considered a ''finishing school'' for Canadian business elite and was known as ''the pedigreed accounting firm'',<ref>''The Globe & Mail'', "Flaherty will get you nowhere" (Aug. 31, 2007)</ref> whose reputation for creating a "Clarkson Man" was that of creating "a gentleman who had been taught from birth if he were lucky, or during his apprenticeship with the firm if he were less so, how things worked in the Canadian elite. Clarkson Men masked their aggressive, innovative energies behind an acceptably circumspect façade of unrelenting hard work, iron-willed self-control, and unerring good manners".<ref>Christina McCall-Newman. ''Grits: An Intimiate portrait of the Liberal Party: "The Politics of Joy"'' (1982) Toronto, p 21</ref> Those matters of being a gentleman; what the ''Globe'' described as the difference between an accountant and a "Clarkson Man" differed in its description over the years, the ''Globe''{{'}}s 1965 description was eventually expanded to include: a quiet self-confidence, a willingness to work weekends and holidays and above all, to be willing to lose—or perhaps more aptly leave—a client if the financial data underpinning an audit was misleading.<ref>''The Financial Post'' magazine, 1983 (Peter C. Newman)</ref>
Through most of the firm's history, the organisation was structured across three separate business lines: i) accounting and auditing services provided by Clarkson Gordon (And previously Clarkson & Cross); ii) management consultancy services provided by Gordon & Co; and iii) receivership, liquidation and bankruptcy trusteeship businesses through ERC Clarkson & Sons (eventually the Clarkson Company).


==Structure and influence==
Clarkson Gordon's managing partners are directly attributed for developing key bankruptcy and insolvency reform in Canada, particularly the reforms resulting from the repeal of the insolvency act 1881, the Bankruptcy Act 1919, and the creation of the Banking Act of 1923. The firm's training, particularly the writings of Geoffrey Teignmouth Clarkson, have been used as foundations of the insolvency and bankruptcy law of Canada. Several innovations in receivership and the development of receivership rules were the result of legal challenges made by the firm in their liquidator roles.<ref name="auto">David Mackenzie, Clarkson Gordon Story: 125 years (1989 Clarkson Gordon) 7</ref>


Throughout most of the firm's history, the organisation was structured across three separate business lines:
Through the 20th century, Clarkson Gordon provided auditing to all five of Canada's [[Big Five (banks)|largest banks]]. Clarkson Gordon was headquartered in [[Toronto]], Ontario, Canada until 1989 when it merged with [[Ernst & Young]] following the merger of Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co, creating the largest accounting firm in the world. At the time of its merger with Ernst & Young, Clarkson Gordon was the second largest firm within the EY Network, and was rebranded as ''EY Canada''.<ref>[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE2DE1E38F93BA25756C0A96F948260 "Reports Say Arthur Young and Ernst May Merge"]. ''[[The New York Times]]''. May 1989.</ref>
# accounting and auditing services provided by Clarkson Gordon (and previous iterations including Clarkson & Cross, Clarkson Gordon & Dilworth, etc);
# management consultancy services provided by Woods Gordon & Co;
# trustee services, assignee, receivership, liquidation and bankruptcy services through ERC Clarkson & Sons (eventually the Clarkson Company).


The group additionally operated through partnerships with other practices including Clarkson, Cross & Helliwell in Vancouver (Helliwell being one of ERC Clarkson's cousins).
==History==
Clarkson Gordon was founded by the Clarkson family in 1864 by [[Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada)]] as '''Thomas Clarkson & Sons''' as one of the few receivership businesses in Toronto. Thomas Clarkson was at the time a prominent financier in Toronto, having raised the Exchange building, served as the Board of Trade president and was on the board of directors for several banks including the Bank of Toronto which he helped establish. As early as 1857, Thomas had served as a proto-auditor role on behalf of the shareholders of the Bank of Toronto known as a ''"Scrutineer"''.<ref>Proceedings of the First Annual General Meeting of the Stockholders of the Bank of Toronto held at the banking house of the institution in Toronto on Wednesday, 15 July 1857 < https://digital.library.mcgill.ca/hrcorpreports/pdfs/B/Bank_of_Toronto_1857.pdf></ref>


