He was President of the Simcoe Railway and Power Company, which constructed the Big Chute hydroelectric plant in 1909.[2] The plant was acquired by the Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario in 1914, being the first station owned and operated by it.[3]
Finlayson entered into a law practice in a partnership with George Dudley in 1917.[5] They established at Finlayson & Dudley, Barristers and Solicitors at 212 King Street in Midland.[6] Dudley took over the firm upon Finlayson's death.[5]
in 1926, Finlayson became the Minister of Lands and Forests in the government of Howard Ferguson, which he would continue to hold until 1934. Prior to his appointment, Ernest H. Finlayson (his half-brother and the head of the Dominion Forest Service since 1925) gave him an intensive crash-course in silviculture, which "resulted in... [Minister Finlayson]... stepping into the job with, perhaps, a greater knowledge of the principles of forestry than has probably been the case with any other non-technical man who has occupied a Cabinet post."[7] In 1927, Finlayson declared to the Legislature:
[T]imber must be treated as a crop and not as a mine.[8]
As Minister, he was responsible for the passage of several Acts relating to forestry in Ontario (although their effectiveness has since been questioned):[7]
The Forestry Act, 1927[9] (which provided for the expropriation of lands for forestry purposes, and for the moving of inhabitants of barren lands (such as the Trent watershed)[10] to other agricultural areas, including the Great Clay Belt)[11]
The Provincial Forests Act, 1929[12] (which created provincial Forest Reserves)
The Pulpwood Conservation Act, 1929[13] (which required lumber companies to institute reforestation plans for the areas they held under license)
In addition to the Department of Lands and Forests, he was also assigned responsibility for the Department of Northern Development.[14] He also became an advocate for the expansion of the provincial parks system — probably the first influential politician in the Province to do so[15] — and was instrumental in swapping timber limits with the Spanish River Company in order to save the natural beauty of Trout Lake (later renamed as O.S.A. Lake), which was incorporated in 1964 into the newly created Killarney Provincial Park.[15]
Losing his seat in 1934, he was subsequently reelected in 1937. In 1939, he resigned his seat in order to enable George Drew, the new party leader, to be elected to the Assembly. He died in 1943, after a brief illness.[4]
Legacy
Several places in the province have been named after Finlayson: