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Wikipedia

Tenant League

The Tenant League in Prince Edward Island was a 19th-century agrarian populist movement whose goal was the "dismantling of the proprietary land system" in that province.[1]

Context Edit

The League was formed in response to the Absentee Landlord Question, which arose in 1767 when King George III divided the island into 67 lots, which he allocated to his supporters by lottery. Many tenant farmers in the province were unhappy with their inability to gain title in the land they worked. Most also faced burdensome rents.

The grants were conditional on certain settlement conditions which were often not fulfilled. However, the political connection of the grantees generally meant that the government could not or would not contest them, in spite of calls from the province's tenants.[2]

Activity Edit

The league was created in December 1864. By the summer of 1864, most of the Island's tenants were members. In a convention at Charlottetown, the league adopted a constitution which urged its members to withhold payment of rents.

At a parade in 1865 the government attempted to arrest Samuel Fletcher, the league's leader. However, the crowd of members prevented it. Governor George Dundas then banned the organization, but they refused to disband. Defiance and collective action would continue to characterize the league's existence, as they clashed with officials dispatched to collect rents.[3] This prompted the introduction of British troops to put down the "Tenant League Riots" in 1866.[3]

Influence Edit

In 1873, after a failed railroad project pushed the Island almost to bankruptcy, it joined the Dominion of Canada. Under the terms of union, the government of Canada provided financial help to the province in purchasing the remaining leaseholds. In 1878 PEI passed its compulsory Land Purchase Act which finally dispossessed the absentee landlords and made the land available for purchase in fee simple to the local population.[4][5]

References Edit

  1. ^ Book Review: The Tenant League of Prince Edward Island, 1864–1867: Leasehold Tenure in the New World. 2004-05-30 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ The Absentee Landlord Question - Prince Edward Island. 2006-02-11 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b The Tenant League / Tenant League Riots.
  4. ^ Prince Edward Island. 2002-06-06 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Duncan Campbell's History of Prince Edward Island - Chapter 8.

tenant, league, prince, edward, island, 19th, century, agrarian, populist, movement, whose, goal, dismantling, proprietary, land, system, that, province, contents, context, activity, influence, referencescontext, editthe, league, formed, response, absentee, la. The Tenant League in Prince Edward Island was a 19th century agrarian populist movement whose goal was the dismantling of the proprietary land system in that province 1 Contents 1 Context 2 Activity 3 Influence 4 ReferencesContext EditThe League was formed in response to the Absentee Landlord Question which arose in 1767 when King George III divided the island into 67 lots which he allocated to his supporters by lottery Many tenant farmers in the province were unhappy with their inability to gain title in the land they worked Most also faced burdensome rents The grants were conditional on certain settlement conditions which were often not fulfilled However the political connection of the grantees generally meant that the government could not or would not contest them in spite of calls from the province s tenants 2 Activity EditThe league was created in December 1864 By the summer of 1864 most of the Island s tenants were members In a convention at Charlottetown the league adopted a constitution which urged its members to withhold payment of rents At a parade in 1865 the government attempted to arrest Samuel Fletcher the league s leader However the crowd of members prevented it Governor George Dundas then banned the organization but they refused to disband Defiance and collective action would continue to characterize the league s existence as they clashed with officials dispatched to collect rents 3 This prompted the introduction of British troops to put down the Tenant League Riots in 1866 3 Influence EditIn 1873 after a failed railroad project pushed the Island almost to bankruptcy it joined the Dominion of Canada Under the terms of union the government of Canada provided financial help to the province in purchasing the remaining leaseholds In 1878 PEI passed its compulsory Land Purchase Act which finally dispossessed the absentee landlords and made the land available for purchase in fee simple to the local population 4 5 References Edit Book Review The Tenant League of Prince Edward Island 1864 1867 Leasehold Tenure in the New World Archived 2004 05 30 at the Wayback Machine The Absentee Landlord Question Prince Edward Island Archived 2006 02 11 at the Wayback Machine a b The Tenant League Tenant League Riots Prince Edward Island Archived 2002 06 06 at the Wayback Machine Duncan Campbell s History of Prince Edward Island Chapter 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tenant League amp oldid 1161255316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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