Clarkson Gordon's managing partners are directly attributed for developing key bankruptcy and insolvency reform in Canada, particularly the reforms resulting from the repeal of the insolvency act 1881, the Bankruptcy Act 1919, and the creation of the Banking Act of 1923. The firm's training, particularly the writings of Geoffrey Teignmouth Clarkson and ERC,<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/cihm_04168 | isbn=9780665041686 | title=Bankruptcy legislation &#91;microform&#93; | year=1885 }}</ref> have been used as foundations of the insolvency and bankruptcy law of Canada. Several innovations in receivership and the development of receivership rules were the result of legal challenges made by the firm in their liquidator roles.<ref name="auto">David Mackenzie, Clarkson Gordon Story: 125 years (1989 Clarkson Gordon) 7</ref>
In 1868, Thomas Clarkson was President of the Chamber of Commerce and lacked experienced help. His senior employee, Mr. Thomas Munro was dedicated full-time to the work. By 1872 work was so busy that Thomas recalled his son, [[Edward Roper Curzon Clarkson]] (ERC) to Toronto from Montreal and at 18, ERC joined the business. A year later, Thomas suffered a paralytic stroke, ERC was not yet 21 and barred from being appointed a receiver by the province of Upper Canada, ERC formed a partnership with Mr Munro which they called '''Clarkson & Munro''', operating out of the Exchange Buildings at 34 Wellington Street.<ref>1877 Might’s Greater Toronto Directory</ref> This partnership lasted until 1877 when Clarkson received his appointment as an official assignee and joined '''Turner, Clarkson & Co'''.


Through the 20th century, Clarkson Gordon provided auditing to all five of Canada's [[Big Five (banks)|largest banks]]. Clarkson Gordon was headquartered in [[Toronto]], Ontario, Canada until 1989 when it merged with [[Ernst & Young]] following the merger of Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co, creating the largest accounting firm in the world. At the time of its merger with Ernst & Young, Clarkson Gordon was the second largest firm within the EY Network, and was rebranded as ''EY Canada'' in 1989, although EY still retains the copyright.<ref>[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE2DE1E38F93BA25756C0A96F948260 "Reports Say Arthur Young and Ernst May Merge"]. ''[[The New York Times]]''. May 1989.</ref>
By then ERC had become interested in accounting, and along with others in Toronto, was a founding member of the [[Canadian accounting profession unification|Institute of Accountants of Ontario]], a predecessor of the [[Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants]], serving as the Institute of Accountants of Ontario's first president and widely regarded in his obituaries as the first Canadian chartered accountant,<ref name="auto">David Mackenzie, Clarkson Gordon Story: 125 years (1989 Clarkson Gordon) 7</ref>


==History==
The professionalisation of the accounting class coincided with ERC transforming his business into two parallel practices: a receivership business known as ERC Clarkson & Sons, and an accounting business known as Clarkson & Cross. William H. Cross, a firery Mancunian, frequently butt heads with the Institute of Accountants of Ontario leadership (other than Clarkson) particularly after the [[Confederation Life]] scandal of 1890 which resulted in Clarkson & Cross investigated the decisions of the company on behalf of shareholders.<ref>{{cite book |last= Richardson|first= Alan J.|editor1-last= Murphy|editor1-first= George J.|year= 1993|title= A History of Canadian Accounting Thought and Practice|chapter=An Interpretative Chronology of the Development of Accounting Associations in Canada: 1879-1979|chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=O5_Wejf0764C&pg=PA551|location= New York|publisher= Garland|pages= 551{{en dash}}627|isbn= 978-0-8153-1248-2|ref={{harvid|Richardson|1993b}}}}</ref>


