James Alexander Cowan was born in Shakespeare Ontario on October 27, 1901.
The almost seventy-seven years that were his life was quite an adventure. It
came at a time when Toronto and Canada were coming of age. The whole world was
changing and he was there for many of the interesting chapters of the period.
He was the eldest child of Presbyterian minister Hugh Cowan and his wife
Jean Wood.
Jimmy Cowan or JAC, as he as he was often known, spent some time at the
University of Toronto and was the editor of The Goblin - a campus publication.
He also was a promoter for The Dumbells a travelling troupe of vaudevillian
musicians.
His career took him after his time at the U of T on to writing at the
Toronto Star and later as an editor at Star Weekly. His colleagues included Greg
Clarke, Morley Callaghan and Gordon Sinclair. It was during those years that he
met and worked with another writer at the Star who was to become a life-long
friend, Ernest Hemingway. Just prior to the Hemingway’s departure for France,
Ernest served as best man to my grandfather as he married my grandmother Grace
Williams in Toronto on January 12, 1924 at the Hemingway’s apartment at the
Cedarville Mansions located at 1599 Bathurst Street in Toronto.
This young and vibrant Toronto was an exciting place to be in those days
and the newspaper business was a great center of community life. Toronto and
Ontario were just beginning to awaken as a place of industry and commerce. Jimmy
Cowan went on to write features for the Star and later for Canada’s Maclean’s
magazine while still in his 20s. He also wrote for Esquire Magazine.
His talents led him to the new world of PR as Canada’s first Public
Relations specialist (or consultant as they called it at the time) representing
and advising a wide range of firms over the years. It was said that he was known
for an intuitive sense of what direction and message would be most effective for
a client to take. He was what Malcolm Gladwell would call "A Connector" with the
ability to maintain a wide circle of business relationships during a time when
"who you knew" was even more important than it is today.
He had an early and continuing interest in the energy business. His
special focus was on uranium and radium or what would later be generally known
as the nuclear power industry. His many travels included visits to Fort
McMurray, Great Bear Lake and Great Slave Lake.
James A. Cowan was a personal and corporate advisor to the great business
magnate Cyrus Eaton of C&O Railway. He was very involved in the public relations
world of Steeprock Mines and Canada Steamship Lines in Canada too.
An advisor to politicians and political parties in Canada, his work also
took James A. Cowan to serve as an occasional personal public relations advisor
from 1935 – 1939 to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. His politics in Canada were
usually associated with the Liberal Party of Canada.
He represented Rank Films of Great Britain (familiar for their film
introductions that featured a man sounding a large gong) as their Director of
Public Relations. At the time produced many of the U.K.’s most important films
and was home to many of the great British stars of the era. In addition to the
Pinewood Studios (think James Bond Movies), Rank also owned the Odeon Cinemas.
This led to many hours with the many British actors who would come to North
America to promote their films. Among the many actors that he assisted were Sir
Alec Guinness, Sir Lawrence Olivier, John Mills, Deborah Kerr, Trevor Howard,
Jean Simmons, Stewart Granger, Basil Rathbone, Michael Redgrave and Leslie
Howard.
In 1952, James A. Cowan was elected the first president of the Canadian
Film Institute (previously known as the National Film Society) by the board of
directors.
Over the years, he acquired the rights to the Madame Tussaud Waxworks for
Canada and he was the one who brought it to Niagara Falls.
JAC was someone who maintained a range of interests and causes. He wrote a
script for a documentary on the discoveries of radium at Great Slave Lake and
the development of the nuclear industry in Canada. The film was called The
Secret Years of El Dorado that won the award for the Non-Dramatic Script for the
1968 Canadian Film Awards (now known as the Genie Awards).
In the early 1950s he was one of the founders of the Stratford Festival in
Stratford, Ontario assisting with the promotion of the festival as well as the
connection to British actors from the Rank Organization who would headline at
the Festival like Sir Alec Guinness and Irene Worth as well as the first
director Dr. Tyrone Guthrie. He then oversaw and financed the initial PR and
fund raising efforts of the project that was ably executed by Mary Jolliffe who
. The day to day work was done by the talented Mary Jolliffe who was the
festival’s first publicist. Through his connections in Great Britain and the
United States media, he was able to have the Stratford launch featured in the
international press. He arranged the documentary of the National Film Board on
the creation of the festival called, "The Stratford Adventure."
