Sir Harry Oakes, 1st Baronet

Male 1874 - 1943  (68 years)


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  • Name Harry Oakes 
    Prefix Sir 
    Suffix 1st Baronet 
    Born 23 Dec 1874  Sangerville, Piscataquis County, Maine Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    FamilySearch ID LHCC-PKK 
    FindaGrave Memorial ID 6599467 
    Died 7 Jul 1943  Nassau, ____, New Providence, Bahamas Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Buried Aft 7 Jul 1943  Dover Cemetery, Dover-Foxcroft, Piscataquis County, Maine Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I23525  New England Hall Families Master Tree
    Last Modified 30 Sep 2025 

    Father William Pitt Oakes,   b. 8 Mar 1833, Sangerville, Penobscot County, Maine Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1 Feb 1913, Dover-Foxcroft, Piscataquis County, Maine Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 79 years) 
    Mother Edith Nancy Lewis,   b. 14 Jul 1842, Sangerville, Piscataquis County, Maine Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 7 Jan 1923  (Age 80 years) 
    Married 12 Aug 1869  Sangerville, Piscataquis County, Maine Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F11193  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Lady Eunice Myrtle MacIntyre,   b. 23 Nov 1898, Leichhardt, ____, New South Wales, Australia Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 6 Jun 1981, Nassau, ____, New Providence, Bahamas Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 82 years) 
    Married 30 Jun 1923  Woollahra, Sydney, ____, New South Wales, Australia Find all individuals with events at this location 
    • Sydney, Australia, Anglican Parish Registers, 1814-2011
      Name      Harry Oates
      Gender      Male
      Independent Means
      Marriage Age      48
      Record Type      Marriage
      Birth Date      abt 1875
      Born: Sangerville, Maine USA
      Marriage Date      30 Jun 1923
      Marriage Place      St. Marks Church, Darling Point, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
      Father      William Pitt Oates, (Dec'd), Surveyor
      Mother      Edith Nancy Oates (Dec'd)

      Spouse      Eunice Myrtle McIntyre
      Home Duties
      Age 24
      Birth Place: ByAnez[?]
      Father: Thomas McIntyre (Dec'd), Government Officer
      Mother Sarah Jane Mobles

      Marriage Date      30 Jun 1923
      Marriage Place      Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
    Children 
     1. Baroness Nancy Oakes,   b. 17 May 1924, Toronto, York County, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 16 Jan 2005, Westminster, Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 80 years)
     2. Sir Sydney Oakes, 2nd Baronet,   b. 9 Jun 1927, Toronto, York County, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 8 Aug 1966, Nassau, ____, New Providence, Bahamas Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 39 years)
     3. Shirley Lewis Oakes,   b. 10 Apr 1929, Toronto, York County, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 9 Aug 1986, Palm Beach County, Florida Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 57 years)
     4. William Pitt Oakes,   b. 11 Sep 1930, Toronto, York County, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 27 Apr 1958, Bronx, Bronx County, New York Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 27 years)
     5. Harry Phillips Oakes,   b. 30 Aug 1932, Toronto, York County, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Unknown
    Last Modified 30 Sep 2025 
    Family ID F11190  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - 23 Dec 1874 - Sangerville, Piscataquis County, Maine Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarried - 30 Jun 1923 - Woollahra, Sydney, ____, New South Wales, Australia Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDied - 7 Jul 1943 - Nassau, ____, New Providence, Bahamas Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBuried - Aft 7 Jul 1943 - Dover Cemetery, Dover-Foxcroft, Piscataquis County, Maine Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Notes 
    • From FindaGrave:

      Sir Harry Oakes, 1st Baronet
      (23 December 1874 –  7 July 1943)

      was a British gold mine owner, entrepreneur, investor and philanthropist.

      Oakes, born December 23, 1874 to Edith and William-Pitt Oakes of Sangerville, was the third of five children. The Oakes family had lived in Sangerville since at least 1808, but in the 1880's William Oakes moved to Foxcroft so his sons could attend Foxcroft Academy.

      Harry was 23 years old when he set out on a 16-year journey which took him to Australia, Africa, the Yukon, California, Central America, and Canada. During his college years, he predicted to a classmate that he would become a millionaire and die a violent death "with his boots on." He did both.

      Oakes' quest for wealth began in the Yukon where he chipped rock at temperatures which plunged to 60 degrees below zero, even though the gold rush there was coming to a close. In the late 1800's, Oakes spent a year working as a medical assistant treating frostbite cases. By 1906 he found himself shipwrecked off the coast of Alaska, and was taken prisoner briefly by the Russians before being allowed to return to Alaska. Working as a deck hand, Oakes embarked for Australia, where he was once again disappointed in his search for gold. Further failures awaited him in New Zealand and California, the latter in which he suffered and nearly died of heat stroke.

      In June of 1911, he traveled to Ontario where he received a new miner's license. From Ontario, he ventured North to Swastika a town in Ontario, Canada. where he met a woman named Roza Brown. Ms. Brown has been described as unusually ugly, malodorous, and was accompanied by snarling dogs. Although she had a well-known contempt for prospectors, Roza ran a boarding house for miners and it was she who put Oakes on the trail to Kirkland Lake and his eventual fortune. Oakes, taking her advice, went to the claims office, leafed through the records and learned of a claim that was going to fall open the next day. However, since he only had $2.65 in his pocket and couldn't wait for money from home, he hurried back to Swastika where he interested a family of four brothers in staking the claim with him.

      The five shook hands, agreeing to share in any proceeds from gold that was discovered. The Tough brothers, along with Oakes set out by foot at midnight for the mine. It was 52 degrees below zero as they walked the seven miles through a beginning snowfall. After driving in their stakes, they toasted what they called the Tough-Oakes Mine. Moments later, the former owner of the mine, William Wright, walked into view. Wright saw what had happened, knew he'd lost his claim, and hurried to stake new ones adjoining the Tough-Oakes claim.

      Later, he and Oakes formed a partnership and made further claims at Kirkland Lakes. Within eight years, Oakes was the richest man in Canada, where his Lake Shore Mine at Kirkland was second only in wealth to the Homestead Mine in the Black Hills of the Dakotas. After years of struggling to survive, Oakes was now earning an estimated $60,000 a day.

      Oakes celebrated his new-found wealth by enjoying a world cruise during which he met a shy, unassuming woman named Eunice MacIntyre, the daughter of a government official. Eunice was twenty-four, six inches taller than Oakes, and 26 years younger. The couple married and returned to Ontario where the following year,

      Harry renounced his American citizenship for business reasons. He became a naturalized Canadian, but relocated when he realized that he would have to pay the Canadian government $17,500 per day in taxes for the entitlement to live there. Oakes and his bride sought refuge at Nassau, a Caribbean Island where he would not be required to pay taxes. There, he built a waterworks, a golf course, set up a bus service for the natives, an airplane service for emergency illnesses, a free milk program for children and a fund for unwed mothers. To this he added a gift of $400,000 to St. Georges Hospital in London.

      In 1939, King George VI rewarded him by bestowing upon him the title of Baron.

      Oakes good fortune came to an abrupt end on a rainy night in July, 1943 while Oakes' wife and four of their five children were vacationing at their summer home in Bar Harbor. Oakes was to join them there the following day, the ninth of July. His close friend Harold Christie, who was later declared to be the perpetrator, told authorities that when he went to wake Oakes at his Nassau estate, he discovered that his skull had been shattered by four blows behind the ear. The body had been partially destroyed by fire, very likely to disguise the true nature of the crime which still remains a "cold case." Christie, who reportedly slept in the adjoining room that night, claimed that he never heard a sound.

      What ensued was one of the most disastrous and incompetent police investigations known to date. Important evidence was ignored or discounted, and Oakes autopsy was so badly mishandled that the plane carrying his body had to be recalled in midair for new photographs to be taken. According to the autopsy, Oakes' death had been caused by a single blow or a series of separate blows from a blunt instrument. This conclusion raised a great deal of suspicion, considering that located on the mastoid bone just behind Oakes' right ear were four holes arranged in a square.

      Attention was immediately focused on Oakes' son-in-law, Alfred de Marigny. Earlier, Oakes had been seen arguing with him, and de Marigny was deeply mistrusted by the locals. He had arrived in the Bahamas with a playboy reputation and two failed marriages behind him. Moreover, in 1942 he had married Oakes eldest daughter Nancy, only three days after her eighteenth birthday. He had embarrassed the local society in the Bahamas by becoming successful in several businesses without the cooperation of the local community. He particularly irked those of high social status when he frequently won local yacht races. Oakes' son-in-law was arrested and charged with murder the day after Oakes' death. Standing trial, de Marigny was deemed not guilty by a jury in under two hours, and the case was never again reopened.

      Years later, Alfred de Marigny went public and claimed that he found one of the missing watchmen who were at Oakes' estate on the night of the murder. He insisted that the man informed him that at the time of the murder, he and the other watchman were sheltering themselves from a sudden storm in a shed. He further recounted that just after midnight, a sedan pulled up to the house and two men got out and went inside the house. The watchmen thought they heard three or four gunshots, and minutes later flames could be seen in Sir Harrys bedroom. The two strangers then exited the scene in the sedan. The two watchmen fled in terror, but not before they identified a third man in the vehicle as Harold Christie.

      As told to de Marigny, Christie tracked down the watchmen the next day and paid them each 100 pounds to leave Nassau and never return. They were further encouraged to stay clear of the area when they learned that the local harbor master, an experienced diver, had reportedly drowned in the harbor. The harbor master had reputedly been the only witness to the arrival of a mysterious boat about midnight on the night of the murder.

      In the account of de Marigny, Christie avoided investigation because any competent inquiry would have revealed that Oakes, Christie, and the Duke of Windsor had conspired to smuggle millions of dollars out of the Bahamas in violation of currency regulations. The Duke, then the Governor of the Bahamas and former King of Great Britain, possessed the power to reopen the investigation but never did.

      Harry Oakes left a personal fortune valued at slightly under $12 million, There is also still the lingering mystery of who murdered Harry Oakes. The official autopsy declared Oakes was killed by a blow to the head, although de Marigny insists a Nassau doctor told him that Oakes was shot to death, a story that coincides with the watchman's account. If de Marigny was telling the truth, there would exist four small-caliber bullets in Harry Oakes' skull.

      Sir Harry Oakes is entombed in a marble mausoleum at a Dover-Foxcroft Cemetery.