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Upper Canada

The Province of Upper Canada (French: province du Haut-Canada) was a part of British Canada established in 1791 by the Kingdom of Great Britain, to govern the central third of the lands in British North America, formerly part of the Province of Quebec since 1763. Upper Canada included all of modern-day Southern Ontario and all those areas of Northern Ontario in the Pays d'en Haut which had formed part of New France, essentially the watersheds of the Ottawa River or Lakes Huron and Superior, excluding any lands within the watershed of Hudson Bay. The "upper" prefix in the name reflects its geographic position along the Great Lakes, mostly above the headwaters of the Saint Lawrence River, contrasted with Lower Canada (present-day Quebec) to the northeast.

Province of Upper Canada
1791–1841
Union Flag (1801 version)[1][2]
Anthem: "God Save the King/Queen"
Map of Upper Canada (orange) with 21st-century Canada (pink) surrounding it
StatusBritish colony
CapitalNewark 1792–1797 (renamed Niagara 1798, Niagara-on-the-Lake 1970)
York (later renamed Toronto in 1834) 1797–1841
Common languagesEnglish
GovernmentFamily Compact aristocracy
under a
Constitutional monarchy
Sovereign 
• 1791–1820
George III
• 1820–1830
George IV
• 1830–1837
William IV
• 1837–1841
Victoria
Lieutenant-Governor; Executive Council of Upper Canada 
LegislatureParliament of Upper Canada
Legislative Council
Legislative Assembly
Historical eraBritish Era
26 December 1791
10 February 1841
Area
1836[3]258,999 km2 (100,000 sq mi)
Population
• 1823[3]
150,196
• 1836[3]
358,187
CurrencyHalifax pound
Today part of

Upper Canada was the primary destination of Loyalist refugees and settlers from the United States after the American Revolution, who often were granted land to settle in Upper Canada. Already populated by Indigenous peoples, land for settlement in Upper Canada was made by treaties between the new British government and the Indigenous, exchanging land for one-time payments or annuities. The new province was characterized by its British way of life, including bicameral parliament and separate civil and criminal law, rather than mixed as in Lower Canada or elsewhere in the British Empire.[4][failed verification] The division was created to ensure the exercise of the same rights and privileges enjoyed by loyal subjects elsewhere in the North American colonies.[5] In 1812, war broke out between Great Britain and the United States, leading to several battles in Upper Canada. The United States attempted to capture Upper Canada, but the war ended with the situation unchanged.

The government of the colony came to be dominated by a small group of persons, known as the "Family Compact", who held most of the top positions in the Legislative Council and appointed officials. In 1837, an unsuccessful rebellion attempted to overthrow the undemocratic system. Representative government would be established in the 1840s. Upper Canada existed from its establishment on 26 December 1791 to 10 February 1841, when it was united with adjacent Lower Canada to form the Province of Canada.

Establishment edit

 
Map of Upper Canada's districts

As part of the 1763 Treaty of Paris which ended the Seven Years' War global conflict and the French and Indian War in North America, Great Britain retained control over the former New France, which had been defeated in the French and Indian War. The British had won control after Fort Niagara had surrendered in 1759 and Montreal capitulated in 1760, and the British under Robert Rogers took formal control of the Great Lakes region in 1760.[6] Fort Michilimackinac was occupied by Roger's forces in 1761.

The territories of contemporary southern Ontario and southern Quebec were initially maintained as the single province of Quebec, as it had been under the French. From 1763 to 1791, the Province of Quebec maintained its French language, cultural behavioural expectations, practices and laws. The British passed the Quebec Act in 1774, which expanded the Quebec colony's authority to include part of the Indian Reserve to the west (i.e., parts of southern Ontario), and other western territories south of the Great Lakes including much of what would become the United States' Northwest Territory, including the modern states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin and parts of Minnesota.

After the American War of Independence ended in 1783, Britain retained control of the area north of the Ohio River. The official boundaries remained undefined until 1795 and the Jay Treaty. The British authorities encouraged the movement of people to this area from the United States, offering free land to encourage population growth. For settlers, the head of the family received 100 acres (40 ha) and 50 acres (20 ha) per family member, and soldiers received larger grants.[7] These settlers are known as United Empire Loyalists and were primarily English-speaking Protestants. The first townships (Royal and Cataraqui) along the St. Lawrence and eastern Lake Ontario were laid out in 1784, populated mainly with decommissioned soldiers and their families.[8]

"Upper Canada" became a political entity on 26 December 1791 with the Parliament of Great Britain's passage of the Constitutional Act of 1791. The act divided the province of Quebec into Upper and Lower Canada, but did not yet specify official borders for Upper Canada. The division was effected so that Loyalist American settlers and British immigrants in Upper Canada could have English laws and institutions, and the French-speaking population of Lower Canada could maintain French civil law and the Catholic religion. The first lieutenant-governor was John Graves Simcoe.[9]

 
Map of Upper Canada by J. Arrowsmith (1837)

The 1795 Jay Treaty officially set the borders between British North America and the United States north to the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River. On 1 February 1796, the capital of Upper Canada was moved from Newark (now Niagara-on-the-Lake) to York (now Toronto), which was judged to be less vulnerable to attack by the US.

The Act of Union 1840, passed 23 July 1840 by the British Parliament and proclaimed by the Crown on 10 February 1841, merged Upper Canada with Lower Canada to form the short-lived United Province of Canada.

Government edit

Provincial administration edit

Upper Canada's constitution was said to be "the very image and transcript" of the British constitution, and based on the principle of "mixed monarchy" – a balance of monarchy, aristocracy and democracy.[10]

The Executive arm of government in the colony consisted of a lieutenant-governor, his executive council, and the Officers of the Crown (equivalent to the Officers of the Parliament of Canada): the Adjutant General of the Militia, the Attorney General, the Auditor General of Land Patents for Upper Canada, the Auditor General (only one appointment ever made), Crown Lands Office, Indian Office, Inspector General, Kings' Printer, Provincial Secretary and Registrar's Office, Receiver General of Upper Canada, Solicitor General, and Surveyor General.[11]

The Executive Council of Upper Canada had a similar function to the Cabinet in England but was not responsible to the Legislative Assembly. They held a consultative position, however, and did not serve in administrative offices as cabinet ministers do. Members of the Executive Council were not necessarily members of the Legislative Assembly but were usually members of the Legislative Council.[12]

Parliament edit

 
The third Parliament Building in York, built between 1829 and 1832 at Front Street
 
The Great Seal of Upper Canada

The Legislative branch of the government consisted of the parliament comprising legislative council and legislative assembly. When the capital was first moved to Toronto (then called York) from Newark (present-day Niagara-on-the-Lake) in 1796, the Parliament Buildings of Upper Canada were at the corner of Parliament and Front Streets, in buildings that were burned by US forces in the War of 1812, rebuilt, then burned again by accident in 1824. The site was eventually abandoned for another, to the west.

The Legislative Council of Upper Canada was the upper house governing the province of Upper Canada. Although modelled after the British House of Lords, Upper Canada had no aristocracy. Members of the Legislative council, appointed for life, formed the core of the oligarchic group, the Family Compact, that came to dominate government and economy in the province.

The Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada functioned as the lower house in the Parliament of Upper Canada. Its legislative power was subject to veto by the appointed Lieutenant Governor, Executive Council, and Legislative Council.

Local government edit

Local government in the province of Upper Canada was based on districts. In 1788, four districts were created:[13]

The name changes all took place in 1792.

Justices of the Peace were appointed by the Lt. Governor. Any two justices meeting together could form the lowest level of the justice system, the Courts of Request. A Court of Quarter Sessions was held four times a year in each district composed of all the resident justices. The Quarter Sessions met to oversee the administration of the district and deal with legal cases. They formed, in effect, the municipal government until an area was incorporated as either a Police Board or a City after 1834.[14]

Additional districts were created from the existing districts as the population grew until 1849, when local government mainly based on counties came into effect. At that time, there were 20 districts; legislation to create a new Kent District was never completed. Up until 1841, the district officials were appointed by the lieutenant-governor, although usually with local input.

Politics edit

Family Compact edit

The Family Compact is the epithet applied to an oligarchic group of men who exercised most of the political and judicial power in Upper Canada from the 1810s to the 1840s. It was noted for its conservatism and opposition to democracy.[15] The uniting factors amongst the Compact were its loyalist tradition, hierarchical class structure and adherence to the established Anglican Church. Leaders such as John Beverley Robinson and John Strachan proclaimed it an ideal government, especially as contrasted with the rowdy democracy in the nearby United States.[16] The Family Compact emerged from the War of 1812 and collapsed in the aftermath of the Rebellions of 1837.

Reform movement edit

There were many outstanding individual reform politicians in Upper Canada, including Robert Randal, Peter Perry, Marshall Spring Bidwell, William Ketchum and Dr. William Warren Baldwin; however, organised collective reform activity began with Robert Fleming Gourlay. Gourlay was a well-connected Scottish emigrant who arrived in 1817, hoping to encourage "assisted emigration" of the poor from Britain. He solicited information on the colony through township questionnaires, and soon became a critic of government mismanagement. When the local legislature ignored his call for an inquiry, he called for a petition to the British Parliament. He organised township meetings, and a provincial convention – which the government considered dangerous and seditious. Gourlay was tried in December 1818 under the 1804 Sedition Act and jailed for 8 months. He was banished from the province in August 1819. His expulsion made him a martyr in the reform community.[19]

The next wave of organised Reform activity emerged in the 1830s through the work of William Lyon Mackenzie, James Lesslie, John Rolph, William John O'Grady and Dr Thomas Morrison, all of Toronto. They were critical to introducing the British Political Unions to Upper Canada. Political Unions were not parties. The unions organised petitions to Parliament.

The Upper Canada Central Political Union was organised in 1832–33 by Dr Thomas David Morrison (mayor of Toronto in 1836) while William Lyon Mackenzie was in England. This union collected 19,930 signatures on a petition protesting Mackenzie's unjust expulsion from the House of Assembly by the Family Compact.[20]

 
Second market in York (Toronto)

This union was reorganised as the Canadian Alliance Society (1835). It shared a large meeting space in the market buildings with the Mechanics Institute and the Children of Peace. The Canadian Alliance Society adopted much of the platform (such as secret ballot & universal suffrage) of the Owenite National Union of the Working Classes in London, England, that were to be integrated into the Chartist movement in England.[21]

The Canadian Alliance Society was reborn as the Constitutional Reform Society (1836), when it was led by the more moderate reformer, Dr William W. Baldwin. After the disastrous 1836 elections, it took the final form as the Toronto Political Union in 1837. It was the Toronto Political Union that called for a Constitutional Convention in July 1837, and began organising local "Vigilance Committees" to elect delegates. This became the organizational structure for the Rebellion of 1837.[22]

Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837 edit

 
Drawing showing the fatal shooting of Col. Robert Moodie outside John Montgomery's tavern in Toronto on 4 December 1837

The Upper Canada Rebellion was an insurrection against the oligarchic government of the Family Compact in December 1837, led by William Lyon Mackenzie. Long term grievances included antagonism between Later Loyalists and British Loyalists, political corruption, the collapse of the international financial system and the resultant economic distress, and a growing republican sentiment. While public grievances had existed for years, it was the Lower Canada Rebellion (in present-day Quebec) that emboldened rebels in Upper Canada to revolt openly soon after. The Upper Canada Rebellion was largely defeated shortly after it began, although resistance lingered until 1838 (and became more violent) – mainly through the support of the Hunters' Lodges, a secret anti-British American militia that emerged in states around the Great Lakes. They launched the Patriot War in 1838–39.[23]

John Lambton, Lord Durham's support for "responsible government" undercut the Tories and gradually led the public to reject what it viewed as poor administration, unfair land and education policies, and inadequate attention to urgent transportation needs. Durham's report led to the administrative unification of Upper and Lower Canada as the Province of Canada in 1841. Responsible government did not occur until the late 1840s under Robert Baldwin and Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine.[24]

Sydenham and the Union of the Canadas edit

After the Rebellions, the new governor, Charles Poulett Thomson, 1st Baron Sydenham, proved an exemplary Utilitarian, despite his aristocratic pretensions. This combination of free trade and aristocratic pretensions needs to be underscored; although a liberal capitalist, Sydenham was no radical democrat. Sydenham approached the task of implementing those aspects of Durham's report that the colonial office approved of, municipal reform, and the union of the Canadas, with a "campaign of state violence and coercive institutional innovation ... empowered not just by the British state but also by his Benthamite certainties."[25] Like governors Bond Head before him, and Metcalfe after, he was to turn to the Orange Order for often violent support. It was Sydenham who played a critical role in transforming Compact Tories into Conservatives.

Sydenham introduced a vast expansion of the state apparatus through the introduction of municipal government. Areas not already governed through civic corporations or police boards would be governed through centrally controlled District Councils with authority over roads, schools, and local policing. A strengthened Executive Council would further usurp much of the elected assembly's legislative role, leaving elected politicians to simply review the administration's legislative program and budgets.

Settlement edit

First Nations dispossession and reserves edit

The First Nations occupying the territory that was to become Upper Canada were:

  • Anishinaabe or Anishinabe—or more properly (plural) Anishinaabeg or Anishinabek. The plural form of the word is the autonym often used by the Odawa, Ojibwe, and Algonquin peoples.
  • The Iroquois, also known as the Haudenosaunee or the "People of the Longhouse",[26]

Prior to the creation of Upper Canada in 1791, much land had already been ceded by the First Nations to the Crown in accordance with the Royal Proclamation of 1763. The first treaty was between the Seneca and the British in 1764, giving access to lands adjoining the Niagara River.[27] During the American Revolutionary War most of the First Nations supported the British. After the Americans launched a campaign that burned the villages of the Iroquois in New York State in 1779[28] the refugees fled to Fort Niagara and other British posts, and remained permanently in Canada.

 
The Province of Quebec in 1774

Land was granted to these allied Six Nations who had served on the British side during the American Revolution by the Haldimand Proclamation (1784). Haldimand had purchased a tract of land from the Mississaugas. The nature of the grant and the administration of land sales by Upper Canada and Canada is a matter of dispute.

Between 1783 and 1812, fifteen land surrender treaties were concluded in Upper Canada. These involved one-time payments of money or goods to the Indigenous peoples. Some of the treaties spelled out designated reserve lands for the Indigenous peoples.[29]

Following the War of 1812, European settlers came in increasing numbers. The Indian Department focussed on converting the Indigenous peoples to abandon their old way of life and adopt agriculture. The treaties shifted from one-time payments in exchange to annual annuities from the sale of surrendered lands. Between 1825 and 1860, treaties were concluded for nearly all of the land-mass of the future province of Ontario. In 1836, Manitoulin Island was designated as a reserve for dispossessed natives, but much of this was ceded in 1862.[29]

Loyalists and the land grant system edit

 
An 1824 land deed for Upper Canada

Crown land policy to 1825 was multi-fold in the use of a "free" resource that had value to people who themselves may have little or no money for its purchase and for the price of settling upon it to support themselves and a create a new society. First, the cash-strapped Crown government in Canada could pay and reward the services and loyalty of the "United Empire Loyalists" who, originated outside of Canada, without encumbrance of debt by being awarded with small portions of land (under 200 acres or 80 hectares) with the proviso that it be settled by those to which it was granted; Second, portions would be reserved for the future use of the Crown and the clergy that did not require settlement by which to gain control. Lt. Governor Simcoe saw this as the mechanism by which an aristocracy might be created,[30] and that compact settlement could be avoided with the grants of large tracts of land to those Loyalists not required to settle on it as the means of gaining control.

Assisted immigration edit

The Calton weavers were a community of handweavers established in the community of Calton, then in Lanarkshire just outside Glasgow, Scotland in the 18th century.[31] In the early 19th century, many of the weavers emigrated to Canada, settling in Carleton Place and other communities in eastern Ontario, where they continued their trade.[32]

In 1825, 1,878 Irish Immigrants from the city of Cork arrived in the community of Scott's Plains. The British Parliament had approved an experimental emigration plan to transport poor Irish families to Upper Canada in 1822. The scheme was managed by Peter Robinson, a member of the Family Compact and brother of the Attorney General. Scott's Plains was renamed Peterborough in his honour.

Talbot settlement edit

Thomas Talbot emigrated in 1791, where he became personal secretary to John Graves Simcoe, Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada. Talbot convinced the government to allow him to implement a land settlement scheme of 5,000 acres (2,000 ha) in Elgin County in the townships of Dunwich and Aldborough in 1803.[33] According to his government agreement, he was entitled to 200 acres (80 ha) for every settler who received 50 acres (20 ha); in this way he gained an estate of 20,000 acres (8,000 ha). Talbot's administration was regarded as despotic. He was infamous for registering settlers' names on the local settlement map in pencil and if displeased, erasing their entry. Talbot's abuse of power was a contributing factor in the Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837.[34]

Crown and clergy reserves edit

The Crown reserves, one seventh of all lands granted, were to provide the provincial executive with an independent source of revenue not under the control of the elected Assembly. The clergy reserves, also one seventh of all lands granted in the province, were created "for the support and maintenance of a Protestant clergy" in lieu of tithes. The revenue from the lease of these lands was claimed by the Rev. John Strachan on behalf of the Church of England. These reserves were directly administered by the Crown; which, in turn, came under increasing political pressure from other Protestant bodies. The Reserve lands were to be a focal point of dissent within the Legislative Assembly.[35]

The Clergy Corporation was incorporated in 1819 to manage the clergy reserves. After the Rev. John Strachan was appointed to the Executive Council, the advisory body to the Lieutenant Governor, in 1815, he began to push for the Church of England's autonomous control of the clergy reserves on the model of the Clergy Corporation created in Lower Canada in 1817. Although all clergymen in the Church of England were members of the body corporate, the act prepared in 1819 by Strachan's former student, Attorney General John Beverly Robinson, also appointed the Inspector General and the Surveyor General to the board, and made a quorum of three for meetings; these two public officers also sat on the Legislative Council with Strachan. These three were usually members of the Family Compact.[36]

The clergy reserves were not the only types of landed endowment for the Anglican Church and clergy. The 1791 Act also provided for glebe land to be assigned and vested in the Crown (for which 22,345 acres (9,043 ha) were set aside), where the revenues would be remitted to the Church.[37] The act also provided for the creation of parish rectories, giving parishes a corporate identity so that they could hold property (although none were created until 1836, prior to the recall of John Colborne, in which he created 24 of them).[37] They were granted lands amounting to 21,638 acres (8,757 ha), of which 15,048 acres (6,090 ha) were drawn from the clergy reserves and other glebe lots, while 6,950 acres (2,810 ha) were taken from ordinary Crown lands.[38] A later suit to have this action annulled was dismissed by the Court of Chancery of Upper Canada.[39] The Province of Canada would later pass an Act in 1866 to authorize the disposal of such glebe and rectory lands not specifically used as churches, parsonages or burial grounds.[40]

Common school lands edit

In 1797, lands in twelve townships (six east of York, and six west, totalling about 500,000 acres (200,000 ha), were set aside, from which revenues arising from their sale or lease were dedicated to support the establishment of grammar schools and a university for the Province.[41] They were distributed as follows:

Townships reserved for Common School Lands in Upper Canada - Lands disposable (in acres)[42]
District Township Original Royal grant (1797) Townships set aside as substituted lands[a 1] Lands alienated Reinvested in the Crown[a 2] Lands disposable
To individuals Surveyor's % To Upper Canada College University[a 3] UCC
Ottawa Alfred 25,140 25,140
Plantagenet 40,000 40,000
Midland Bedford 61,220 2,678 2,858 55,684
Hinchinbroke 51,100 2,437 48,663
Sheffield 56,688 3,158 53,530
Newcastle Seymour 47,484 3,515 25,000 18,969
London Blandford 20,400 1,179 5,000 14,221
Houghton 19,000 1,592 1,505 15,893
Middleton 35,000 22,600 1,667 10,733
Southwold 40,500 30,900 719 8,881
Warwick 600 600
Westminster 51,143 40,725 1,218 9,200
Yarmouth 20,000 7,084 1,026 11,900
Home Java[a 4] 12,000 12,000
Luther 66,000 66,000
Merlin[a 4] 40,000 23,281 5,031 11,688
Osprey 50,000 50,000
Proton 66,000 66,000
Sunnidale 38,000 38,000
Totals 467,675 272,600 170,719 19,282 42,000 225,944 24,000 258,330
  1. ^ In place of lands in reserved townships that had been sold to individuals
  2. ^ In lieu of lands granted elsewhere
  3. ^ King's College University, later renamed as the University of Toronto
  4. ^ a b Later merged to form Nottawasaga Township

Land sale system edit

The land grant policy changed after 1825 as the Upper Canadian administration faced a financial crisis that would otherwise require raising local taxes, thereby making it more dependent on a local elected legislature. The Upper Canadian state ended its policy of granting land to "unofficial" settlers and implemented a broad plan of revenue-generating sales. The Crown replaced its old policy of land grants to ordinary settlers in newly opened districts with land sales by auction. It also passed legislation that allowed the auctioning of previously granted land for payment of back-taxes.[43]

Canada Company edit

 
Canada Company Office, 1834

The greater portion of British emigrants, arriving in Canada without funds and the most exalted ideas of the value and productiveness of land, purchase extensively on credit... Everything goes on well for a short time. A log-house is erected with the assistance of old settlers, and the clearing of forest is commenced. Credit is obtained at a neighbouring store ... During this period he has led a life of toil and privation... On the arrival of the fourth harvest, he is reminded by the storekeeper to pay his account with cash, or discharge part of it with his disposable produce, for which he gets a very small price. He is also informed that the purchase money of the land has been accumulating with interest ... he finds himself poorer than when he commenced operation. Disappointment preys on his spirit... the land ultimately reverts to the former proprietor, or a new purchaser is found.

— Patrick Shirreff, 1835

Few chose to lease the Crown reserves as long as free grants of land were still available. The Lieutenant Governor increasingly found himself depending upon the customs duties shared with, but collected in Lower Canada for revenue; after a dispute with the lower province on the relative proportions to be allocated to each, these duties were withheld, forcing the Lieutenant Governor to search for new sources of revenue. The Canada Company was created as a means of generating government revenue that was not under the control of the elected Assembly, thereby granting the Lt. Governor greater independence from local voters.

The plan for the Canada Company was promoted by the province's Attorney General, John Beverly Robinson, then studying law at Lincoln's Inn in London. The Lt. Governor's financial crisis led to a quick adoption of Robinson's scheme to sell the Crown reserves to a new land company which would provide the provincial government with annual payments of between £15,000 to £20,000. The Canada Company was chartered in London in 1826; after three years of mismanagement by John Galt, the company hired William Allan and Thomas Mercer Jones to manage the company's Upper Canadian business. Jones was to manage the "Huron Tract," and Allan to sell the Crown reserves already surveyed in other districts.[44]

According to the Canada Company, "the poorest individual can here procure for himself and family a valuable tract; which, with a little labour, he can soon convert into a comfortable home, such as he could probably never attain in any other country – all his own!" However, recent studies have suggested that a minimum of £100 to £200 plus the cost of land was required to start a new farm in the bush. As a result, few of these poor settlers had any hope of starting their own farm, although many tried.[45]

Huron Tract edit

 
Huron Tract Purchase area, in Southern Ontario, highlighted in yellow

The Huron Tract lies in the counties of Huron, Perth, Middlesex and present-day Lambton County, Ontario, bordering on Lake Huron to the west and Lake Erie to the east. The tract was purchased by the Canada Company for resale to settlers. Influenced by William "Tiger" Dunlop, John Galt and other businessmen formed the Canada Company.[46] The Canada Company was the administrative agent for the Huron Tract.

List of cities and towns of Upper Canada edit

 
Map of Upper Canada

Incorporated in Upper Canada era (to 1841)

Incorporated in Canada West (1841-1867)

Population edit

Upper Canada
YearPop.±%
180670,718—    
181176,000+7.5%
181495,000+25.0%
1824150,066+58.0%
1825157,923+5.2%
1826166,379+5.4%
1827177,174+6.5%
1828186,488+5.3%
1829197,815+6.1%
1830213,156+7.8%
1831236,702+11.0%
1832263,554+11.3%
1833295,863+12.3%
1834321,145+8.5%
1835347,359+8.2%
1836374,099+7.7%
1837397,489+6.3%
1838399,422+0.5%
1839409,048+2.4%
1840432,159+5.6%
Source: Statistics Canada website Censuses of Canada 1665 to 1871.
See United Province of Canada for population after 1840.

Ethnic groups edit

Although the province is frequently referred to as "English Canada" after the Union of the Canadas,[by whom?] and its ethnic homogeneity said to be a factor in the Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837,[by whom?] there was range of ethnic groups in Upper Canada. However, due to the lack of a detailed breakdown, it is difficult to count each group, and this may be considered abuse of statistics. An idea of the ethnic breakdown can be had if one considers the religious census of 1842, which is helpfully provided below: Roman Catholics were 15% of the population, and adherents to this religion were, at the time, mainly drawn from the Irish and the French settlers. The Roman Catholic faith also numbered some votaries from amongst the Scottish settlers. The category of "other" religious adherents, somewhat under 5% of the population, included the Aboriginal and Metis culture.

First Nations edit

See above: Land Settlement

Métis edit

Many British and French-Canadian fur traders married First Nations women from the Cree, Ojibwa, or Saulteaux First Nations. The majority of these fur traders were Scottish and French and were Catholic.[47]

Canadiens/French-Canadians edit

Early settlements in the region include the Mission of Sainte-Marie among the Hurons at Midland in 1649, Sault Ste. Marie in 1668, and Fort Pontchartrain du Détroit in 1701. Southern Ontario was part of the Pays d'en-haut (Upper Country) of New France, and later part of the province of Quebec until Quebec was split into Upper and Lower Canada in 1791. The first wave of settlement in the Detroit/Windsor area came in the 18th century during the French regime. A second wave came in the 19th and early 20th centuries to the areas of Eastern Ontario and Northeastern Ontario. In the Ottawa Valley, in particular, some families have moved back and forth across the Ottawa River for generations (the river is the border between Ontario and Quebec). In the city of Ottawa some areas such as Vanier and Orleans have a rich Franco-heritage where families often have members on both sides of the Ottawa River.

Loyalists/Later Loyalists edit

After an initial group of about 7,000 United Empire Loyalists were thinly settled across the province in the mid-1780s, a far larger number of "late-Loyalists" arrived in the late 1790s and were required to take an oath of allegiance to the Crown to obtain land if they came from the US. Their fundamental political allegiances were always considered dubious. By 1812, this had become acutely problematic since the American settlers outnumbered the original Loyalists by more than ten to one. Following the War of 1812, the colonial government under Lt. Governor Gore took active steps to prevent Americans from swearing allegiance, thereby making them ineligible to obtain land grants. The tensions between the Loyalists and late Loyalists erupted in the "Alien Question" crisis in 1820–21 when the Bidwells (Barnabas and his son Marshall) sought election to the provincial assembly. They faced opponents who claimed they could not hold elective office because of their American citizenship. If the Bidwells were aliens so were the majority of the province. The issue was not resolved until 1828 when the Colonial government retroactively granted them citizenship.

Freed slaves edit

The Act Against Slavery passed in Upper Canada on 9 July 1793. The 1793 "Act against Slavery" forbade the importation of any additional slaves and freed children. It did not grant freedom to adult slaves—they were finally freed by the British Parliament in 1833. As a consequence, many Canadian slaves fled south to New England and New York, where slavery was no longer legal. Many American slaves who had escaped from the South via the Underground Railroad or fleeing from the Black Codes in the Ohio Valley came north to Ontario, a good portion settling on land lots and began farming.[48] It is estimated that thousands of escaped slaves entered Upper Canada from the United States.[49]

British edit

The Great Migration from Britain from 1815 to 1850 has been numbered at 800,000. The population of Upper Canada in 1837 is documented at 409,000. Given the lack of detailed census data, it is difficult to assess the relative size of the American and Canadian born "British" and the foreign-born "British." By the time of the first census in 1841, only half of the population of Upper Canada were foreign-born British.[50]

Irish edit
Scottish edit
English edit

Religion edit

1842 Religion in Upper Canada
YearPop.
Baptists16,411
Catholics65,203
Anglican107,791
Congregational4,253
Jews1,105
Lutherans4,524
Methodists82,923
Moravians1,778
Presbyterians97,095
Quakers5,200
Others19,422
Source: Statistics Canada website Censuses of Canada 1665 to 1871.
See United Province of Canada for population after 1840.

Church of England edit

The first Lt. Governor, Sir John Graves Simcoe, sought to make the Church of England the Established Church of the province. To that end, he created the clergy reserves, the revenues of which were to support the church. The clergy reserves proved to be a long-term political issue, as other denominations, particularly the Church of Scotland (Presbyterians) sought a proportional share of the revenues. The Church of England was never numerically dominant in the province, as it was in England, especially in the early years when most of the American born Later Loyalists arrived. The growth of the Church of England depended largely on later British emigration for growth.

The Church was led by the Rev. John Strachan (1778–1867), a pillar of the Family Compact. Strachan was part of the oligarchic ruling class of the province, and besides leading the Church of England, also sat on the Executive Council, the Legislative Council, helped found the Bank of Upper Canada, Upper Canada College, and the University of Toronto.

Catholic Church edit

Father Alexander Macdonell was a Scottish Catholic priest who formed his evicted clan into The Glengarry Fencibles regiment, of which he was chaplain. He was the first Catholic chaplain in the British Army since the Reformation. When the regiment was disbanded, Rev. Macdonell appealed to the government to grant its members a tract of land in Canada, and, in 1804, 160,000 acres (60,000 ha) were provided in what is now Glengarry County, Canada. In 1815, he began his service as the first Roman Catholic Bishop at St. Raphael's Church in the Highlands of Ontario.[51] In 1819, he was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Upper Canada, which in 1826 was erected into a suffragan bishopric of the Archdiocese of Quebec.[52][53] In 1826, he was appointed to the legislative council.[54]

Macdonell's role on the Legislative Council was one of the tensions with the Toronto congregation, led by Father William O'Grady. O'Grady, like Macdonell, had been an army chaplain (to Connell James Baldwin's soldiers in Brazil). O'Grady followed Baldwin to Toronto Gore Township in 1828. From January 1829 he was pastor of St. Paul's church in York. Tensions between the Scottish and Irish came to a head when O'Grady was defrocked, in part for his activities in the Reform movement. He went on to edit a Reform newspaper in Toronto, the Canadian Correspondent.

Ryerson and the Methodists edit

The undisputed leader of the highly fractious Methodists in Upper Canada was Egerton Ryerson, editor of their newspaper, The Christian Guardian. Ryerson (1803–1882) was an itinerant minister – or circuit rider – in the Niagara area for the Methodist Episcopal Church – an American branch of Methodism. As British immigration increased, Methodism in Upper Canada was torn between those with ties to the Methodist Episcopal Church and the British Wesleyan Methodists. Ryerson used the Christian Guardian to argue for the rights of Methodists in the province and, later, to help convince rank-and-file Methodists that a merger with British Wesleyans (effected in 1833) was in their best interest.

Presbyterians edit

The earliest Presbyterian ministers in Upper Canada came from various denominations based in Scotland, Ireland, and the United States. The "Presbytery of the Canadas" was formed in 1818 primarily by Scottish Associate Presbyterian missionaries, yet independently of their mother denomination in the hope of including Presbyterian ministers of all stripes in Upper and Lower Canada. Although successfully including members from Irish Associate, and American Presbyterian and Reformed denominations, the growing group of missionaries belonging to the Church of Scotland remained separate. Instead, in 1831, they formed their own "Synod of the Presbyterian Church of Canada in Connection with the Established Church of Scotland". That same year the "Presbytery of the Canadas", having grown and been re-organized, became the "United Synod of Upper Canada". In its continued pursuit for Presbyterian unity (and a share of government funding from the clergy reserves for established churches) the United Synod sought a union with the Church of Scotland synod which it finally joined in 1840. However, some ministers had left the United Synod prior to this merger (including, notably, Rev. James Harris, Rev. William Jenkins, and Rev. Daniel Eastman). In the 1832 new Secessionist missionaries began to arrive, belonging to "The United Associate Synod in Scotland" (after 1847, the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland). Committed to the voluntarist principle of rejecting government funding they decided against joining the "United Synod of Upper Canada" and on Christmas Day 1834 formed the "Missionary Presbytery of the Canadas". Although this new presbytery was formed at Rev. James Harris's church in Toronto, he and his congregation remained independent from it. However, the voluntarist, Rev. Jenkins and his congregation in Richmond Hill joined the Missionary Presbytery a few years later. Rev. Eastman had left the United Synod in 1833 to form the "Niagara Presbytery" of the Presbyterian Church in the USA. After this presbytery dissolved following the Rebellion of 1837, he rejoined the United Synod which then joined the Church of Scotland. Outside of these four Presbyterian denominations, only two others gained a foothold in the province. The small "Stamford Presbytery" of the American Secessionist tradition was formed in 1835 in the Niagara region, and the Scottish Reformed Presbyterian or "Covenanter" tradition was represented in the province to an even lesser extent. Despite the numerous denominations, by the late 1830s, the Church of Scotland was the main expression of Presbyterianism in Upper Canada.

Mennonites, Tunkers, Quakers, and Children of Peace edit

 
The Sharon Temple, built by the Children of Peace

These groups of later Loyalists were proportionately larger in the early decades of the province's settlement. The Mennonites, Tunkers, Quakers and Children of Peace are the traditional Peace churches. The Mennonites and Tunkers were generally German-speaking and immigrated as Later Loyalists from Pennsylvania. Many of their descendants continue to speak a form of German called Pennsylvania Dutch. The Quakers (Society of Friends) immigrated from New York, the New England States and Pennsylvania. The Children of Peace were founded during the War of 1812 after a schism in the Society of Friends in York County.[55] A further schism occurred in 1828, leaving two branches, "Orthodox" Quakers and "Hicksite" Quakers.

Poverty edit

In the decade ending in 1837, the population of Upper Canada doubled, to 397,489, fed in large part by erratic spurts of displaced paupers, the "surplus population" of the British Isles. Historian Rainer Baehre estimated that between 1831 and 1835 a bare minimum of one-fifth of all emigrants to the province arrived totally destitute, forwarded by their parishes in the United Kingdom.[56] The pauper immigrants arriving in Toronto were the excess agricultural workers and artisans whose growing ranks sent the cost of parish-based poor relief in England spiralling; a financial crisis that generated frenetic public debate and the overhaul of the Poor Laws in 1834. "Assisted emigration", a second solution to the problem touted by the Parliamentary Under-Secretary in the Colonial Office, Robert Wilmot Horton, would remove them permanently from the parish poor rolls.

The roots of Wilmot-Horton's "assisted emigration" policies began in April 1820, in the middle of an insurrection in Glasgow, where a young, already twice bankrupted William Lyon Mackenzie was setting sail for Canada on a ship called Psyche. After the week-long violence, the rebellion was easily crushed; the participants were driven less by treason than distress. In a city of 147,000 people without a regular parish system of poor relief, between ten and fifteen thousand were destitute. The Prime Minister agreed to provide free transportation from Quebec to Upper Canada, a 100-acre (40 ha) land grant, and a year's supply of provisions to any of the rebellious weavers who could pay their own way to Quebec. In all, in 1820 and 1821, a private charity helped 2,716 Lanarkshire and Glasgow emigrants to Upper Canada to take up their free grants, primarily in the Peterborough area.[57] A second project was the Petworth Emigration Committee organised by the Reverend Thomas Sockett, who chartered ships and sent emigrants from England to Canada in each of the six years between 1832 and 1837.[58] This area in the south of England was terrorised by the Captain Swing Riots, a series of clandestine attacks on large farmers who refused relief to unemployed agricultural workers. The area hardest hit – Kent – was the area where Sir Francis Bond Head, later Lt. Governor of Upper Canada in 1836, was the Assistant Poor Law Commissioner. One of his jobs was to force the unemployed into "Houses of Industry."

Trade, monetary policy, and financial institutions edit

Corporations edit

There were two types of corporate actors at work in the Upper Canadian economy: the legislatively chartered companies and the unregulated joint-stock companies. The joint stock company was popular in building public works, since it should be for general public benefit, as the benefit would otherwise be sacrificed to legislated monopolies with exclusive privileges. or lie dormant. An example of the legislated monopoly is found in the Bank of Upper Canada. However, the benefit of the joint-stock shareholders, as the risk takers, was whole and entire; and the general public benefitted only indirectly. As late as 1849, even the moderate reform politician Robert Baldwin was to complain that "unless a stop were made to it, there would be nothing but corporations from one end of the country to the other." Radical reformers, like William Lyon Mackenzie, who opposed all "legislated monopolies," saw joint stock associations as the only protection against "the whole property of the country... being tied up as an irredeemable appendage to incorporated institutions, and put beyond the reach of individual possession."[59] As a result, most of the joint-stock companies formed in this period were created by political reformers who objected to the legislated monopolies granted to members of the Family Compact.

Currency and banking edit

Currency edit

The government of Upper Canada never issued a provincial currency. A variety of coins, mainly of French, Spanish, English and American origin circulated. The government used the Halifax standard, where one pound Halifax equalled four Spanish dollars. One pound sterling equalled £1 2s 2¾d (until 1820), and £1 2s 6½d Halifax pounds after 1820.

Paper currency was issued primarily by the Bank of Upper Canada, although with the diversification of the banking system, each bank would issue its own distinctive notes.[60]

Bank of Upper Canada edit

 
The Bank of Upper Canada, Toronto

The Bank of Upper Canada was "captured" from Kingston merchants by the York elite at the instigation of John Strachan in 1821, with the assistance of William Allan, a Toronto merchant and Executive Councillor. York was too small to warrant such an institution as indicated by the inability of its promoters to raise even the minimal 10% of the £200,000 authorised capital required for start-up. It succeeded where the Bank of Kingston had failed only because it had the political influence to have this minimum reduced by half, and because the provincial government subscribed for two thousand of its eight thousand shares. The administration appointed four of the bank's fifteen directors that, as with the Clergy Corporation, made for a tight bond between the nominally private company and the state. Forty-four men served as bank directors during the 1830s; eleven of them were executive councillors, fifteen of them were legislative councillors, and thirteen were magistrates in Toronto. More importantly, all 11 men who had ever sat on the Executive Council also sat on the board of the Bank at one time or another. 10 of these men also sat on the Legislative Council. The overlapping membership on the boards of the Bank of Upper Canada and on the Executive and Legislative Councils served to integrate the economic and political activities of church, state, and the "financial sector." These overlapping memberships reinforced the oligarchic nature of power in the colony and allowed the administration to operate without any effective elective check. The Bank of Upper Canada was a political sore point for the Reformers throughout the 1830s.[61]

Bank wars: the Scottish joint-stock banks edit

The difference between the chartered banks and the joint-stock banks lay almost entirely on the issue of liability and its implications for the issuance of bank notes. The joint-stock banks lacked limited liability, hence every partner in the bank was responsible for the bank's debts to the full extent of their personal property. The formation of new joint-stock banks blossomed in 1835 in the aftermath of a parliamentary report by Dr Charles Duncombe, which established their legality here. Duncombe's report drew in large part on an increasingly dominant banking orthodoxy in the United Kingdom which challenged the English system of chartered banks. Duncombe's Select Committee on Currency offered a template for the creation of joint-stock banks based on several successful British banks. Within weeks two Devonshire businessmen, Capt. George Truscott and John Cleveland Green, established the "Farmer's Bank" in Toronto. The only other successful bank established under this law was "The Bank of the People" which was set up by Toronto's Reformers. The Bank of the People provided the loan that allowed William Lyon Mackenzie to establish the newspaper The Constitution in 1836 in the lead up to the Rebellion of 1837. Mackenzie wrote at the time: "Archdeacon Strachan's bank (the old one) ... serve the double purpose of keeping the merchants in chains of debt and bonds to the bank manager, and the Farmer's acres under the harrow of the storekeeper. You will be shewn how to break this degraded yoke of mortgages, ejectments, judgments and bonds. Money bound you – money shall loose you".[62] During the financial panic of 1836, the Family Compact sought to protect its interests in the nearly bankrupt Bank of Upper Canada by making joint-stock banks illegal.[63]

Trade edit

After the Napoleonic Wars, as industrial production in Britain took off, English manufacturers began dumping cheap goods in Montreal; this allowed an increasing number of shopkeepers in York to obtain their goods competitively from Montreal wholesalers. It was during this period that the three largest pre-war merchants who imported directly from Britain retired from business as a result; Quetton St. George in 1815, Alexander Wood in 1821, and William Allan in 1822. Toronto and Kingston then underwent a boom in the number of increasingly specialised shops and wholesalers.[64] The Toronto wholesale firm of Isaac Buchanan and Company were one of the largest of the new wholesalers. Isaac Buchanan was a Scots merchant in Toronto, in partnership with his brother Peter, who remained in Glasgow to manage the British end of the firm. They established their business in Toronto in 1835, having bought out Isaac's previous partners, William Guild and Co., who had established themselves in Toronto in 1832. As a wholesale firm, the Buchanan's had invested more than £10,000 in their business.[65]

Another of those new wholesale businesses was the Farmers' Storehouse Company. The Farmers Storehouse Company was formed in the Home District and is probably Canada's first Farmers' Cooperative. The Storehouse expedited the sale of farmer's wheat to Montreal, and provided them with cheaper consumer goods.[66]

Wheat and grains edit

Upper Canada was in the unenviable position of having few exports with which to pay for all its imported manufactured needs. For the vast majority of those who settled in rural areas, debt could be paid off only through the sale of wheat and flour; yet, throughout much of the 1820s, the price of wheat went through periodic cycles of boom and bust depending upon the British markets that ultimately provided the credit upon which the farmer lived. In the decade 1830–39, exports of wheat averaged less than £1 per person a year (less than £6 per household), and in the 1820s just half that.[67]

Given the small amounts of saleable wheat and flour, and the rarity of cash, some have questioned how market oriented these early farmers were. Instead of depending on the market to meet their needs, many of these farmers depended on networks of shared resources and cooperative marketing. For example, rather than hire labour, they met their labour needs through "work bees." such farmers are said to be 'subsistence oriented' and not to respond to market cues; rather, they engage in a moral economy seeking 'subsistence insurance' and a 'just price'. The Children of Peace in the village of Hope (now Sharon) are a well documented example. They were the most prosperous agricultural community in Canada West by 1851.[68]

Timber edit

The Ottawa River timber trade resulted from Napoleon's 1806 Continental Blockade in Europe. The United Kingdom required a new source of timber for its navy and shipbuilding. Later the UK's application of gradually increasing preferential tariffs increased Canadian imports. The trade in squared timber lasted until the 1850s. The transportation of raw timber by means of floating down the Ottawa River was proved possible in 1806 by Philemon Wright.[69] Squared timber would be assembled into large rafts which held living quarters for men on their six-week journey to Quebec City, which had large exporting facilities and easy access to the Atlantic Ocean.

The timber trade was Upper and Lower Canada's major industry in terms of employment and value of the product.[70] The largest supplier of square red and white pine to the British market was the Ottawa River[71] and the Ottawa Valley. They had "rich red and white pine forests."[72] Bytown (later called Ottawa), was a major lumber and sawmill centre of Canada.[73]

Transportation and communications edit

 
The complete First Welland Canal including the Feeder Canal and the extension to Port Colborne. The present-day canal is marked in pale grey.

Canal system edit

 
The Rideau Canal in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, with Parliament Hill and the old "Union Station" visible in the background

The early nineteenth century was the age of canals. The Erie Canal, stretching from Buffalo to Albany, New York, threatened to divert all of the grain and other trade on the upper Great Lakes through the Hudson River to New York city after its completion in 1825. Upper Canadians sought to build a similar system that would tie this trade to the St Lawrence River and Montreal.

Rideau Canal edit

The Rideau Canal's purpose was military and hence was paid for by the British and not the local treasury. It was intended to provide a secure supply and communications route between Montreal and the British naval base in Kingston. The objective was to bypass the St. Lawrence River bordering New York; a route which would have left British supply ships vulnerable to an attack. Westward from Montreal, travel would proceed along the Ottawa River to Bytown (now Ottawa), then southwest via the canal to Kingston and out into Lake Ontario. Because the Rideau Canal was easier to navigate than the St. Lawrence River due to the series of rapids between Montreal and Kingston, it became a busy commercial artery from Montreal to the Great Lakes. The construction of the canal was supervised by Lieutenant-Colonel John By of the Royal Engineers. The work started in 1826, and was completed 6 years later in 1832 at a cost of £822,000.

Welland Canal edit

The Welland Canal was created to directly link Lake Erie with Lake Ontario, bypassing Niagara Falls and the Erie Canal. It was the idea of William Hamilton Merritt who owned a sawmill, grist mill and store on the Twelve Mile Creek. The Legislature authorised the joint-stock Welland Canal Company on 19 January 1824, with a capitalisation of $150,000, and Merritt as the agent. The canal was officially opened exactly five years later on 30 November 1829. However, the original route to Lake Erie followed the Welland and Niagara Rivers and was difficult and slow to navigate. The Welland Canal Company obtained a loan of 50,000 pounds from the province of Upper Canada in March 1831 to cut a canal directly to Gravelly Bay (now Port Colborne) as the new Lake Erie terminus for the canal.[74]

By the time the canal was finished in 1837, it had cost the province £425,000 in loans and stock subscriptions. The company was supposed to have been a private one using private capital; but the province had little private capital available, hence most of the original funds came from New York. To keep the canal in Upper Canadian hands, the province had passed a law barring Americans from the company's directorate. The company was thus controlled by the Family Compact, even though they had few shares. By 1834, it was clear the canal would never make money and that the province would be on the hook for the large loans; the canal and the canal company thus became a political issue, as local farmers argued the huge expense would ultimately only benefit American farmers in the west and the merchants who transported their grain.[75]

Desjardins Canal edit

The Desjardins Canal, named after its promoter Pierre Desjardins, was built to give Dundas, Ontario, easier access to Burlington Bay and Lake Ontario. Access to Lake Ontario from Dundas was made difficult by the topography of the area, which included a natural sand and gravel barrier, across Burlington Bay which allowed only boats with a shallow draft through. In 1823 a canal was dug through the sandbar. In 1826 the passage was completed, allowing schooners to sail to neighbouring Hamilton. Hamilton then became a major port and quickly expanded as a centre of trade and commerce. In 1826 a group of Dundas businessmen incorporated to compete with Hamilton and increase the value of their real estate holdings. The project to build Desjardins Canal continued for ten years, from 1827 to 1837, and required constant infusions of money from the province. In 1837, the year it opened, the company's income was £6,000, of which £5,000 was from a government loan and £166 was received from canal tolls.

Lake traffic: steamships edit

There is disagreement as to whether the Canadian-built Frontenac (170 feet; 52 m), launched on 7 September 1816, at Ernestown, Ontario or the US-built Ontario (110 feet; 34 m), launched in the spring of 1817 at Sacketts Harbor, New York, was the first steamboat on the Great Lakes. While Frontenac was launched first, Ontario began active service first.[76] The first steamboat on the upper Great Lakes was the passenger-carrying Walk-In-The-Water, built in 1818 to navigate Lake Erie.

In the years between 1809 and 1837 just over 100 steamboats were launched by Upper and Lower Canadians for the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes trade, of which ten operated on Lake Ontario.[77] The single largest engine foundry in British North America before 1838 was the Eagle Foundry of Montreal, founded by John Dod Ward in the fall of 1819 which manufactured 33 of the steam engines. The largest Upper Canadian engine manufacturer was Sheldon & Dutcher of Toronto, who made three engines in the 1830s before being driven to Bankruptcy by the Bank of Upper Canada in 1837.[78]

The major owner-operators of steamships on Lake Ontario were Donald Bethune, John Hamilton, Hugh Richardson, and Henry Gildersleeve, each of whom would have invested a substantial fortune.[79]

Roads edit

Besides marine travel, Upper Canada had a few Post roads or footpaths used for transportation by horse or stagecoaches along the key settlements between London to Kingston.

The Governor's Road was built beginning in 1793 from Dundas to Paris and then to the proposed capital of London by 1794. The road was further extended eastward with new capital of York in 1795. his road was eventually known as Dundas Road.

A second route was known as Lakeshore Road or York Road which was built from York to Trent River from 1799 to 1900 and later extended eastwards to Kingston in 1817. This road was later renamed as Kingston Road.

United States relations edit

War of 1812 (1812–1815) edit

 
Painting depicting the death of Isaac Brock

During the War of 1812 with the United States, Upper Canada was the chief target of the Americans, since it was weakly defended and populated largely by American immigrants. However, division in the United States over the war, a lackluster American militia, the incompetence of American military commanders, and swift and decisive action by the British commander, Sir Isaac Brock, kept Upper Canada part of British North America.

Detroit was captured by the British on 6 August 1812. The Michigan Territory was held under British control until it was abandoned in 1813. The Americans won the decisive Battle of Lake Erie (10 September 1813) and forced the British to retreat from the western areas. On the retreat they were intercepted at the Battle of the Thames (5 October 1813) and destroyed in a major American victory that killed Tecumseh and broke the power of Britain's Indian allies.[80]

Major battles fought on territory in Upper Canada included:

Many other battles were fought in American territory bordering Upper Canada, including the Northwest Territory (most in modern-day Michigan), upstate New York and naval battles in the Great Lakes.

The Treaty of Ghent (ratified in 1815) ended the war and restored the status quo ante bellum.

1837 Rebellion and Patriot War edit

Mackenzie, Duncombe, John Rolph and 200 supporters fled to Navy Island in the Niagara River, where they declared themselves the Republic of Canada on 13 December. They obtained supplies from supporters in the United States, resulting in British reprisals (see Caroline affair). This incident has been used to establish the principle of "anticipatory self-defense" in international politics, which holds that it may be justified only in cases in which the "necessity of that self-defense is instant, overwhelming, and leaving no choice of means, and no moment for deliberation". This formulation is part of the Caroline test. The Caroline affair is also now invoked frequently in the course of the dispute around preemptive strike (or preemption doctrine).

On 13 January 1838, under attack by British armaments, the rebels fled. Mackenzie went to the United States where he was arrested and charged under the Neutrality Act.[81] The Neutrality Act of 1794 made it illegal for an American to wage war against any country at peace with the United States. Application of the Neutrality Act during the Patriot War led to the largest use of US government military force against its own citizens since the Whiskey Rebellion.[82]

The extended series of incidents comprising the Patriot War were finally settled by US Secretary of State Daniel Webster and Alexander Baring, 1st Baron Ashburton, in the course of their negotiations leading to the Webster–Ashburton Treaty of 1842.

Education edit

In 1807 the Grammar School Act allowed the government to take over various grammar schools across the province and incorporating them into a network of eight new, public grammar schools (secondary schools), one for each of the eight districts (Eastern, Johnstown, Midland, Newcastle, Home, Niagara, London, and Western):[83]

Canada West edit

Canada West was the western portion of the United Province of Canada from 10 February 1841, to 1 July 1867.[85] Its boundaries were identical to those of the former province of Upper Canada. Lower Canada would also become Canada East.

The area was named the province of Ontario under the British North America Act of 1867.

See also edit

Notes edit

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  2. ^ "Royal Union Flag". The Flags of Canada. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b Butler (1843), pp. 10, 20
  4. ^ "Juriglobe".
  5. ^ "Constitutional Act 1791". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  6. ^ Craig (1963), p. 2
  7. ^ Craig (1963), pp. 5–6
  8. ^ Craig (1963), p. 6
  9. ^ "Biography – SIMCOE, JOHN GRAVES". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. V. 1801–1820.
  10. ^ McNairn (2000), pp. 23–62
  11. ^ Armstrong (1985), pp. 8–12
  12. ^ Armstrong (1985), p. 39
  13. ^ Craig (1963), p. 12
  14. ^ Craig (1963), pp. 30–31
  15. ^ Wallace (1915)
  16. ^ Mills, David; Panneton, Daniel (20 March 2017) [7 February 2006]. "Family Compact". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  17. ^ "Biography – ROBINSON, Sir JOHN BEVERLEY". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IX. 1861–1870.
  18. ^ "Biography – BOULTON, WILLIAM HENRY". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. X. 1871–1880.
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  20. ^ Wilton (2001), pp. 146–147
  21. ^ Schrauwers (2009), pp. 181–184
  22. ^ Schrauwers (2009), pp. 192–199
  23. ^ Greer, Allan (1995). "1837–38: Rebellion Reconsidered". Canadian Historical Review. LXVII (1): 1–30. doi:10.3138/chr-076-01-01.
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  26. ^ a b Haudenosaunee is /hɔːdɛnəˈʃɔːn/ in English, Akunęhsyę̀niˀ in Tuscarora (Rudes, B., Tuscarora English Dictionary, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999), and Rotinonsionni in Mohawk.
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  39. ^ Attorney-General v Grasett, 5 Gr 412 (C.C.U.C. 12 May 1856).; affirmed on appeal, Attorney-General v Grasett, 6 Gr 200 (C.E.A.U.C. 1857).
  40. ^ An Act to provide for the sale of the Rectory Lands in this Province, S.Prov.C. 1866, c. 16 , as amended by c. 17
  41. ^ The Origin, History and Management of the University of King's College. Toronto: George Brown. 1844. p. 9.
  42. ^ Hodgins, J. George (1894). "V: Educational Provisions of the Upper Canada Legislature in 1832, 1833". Documentary History of Education in Upper Canada. Vol. II (1831-1836). Toronto: Warwick Bros. & Rutter. pp. 102–105.
  43. ^ Schrauwers, Albert (Spring 2010). "The Gentlemanly Order & the Politics of Production in the Transition to Capitalism in the Home District, Upper Canada". Labour/Le Travail. 65 (1): 26–31. JSTOR 20798984.
  44. ^ Lee (2004), pp. 98–148
  45. ^ Ankli, Robert E.; Duncan, Kenneth (1984). "Farm Making Costs in Early Ontario". Canadian Papers in Rural History. 4: 33–49.
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  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 February 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  48. ^ Cooper, Afua, "Acts of Resistance: Black Men and Women Engage Slavery in Upper Canada, 1793–1803," Ontario History, Spring 2007, Vol. 99 Issue 1, pp 5–17
  49. ^ "Underground Railroad". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  50. ^ Wilton (2001), p. 9
  51. ^ "The Parish of St. Raphael Glengarry Emigration of 1786 Bishop Alexander Macdonell 1762–1840". ontarioplaques.com. Retrieved 16 April 2012.
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  53. ^ "Why is Canada the most tolerant country in the world? Luck".
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  55. ^ Reaman (1957), pp. 40–124
  56. ^ Baehre, Rainer (1981). "Pauper Emigration to Upper Canada in the 1830s". Historie Sociale/Social History. XIV (28): 340.
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  58. ^ Cameron & Maude (2000)
  59. ^ Schrauwers (2009), p. 21
  60. ^ McCalla (1993), pp. 245247
  61. ^ Schrauwers (2010), pp. 22–26
  62. ^ Schrauwers, Albert (2011). "'Money bound you – money shall loose you': Micro-credit, Social Capital and the Meaning of Money in Upper Canada". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 52 (2): 314–343. doi:10.1017/s0010417511000077. S2CID 154484234.
  63. ^ Schrauwers (2009), pp. 151–174
  64. ^ Schrauwers (2009), p. 107
  65. ^ McCalla (1979), p. 28
  66. ^ Schrauwers (2009), pp. 102–106
  67. ^ McCalla (1993), p. 75
  68. ^ Schrauwers (2009), pp. 41–50
  69. ^ Woods (1980), p. 89
  70. ^ Greening (1961), pp. 111
  71. ^ Greening (1961), p. 111
  72. ^ Bond (1984), p. 43
  73. ^ (Mika 1982, p. 121)
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  75. ^ Aitken, Hugh G.T. (1953). "Yates and McIntyre: Lottery Managers". The Journal of Economic History. 13 (1): 36–57. doi:10.1017/S0022050700070030. S2CID 153540099.
  76. ^ The debate is addressed by Barlow Cumberland in Chapter 2 of A Century of Sail and Steam on the Niagara River. Retrieved 26 March 2011
  77. ^ McCalla (1993), p. 119
  78. ^ Lewis, Walter (1997). "The First Generation of Marine Engines in Central Canadian Steamers, 1809–1837". The Northern Mariner. VII (2): II.
  79. ^ McCalla (1993), p. 120
  80. ^ Young, Bennett Henderson, The Battle of the Thames: In Which Kentuckians Defeated the British, French and Indians, 5 October 1813. Louisville, Ky.: Morton, 1903.
  81. ^ Armstrong, Frederick H.; Stagg, Ronald J. (1976). "McKenzie, William Lyon". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IX (1861–1870) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  82. ^ Bonthius, Andrew (2003). "The Patriot War of 1837–1838: Locofocoism with a Gun?". Labour/Le Travail. 52 (2): 11–12. doi:10.2307/25149383. JSTOR 25149383. S2CID 142863197.
  83. ^ "Education in Upper Canada From 1783 To 1844". canada.yodelout.com.
  84. ^ "Western District Grammar School – Southwestern Ontario Digital Archive". swoda.uwindsor.ca.
  85. ^ Careless, J.M.S.; Foot, Richard (4 March 2015) [7 February 2006]. "Province of Canada, 1841–67". The Canadian Encyclopedia (online ed.). Historica Canada.

References edit

  • Armstrong, Frederick Henry (1985). Handbook of Upper Canadian Chronology (revised ed.). Dundurn. ISBN 978-0-919670-92-1.
  • Bond, Courtney C.J. (1984). Where Rivers Meet: An Illustrated History of Ottawa. Windsor Publications.
  • Butler, Samuel (1843). The Emigrant's Handbook of Facts Concerning Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Cape of Good Hope, &c. Glasgow: W.R. M'Phun. ISBN 9780665952821.
  • Cameron, Wendy; Maude, Mary McDougall (2000). Assisting Emigration to Upper Canada: The Petworth Project, 1832–1837. Montreal-Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 9780773520349.
  • Campey, Lucille H. (2005). The Scottish pioneers of Upper Canada, 1784–1855: Glengarry and beyond. Dundurn Press Ltd. ISBN 978-1-897045-01-5.
  • Careless, J.M.S. (1967). The Union of the Canadas: The Growth of Canadian Institutions 1841–1857. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 9780771019128.
  • Craig, Gerald M. (1963). Upper Canada: The Formative Years, 1784-1841, republished 2013. McClelland and Stewart. ISBN 978-0-19-900904-6.
  • Gates, Lillian (1968). Land Policies of Upper Canada. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press.
  • Greening, W.E. (1961). The Ottawa. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart.
  • Humber, Charles J. (1991). Allegiance: the Ontario Story. Mississauga, Ontario: Heirloom Publishing.
  • Johnston, H.J.M. (1972). British Emigration Policy 1815–1830: 'Shovelling Out the Paupers. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Lee, Robert C. (2004). The Canada Company and the Huron Tract, 1826–1853: Personalities, Profits and Politics. Toronto: Natural Heritage Books. ISBN 9781896219943.
  • McCalla, Douglas (1979). The Upper Canada Trade 1834–1872: A Study of the Buchanan's Business. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • McCalla, Douglas (1993). Planting the Province: The Economic History of Upper Canada 1784–1870. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • McNairn, Jeffrey L. (2000). The Capacity To Judge: Public Opinion and Deliberative Democracy in Upper Canada,1791-1854. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-3916-4.
  • Mika, Nick & Helma (1982). Bytown: The Early Days of Ottawa. Belleville, Ont.: Mika Publishing Company.
  • Mintz, Max M. (1999). Seeds of Empire: The American Revolutionary Conquest of the Iroquois. New York University Press.
  • Reaman, G. Elmore (1957). The Trail of the Black Walnut. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart.
  • Schrauwers, Albert (2009). Union is Strength: W.L. Mackenzie, the Children of Peace and the Emergence of Joint Stock Democracy in Upper Canada. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-9927-3.
  • Wallace, W. Stewart (1915). The Family Compact: A Chronicle of the Rebellion in Upper Canada. Glasgow, Brook.
  • Wilton, Carol (2001). Popular Politics and Political Culture in Upper Canada, 1800-1850. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-2054-7.
  • Woods, Shirley E. Jr (1980). Ottawa: The Capital of Canada. Toronto: Doubleday Canada.

Statutes edit

  • Stewart Derbishire and George Desbarats, printers (1859). The consolidated statutes for Upper Canada. Toronto: Toronto : Printed by S. Derbishire and G. Desbarats, law printer to the Queen.
  • James Nickalls Jr (1831). The Statutes of the Province of Upper Canada: Together with Such British Statutes, Ordinances of Quebec, and Proclamationsas relate to the said province. Kingston: Printed by F.M. Hill.

Further reading edit

  • Clarke, John. Land Power and Economics on the Frontier of Upper Canada McGill-Queen's University Press (2001) 747pp. (ISBN 0-7735-2062-7)
  • Di Mascio, Anthony. The Idea of Popular Schooling in Upper Canada: Print Culture, Public Discourse, and the Demand for Education (McGill-Queen's University Press; 2012) 248 pages; building a common system of schooling in the late-18th and early 19th centuries.
  • Dieterman, Frank. Government on fire: the history and archaeology of Upper Canada's first Parliament Buildings Eastendbooks, 2001.
  • Dunham, Eileen. Political unrest in Upper Canada 1815–1836 McClelland and Stewart, 1963.
  • Errington, Jane. The lion, the eagle, and Upper Canada: a developing colonial ideology McGill-Queen's University Press, 1987.
  • Grabb, Edward; Duncan, Jeff; Baer, Douglas (2000). "Defining Moments and Recurring Myths: Comparing Canadians and Americans after the American Revolution". The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology. 37.
  • Johnston, James Keith. Historical essays on Upper Canada McClelland and Stewart, 1975.
  • Kilbourn, William. The Firebrand: William Lyon Mackenzie and the Rebellion in Upper Canada (1956)
  • Lewis, Frank, and M. C. Urquhart. Growth and standard of living in a pioneer economy: Upper Canada 1826–1851 Kingston, Ont. : Institute for Economic Research, Queen's University, 1997.
  • Rea, J. Edgar. "Rebellion in Upper Canada, 1837" Manitoba Historical Society Transactions Series 3, Number 22, 1965–66 online, historiography
  • Saul, John Ralston. Louis-Hippolyte LaFontaine and Robert Baldwin (2010) online
  • Winearls, Joan. Mapping Upper Canada 1780–1867: an annotated bibliography of manuscript and printed maps. University of Toronto Press, 1991.erdvrv
  • Moving Here, Staying Here: The Canadian Immigrant Experience 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine at Library and Archives Canada

External links edit

  • Upper Canada - Library and Archives Canada
  • Upper Canada - History of Ontario - Ontario Government
  • Upper Canada at The Canadian Encyclopedia
  • Maritime History of the Great Lakes
  • Early Canadiana Online digital collections

