Career
Born in Mille Roches, Ontario to a successful Franco-Ontarian fabric manufacturer, Ault moved to Wisconsin in his teens, where he worked as a bookkeeper. In 1876, he moved to Cincinnati and took a job as a lampblack salesman. In 1928, Ault sold his share in the company for $14 million.
In the mid-1920s, Ault was offered an ambassadorship by United States. President Warren G. Harding, but he declined.
Ault was also an avid naturalist, whose passion for parks led him to join Cincinnati"s parks board. He served as chair of the board from 1908 to 1926, and donated 204 acres (825,000 m²) of land to the city to create Ault Park.
Twenty acres (21,000 m²) not donated by Ault himself were later added to this park as well. He also donated a family property on Sheek"s Island to the Township of Cornwall, which also became known as Ault Park.
In 1958, 28 years after Ault"s death, Sheek"s Island and Ault"s birthplace in Mille Roches were submerged by construction on the Saint Lawrence Seaway project
With the help of Ault"s surviving family, Ault Park was rebuilt on the new river shoreline near Long Sault, and is home to a historical museum commemorating The Lost Villages.