Clarkson Gordon was founded by the Clarkson family in 1864 by [[Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada)]] as '''Thomas Clarkson & Sons''' when Thomas was appointed an Official Assignee for the Province of Ontario. Thomas Clarkson was a prominent financier in Toronto, having raised the Exchange building, served as the Board of Trade president and was on the board of directors for several banks including the Bank of Toronto (which he helped establish). As early as 1857, Thomas had served in a proto-auditor role on behalf of the shareholders of the Bank of Toronto known as a ''"Scrutineer"''.<ref>Proceedings of the First Annual General Meeting of the Stockholders of the Bank of Toronto held at the banking house of the institution in Toronto on Wednesday, 15 July 1857 < https://digital.library.mcgill.ca/hrcorpreports/pdfs/B/Bank_of_Toronto_1857.pdf></ref>
ERC, a prominent member and president of the [[Toronto Board of Trade]], an organisation which his father, [[Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada)]] helped found, used the venue to promote insolvency reform. <ref name="auto">David Mackenzie, Clarkson Gordon Story: 125 years (1989 Clarkson Gordon) 7</ref>
[[File:Jrr792.jpg|thumb|Thomas Clarkson {{circa|1864}}]]
In 1868, Thomas Clarkson was President of the Chamber of Commerce and lacked experienced help. His senior employee, Mr. Thomas Munro was dedicated full-time to the work. By 1872 work was so busy that Thomas recalled his son, [[Edward Roper Curzon Clarkson]] (ERC) to Toronto from Montreal and at 18, ERC joined the business. A year later, Thomas suffered a paralytic stroke, ERC was not yet 21 and barred from being appointed a receiver by the province of Upper Canada, ERC formed a partnership with Mr Munro which they called '''Clarkson & Munro''', operating out of the Exchange Buildings at 34 Wellington Street.<ref>1877 Might's Greater Toronto Directory</ref> This partnership lasted until 1877 when Clarkson received his appointment as an official assignee and joined '''Turner, Clarkson & Co'''.


By then ERC had become interested in accounting, and along with others in Toronto, was a founding member of the [[Canadian accounting profession unification|Institute of Accountants of Ontario]], a predecessor of the [[Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants]], serving as the Institute of Accountants of Ontario's first president and widely regarded in his obituaries as the first Canadian chartered accountant,<ref name="auto"/>
W.H. Cross retired in 1913. By then, the partnership consisted of ERC and his son Geoffrey Teignmouth Clarkson. Colonel H.D.L. Gordon was selected to replace Cross. Gordon demanded his protege, RJ Dilworth, also become a senior partner and the firm was renamed to ''Clarkson Gordon & Dilworth''.

The professionalisation of the accounting class coincided with ERC transforming his business into two parallel practices: a receivership business known as ERC Clarkson & Sons, and an accounting business known as Clarkson & Cross. William H. Cross, a fiery Mancunian, frequently butt heads with the Institute of Accountants of Ontario leadership (other than Clarkson), particularly after the [[Confederation Life]] scandal of 1890 which resulted in Clarkson & Cross investigating the decisions of the company on behalf of shareholders.<ref>{{cite book |last= Richardson|first= Alan J.|editor1-last= Murphy|editor1-first= George J.|year= 1993|title= A History of Canadian Accounting Thought and Practice|chapter=An Interpretative Chronology of the Development of Accounting Associations in Canada: 1879-1979|chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=O5_Wejf0764C&pg=PA551|location= New York|publisher= Garland|pages= 551{{en dash}}627|isbn= 978-0-8153-1248-2|ref={{harvid|Richardson|1993b}}}}</ref>
[[File:ERC Clarkson circa 1888.png|thumb|left|ERC Clarkson]]
ERC, a prominent member and president of the [[Toronto Board of Trade]], an organisation which his father, [[Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada)]] helped found, used the venue to promote insolvency reform.<ref name="auto"/>
[[File:WholsaleStoresFrontandWellington.jpg|thumb|Wellington Street]]

[[File:Clarkson & Cross 1881 advertisement.png|thumb|]]
W.H. Cross retired in 1913. By then, the partnership consisted of ERC and his son Geoffrey Teignmouth (GT) Clarkson. Colonel H.D.L. Gordon was selected to replace Cross. ERC Clarkson had known Gordon 1896 when ERC had recommended Gordon go to England and work for Cooper Brothers & Co, a large London-based accounting firm. Gordon had returned in 1898 as a staff with Clarkson & Cross for eight years. demanded his protege, RJ Dilworth, also become a senior partner and the firm was renamed '''Clarkson Gordon & Dilworth'''.


