Mutual Life


The Mutual Life Assurance Company of Canada was a Canadian insurance company that existed from 1868 to 2002. The company's articles of incorporation received royal assent in the Parliament of Ontario on 19 December 1868 as the Ontario Mutual Life Assurance Company. In 1900, it changed its name to the Mutual Life Assurance Company of Canada.
At the end of the 20th century, Mutual Life was Canada's fourth largest insurance company. On 10 June 1999, shareholders voted to demutualise the company and to change its name to the Clarica Life Insurance Company. Clarica determined a valuation of CAD 865 million, and on 15 July 1999 made its initial public offering of 42.2 million shares valued at CAD 20.50 per. In December 2001, Sun Life made a CAD 7.1 billion offer to acquire Clarica. Shareholders voted in favour of the takeover on 6 March 2002, and the deal was completed on 29 May. Upon the purchase, Sun Life overtook Manulife to become Canada's largest insurance company. After the sale, Clarica was merged into the Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, and the corporation was dissolved at the end of 2002. That year, Sun transferred the headquarters of its Canadian operations from Toronto to Waterloo, where they remain today.

Leadership

President

  1. Isaac Erb Bowman, 1869–1897
  2. Robert Melvin, 1897–1908
  3. Edwin Perry Clement, 1908–1920
  4. Maj. Hume Blake Cronyn Sr., 1920–1929
  5. Robert Osborne McCulloch, 1929–1943
  6. Louis Lacourse Lang, 1943–1958
  7. Harrington Luke Guy, 1958–1959
  8. Edward Anthes Rieder, 1959–1964
  9. Kenneth Robert MacGregor, 1964–1973
  10. John Harry Panabaker, 1973–1982
  11. Jack Verner Masterman, 1982–1989
  12. Robert Murray Astley, 1989–2002

    Chairman of the Board

  13. Charles Martin Bowman, 1926–1932
  14. Robert Osborne McCulloch, 1943
  15. Louis Lacourse Lang, 1958–1964
  16. Edward Anthes Rieder, 1964–1966
  17. Harold Melvin Turner, 1966–1973
  18. Kenneth Robert MacGregor, 1973–1982
  19. John Harry Panabaker, 1982–1989
  20. Jack Verner Masterman, 1989–1999
  21. David Alison Ganong, 1999–2002