Background
Reilly was born to Protestant Irish immigrants, the 13th of 16 children of James Reilly and Mary Jane Whiteside, and his family settled in Toronto and ran a grocery store.
Reilly was born to Protestant Irish immigrants, the 13th of 16 children of James Reilly and Mary Jane Whiteside, and his family settled in Toronto and ran a grocery store.
Before politics, he was a locksmith, taking on a career after high school and learning from an older brother who had opened Reilly Lock on Yonge Street. He ultimately went on to manage and co-own the business, which grew to become one of the largest locksmithing companies in Toronto, with over 40 employees. Reilly had a keen interest in public speaking and Reilly developed and owned the Reilly Institute of Effective Public Speaking.
During the late 1940s and 1950s, Reilly was a City of Toronto alderman.
He was licensed as a private pilot and, on March 17, 1958, while flying a small plane in Florida, the plane experienced an engine failure and he was forced to land on the beach at Fort Lauderdale. He passed his last driver"s license test at age 95.
He first entered political life in 1947, running as an aldermanic candidate. We was elected as one of two Councilors in Ward 9 in the City of Toronto.
He was re-electe as a councilor in 1948, but he lost in 1949 when he attempted to secure one of the four positions on the Board of Control.
He chose not to run in the 1955 election. Reilly was first elected to the Ontario legislature in the riding of Eglinton in a by-election on January 18, 1962. The by-election was called to replace William Dunlop who died in office in 1961.
During his term of office he served as the Deputy Speaker (1966) and as the Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Industry and Tourism in October 1972.
In 1975, he retired from provincial politics. After he left politics, he was made chair of the board of trustees of the Ontario Science Centre, where he served two three-year terms until 1983.
He is credited with raising the international profile of the Ontario Science Centre, and oversaw the exhibition China: 7,000 Years of Discovery, that broke all previous attendance records, attracting more than 1.5 million visitors in 1982. A very spiritual man, Reilly organized the first Ontario Prayer Breakfast in 1970.
lieutenant is now an annual event, held in Toronto, and it recently celebrating its 42nd year.
He died at Sunnybrook Hospital in 2008. He was 95 years old.
In 1951, he returned to municipal politics, winning acclamation as a councilor in Ward 9, a position he successfully defended in the elections in 1952, 1953 and 1954. He also acted as Chief Party Whip.