GT Clarkson, who eventually became the managing partner after ERC's retirement, joined the firm following his qualification as an accountant at 15 in 1893. GT was noted for being particularly private but politically savvy. He, like ERC was a conservative and GT was extremely close with Ontario Premiers [[Howard Ferguson]]. GT frequently advised conservative governments on department efficiencies and was appointed to several royal commissions. He was also appointed the auditor of several government businesses or businesses where the major creditor was the government, including, by 1923 no less than 4 defaulted banks: the Ontario Bank, the Sovereign Bank, Farmers’ Bank, and the Monarch Bank and had liquidated dozens of other financing institutions including the Dominion Permanent Loan Company.<ref>Financial Review, 1923 pages 101, 110, 129</ref> Later that year he would administer the liquidation of Home Bank. He had also been auditor to the Canadian Bank of Commerce, and a single year in 1901 the Colonial Investment and Loan Company, Bank of Toronto, Dominion Bank, Imperial Bank and the Standard Bank of Canada.
GT Clarkson, who eventually became the managing partner after ERC's retirement, joined the firm following his qualification as an accountant at 15 in 1893. GT was noted for being particularly private but politically savvy. He, like ERC was a conservative and GT was extremely close with Ontario Premiers [[Howard Ferguson]]. GT frequently advised conservative governments on department efficiencies and was appointed to several royal commissions. He was also appointed the auditor of several government businesses or businesses where the major creditor was the government, including, by 1923 no less than 4 defaulted banks: the Ontario Bank, the Sovereign Bank, Farmers’ Bank, and the Monarch Bank and had liquidated dozens of other financing institutions including the Dominion Permanent Loan Company.<ref>Financial Review, 1923 pages 101, 110, 129</ref> Later that year he would administer the liquidation of Home Bank. He had also been auditor to the Canadian Bank of Commerce, and a single year in 1901 the Colonial Investment and Loan Company, Bank of Toronto, Dominion Bank, Imperial Bank and the Standard Bank of Canada.
Toronto's ''Hush'' magazine claimed in the 1930s that GT was known as "Jesus Christ" amongst the [[Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario|Provincial Conservatives ]]in Queen's Park.<ref>Walter Gordon Walter Gordon: A Political Memoir, Volume 10 of Canadian lives, Formac Publishing Company, 1983</ref> He was frequently called upon to provide expert evidence at [[Queen's Park (Toronto)|Queen's Park]] and in [[Parliament of Canada|Parliament]]. <ref>The Financial Times 14 June 1944, page 12 “Expert Opinion Behind Stand on Bank Reserves: GT Clarkson Says that to Reveal Them would be Unwise and Dangerous”</ref> GT's opinion was deemed critical when drafting the Banking Act 1923 and no changes to the legislation when in committee were to be made without his approval<ref>The Financial Times 14 June 1944, page 12 “Expert Opinion Behind Stand on Bank Reserves: GT Clarkson Says that to Reveal Them would be Unwise and Dangerous”</ref>. He corresponded often with Arthur Meighen when Meighen was both [[13th Canadian Parliament|Prime Minister]] and a Senator when giving evidence to the Select Standing Committee on Banking and Commerce in the House of Commons.<ref>The Financial Times 14 June 1944, page 12 “Expert Opinion Behind Stand on Bank Reserves: GT Clarkson Says that to Reveal Them would be Unwise and Dangerous”</ref> Indeed his ties to the government were so strong that he was offered the Minister of Finance position under [[Arthur Meighen]]'s government following the [[King-Bing affair]] at the urging of prominent Toronto Conservative figure I.E. Weldon. GT, like his father, provided his services to non-profit organisations, particularly education. He served on the board of governors for Havergal Collegr, Upper Canada College, and Wycliffe College. <ref> Meighen Papers Series 4 (M.G. 26, I, Volume 140) Reel C3477 file 0355</ref>
Toronto's ''Hush'' magazine claimed in the 1930s that GT was known as "Jesus Christ" amongst the [[Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario|Provincial Conservatives]] in Queen's Park.<ref name="ReferenceA">Walter Gordon Walter Gordon: A Political Memoir, Volume 10 of Canadian lives, Formac Publishing Company, 1983</ref> A fact which so angered GT that he tried to sue the magazine for libel.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> He was frequently called upon to provide expert evidence at [[Queen's Park (Toronto)|Queen's Park]] and in [[Parliament of Canada|Parliament]].<ref name="ReferenceB">The Financial Times 14 June 1944, page 12 “Expert Opinion Behind Stand on Bank Reserves: GT Clarkson Says that to Reveal Them would be Unwise and Dangerous”</ref> GT's opinion was deemed critical when drafting the Banking Act 1923 and no changes to the legislation when in committee were to be made without his approval.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> He often corresponded with Arthur Meighen when Meighen was both [[13th Canadian Parliament|Prime Minister]] and a Senator when giving evidence to the Select Standing Committee on Banking and Commerce in the House of Commons.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> Indeed his ties to the government were so strong that he was offered the Minister of Finance position under [[Arthur Meighen]]'s government following the [[King-Bing affair]] at the urging of prominent Toronto Conservative figure I.E. Weldon.<ref>Meighen Papers Series 4 (M.G. 26, I, Volume 140) Reel C3477 file 0355</ref>


