Stephen Boleslav Roman | |
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Born | Veľký Ruskov, Czechoslovakia | April 17, 1921
Died | 23 March 1988 Markham, Ontario, Canada | (aged 66)
Nationality | Slovak, Canadian |
Occupation | mining engineer |
Known for | Rose to be president of Denison Mines, inducted in the Canadian Mining Hall of Fame |
Stephen Boleslav Roman (17 April 1921 – 23 March 1988) was a prominent Canadian mining engineer and mining executive of a Slovak origin.[1] Business commentator Diane Francis described him as a self-made man in her book Controlling Interest.[2] A 1967 profile in Fortune magazine said "Toronto teems with speculators who have made it big promoting oil, mines, and penny stocks, but no one has made it bigger than Stephen Boleslav Roman."[3] Peter Newman profiled him in "Sometimes a great nation: will Canada belong to the 21st century?"[4]
Štefan Boleslav Roman was born in village Veľký Ruskov (now Nový Ruskov) in Slovakia. He emigrated to Canada when he was 16 years old. Since his youth he was strong connected to the Greek Catholic Church. He helped to found and organize the Slovak Catholic Eparchy of Saints Cyril and Methodius of Toronto. The monumental Cathedral of the Transfiguration of our Lord in Markham was funded and designed by him, modeling the structure on the church in Veľký Ruskov.[5]
Roman was invested in the Order of Canada and the Canadian Mining Hall of Fame.[6] The Vatican appointed him a Papal knight.[7]
The lake freighter Stephen B. Roman was named after him.[8]
Stephen B. Roman, the man who took control of a penny mining stock in 1953 and built it into one of the largest mining empires in Canada, has died. He was 66.
Stephen Boleslav Roman is one of that rare species among Canada's rich: he's a self-made man and an ideologue, who fiercely believes in Catholicism, capitalism, the emancipation of Slovakia, Denison Mines, and...