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upper, canada, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, northern, canada, province, french, province, haut, canada, part, british, canada, established, 1791, kingdom, great, britain, govern, central, third, lands, british, north, america, formerly, part, p. For other uses see Upper Canada disambiguation Not to be confused with Northern Canada The Province of Upper Canada French province du Haut Canada was a part of British Canada established in 1791 by the Kingdom of Great Britain to govern the central third of the lands in British North America formerly part of the Province of Quebec since 1763 Upper Canada included all of modern day Southern Ontario and all those areas of Northern Ontario in the Pays d en Haut which had formed part of New France essentially the watersheds of the Ottawa River or Lakes Huron and Superior excluding any lands within the watershed of Hudson Bay The upper prefix in the name reflects its geographic position along the Great Lakes mostly above the headwaters of the Saint Lawrence River contrasted with Lower Canada present day Quebec to the northeast Province of Upper Canada1791 1841Union Flag 1801 version 1 2 Anthem God Save the King Queen source source Map of Upper Canada orange with 21st century Canada pink surrounding itStatusBritish colonyCapitalNewark 1792 1797 renamed Niagara 1798 Niagara on the Lake 1970 York later renamed Toronto in 1834 1797 1841Common languagesEnglishGovernmentFamily Compact aristocracyunder aConstitutional monarchySovereign 1791 1820George III 1820 1830George IV 1830 1837William IV 1837 1841VictoriaLieutenant Governor Executive Council of Upper Canada LegislatureParliament of Upper Canada Upper houseLegislative Council Lower houseLegislative AssemblyHistorical eraBritish Era Constitutional Act of 179126 December 1791 Act of Union 184010 February 1841Area1836 3 258 999 km2 100 000 sq mi Population 1823 3 150 196 1836 3 358 187CurrencyHalifax poundPreceded by Succeeded byProvince of Quebec 1763 1791 Province of CanadaToday part ofCanada OntarioUpper Canada was the primary destination of Loyalist refugees and settlers from the United States after the American Revolution who often were granted land to settle in Upper Canada Already populated by Indigenous peoples land for settlement in Upper Canada was made by treaties between the new British government and the Indigenous exchanging land for one time payments or annuities The new province was characterized by its British way of life including bicameral parliament and separate civil and criminal law rather than mixed as in Lower Canada or elsewhere in the British Empire 4 failed verification The division was created to ensure the exercise of the same rights and privileges enjoyed by loyal subjects elsewhere in the North American colonies 5 In 1812 war broke out between Great Britain and the United States leading to several battles in Upper Canada The United States attempted to capture Upper Canada but the war ended with the situation unchanged The government of the colony came to be dominated by a small group of persons known as the Family Compact who held most of the top positions in the Legislative Council and appointed officials In 1837 an unsuccessful rebellion attempted to overthrow the undemocratic system Representative government would be established in the 1840s Upper Canada existed from its establishment on 26 December 1791 to 10 February 1841 when it was united with adjacent Lower Canada to form the Province of Canada Contents 1 Establishment 2 Government 2 1 Provincial administration 2 2 Parliament 2 3 Local government 3 Politics 3 1 Family Compact 3 2 Reform movement 3 3 Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837 3 4 Sydenham and the Union of the Canadas 4 Settlement 4 1 First Nations dispossession and reserves 4 2 Loyalists and the land grant system 4 2 1 Assisted immigration 4 2 2 Talbot settlement 4 3 Crown and clergy reserves 4 4 Common school lands 4 5 Land sale system 4 6 Canada Company 4 6 1 Huron Tract 4 7 List of cities and towns of Upper Canada 5 Population 5 1 Ethnic groups 5 1 1 First Nations 5 1 2 Metis 5 1 3 Canadiens French Canadians 5 1 4 Loyalists Later Loyalists 5 1 5 Freed slaves 5 1 6 British 5 1 6 1 Irish 5 1 6 2 Scottish 5 1 6 3 English 5 2 Religion 5 2 1 Church of England 5 2 2 Catholic Church 5 2 3 Ryerson and the Methodists 5 2 4 Presbyterians 5 2 5 Mennonites Tunkers Quakers and Children of Peace 5 3 Poverty 6 Trade monetary policy and financial institutions 6 1 Corporations 6 2 Currency and banking 6 2 1 Currency 6 2 2 Bank of Upper Canada 6 2 3 Bank wars the Scottish joint stock banks 6 3 Trade 6 3 1 Wheat and grains 6 3 2 Timber 7 Transportation and communications 7 1 Canal system 7 1 1 Rideau Canal 7 1 2 Welland Canal 7 1 3 Desjardins Canal 7 2 Lake traffic steamships 7 3 Roads 8 United States relations 8 1 War of 1812 1812 1815 8 2 1837 Rebellion and Patriot War 9 Education 10 Canada West 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Statutes 14 Further reading 15 External linksEstablishment editSee also Constitutional history of Canada nbsp Map of Upper Canada s districtsAs part of the 1763 Treaty of Paris which ended the Seven Years War global conflict and the French and Indian War in North America Great Britain retained control over the former New France which had been defeated in the French and Indian War The British had won control after Fort Niagara had surrendered in 1759 and Montreal capitulated in 1760 and the British under Robert Rogers took formal control of the Great Lakes region in 1760 6 Fort Michilimackinac was occupied by Roger s forces in 1761 The territories of contemporary southern Ontario and southern Quebec were initially maintained as the single province of Quebec as it had been under the French From 1763 to 1791 the Province of Quebec maintained its French language cultural behavioural expectations practices and laws The British passed the Quebec Act in 1774 which expanded the Quebec colony s authority to include part of the Indian Reserve to the west i e parts of southern Ontario and other western territories south of the Great Lakes including much of what would become the United States Northwest Territory including the modern states of Illinois Indiana Michigan Ohio Wisconsin and parts of Minnesota After the American War of Independence ended in 1783 Britain retained control of the area north of the Ohio River The official boundaries remained undefined until 1795 and the Jay Treaty The British authorities encouraged the movement of people to this area from the United States offering free land to encourage population growth For settlers the head of the family received 100 acres 40 ha and 50 acres 20 ha per family member and soldiers received larger grants 7 These settlers are known as United Empire Loyalists and were primarily English speaking Protestants The first townships Royal and Cataraqui along the St Lawrence and eastern Lake Ontario were laid out in 1784 populated mainly with decommissioned soldiers and their families 8 Upper Canada became a political entity on 26 December 1791 with the Parliament of Great Britain s passage of the Constitutional Act of 1791 The act divided the province of Quebec into Upper and Lower Canada but did not yet specify official borders for Upper Canada The division was effected so that Loyalist American settlers and British immigrants in Upper Canada could have English laws and institutions and the French speaking population of Lower Canada could maintain French civil law and the Catholic religion The first lieutenant governor was John Graves Simcoe 9 nbsp Map of Upper Canada by J Arrowsmith 1837 The 1795 Jay Treaty officially set the borders between British North America and the United States north to the Great Lakes and St Lawrence River On 1 February 1796 the capital of Upper Canada was moved from Newark now Niagara on the Lake to York now Toronto which was judged to be less vulnerable to attack by the US The Act of Union 1840 passed 23 July 1840 by the British Parliament and proclaimed by the Crown on 10 February 1841 merged Upper Canada with Lower Canada to form the short lived United Province of Canada Government editProvincial administration edit Upper Canada s constitution was said to be the very image and transcript of the British constitution and based on the principle of mixed monarchy a balance of monarchy aristocracy and democracy 10 The Executive arm of government in the colony consisted of a lieutenant governor his executive council and the Officers of the Crown equivalent to the Officers of the Parliament of Canada the Adjutant General of the Militia the Attorney General the Auditor General of Land Patents for Upper Canada the Auditor General only one appointment ever made Crown Lands Office Indian Office Inspector General Kings Printer Provincial Secretary and Registrar s Office Receiver General of Upper Canada Solicitor General and Surveyor General 11 The Executive Council of Upper Canada had a similar function to the Cabinet in England but was not responsible to the Legislative Assembly They held a consultative position however and did not serve in administrative offices as cabinet ministers do Members of the Executive Council were not necessarily members of the Legislative Assembly but were usually members of the Legislative Council 12 Parliament edit nbsp The third Parliament Building in York built between 1829 and 1832 at Front Street nbsp The Great Seal of Upper Canada The Legislative branch of the government consisted of the parliament comprising legislative council and legislative assembly When the capital was first moved to Toronto then called York from Newark present day Niagara on the Lake in 1796 the Parliament Buildings of Upper Canada were at the corner of Parliament and Front Streets in buildings that were burned by US forces in the War of 1812 rebuilt then burned again by accident in 1824 The site was eventually abandoned for another to the west The Legislative Council of Upper Canada was the upper house governing the province of Upper Canada Although modelled after the British House of Lords Upper Canada had no aristocracy Members of the Legislative council appointed for life formed the core of the oligarchic group the Family Compact that came to dominate government and economy in the province The Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada functioned as the lower house in the Parliament of Upper Canada Its legislative power was subject to veto by the appointed Lieutenant Governor Executive Council and Legislative Council Local government edit Local government in the province of Upper Canada was based on districts In 1788 four districts were created 13 Lunenburgh District later Eastern Mecklenburg District later Midland Nassau District later Home Hesse District later Western The name changes all took place in 1792 Justices of the Peace were appointed by the Lt Governor Any two justices meeting together could form the lowest level of the justice system the Courts of Request A Court of Quarter Sessions was held four times a year in each district composed of all the resident justices The Quarter Sessions met to oversee the administration of the district and deal with legal cases They formed in effect the municipal government until an area was incorporated as either a Police Board or a City after 1834 14 Additional districts were created from the existing districts as the population grew until 1849 when local government mainly based on counties came into effect At that time there were 20 districts legislation to create a new Kent District was never completed Up until 1841 the district officials were appointed by the lieutenant governor although usually with local input Politics editFamily Compact edit Main article Family Compact The Family Compact is the epithet applied to an oligarchic group of men who exercised most of the political and judicial power in Upper Canada from the 1810s to the 1840s It was noted for its conservatism and opposition to democracy 15 The uniting factors amongst the Compact were its loyalist tradition hierarchical class structure and adherence to the established Anglican Church Leaders such as John Beverley Robinson and John Strachan proclaimed it an ideal government especially as contrasted with the rowdy democracy in the nearby United States 16 The Family Compact emerged from the War of 1812 and collapsed in the aftermath of the Rebellions of 1837 Some Members of the Family Compact nbsp Bishop Strachan the acknowledged Anglican leader of the Family Compact nbsp John Robinson acknowledged leader of the Family Compact member of the Legislative Assembly and later the Legislative Council 17 nbsp William Henry Boulton 8th Mayor of Toronto and member of the Legislative Assembly 18 nbsp Sir Allan Napier MacNab 1st Baronet of the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada nbsp Henry Sherwood 13th Parliament of Upper Canada representing Brockville Reform movement edit Main articles William Lyon Mackenzie and Reform movement Upper Canada There were many outstanding individual reform politicians in Upper Canada including Robert Randal Peter Perry Marshall Spring Bidwell William Ketchum and Dr William Warren Baldwin however organised collective reform activity began with Robert Fleming Gourlay Gourlay was a well connected Scottish emigrant who arrived in 1817 hoping to encourage assisted emigration of the poor from Britain He solicited information on the colony through township questionnaires and soon became a critic of government mismanagement When the local legislature ignored his call for an inquiry he called for a petition to the British Parliament He organised township meetings and a provincial convention which the government considered dangerous and seditious Gourlay was tried in December 1818 under the 1804 Sedition Act and jailed for 8 months He was banished from the province in August 1819 His expulsion made him a martyr in the reform community 19 The next wave of organised Reform activity emerged in the 1830s through the work of William Lyon Mackenzie James Lesslie John Rolph William John O Grady and Dr Thomas Morrison all of Toronto They were critical to introducing the British Political Unions to Upper Canada Political Unions were not parties The unions organised petitions to Parliament The Upper Canada Central Political Union was organised in 1832 33 by Dr Thomas David Morrison mayor of Toronto in 1836 while William Lyon Mackenzie was in England This union collected 19 930 signatures on a petition protesting Mackenzie s unjust expulsion from the House of Assembly by the Family Compact 20 nbsp Second market in York Toronto This union was reorganised as the Canadian Alliance Society 1835 It shared a large meeting space in the market buildings with the Mechanics Institute and the Children of Peace The Canadian Alliance Society adopted much of the platform such as secret ballot amp universal suffrage of the Owenite National Union of the Working Classes in London England that were to be integrated into the Chartist movement in England 21 The Canadian Alliance Society was reborn as the Constitutional Reform Society 1836 when it was led by the more moderate reformer Dr William W Baldwin After the disastrous 1836 elections it took the final form as the Toronto Political Union in 1837 It was the Toronto Political Union that called for a Constitutional Convention in July 1837 and began organising local Vigilance Committees to elect delegates This became the organizational structure for the Rebellion of 1837 22 Members of the Reform Movement nbsp Robert Fleming Gourlay nbsp William Lyon Mackenzie nbsp Dr Thomas D Morrison nbsp Robert Baldwin nbsp Samuel Lount Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837 edit Main articles Rebellions of 1837 Upper Canada Rebellion and Patriot War nbsp Drawing showing the fatal shooting of Col Robert Moodie outside John Montgomery s tavern in Toronto on 4 December 1837The Upper Canada Rebellion was an insurrection against the oligarchic government of the Family Compact in December 1837 led by William Lyon Mackenzie Long term grievances included antagonism between Later Loyalists and British Loyalists political corruption the collapse of the international financial system and the resultant economic distress and a growing republican sentiment While public grievances had existed for years it was the Lower Canada Rebellion in present day Quebec that emboldened rebels in Upper Canada to revolt openly soon after The Upper Canada Rebellion was largely defeated shortly after it began although resistance lingered until 1838 and became more violent mainly through the support of the Hunters Lodges a secret anti British American militia that emerged in states around the Great Lakes They launched the Patriot War in 1838 39 23 John Lambton Lord Durham s support for responsible government undercut the Tories and gradually led the public to reject what it viewed as poor administration unfair land and education policies and inadequate attention to urgent transportation needs Durham s report led to the administrative unification of Upper and Lower Canada as the Province of Canada in 1841 Responsible government did not occur until the late 1840s under Robert Baldwin and Louis Hippolyte Lafontaine 24 Sydenham and the Union of the Canadas edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Report on the Affairs of British North America Main articles Charles Poulett Thomson 1st Baron Sydenham and Province of Canada After the Rebellions the new governor Charles Poulett Thomson 1st Baron Sydenham proved an exemplary Utilitarian despite his aristocratic pretensions This combination of free trade and aristocratic pretensions needs to be underscored although a liberal capitalist Sydenham was no radical democrat Sydenham approached the task of implementing those aspects of Durham s report that the colonial office approved of municipal reform and the union of the Canadas with a campaign of state violence and coercive institutional innovation empowered not just by the British state but also by his Benthamite certainties 25 Like governors Bond Head before him and Metcalfe after he was to turn to the Orange Order for often violent support It was Sydenham who played a critical role in transforming Compact Tories into Conservatives Sydenham introduced a vast expansion of the state apparatus through the introduction of municipal government Areas not already governed through civic corporations or police boards would be governed through centrally controlled District Councils with authority over roads schools and local policing A strengthened Executive Council would further usurp much of the elected assembly s legislative role leaving elected politicians to simply review the administration s legislative program and budgets Settlement editFirst Nations dispossession and reserves edit Main articles First Nations in Ontario Anishinaabe and Iroquois The First Nations occupying the territory that was to become Upper Canada were Anishinaabe or Anishinabe or more properly plural Anishinaabeg or Anishinabek The plural form of the word is the autonym often used by the Odawa Ojibwe and Algonquin peoples The Iroquois also known as the Haudenosaunee or the People of the Longhouse 26 Prior to the creation of Upper Canada in 1791 much land had already been ceded by the First Nations to the Crown in accordance with the Royal Proclamation of 1763 The first treaty was between the Seneca and the British in 1764 giving access to lands adjoining the Niagara River 27 During the American Revolutionary War most of the First Nations supported the British After the Americans launched a campaign that burned the villages of the Iroquois in New