GT, like his father, provided the accounting and auditing services of the firm to non-profit and charity organisations, particularly educational institutions free of charge. He served on the board of governors for Havergal College, Upper Canada College, Wycliffe College, and the Hospital for Sick Children.<ref>Hospital for Sick Children, Report 1921</ref> ERC provided the auditing for the University of Toronto until his death and the Canadian Bankers' Association <ref>President's Report For the year ending 30 June 1923, “Statement regarding the Biological Museum” to the Board of Governors of the University of Toronto 1917/18-1923/24, p 78 AXX-4814</ref>
By the 1930s, Colonel Gordon's son, [[Walter Gordon]] joined the firm alongside GT's three sons, Robert Curzon, Geoffrey Perry, and Fredrick Curzon.<ref name="auto">David Mackenzie, Clarkson Gordon Story: 125 years (1989 Clarkson Gordon) 7</ref> Walter Gordon The firm established a "best friend" partnership with Arthur Young & Co, sharing services and servicing each other's clients depending on which side of the border the client was on. The two firms also created a joint venture in Brazil.


By the 1930s, Colonel Gordon's son, [[Walter L. Gordon|Walter Gordon]] joined the firm alongside GT's three sons, Robert Curzon, Geoffrey Perry, and Fredrick Curzon.<ref name="auto"/> Walter Gordon The firm established a "best friend" partnership with Arthur Young & Co, sharing services and servicing each other's clients depending on which side of the border the client was on. The two firms also created a joint venture in Brazil. The firm operated out of Quebec and the Maritimes by the firm of Clarkson, Mcdonald, Currie & Co. The firm's name in Ontario and the west soon changed to '''Clarkson, Gordon, Dilworth, Guilfoyle & Nash'''.
In 1947 near the end of GT’s management, an ancestor of Thomas Clarkson and GT’s distant cousin, Gertrude Mulcahy, became the first woman to receive her CA.<ref name="auto">David Mackenzie, Clarkson Gordon Story: 125 years (1989 Clarkson Gordon) 7</ref>


In 1947 near the end of GT's management, an ancestor of Thomas Clarkson and GT's distant cousin, Gertrude Mulcahy, became the first woman to receive her CA.<ref name="auto"/><ref>https://www.caaa.ca/media/305508/gertrude-mulcahy.pdf {{Bare URL PDF|date=August 2022}}</ref>
In 1989, the firm announced that it would move into the newly constructed [[Toronto-Dominion Centre|Clarkson Gordon Tower]] at 222 Bay Street.<ref>https://archive.org/details/clarksongordonst0000mack/page/136/mode/2up?q=building</ref> The firm had 420 partners and 2,100 professionals and a sizeable art collection of over 900 pieces, specialising in Canadian artists.<ref name="auto">David Mackenzie, Clarkson Gordon Story: 125 years (1989 Clarkson Gordon) 7</ref> Before the firm was able to move into the new complex, Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co announced that the two firms would merge. The Clarkson Gordon partnership announced that after 125 years it would change its name in Canada to Ernst & Young Canada.


In 1989, the firm announced that it would move into the newly constructed [[Toronto-Dominion Centre|Clarkson Gordon Tower]] at 222 Bay Street.<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/clarksongordonst0000mack/page/136/mode/2up?q=building | isbn=9780969110026 | title=The Clarkson Gordon story : In celebration of 125 years | year=1989 | last1=MacKenzie | first1=David Clark | last2=Clarkson | first2=Gordon (Firm) | publisher=Clarkson Gordon }}</ref> The firm had 420 partners and 2,100 professionals and a sizeable art collection of over 900 pieces, specialising in Canadian artists.<ref name="auto"/> Before the firm was able to move into the new complex, Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co announced that the two firms would merge. The Clarkson Gordon partnership announced that after 125 years it would change its name in Canada to Ernst & Young Canada.
==Notable Alumni==