He was the Canadian Cancer Society’s first National Campaign Chairman and
helped pioneer the organization serving as a member of the National Board for 18
years.
His love of nature included a number of conservation projects including
his work helping to secure Canadian support of the Quetico-Superior Foundation
to preserve the boundary waters area that created the largest international
wilderness preserve in the world.
In the 1950s, he was an advocate of blended income housing rather than
common income patterns in the redevelopment of the then Regent Park slums in
Toronto. This was rejected at the time however, his view proved to be the
solution now generally adopted in urban planning in Ontario.
He served on various corporate boards including the founding board of CTV
in Canada.
Expo ’67 was one of his last major projects before his retirement although
he remained involved in corporate life into his seventies.
He died on September 9, 1978 at Bracebridge, Ontario and is buried in
Gravenhurst – not surprisingly in his beloved Muskoka.
Excerpted from
Up To The Cottage -
Memories of Muskoka
by Grant D. Fairley
Acknowledgements
Mary Jolliffe, C.M. the publicist for many years at the Stratford Festival
and the Canada Council was generous with her time and recollections about James
A. Cowan.
Public Relations specialist, Kevin Putnam, as a student and then in
preparation for a book did a study on the life of my grandfather James A. Cowan
and his role in the history of Public Relations in Canada. Conversations with
him have been helpful.
Lindsay Thompson of Marketing Magazine was helpful in securing a 1961
profile of James A. Cowan.
References
Baker, Carlos (1969) Ernest Hemingway: A Life Story. New York, NY: Charles
Scribner’s Sons.
Burrill, William (1994) Hemingway: The Toronto Years. Toronto, ON:
Doubleday Canada
Harkness, Ross (1963) J. E. Atkinson Of The Star. Toronto, ON: University
of Toronto Press
Searle, R. Newell (1977) Saving Quetico Superior: A Land Set Apart St.
Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Press
Nolan, Michael (2001) CTV-The Network That Means Business. Edmonton, AB:
The University of Alberta Press
Krishnamurthy Sriramesh (Editor), Dejan Vercic (Editor) (2009) The Global
Public Relations Handbook, Revised and Expanded Edition: Theory, Research, and
Practice. New York, NY: Routledge p. 655-656
Warecki, George Michael (2000) Protecting Ontario’s Wilderness: A history
of changing ideas and preservation politics, 1927-1973. New York, NY: Peter Lang
International Academic Publishers
Knott, Leonard L (1955) The PR in Profit: A Guide to Successful Public
Relations in Canada. Toronto, ON: McClelland & Stewart
Patterson, Tom and Allan Gould (1999) First Stage: The Making of the
Stratford Festival. Firefly Books
Davies, Robertson and Guthrie, Tyrone (1971) Renown at Stratford Robertson
and Tyrone Guthrie Toronto: Clarke, Irwin & Co.
Guthrie, Tyrone Davies, Robertson and Grant MacDonald (1954) TWICE HAVE
THE TRUMPETS SOUNDED - A Record of the Stratford Shakespearean Festival in
Canada
Liberty Profile: Jimmy Cowan by Ken MacTaggart, Liberty Magazine Canada
April 28, 1945 Pages 16-17
Meet Cowan - Phantom of Canadian PR by Dean Walker, Marketing Magazine
April 26, 1963
James A. Cowan Heads Canadian Film Institute, Canadian Film Weekly
Magazine February 27, 1952 Pages 1 and 3
Various articles from The Toronto Star, Star Weekly, The Varsity, The
Goblin, Esquire Magazine and Maclean’s Magazine
The Golden Gong - The Story of Rank Films (2004) DVD Hosted By Michael
Caine. Kock International