York State in 1779 28 the refugees fled to Fort Niagara and other British posts and remained permanently in Canada nbsp The Province of Quebec in 1774Land was granted to these allied Six Nations who had served on the British side during the American Revolution by the Haldimand Proclamation 1784 Haldimand had purchased a tract of land from the Mississaugas The nature of the grant and the administration of land sales by Upper Canada and Canada is a matter of dispute Between 1783 and 1812 fifteen land surrender treaties were concluded in Upper Canada These involved one time payments of money or goods to the Indigenous peoples Some of the treaties spelled out designated reserve lands for the Indigenous peoples 29 Following the War of 1812 European settlers came in increasing numbers The Indian Department focussed on converting the Indigenous peoples to abandon their old way of life and adopt agriculture The treaties shifted from one time payments in exchange to annual annuities from the sale of surrendered lands Between 1825 and 1860 treaties were concluded for nearly all of the land mass of the future province of Ontario In 1836 Manitoulin Island was designated as a reserve for dispossessed natives but much of this was ceded in 1862 29 Loyalists and the land grant system edit Main article United Empire Loyalist nbsp An 1824 land deed for Upper CanadaCrown land policy to 1825 was multi fold in the use of a free resource that had value to people who themselves may have little or no money for its purchase and for the price of settling upon it to support themselves and a create a new society First the cash strapped Crown government in Canada could pay and reward the services and loyalty of the United Empire Loyalists who originated outside of Canada without encumbrance of debt by being awarded with small portions of land under 200 acres or 80 hectares with the proviso that it be settled by those to which it was granted Second portions would be reserved for the future use of the Crown and the clergy that did not require settlement by which to gain control Lt Governor Simcoe saw this as the mechanism by which an aristocracy might be created 30 and that compact settlement could be avoided with the grants of large tracts of land to those Loyalists not required to settle on it as the means of gaining control Assisted immigration edit Main articles Calton weavers and Petworth Emigration Scheme The Calton weavers were a community of handweavers established in the community of Calton then in Lanarkshire just outside Glasgow Scotland in the 18th century 31 In the early 19th century many of the weavers emigrated to Canada settling in Carleton Place and other communities in eastern Ontario where they continued their trade 32 In 1825 1 878 Irish Immigrants from the city of Cork arrived in the community of Scott s Plains The British Parliament had approved an experimental emigration plan to transport poor Irish families to Upper Canada in 1822 The scheme was managed by Peter Robinson a member of the Family Compact and brother of the Attorney General Scott s Plains was renamed Peterborough in his honour Talbot settlement edit Thomas Talbot emigrated in 1791 where he became personal secretary to John Graves Simcoe Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada Talbot convinced the government to allow him to implement a land settlement scheme of 5 000 acres 2 000 ha in Elgin County in the townships of Dunwich and Aldborough in 1803 33 According to his government agreement he was entitled to 200 acres 80 ha for every settler who received 50 acres 20 ha in this way he gained an estate of 20 000 acres 8 000 ha Talbot s administration was regarded as despotic He was infamous for registering settlers names on the local settlement map in pencil and if displeased erasing their entry Talbot s abuse of power was a contributing factor in the Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837 34 Crown and clergy reserves edit Main articles Clergy reserve and Clergy Corporation The Crown reserves one seventh of all lands granted were to provide the provincial executive with an independent source of revenue not under the control of the elected Assembly The clergy reserves also one seventh of all lands granted in the province were created for the support and maintenance of a Protestant clergy in lieu of tithes The revenue from the lease of these lands was claimed by the Rev John Strachan on behalf of the Church of England These reserves were directly administered by the Crown which in turn came under increasing political pressure from other Protestant bodies The Reserve lands were to be a focal point of dissent within the Legislative Assembly 35 The Clergy Corporation was incorporated in 1819 to manage the clergy reserves After the Rev John Strachan was appointed to the Executive Council the advisory body to the Lieutenant Governor in 1815 he began to push for the Church of England s autonomous control of the clergy reserves on the model of the Clergy Corporation created in Lower Canada in 1817 Although all clergymen in the Church of England were members of the body corporate the act prepared in 1819 by Strachan s former student Attorney General John Beverly Robinson also appointed the Inspector General and the Surveyor General to the board and made a quorum of three for meetings these two public officers also sat on the Legislative Council with Strachan These three were usually members of the Family Compact 36 The clergy reserves were not the only types of landed endowment for the Anglican Church and clergy The 1791 Act also provided for glebe land to be assigned and vested in the Crown for which 22 345 acres 9 043 ha were set aside where the revenues would be remitted to the Church 37 The act also provided for the creation of parish rectories giving parishes a corporate identity so that they could hold property although none were created until 1836 prior to the recall of John Colborne in which he created 24 of them 37 They were granted lands amounting to 21 638 acres 8 757 ha of which 15 048 acres 6 090 ha were drawn from the clergy reserves and other glebe lots while 6 950 acres 2 810 ha were taken from ordinary Crown lands 38 A later suit to have this action annulled was dismissed by the Court of Chancery of Upper Canada 39 The Province of Canada would later pass an Act in 1866 to authorize the disposal of such glebe and rectory lands not specifically used as churches parsonages or burial grounds 40 Common school lands edit In 1797 lands in twelve townships six east of York and six west totalling about 500 000 acres 200 000 ha were set aside from which revenues arising from their sale or lease were dedicated to support the establishment of grammar schools and a university for the Province 41 They were distributed as follows Townships reserved for Common School Lands in Upper Canada Lands disposable in acres 42 District Township Original Royal grant 1797 Townships set aside as substituted lands a 1 Lands alienated Reinvested in the Crown a 2 Lands disposableTo individuals Surveyor s To Upper Canada College University a 3 UCCOttawa Alfred 25 140 25 140 Plantagenet 40 000 40 000 Midland Bedford 61 220 2 678 2 858 55 684Hinchinbroke 51 100 2 437 48 663 Sheffield 56 688 3 158 53 530Newcastle Seymour 47 484 3 515 25 000 18 969 London Blandford 20 400 1 179 5 000 14 221Houghton 19 000 1 592 1 505 15 893Middleton 35 000 22 600 1 667 10 733Southwold 40 500 30 900 719 8 881Warwick 600 600Westminster 51 143 40 725 1 218 9 200Yarmouth 20 000 7 084 1 026 11 900Home Java a 4 12 000 12 000 Luther 66 000 66 000 Merlin a 4 40 000 23 281 5 031 11 688Osprey 50 000 50 000 Proton 66 000 66 000Sunnidale 38 000 38 000 Totals 467 675 272 600 170 719 19 282 42 000 225 944 24 000 258 330 In place of lands in reserved townships that had been sold to individuals In lieu of lands granted elsewhere King s College University later renamed as the University of Toronto a b Later merged to form Nottawasaga Township Land sale system edit The land grant policy changed after 1825 as the Upper Canadian administration faced a financial crisis that would otherwise require raising local taxes thereby making it more dependent on a local elected legislature The Upper Canadian state ended its policy of granting land to unofficial settlers and implemented a broad plan of revenue generating sales The Crown replaced its old policy of land grants to ordinary settlers in newly opened districts with land sales by auction It also passed legislation that allowed the auctioning of previously granted land for payment of back taxes 43 Canada Company edit Main article Canada Company nbsp Canada Company Office 1834The greater portion of British emigrants arriving in Canada without funds and the most exalted ideas of the value and productiveness of land purchase extensively on credit Everything goes on well for a short time A log house is erected with the assistance of old settlers and the clearing of forest is commenced Credit is obtained at a neighbouring store During this period he has led a life of toil and privation On the arrival of the fourth harvest he is reminded by the storekeeper to pay his account with cash or discharge part of it with his disposable produce for which he gets a very small price He is also informed that the purchase money of the land has been accumulating with interest he finds himself poorer than when he commenced operation Disappointment preys on his spirit the land ultimately reverts to the former proprietor or a new purchaser is found Patrick Shirreff 1835 Few chose to lease the Crown reserves as long as free grants of land were still available The Lieutenant Governor increasingly found himself depending upon the customs duties shared with but collected in Lower Canada for revenue after a dispute with the lower province on the relative proportions to be allocated to each these duties were withheld forcing the Lieutenant Governor to search for new sources of revenue The Canada Company was created as a means of generating government revenue that was not under the control of the elected Assembly thereby granting the Lt Governor greater independence from local voters The plan for the Canada Company was promoted by the province s Attorney General John Beverly Robinson then studying law at Lincoln s Inn in London The Lt Governor s financial crisis led to a quick adoption of Robinson s scheme to sell the Crown reserves to a new land company which would provide the provincial government with annual payments of between 15 000 to 20 000 The Canada Company was chartered in London in 1826 after three years of mismanagement by John Galt the company hired William Allan and Thomas Mercer Jones to manage the company s Upper Canadian business Jones was to manage the Huron Tract and Allan to sell the Crown reserves already surveyed in other districts 44 According to the Canada Company the poorest individual can here procure for himself and family a valuable tract which with a little labour he can soon convert into a comfortable home such as he could probably never attain in any other country all his own However recent studies have suggested that a minimum of 100 to 200 plus the cost of land was required to start a new farm in the bush As a result few of these poor settlers had any hope of starting their own farm although many tried 45 Huron Tract edit nbsp Huron Tract Purchase area in Southern Ontario highlighted in yellowMain article Huron Tract The Huron Tract lies in the counties of Huron Perth Middlesex and present day Lambton County Ontario bordering on Lake Huron to the west and Lake Erie to the east The tract was purchased by the Canada Company for resale to settlers Influenced by William Tiger Dunlop John Galt and other businessmen formed the Canada Company 46 The Canada Company was the administrative agent for the Huron Tract List of cities and towns of Upper Canada edit nbsp Map of Upper CanadaIncorporated in Upper Canada era to 1841 York now Toronto capital of Upper Canada Kingston Brockville Hamilton Cornwall Prescott Port Hope Picton Cobourg LondonIncorporated in Canada West 1841 1867 Newark now Niagara on the Lake Brantford Bytown now Ottawa Goderich Belleville Peterborough Perth Napanee Guelph Whitby Paris Ontario Lindsay now part of Kawartha Lakes Galt now part of Cambridge Ontario Welland Sandwich now Windsor Stratford OntarioPopulation editUpper CanadaYearPop 180670 718 181176 000 7 5 181495 000 25 0 1824150 066 58 0 1825157 923 5 2 1826166 379 5 4 1827177 174 6 5 1828186 488 5 3 1829197 815 6 1 1830213 156 7 8 1831236 702 11 0 1832263 554 11 3 1833295 863 12 3 1834321 145 8 5 1835347 359 8 2 1836374 099 7 7 1837397 489 6 3 1838399 422 0 5 1839409 048 2 4 1840432 159 5 6 Source Statistics Canada website Censuses of Canada 1665 to 1871 See United Province of Canada for population after 1840 Ethnic groups edit Although the province is frequently referred to as English Canada after the Union of the Canadas by whom and its ethnic homogeneity said to be a factor in the Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837 by whom there was range of ethnic groups in Upper Canada However due to the lack of a detailed breakdown it is difficult to count each group and this may be considered abuse of statistics An idea of the ethnic breakdown can be had if one considers the religious census of 1842 which is helpfully provided below Roman Catholics were 15 of the population and adherents to this religion were at the time mainly drawn from the Irish and the French settlers The Roman Catholic faith also numbered some votaries from amongst the Scottish settlers The category of other religious adherents somewhat under 5 of the population included the Aboriginal and Metis culture First Nations edit Main article First Nations in Ontario See above Land Settlement Anishinaabe or Anishinabe or more properly plural Anishinaabeg or Anishinabek The plural form of the word is the autonym often used by the Odawa Ojibwe and Algonquin peoples The Haudenosaunee also known as the Iroquois or the People of the Longhouse 26 Metis edit Main article Metis in Canada Many British and French Canadian fur traders married First Nations women from the Cree Ojibwa or Saulteaux First Nations The majority of these fur traders were Scottish and French and were Catholic 47 Canadiens French Canadians edit Main articles French Canadian and franco Ontarian Early settlements in the region include the Mission of Sainte Marie among the Hurons at Midland in 1649 Sault Ste Marie in 1668 and Fort Pontchartrain du Detroit in 1701 Southern Ontario was part of the Pays d en haut Upper Country of New France and later part of the province of Quebec until Quebec was split into Upper and Lower Canada in 1791 The first wave of settlement in the Detroit Windsor area came in the 18th century during the French regime A second wave came in the 19th and early 20th centuries to the areas of Eastern Ontario and Northeastern Ontario In the Ottawa Valley in particular some families have moved back and forth across the Ottawa River for generations the river is the border between Ontario and Quebec In the city of Ottawa some areas such as Vanier and Orleans have a rich Franco heritage where families often have members on both sides of the Ottawa River Loyalists Later Loyalists edit Main articles United Empire Loyalist and Expulsion of the Loyalists After an initial group of about 7 000 United Empire Loyalists were thinly settled across the province in the mid 1780s a far larger number of late Loyalists arrived in the late 1790s and were required to take an oath of allegiance to the Crown to obtain land if they came from the US Their fundamental political allegiances were always considered dubious By 1812 this had become acutely problematic since the American settlers outnumbered the original Loyalists by more than ten to one Following the War of 1812 the colonial government under Lt Governor Gore took active steps to prevent Americans from swearing allegiance thereby making them ineligible to obtain land grants The tensions between the Loyalists and late Loyalists erupted in the Alien Question crisis in 1820 21 when the Bidwells Barnabas and his son Marshall sought election to the provincial assembly They faced opponents who claimed they could not hold elective office because of their American citizenship If the Bidwells were aliens so were the majority of the province The issue was not resolved until 1828 when the Colonial government retroactively granted them citizenship Freed slaves edit The Act Against Slavery passed in Upper Canada on 9 July 1793 The 1793 Act against Slavery forbade the importation of any additional slaves and freed children It did not grant freedom to adult slaves they were finally freed by the British Parliament in 1833 As a consequence many Canadian slaves fled south to New England and New York where slavery was no longer legal Many American slaves who had escaped from the South via the Underground Railroad or fleeing from the Black Codes in the Ohio Valley came north to Ontario a good portion settling on land lots and began farming 48 It is estimated that thousands of escaped slaves entered Upper Canada from the United States 49 British edit See also Great Migration of Canada The Great Migration from Britain from 1815 to 1850 has been numbered at 800 000 The population of Upper Canada in 1837 is documented at 409 000 Given the lack of detailed census data it is difficult to assess the relative size of the American and Canadian born British and the foreign born British By the time of the first census in 1841 only half of the population of Upper Canada were foreign born British 50 Irish edit Main article Irish Canadian Irish in Ontario Scottish edit Main article Scottish Canadian Ontario English edit Main article English Canadian Ontario Religion edit 1842 Religion in Upper CanadaYearPop Baptists16 411Catholics65 203Anglican107 791Congregational4 253Jews1 105Lutherans4 524Methodists82 923Moravians1 778Presbyterians97 095Quakers5 200Others19 422Source Statistics Canada website Censuses of Canada 1665 to 1871 See United Province of Canada for population after 1840 Church of England edit Main articles Anglican Church of Canada and John Strachan The first Lt Governor Sir John Graves Simcoe sought to make the Church of England the Established Church of the province To that end he created the clergy reserves the revenues of which were to support the church The clergy reserves proved to be a long term political issue as other denominations particularly the Church of Scotland Presbyterians sought a proportional share of the revenues The Church of England was never numerically dominant in the province as it was in England especially in the early years when most of the American born Later Loyalists arrived The growth of the Church of England depended largely on later British emigration for growth The Church was led by the Rev John Strachan 1778 1867 a pillar of the Family Compact Strachan was part of the oligarchic ruling class of the province and besides leading the Church of England also sat on the Executive Council the Legislative Council helped found the Bank of Upper Canada Upper Canada College and the University of Toronto Catholic Church edit Main articles Roman Catholicism in Canada and Alexander Macdonell bishop of Kingston Father Alexander Macdonell was a Scottish Catholic priest who formed his evicted clan into The Glengarry Fencibles regiment of which he was chaplain He was the first Catholic chaplain in the British Army since the Reformation When the regiment was disbanded Rev Macdonell appealed to the government to grant its members a tract of land in Canada and in 1804 160 000 acres 60 000 ha were provided in what is now Glengarry County Canada In 1815 he began his service