*[[Jim Flaherty ]] - former minister of finance
==Notable alumni==
*[[Jim Flaherty]] former minister of finance
*[[Edward Roper Curzon Clarkson]]
*[[Edward Roper Curzon Clarkson]]
*[[Thomas Clarkson]]
*[[Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada)|Thomas Clarkson]]
*[[Walter Gordon]] - senior partner and former minister of finance
*[[Walter L. Gordon]] senior partner and former minister of finance
*[[Jim Balsillie]]
*[[Jim Balsillie]]
*[[Arthur Labatt]
*[[Arthur Labatt]]
*John Cleghorn - former Chairman & CEO of RBC & SNC-Lavalin
*[[John Cleghorn]] former chairman & CEO of RBC & SNC-Lavalin
*Cynthia Devine - CFO of [[Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment]]
*[[Cynthia Devine]] CFO of [[Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment]]
*Jim McAlpine - President and CEO of Magna Entertainment and EVP and CFO of [[Magna]]
*[[Jim McAlpine]] President and CEO of [[Magna Entertainment Corp.|Magna Entertainment]] and EVP and CFO of [[Magna International|Magna]]
*[[Ronald Osborne]] - media executive
*[[Ronald Osborne]] media executive
*[[George Fink]] - championship Canadian curler
*[[George Fink]] championship Canadian curler
*Glenn Mifflin - CEO of Cuso International
*[[Glenn Mifflin]] CEO of Cuso International
* Sheila Fraser – Auditor General of Canada

==Also See==
[[Ernst & Young]]


==See also ==
* [[Ernst & Young]]


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 20:19, 6 April 2024

Clarkson Gordon
Company typePartnership
IndustryProfessional services
Founded1864 (as Clarkson & Munro)
Defunct1989 (rebranded as EY Canada)
Headquarters,
Canada
Area served
  • Canada
  • the United States
  • Brazil
Key people
Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada) (Founder)
Services
Divisions
  • ERC Clarkson & Sons (The Clarkson Company Limited)
  • Woods, Gordon & Co
  • Clarkson, Gordon & Co
  • Arthur Young Clarkson Gordon

Clarkson Gordon (also known as Clarkson Gordon & Co) was a national Canadian accounting and receivership business founded in Toronto, Upper Canada in 1864 by Thomas Clarkson and operated for 125 years until the partnership elected to merge with the EY network of firms in 1989 following the merger between Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co.

The firm was considered a finishing school for Canadian business elite and was known as the pedigreed accounting firm,[1] whose reputation for creating a "Clarkson Man" was that of creating "a gentleman who had been taught from birth if he were lucky, or during his apprenticeship with the firm if he were less so, how things worked in the Canadian elite. Clarkson Men masked their aggressive, innovative energies behind an acceptably circumspect façade of unrelenting hard work, iron-willed self-control, and unerring good manners".[2] Those matters of being a gentleman; what the Globe described as the difference between an accountant and a "Clarkson Man" differed in its description over the years, the Globe's 1965 description was eventually expanded to include: a quiet self-confidence, a willingness to work weekends and holidays and above all, to be willing to lose—or perhaps more aptly leave—a client if the financial data underpinning an audit was misleading.[3]

Structure and influence[edit]

Throughout most of the firm's history, the organisation was structured across three separate business lines:

  1. accounting and auditing services provided by Clarkson Gordon (and previous iterations including Clarkson & Cross, Clarkson Gordon & Dilworth, etc);
  2. management consultancy services provided by Woods Gordon & Co;
  3. trustee services, assignee, receivership, liquidation and bankruptcy services through ERC Clarkson & Sons (eventually the Clarkson Company).

The group additionally operated through partnerships with other practices including Clarkson, Cross & Helliwell in Vancouver (Helliwell being one of ERC Clarkson's cousins).

Clarkson Gordon's managing partners are directly attributed for developing key bankruptcy and insolvency reform in Canada, particularly the reforms resulting from the repeal of the insolvency act 1881, the Bankruptcy Act 1919, and the creation of the Banking Act of 1923. The firm's training, particularly the writings of Geoffrey Teignmouth Clarkson and ERC,[4] have been used as foundations of the insolvency and bankruptcy law of Canada. Several innovations in receivership and the development of receivership rules were the result of legal challenges made by the firm in their liquidator roles.[5]