as the first Roman Catholic Bishop at St Raphael s Church in the Highlands of Ontario 51 In 1819 he was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Upper Canada which in 1826 was erected into a suffragan bishopric of the Archdiocese of Quebec 52 53 In 1826 he was appointed to the legislative council 54 Macdonell s role on the Legislative Council was one of the tensions with the Toronto congregation led by Father William O Grady O Grady like Macdonell had been an army chaplain to Connell James Baldwin s soldiers in Brazil O Grady followed Baldwin to Toronto Gore Township in 1828 From January 1829 he was pastor of St Paul s church in York Tensions between the Scottish and Irish came to a head when O Grady was defrocked in part for his activities in the Reform movement He went on to edit a Reform newspaper in Toronto the Canadian Correspondent Ryerson and the Methodists edit Main articles Egerton Ryerson and Methodist Episcopal Church The undisputed leader of the highly fractious Methodists in Upper Canada was Egerton Ryerson editor of their newspaper The Christian Guardian Ryerson 1803 1882 was an itinerant minister or circuit rider in the Niagara area for the Methodist Episcopal Church an American branch of Methodism As British immigration increased Methodism in Upper Canada was torn between those with ties to the Methodist Episcopal Church and the British Wesleyan Methodists Ryerson used the Christian Guardian to argue for the rights of Methodists in the province and later to help convince rank and file Methodists that a merger with British Wesleyans effected in 1833 was in their best interest Presbyterians edit Main article Presbyterian Church in Canada The earliest Presbyterian ministers in Upper Canada came from various denominations based in Scotland Ireland and the United States The Presbytery of the Canadas was formed in 1818 primarily by Scottish Associate Presbyterian missionaries yet independently of their mother denomination in the hope of including Presbyterian ministers of all stripes in Upper and Lower Canada Although successfully including members from Irish Associate and American Presbyterian and Reformed denominations the growing group of missionaries belonging to the Church of Scotland remained separate Instead in 1831 they formed their own Synod of the Presbyterian Church of Canada in Connection with the Established Church of Scotland That same year the Presbytery of the Canadas having grown and been re organized became the United Synod of Upper Canada In its continued pursuit for Presbyterian unity and a share of government funding from the clergy reserves for established churches the United Synod sought a union with the Church of Scotland synod which it finally joined in 1840 However some ministers had left the United Synod prior to this merger including notably Rev James Harris Rev William Jenkins and Rev Daniel Eastman In the 1832 new Secessionist missionaries began to arrive belonging to The United Associate Synod in Scotland after 1847 the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland Committed to the voluntarist principle of rejecting government funding they decided against joining the United Synod of Upper Canada and on Christmas Day 1834 formed the Missionary Presbytery of the Canadas Although this new presbytery was formed at Rev James Harris s church in Toronto he and his congregation remained independent from it However the voluntarist Rev Jenkins and his congregation in Richmond Hill joined the Missionary Presbytery a few years later Rev Eastman had left the United Synod in 1833 to form the Niagara Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church in the USA After this presbytery dissolved following the Rebellion of 1837 he rejoined the United Synod which then joined the Church of Scotland Outside of these four Presbyterian denominations only two others gained a foothold in the province The small Stamford Presbytery of the American Secessionist tradition was formed in 1835 in the Niagara region and the Scottish Reformed Presbyterian or Covenanter tradition was represented in the province to an even lesser extent Despite the numerous denominations by the late 1830s the Church of Scotland was the main expression of Presbyterianism in Upper Canada Mennonites Tunkers Quakers and Children of Peace edit Main articles Mennonite Society of Friends Upper Canada and The Children of Peace nbsp The Sharon Temple built by the Children of PeaceThese groups of later Loyalists were proportionately larger in the early decades of the province s settlement The Mennonites Tunkers Quakers and Children of Peace are the traditional Peace churches The Mennonites and Tunkers were generally German speaking and immigrated as Later Loyalists from Pennsylvania Many of their descendants continue to speak a form of German called Pennsylvania Dutch The Quakers Society of Friends immigrated from New York the New England States and Pennsylvania The Children of Peace were founded during the War of 1812 after a schism in the Society of Friends in York County 55 A further schism occurred in 1828 leaving two branches Orthodox Quakers and Hicksite Quakers Poverty edit See also Imprisonment for debt Upper Canada In the decade ending in 1837 the population of Upper Canada doubled to 397 489 fed in large part by erratic spurts of displaced paupers the surplus population of the British Isles Historian Rainer Baehre estimated that between 1831 and 1835 a bare minimum of one fifth of all emigrants to the province arrived totally destitute forwarded by their parishes in the United Kingdom 56 The pauper immigrants arriving in Toronto were the excess agricultural workers and artisans whose growing ranks sent the cost of parish based poor relief in England spiralling a financial crisis that generated frenetic public debate and the overhaul of the Poor Laws in 1834 Assisted emigration a second solution to the problem touted by the Parliamentary Under Secretary in the Colonial Office Robert Wilmot Horton would remove them permanently from the parish poor rolls The roots of Wilmot Horton s assisted emigration policies began in April 1820 in the middle of an insurrection in Glasgow where a young already twice bankrupted William Lyon Mackenzie was setting sail for Canada on a ship called Psyche After the week long violence the rebellion was easily crushed the participants were driven less by treason than distress In a city of 147 000 people without a regular parish system of poor relief between ten and fifteen thousand were destitute The Prime Minister agreed to provide free transportation from Quebec to Upper Canada a 100 acre 40 ha land grant and a year s supply of provisions to any of the rebellious weavers who could pay their own way to Quebec In all in 1820 and 1821 a private charity helped 2 716 Lanarkshire and Glasgow emigrants to Upper Canada to take up their free grants primarily in the Peterborough area 57 A second project was the Petworth Emigration Committee organised by the Reverend Thomas Sockett who chartered ships and sent emigrants from England to Canada in each of the six years between 1832 and 1837 58 This area in the south of England was terrorised by the Captain Swing Riots a series of clandestine attacks on large farmers who refused relief to unemployed agricultural workers The area hardest hit Kent was the area where Sir Francis Bond Head later Lt Governor of Upper Canada in 1836 was the Assistant Poor Law Commissioner One of his jobs was to force the unemployed into Houses of Industry Trade monetary policy and financial institutions editCorporations edit Main article Corporations Upper Canada There were two types of corporate actors at work in the Upper Canadian economy the legislatively chartered companies and the unregulated joint stock companies The joint stock company was popular in building public works since it should be for general public benefit as the benefit would otherwise be sacrificed to legislated monopolies with exclusive privileges or lie dormant An example of the legislated monopoly is found in the Bank of Upper Canada However the benefit of the joint stock shareholders as the risk takers was whole and entire and the general public benefitted only indirectly As late as 1849 even the moderate reform politician Robert Baldwin was to complain that unless a stop were made to it there would be nothing but corporations from one end of the country to the other Radical reformers like William Lyon Mackenzie who opposed all legislated monopolies saw joint stock associations as the only protection against the whole property of the country being tied up as an irredeemable appendage to incorporated institutions and put beyond the reach of individual possession 59 As a result most of the joint stock companies formed in this period were created by political reformers who objected to the legislated monopolies granted to members of the Family Compact Currency and banking edit Currency edit See also Coinage of Upper Canada The government of Upper Canada never issued a provincial currency A variety of coins mainly of French Spanish English and American origin circulated The government used the Halifax standard where one pound Halifax equalled four Spanish dollars One pound sterling equalled 1 2s 2 d until 1820 and 1 2s 6 d Halifax pounds after 1820 Paper currency was issued primarily by the Bank of Upper Canada although with the diversification of the banking system each bank would issue its own distinctive notes 60 Bank of Upper Canada edit Main article Bank of Upper Canada nbsp The Bank of Upper Canada TorontoThe Bank of Upper Canada was captured from Kingston merchants by the York elite at the instigation of John Strachan in 1821 with the assistance of William Allan a Toronto merchant and Executive Councillor York was too small to warrant such an institution as indicated by the inability of its promoters to raise even the minimal 10 of the 200 000 authorised capital required for start up It succeeded where the Bank of Kingston had failed only because it had the political influence to have this minimum reduced by half and because the provincial government subscribed for two thousand of its eight thousand shares The administration appointed four of the bank s fifteen directors that as with the Clergy Corporation made for a tight bond between the nominally private company and the state Forty four men served as bank directors during the 1830s eleven of them were executive councillors fifteen of them were legislative councillors and thirteen were magistrates in Toronto More importantly all 11 men who had ever sat on the Executive Council also sat on the board of the Bank at one time or another 10 of these men also sat on the Legislative Council The overlapping membership on the boards of the Bank of Upper Canada and on the Executive and Legislative Councils served to integrate the economic and political activities of church state and the financial sector These overlapping memberships reinforced the oligarchic nature of power in the colony and allowed the administration to operate without any effective elective check The Bank of Upper Canada was a political sore point for the Reformers throughout the 1830s 61 Bank wars the Scottish joint stock banks edit Main article Bank of the People The difference between the chartered banks and the joint stock banks lay almost entirely on the issue of liability and its implications for the issuance of bank notes The joint stock banks lacked limited liability hence every partner in the bank was responsible for the bank s debts to the full extent of their personal property The formation of new joint stock banks blossomed in 1835 in the aftermath of a parliamentary report by Dr Charles Duncombe which established their legality here Duncombe s report drew in large part on an increasingly dominant banking orthodoxy in the United Kingdom which challenged the English system of chartered banks Duncombe s Select Committee on Currency offered a template for the creation of joint stock banks based on several successful British banks Within weeks two Devonshire businessmen Capt George Truscott and John Cleveland Green established the Farmer s Bank in Toronto The only other successful bank established under this law was The Bank of the People which was set up by Toronto s Reformers The Bank of the People provided the loan that allowed William Lyon Mackenzie to establish the newspaper The Constitution in 1836 in the lead up to the Rebellion of 1837 Mackenzie wrote at the time Archdeacon Strachan s bank the old one serve the double purpose of keeping the merchants in chains of debt and bonds to the bank manager and the Farmer s acres under the harrow of the storekeeper You will be shewn how to break this degraded yoke of mortgages ejectments judgments and bonds Money bound you money shall loose you 62 During the financial panic of 1836 the Family Compact sought to protect its interests in the nearly bankrupt Bank of Upper Canada by making joint stock banks illegal 63 Trade edit Main article Metropolitan thesis After the Napoleonic Wars as industrial production in Britain took off English manufacturers began dumping cheap goods in Montreal this allowed an increasing number of shopkeepers in York to obtain their goods competitively from Montreal wholesalers It was during this period that the three largest pre war merchants who imported directly from Britain retired from business as a result Quetton St George in 1815 Alexander Wood in 1821 and William Allan in 1822 Toronto and Kingston then underwent a boom in the number of increasingly specialised shops and wholesalers 64 The Toronto wholesale firm of Isaac Buchanan and Company were one of the largest of the new wholesalers Isaac Buchanan was a Scots merchant in Toronto in partnership with his brother Peter who remained in Glasgow to manage the British end of the firm They established their business in Toronto in 1835 having bought out Isaac s previous partners William Guild and Co who had established themselves in Toronto in 1832 As a wholesale firm the Buchanan s had invested more than 10 000 in their business 65 Another of those new wholesale businesses was the Farmers Storehouse Company The Farmers Storehouse Company was formed in the Home District and is probably Canada s first Farmers Cooperative The Storehouse expedited the sale of farmer s wheat to Montreal and provided them with cheaper consumer goods 66 Wheat and grains edit Main articles Agriculture in Upper Canada and Corn Laws Upper Canada was in the unenviable position of having few exports with which to pay for all its imported manufactured needs For the vast majority of those who settled in rural areas debt could be paid off only through the sale of wheat and flour yet throughout much of the 1820s the price of wheat went through periodic cycles of boom and bust depending upon the British markets that ultimately provided the credit upon which the farmer lived In the decade 1830 39 exports of wheat averaged less than 1 per person a year less than 6 per household and in the 1820s just half that 67 Given the small amounts of saleable wheat and flour and the rarity of cash some have questioned how market oriented these early farmers were Instead of depending on the market to meet their needs many of these farmers depended on networks of shared resources and cooperative marketing For example rather than hire labour they met their labour needs through work bees such farmers are said to be subsistence oriented and not to respond to market cues rather they engage in a moral economy seeking subsistence insurance and a just price The Children of Peace in the village of Hope now Sharon are a well documented example They were the most prosperous agricultural community in Canada West by 1851 68 Timber edit Main article Ottawa River timber trade The Ottawa River timber trade resulted from Napoleon s 1806 Continental Blockade in Europe The United Kingdom required a new source of timber for its navy and shipbuilding Later the UK s application of gradually increasing preferential tariffs increased Canadian imports The trade in squared timber lasted until the 1850s The transportation of raw timber by means of floating down the Ottawa River was proved possible in 1806 by Philemon Wright 69 Squared timber would be assembled into large rafts which held living quarters for men on their six week journey to Quebec City which had large exporting facilities and easy access to the Atlantic Ocean The timber trade was Upper and Lower Canada s major industry in terms of employment and value of the product 70 The largest supplier of square red and white pine to the British market was the Ottawa River 71 and the Ottawa Valley They had rich red and white pine forests 72 Bytown later called Ottawa was a major lumber and sawmill centre of Canada 73 Transportation and communications edit nbsp The complete First Welland Canal including the Feeder Canal and the extension to Port Colborne The present day canal is marked in pale grey Canal system edit nbsp The Rideau Canal in Ottawa Ontario Canada with Parliament Hill and the old Union Station visible in the backgroundMain articles First Welland Canal Rideau Canal and Desjardins Canal The early nineteenth century was the age of canals The Erie Canal stretching from Buffalo to Albany New York threatened to divert all of the grain and other trade on the upper Great Lakes through the Hudson River to New York city after its completion in 1825 Upper Canadians sought to build a similar system that would tie this trade to the St Lawrence River and Montreal Rideau Canal edit The Rideau Canal s purpose was military and hence was paid for by the British and not the local treasury It was intended to provide a secure supply and communications route between Montreal and the British naval base in Kingston The objective was to bypass the St Lawrence River bordering New York a route which would have left British supply ships vulnerable to an attack Westward from Montreal travel would proceed along the Ottawa River to Bytown now Ottawa then southwest via the canal to Kingston and out into Lake Ontario Because the Rideau Canal was easier to navigate than the St Lawrence River due to the series of rapids between Montreal and Kingston it became a busy commercial artery from Montreal to the Great Lakes The construction of the canal was supervised by Lieutenant Colonel John By of the Royal Engineers The work started in 1826 and was completed 6 years later in 1832 at a cost of 822 000 Welland Canal edit The Welland Canal was created to directly link Lake Erie with Lake Ontario bypassing Niagara Falls and the Erie Canal It was the idea of William Hamilton Merritt who owned a sawmill grist mill and store on the Twelve Mile Creek The Legislature authorised the joint stock Welland Canal Company on 19 January 1824 with a capitalisation of 150 000 and Merritt as the agent The canal was officially opened exactly five years later on 30 November 1829 However the original route to Lake Erie followed the Welland and Niagara Rivers and was difficult and slow to navigate The Welland Canal Company obtained a loan of 50 000 pounds from the province of Upper Canada in March 1831 to cut a canal directly to Gravelly Bay now Port Colborne as the new Lake Erie terminus for the canal 74 By the time the canal was finished in 1837 it had cost the province 425 000 in loans and stock subscriptions The company was supposed to have been a private one using private capital but the province had little private capital available hence most of the original funds came from New York To keep the canal in Upper Canadian hands the province had passed a law barring Americans from the company s directorate The company was thus controlled by the Family Compact even though