Through the 20th century, Clarkson Gordon provided auditing to all five of Canada's largest banks. Clarkson Gordon was headquartered in Toronto, Ontario, Canada until 1989 when it merged with Ernst & Young following the merger of Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co, creating the largest accounting firm in the world. At the time of its merger with Ernst & Young, Clarkson Gordon was the second largest firm within the EY Network, and was rebranded as EY Canada in 1989, although EY still retains the copyright.[6]

History[edit]

Clarkson Gordon was founded by the Clarkson family in 1864 by Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada) as Thomas Clarkson & Sons when Thomas was appointed an Official Assignee for the Province of Ontario. Thomas Clarkson was a prominent financier in Toronto, having raised the Exchange building, served as the Board of Trade president and was on the board of directors for several banks including the Bank of Toronto (which he helped establish). As early as 1857, Thomas had served in a proto-auditor role on behalf of the shareholders of the Bank of Toronto known as a "Scrutineer".[7]

Thomas Clarkson c. 1864

In 1868, Thomas Clarkson was President of the Chamber of Commerce and lacked experienced help. His senior employee, Mr. Thomas Munro was dedicated full-time to the work. By 1872 work was so busy that Thomas recalled his son, Edward Roper Curzon Clarkson (ERC) to Toronto from Montreal and at 18, ERC joined the business. A year later, Thomas suffered a paralytic stroke, ERC was not yet 21 and barred from being appointed a receiver by the province of Upper Canada, ERC formed a partnership with Mr Munro which they called Clarkson & Munro, operating out of the Exchange Buildings at 34 Wellington Street.[8] This partnership lasted until 1877 when Clarkson received his appointment as an official assignee and joined Turner, Clarkson & Co.

By then ERC had become interested in accounting, and along with others in Toronto, was a founding member of the Institute of Accountants of Ontario, a predecessor of the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants, serving as the Institute of Accountants of Ontario's first president and widely regarded in his obituaries as the first Canadian chartered accountant,[5]

The professionalisation of the accounting class coincided with ERC transforming his business into two parallel practices: a receivership business known as ERC Clarkson & Sons, and an accounting business known as Clarkson & Cross. William H. Cross, a fiery Mancunian, frequently butt heads with the Institute of Accountants of Ontario leadership (other than Clarkson), particularly after the Confederation Life scandal of 1890 which resulted in Clarkson & Cross investigating the decisions of the company on behalf of shareholders.[9]

ERC Clarkson

ERC, a prominent member and president of the Toronto Board of Trade, an organisation which his father, Thomas Clarkson (Upper Canada) helped found, used the venue to promote insolvency reform.[5]

Wellington Street

W.H. Cross retired in 1913. By then, the partnership consisted of ERC and his son Geoffrey Teignmouth (GT) Clarkson. Colonel H.D.L. Gordon was selected to replace Cross. ERC Clarkson had known Gordon 1896 when ERC had recommended Gordon go to England and work for Cooper Brothers & Co, a large London-based accounting firm. Gordon had returned in 1898 as a staff with Clarkson & Cross for eight years. demanded his protege, RJ Dilworth, also become a senior partner and the firm was renamed Clarkson Gordon & Dilworth.

GT Clarkson, who eventually became the managing partner after ERC's retirement, joined the firm following his qualification as an accountant at 15 in 1893. GT was noted for being particularly private but politically savvy. He, like ERC was a conservative and GT was extremely close with Ontario Premiers Howard Ferguson. GT frequently advised conservative governments on department efficiencies and was appointed to several royal commissions. He was also appointed the auditor of several government businesses or businesses where the major creditor was the government, including, by 1923 no less than 4 defaulted banks: the Ontario Bank, the Sovereign Bank, Farmers’ Bank, and the Monarch Bank and had liquidated dozens of other financing institutions including the Dominion Permanent Loan Company.[10] Later that year he would administer the liquidation of Home Bank. He had also been auditor to the Canadian Bank of Commerce, and a single year in 1901 the Colonial Investment and Loan Company, Bank of Toronto, Dominion Bank, Imperial Bank and the Standard Bank of Canada. Toronto's Hush magazine claimed in the 1930s that GT was known as "Jesus Christ" amongst the Provincial Conservatives in Queen's Park.[11] A fact which so angered GT that he tried to sue the magazine for libel.[11] He was frequently called upon to provide expert evidence at Queen's Park and in Parliament.[12] GT's opinion was deemed critical when drafting the Banking Act 1923 and no changes to the legislation when in committee were to be made without his approval.[12] He often corresponded with Arthur Meighen when Meighen was both Prime Minister and a Senator when giving evidence to the Select Standing Committee on Banking and Commerce in the House of Commons.[12] Indeed his ties to the government were so strong that he was offered the Minister of Finance position under Arthur Meighen's government following the King-Bing affair at the urging of prominent Toronto Conservative figure I.E. Weldon.[13]

GT, like his father, provided the accounting and auditing services of the firm to non-profit and charity organisations, particularly educational institutions free of charge. He served on the board of governors for Havergal College, Upper Canada College, Wycliffe College, and the Hospital for Sick Children.[14] ERC provided the auditing for the University of Toronto until his death and the Canadian Bankers' Association [15]

By the 1930s, Colonel Gordon's son, Walter Gordon joined the firm alongside GT's three sons, Robert Curzon, Geoffrey Perry, and Fredrick Curzon.[5] Walter Gordon The firm established a "best friend" partnership with Arthur Young & Co, sharing services and servicing each other's clients depending on which side of the border the client was on. The two firms also created a joint venture in Brazil. The firm operated out of Quebec and the Maritimes by the firm of Clarkson, Mcdonald, Currie & Co. The firm's name in Ontario and the west soon changed to Clarkson, Gordon, Dilworth, Guilfoyle & Nash.

In 1947 near the end of GT's management, an ancestor of Thomas Clarkson and GT's distant cousin, Gertrude Mulcahy, became the first woman to receive her CA.[5][16]

In 1989, the firm announced that it would move into the newly constructed Clarkson Gordon Tower at 222 Bay Street.[17] The firm had 420 partners and 2,100 professionals and a sizeable art collection of over 900 pieces, specialising in Canadian artists.[5] Before the firm was able to move into the new complex, Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co announced that the two firms would merge. The Clarkson Gordon partnership announced that after 125 years it would change its name in Canada to Ernst & Young Canada.

Notable alumni[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ The Globe & Mail, "Flaherty will get you nowhere" (Aug. 31, 2007)
  2. ^ Christina McCall-Newman. Grits: An Intimiate portrait of the Liberal Party: "The Politics of Joy" (1982) Toronto, p 21
  3. ^ The Financial Post magazine, 1983 (Peter C. Newman)
  4. ^ Bankruptcy legislation [microform]. 1885. ISBN 9780665041686.
  5. ^ a b c d e f David Mackenzie, Clarkson Gordon Story: 125 years (1989 Clarkson Gordon) 7
  6. ^ "Reports Say Arthur Young and Ernst May Merge". The New York Times. May 1989.
  7. ^ Proceedings of the First Annual General Meeting of the Stockholders of the Bank of Toronto held at the banking house of the institution in Toronto on Wednesday, 15 July 1857 < https://digital.library.mcgill.ca/hrcorpreports/pdfs/B/Bank_of_Toronto_1857.pdf>
  8. ^ 1877 Might's Greater Toronto Directory
  9. ^ Richardson, Alan J. (1993). "An Interpretative Chronology of the Development of Accounting Associations in Canada: 1879-1979". In Murphy, George J. (ed.). A History of Canadian Accounting Thought and Practice. New York: Garland. pp. 551–627. ISBN 978-0-8153-1248-2.
  10. ^ Financial Review, 1923 pages 101, 110, 129
  11. ^ a b Walter Gordon Walter Gordon: A Political Memoir, Volume 10 of Canadian lives, Formac Publishing Company, 1983
  12. ^ a b c The Financial Times 14 June 1944, page 12 “Expert Opinion Behind Stand on Bank Reserves: GT Clarkson Says that to Reveal Them would be Unwise and Dangerous”
  13. ^ Meighen Papers Series 4 (M.G. 26, I, Volume 140) Reel C3477 file 0355
  14. ^ Hospital for Sick Children, Report 1921
  15. ^ President's Report For the year ending 30 June 1923, “Statement regarding the Biological Museum” to the Board of Governors of the University of Toronto 1917/18-1923/24, p 78 AXX-4814
  16. ^ https://www.caaa.ca/media/305508/gertrude-mulcahy.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  17. ^ MacKenzie, David Clark; Clarkson, Gordon (Firm) (1989). The Clarkson Gordon story : In celebration of 125 years. Clarkson Gordon. ISBN 9780969110026.