they had few shares By 1834 it was clear the canal would never make money and that the province would be on the hook for the large loans the canal and the canal company thus became a political issue as local farmers argued the huge expense would ultimately only benefit American farmers in the west and the merchants who transported their grain 75 Desjardins Canal edit The Desjardins Canal named after its promoter Pierre Desjardins was built to give Dundas Ontario easier access to Burlington Bay and Lake Ontario Access to Lake Ontario from Dundas was made difficult by the topography of the area which included a natural sand and gravel barrier across Burlington Bay which allowed only boats with a shallow draft through In 1823 a canal was dug through the sandbar In 1826 the passage was completed allowing schooners to sail to neighbouring Hamilton Hamilton then became a major port and quickly expanded as a centre of trade and commerce In 1826 a group of Dundas businessmen incorporated to compete with Hamilton and increase the value of their real estate holdings The project to build Desjardins Canal continued for ten years from 1827 to 1837 and required constant infusions of money from the province In 1837 the year it opened the company s income was 6 000 of which 5 000 was from a government loan and 166 was received from canal tolls Lake traffic steamships edit Main article Great Lakes passenger steamers There is disagreement as to whether the Canadian built Frontenac 170 feet 52 m launched on 7 September 1816 at Ernestown Ontario or the US built Ontario 110 feet 34 m launched in the spring of 1817 at Sacketts Harbor New York was the first steamboat on the Great Lakes While Frontenac was launched first Ontario began active service first 76 The first steamboat on the upper Great Lakes was the passenger carrying Walk In The Water built in 1818 to navigate Lake Erie In the years between 1809 and 1837 just over 100 steamboats were launched by Upper and Lower Canadians for the St Lawrence River and Great Lakes trade of which ten operated on Lake Ontario 77 The single largest engine foundry in British North America before 1838 was the Eagle Foundry of Montreal founded by John Dod Ward in the fall of 1819 which manufactured 33 of the steam engines The largest Upper Canadian engine manufacturer was Sheldon amp Dutcher of Toronto who made three engines in the 1830s before being driven to Bankruptcy by the Bank of Upper Canada in 1837 78 The major owner operators of steamships on Lake Ontario were Donald Bethune John Hamilton Hugh Richardson and Henry Gildersleeve each of whom would have invested a substantial fortune 79 Roads edit Besides marine travel Upper Canada had a few Post roads or footpaths used for transportation by horse or stagecoaches along the key settlements between London to Kingston The Governor s Road was built beginning in 1793 from Dundas to Paris and then to the proposed capital of London by 1794 The road was further extended eastward with new capital of York in 1795 his road was eventually known as Dundas Road A second route was known as Lakeshore Road or York Road which was built from York to Trent River from 1799 to 1900 and later extended eastwards to Kingston in 1817 This road was later renamed as Kingston Road United States relations editWar of 1812 1812 1815 edit nbsp Painting depicting the death of Isaac BrockDuring the War of 1812 with the United States Upper Canada was the chief target of the Americans since it was weakly defended and populated largely by American immigrants However division in the United States over the war a lackluster American militia the incompetence of American military commanders and swift and decisive action by the British commander Sir Isaac Brock kept Upper Canada part of British North America Detroit was captured by the British on 6 August 1812 The Michigan Territory was held under British control until it was abandoned in 1813 The Americans won the decisive Battle of Lake Erie 10 September 1813 and forced the British to retreat from the western areas On the retreat they were intercepted at the Battle of the Thames 5 October 1813 and destroyed in a major American victory that killed Tecumseh and broke the power of Britain s Indian allies 80 Major battles fought on territory in Upper Canada included Battle of Queenston Heights 13 October 1812 Burning and Battle of York 27 April 1813 Battle of Fort George 27 May 1813 Battle of Stoney Creek 5 June 1813 Battle of Beaver Dams 24 June 1813 Battle of Lake Erie 10 September 1813 Battle of the Thames 5 October 1813 Battle of Crysler s Farm 11 November 1813 Burning of Newark 10 December 1813 Battle of Chippawa 5 July 1814 Battle of Lundy s Lane 25 July 1814Many other battles were fought in American territory bordering Upper Canada including the Northwest Territory most in modern day Michigan upstate New York and naval battles in the Great Lakes The Treaty of Ghent ratified in 1815 ended the war and restored the status quo ante bellum 1837 Rebellion and Patriot War edit Main articles Rebellions of 1837 1838 Upper Canada Rebellion and Patriot War Mackenzie Duncombe John Rolph and 200 supporters fled to Navy Island in the Niagara River where they declared themselves the Republic of Canada on 13 December They obtained supplies from supporters in the United States resulting in British reprisals see Caroline affair This incident has been used to establish the principle of anticipatory self defense in international politics which holds that it may be justified only in cases in which the necessity of that self defense is instant overwhelming and leaving no choice of means and no moment for deliberation This formulation is part of the Caroline test The Caroline affair is also now invoked frequently in the course of the dispute around preemptive strike or preemption doctrine On 13 January 1838 under attack by British armaments the rebels fled Mackenzie went to the United States where he was arrested and charged under the Neutrality Act 81 The Neutrality Act of 1794 made it illegal for an American to wage war against any country at peace with the United States Application of the Neutrality Act during the Patriot War led to the largest use of US government military force against its own citizens since the Whiskey Rebellion 82 The extended series of incidents comprising the Patriot War were finally settled by US Secretary of State Daniel Webster and Alexander Baring 1st Baron Ashburton in the course of their negotiations leading to the Webster Ashburton Treaty of 1842 Education editIn 1807 the Grammar School Act allowed the government to take over various grammar schools across the province and incorporating them into a network of eight new public grammar schools secondary schools one for each of the eight districts Eastern Johnstown Midland Newcastle Home Niagara London and Western 83 Eastern Grammar School in New Johnstown or current day Cornwall Ontario founded as Cornwall Grammar School and later became Cornwall Collegiate and Vocational School Johnstown District Grammar School Maitland Ontario Midland Grammar School created to replace Kingston Grammar School established in 1792 and later became Kingston Collegiate and Vocational Institute Newcastle District Grammar School Coburg Home District Grammar School in York Upper Canada later becoming Royal Grammar School Toronto High School and finally to the current name Jarvis Collegiate Institute St Catherine s and District Grammar School Niagara District London District Grammar School latter became London Central Secondary School Western District Grammar School in Sandwich or current day Windsor Ontario grammar school is gone and is now the site of General Brock Public School 84 Canada West editMain articles United Province of Canada and Ontario Canada West was the western portion of the United Province of Canada from 10 February 1841 to 1 July 1867 85 Its boundaries were identical to those of the former province of Upper Canada Lower Canada would also become Canada East The area was named the province of Ontario under the British North America Act of 1867 See also edit nbsp Ontario portal nbsp History portal nbsp Canada portalFormer colonies and territories in Canada HMS Speedy 1798 Timeline of Ontario historyNotes edit Early flags Government of Canada 28 August 2017 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Royal Union Flag The Flags of Canada Retrieved 15 January 2021 a b Butler 1843 pp 10 20 Juriglobe Constitutional Act 1791 The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 9 September 2019 Craig 1963 p 2 Craig 1963 pp 5 6 Craig 1963 p 6 Biography SIMCOE JOHN GRAVES Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol V 1801 1820 McNairn 2000 pp 23 62 Armstrong 1985 pp 8 12 Armstrong 1985 p 39 Craig 1963 p 12 Craig 1963 pp 30 31 Wallace 1915 Mills David Panneton Daniel 20 March 2017 7 February 2006 Family Compact The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada Retrieved 9 September 2019 Biography ROBINSON Sir JOHN BEVERLEY Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IX 1861 1870 Biography BOULTON WILLIAM HENRY Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol X 1871 1880 Craig 1963 pp 93 99 Wilton 2001 pp 146 147 Schrauwers 2009 pp 181 184 Schrauwers 2009 pp 192 199 Greer Allan 1995 1837 38 Rebellion Reconsidered Canadian Historical Review LXVII 1 1 30 doi 10 3138 chr 076 01 01 Careless 1967 pp 113 30 McKay Ian 2000 The Liberal Order Framework A prospectus for a reconnaissance of Canadian History Canadian Historical Review 81 4 616 678 doi 10 3138 chr 81 4 616 S2CID 162365787 a b Haudenosaunee is h ɔː d ɛ n e ˈ ʃ ɔː n iː in English Akunehsye niˀ in Tuscarora Rudes B Tuscarora English Dictionary Toronto University of Toronto Press 1999 and Rotinonsionni in Mohawk Upper Canada Land Surrenders The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 7 June 2021 Mintz 1999 a b Upper Canada Land Surrenders and the Williams Treaties 1764 1862 1923 www rcaanc cirnac gc ca Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada 15 February 2013 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Gates 1968 Calton is now within Glasgow itself Campey 2005 p 52ff Humber 1991 p 193 Craig 1963 pp 142 144 Craig 1963 pp 171 179 Wilson George A 1959 The Political and Administrative History of the Upper Canada Clergy Reserves 1790 1855 Toronto PhD Thesis Dept of History University of Toronto pp 133ff a b Hayes Alan L 2004 Anglicans in Canada Controversies and Identity in Historical Perspective Urba and Chicago University of Illinois Press pp 59 61 ISBN 0 252 02902 X Wilson Alan 1969 The Clergy Reserves of Upper Canada PDF Historical Booklet No 23 Ottawa Canadian Historical Association p 17 ISBN 0 88798 057 0 ISSN 0068 886X Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Attorney General v Grasett 5 Gr 412 C C U C 12 May 1856 affirmed on appeal Attorney General v Grasett 6 Gr 200 C E A U C 1857 An Act to provide for the sale of the Rectory Lands in this Province S Prov C 1866 c 16 as amended by c 17 The Origin History and Management of the University of King s College Toronto George Brown 1844 p 9 Hodgins J George 1894 V Educational Provisions of the Upper Canada Legislature in 1832 1833 Documentary History of Education in Upper Canada Vol II 1831 1836 Toronto Warwick Bros amp Rutter pp 102 105 Schrauwers Albert Spring 2010 The Gentlemanly Order amp the Politics of Production in the Transition to Capitalism in the Home District Upper Canada Labour Le Travail 65 1 26 31 JSTOR 20798984 Lee 2004 pp 98 148 Ankli Robert E Duncan Kenneth 1984 Farm Making Costs in Early Ontario Canadian Papers in Rural History 4 33 49 What was the Huron Tract Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 17 September 2010 Complete History of the Canadian Metis Culturework Metis nation of the North West Archived from the original on 26 February 2012 Retrieved 20 November 2012 Cooper Afua Acts of Resistance Black Men and Women Engage Slavery in Upper Canada 1793 1803 Ontario History Spring 2007 Vol 99 Issue 1 pp 5 17 Underground Railroad The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 9 September 2019 Wilton 2001 p 9 The Parish of St Raphael Glengarry Emigration of 1786 Bishop Alexander Macdonell 1762 1840 ontarioplaques com Retrieved 16 April 2012 Multiculturalism The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 9 September 2019 Why is Canada the most tolerant country in the world Luck Bishop Alexander MacDonell catholic hierarchy org Retrieved 16 April 2012 Reaman 1957 pp 40 124 Baehre Rainer 1981 Pauper Emigration to Upper Canada in the 1830s Historie Sociale Social History XIV 28 340 Johnston 1972 pp 51 54 Cameron amp Maude 2000 Schrauwers 2009 p 21 McCalla 1993 pp 245247 Schrauwers 2010 pp 22 26 Schrauwers Albert 2011 Money bound you money shall loose you Micro credit Social Capital and the Meaning of Money in Upper Canada Comparative Studies in Society and History 52 2 314 343 doi 10 1017 s0010417511000077 S2CID 154484234 Schrauwers 2009 pp 151 174 Schrauwers 2009 p 107 McCalla 1979 p 28 Schrauwers 2009 pp 102 106 McCalla 1993 p 75 Schrauwers 2009 pp 41 50 Woods 1980 p 89 Greening 1961 pp 111 Greening 1961 p 111 Bond 1984 p 43 Mika 1982 p 121 Craig 1963 pp 153 160 Aitken Hugh G T 1953 Yates and McIntyre Lottery Managers The Journal of Economic History 13 1 36 57 doi 10 1017 S0022050700070030 S2CID 153540099 The debate is addressed by Barlow Cumberland in Chapter 2 of A Century of Sail and Steam on the Niagara River Retrieved 26 March 2011 McCalla 1993 p 119 Lewis Walter 1997 The First Generation of Marine Engines in Central Canadian Steamers 1809 1837 The Northern Mariner VII 2 II McCalla 1993 p 120 Young Bennett Henderson The Battle of the Thames In Which Kentuckians Defeated the British French and Indians 5 October 1813 Louisville Ky Morton 1903 Armstrong Frederick H Stagg Ronald J 1976 McKenzie William Lyon In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IX 1861 1870 online ed University of Toronto Press Bonthius Andrew 2003 The Patriot War of 1837 1838 Locofocoism with a Gun Labour Le Travail 52 2 11 12 doi 10 2307 25149383 JSTOR 25149383 S2CID 142863197 Education in Upper Canada From 1783 To 1844 canada yodelout com Western District Grammar School Southwestern Ontario Digital Archive swoda uwindsor ca Careless J M S Foot Richard 4 March 2015 7 February 2006 Province of Canada 1841 67 The Canadian Encyclopedia online ed Historica Canada References editArmstrong Frederick Henry 1985 Handbook of Upper Canadian Chronology revised ed Dundurn ISBN 978 0 919670 92 1 Bond Courtney C J 1984 Where Rivers Meet An Illustrated History of Ottawa Windsor Publications Butler Samuel 1843 The Emigrant s Handbook of Facts Concerning Canada New Zealand Australia Cape of Good Hope amp c Glasgow W R M Phun ISBN 9780665952821 Cameron Wendy Maude Mary McDougall 2000 Assisting Emigration to Upper Canada The Petworth Project 1832 1837 Montreal Kingston McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773520349 Campey Lucille H 2005 The Scottish pioneers of Upper Canada 1784 1855 Glengarry and beyond Dundurn Press Ltd ISBN 978 1 897045 01 5 Careless J M S 1967 The Union of the Canadas The Growth of Canadian Institutions 1841 1857 Toronto McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 9780771019128 Craig Gerald M 1963 Upper Canada The Formative Years 1784 1841 republished 2013 McClelland and Stewart ISBN 978 0 19 900904 6 Gates Lillian 1968 Land Policies of Upper Canada Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Press Greening W E 1961 The Ottawa Toronto McClelland amp Stewart Humber Charles J 1991 Allegiance the Ontario Story Mississauga Ontario Heirloom Publishing Johnston H J M 1972 British Emigration Policy 1815 1830 Shovelling Out the Paupers Oxford Clarendon Press Lee Robert C 2004 The Canada Company and the Huron Tract 1826 1853 Personalities Profits and Politics Toronto Natural Heritage Books ISBN 9781896219943 McCalla Douglas 1979 The Upper Canada Trade 1834 1872 A Study of the Buchanan s Business Toronto University of Toronto Press McCalla Douglas 1993 Planting the Province The Economic History of Upper Canada 1784 1870 Toronto University of Toronto Press McNairn Jeffrey L 2000 The Capacity To Judge Public Opinion and Deliberative Democracy in Upper Canada 1791 1854 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 3916 4 Mika Nick amp Helma 1982 Bytown The Early Days of Ottawa Belleville Ont Mika Publishing Company Mintz Max M 1999 Seeds of Empire The American Revolutionary Conquest of the Iroquois New York University Press Reaman G Elmore 1957 The Trail of the Black Walnut Toronto McClelland amp Stewart Schrauwers Albert 2009 Union is Strength W L Mackenzie the Children of Peace and the Emergence of Joint Stock Democracy in Upper Canada University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 9927 3 Wallace W Stewart 1915 The Family Compact A Chronicle of the Rebellion in Upper Canada Glasgow Brook Wilton Carol 2001 Popular Politics and Political Culture in Upper Canada 1800 1850 McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 2054 7 Woods Shirley E Jr 1980 Ottawa The Capital of Canada Toronto Doubleday Canada Statutes edit Stewart Derbishire and George Desbarats printers 1859 The consolidated statutes for Upper Canada Toronto Toronto Printed by S Derbishire and G Desbarats law printer to the Queen James Nickalls Jr 1831 The Statutes of the Province of Upper Canada Together with Such British Statutes Ordinances of Quebec and Proclamationsas relate to the said province Kingston Printed by F M Hill Further reading editClarke John Land Power and Economics on the Frontier of Upper Canada McGill Queen s University Press 2001 747pp ISBN 0 7735 2062 7 Di Mascio Anthony The Idea of Popular Schooling in Upper Canada Print Culture Public Discourse and the Demand for Education McGill Queen s University Press 2012 248 pages building a common system of schooling in the late 18th and early 19th centuries Dieterman Frank Government on fire the history and archaeology of Upper Canada s first Parliament Buildings Eastendbooks 2001 Dunham Eileen Political unrest in Upper Canada 1815 1836 McClelland and Stewart 1963 Errington Jane The lion the eagle and Upper Canada a developing colonial ideology McGill Queen s University Press 1987 Grabb Edward Duncan Jeff Baer Douglas 2000 Defining Moments and Recurring Myths Comparing Canadians and Americans after the American Revolution The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology 37 Johnston James Keith Historical essays on Upper Canada McClelland and Stewart 1975 Kilbourn William The Firebrand William Lyon Mackenzie and the Rebellion in Upper Canada 1956 Lewis Frank and M C Urquhart Growth and standard of living in a pioneer economy Upper Canada 1826 1851 Kingston Ont Institute for Economic Research Queen s University 1997 Rea J Edgar Rebellion in Upper Canada 1837 Manitoba Historical Society Transactions Series 3 Number 22 1965 66 online historiography Saul John Ralston Louis Hippolyte LaFontaine and Robert Baldwin 2010 online Winearls Joan Mapping Upper Canada 1780 1867 an annotated bibliography of manuscript and printed maps University of Toronto Press 1991 erdvrv Moving Here Staying Here The Canadian Immigrant Experience Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine at Library and Archives CanadaExternal links editUpper Canada Library and Archives Canada Upper Canada History of Ontario Ontario Government Upper Canada at The Canadian Encyclopedia Maritime History of the Great Lakes Early Canadiana Online digital collections 44 N 80 W 44 N 80 W 44 80 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Upper Canada amp oldid 1194664393, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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