RECORDS of NIAGARA 1805-1811 the Sudden
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1812; the War, and Its Moral : a Canadian Chronicle
'^^ **7tv»* ^^ / ^^^^T^\/ %*^-'%p^ ^<>.*^7^\/ ^o^*- "o /Vi^/\ co^i^^.% Atii^/^-^^ /.' .*'% y A-^ ; .O*^ . <f,r*^.o^" X'^'^^V %--f.T*\o^^ V^^^^\<^ •^ 4.^ tri * -0 a5 «4q il1 »"^^ 11E ^ ^ THE WAR, AND ITS MORAL CANADIAN CHRONICLE. BY WILLIAM F?"C0FFIN, Esquire, FORMERLT SHERIFF OF THE DISTRICT OF MONTREAI,, LIEUT.-COLONKL, STAFF, ACIITB POROB, CANADA, AND H. M. AGENT FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF THE ORDNANCE ESTATES, CANADA. PRINTED BY JOHN LOVELL, ST. NICHOLAS STREET. 1864. E354 C^y 2. Entered, according to the Act of the Provincial Parliament, in the year one thousand eight hundred and sixty-four, by William F. Coffin, in the OfBce of the Registrar of the Province of Canada. Ea t\}t J^igfjt pjonourable ^ir (SbmtmtJ SSalhtr f cab, iarond, ^er Pajtstg's Post '§ononmbk ^ribg Council, ^nU late ffiobernor ©cneral anli C0mmanKcr4tt=(H;fjicf of IBxitislj Nortfj America, ©Ws (jrattatlinw (!>Uv0uicU 0f the ^m of I8I2 is rcspcctftillp tirtitcatEU, fig fjis fattfjful anU grateful .Scrfaant, WILLIAM P. COFFIN. Ottawa, 2nd January, 1864, TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE SIR EDMUND WALKER HEAD, BARONET. My dear Sir,—^I venture to appeal to your respected name as the best introduction for the little work which I" do myself the honour to dedicate to you. To you, indeed, it owes its existence. You conferred upon me the appointment I have the honour to hold under the Crown in Canada, and that appointment has given life to an idea, long cherished in embryo. The management of the Ordnance Lands in this Province has thrown me upon the scenes of the most notable events of the late war. -
Lt.-Governors of Lower Canada
36 STATISTICAL TEAR-BOOK LT.-GOVERNORS OF NEW BRUNSWICK. 1784. Thomas Carleton. 1824. John M. Bliss (Administrator). 1803. Gabriel Ludlow (Administrator). 1824. Maj.-Gen. Sir H. Douglas. 1808. Edward Winslow 1829. William Black (Administrator). 1808. Lt.-Col. George Johnstone (Admin.' 1831. Maj.-Gen. Sir A. Campbell, 1809. Maj.-Gen. Martin Hunter 1837. Maj.-Gen. Sir J. Harvey. 1811. Maj.-Gen. William Balfour 1841. Sir W. Colebrooke. 1812. Maj.-Gen. Geo. Stracy Smyth 1848. Sir Edmund Head. 1813. Maj.-Gen. Sir Thos. Saumarez 1854. Hon. Sir J. H. T. Manners-Sutton 1816. Lt.-Col. Harris W. Hailes 1861. Hon. A. H. Gordon. 1817. Maj.-Gen. Geo. S. Smyth 1862. Col. J. Cole (Administrator). 1823. Ward Chipman (Admin'r). 1866. Major-Gen. Hastings-Doyle (Ad m.) LT.-GOVERNORS OF LOWER CANADA. 1766. Guy Carleton. 1791. A. Clarke. 1770. H. T. Cramahe (Acting.) 1796. R. Prescott. 1784. Henry Hamilton. 1799. R. S. Milnes. 1785. Henry Hope. 1808. Sir F. N. Burton. LT.-GOVERNORS OF UPPER CANADA. 1792. Col. John G. Simcoe. 1813. Sir G. Drummond (Administrator' 1796. Peter Russell (Administrator). 1815. Sir G. Murray 1799. Peter Hunter. 1815. Sir F. P. Robinson 1805. Alex. Grant (Administrator). 1817. Samuel Smith. ,, 1806. Francis Gore. 1818. Sir Peregrine Maitland. 1811. Sir Isaac Brock (Administrator). 1828. Sir John Colbome. 1812. Sir Roger H. Sheafe 1836. Sir Francis Bond Head. 1813. Major-Gen. F. de Rottenburg. 1838. Sir George Arthur. LT.-GOVERNORS OF CAPE BRETON. 1784. Major J. F. W. Desbarres. 1800. Gen. Despard (Administrator). 1787. Lt.-Col. Maearmick. 1807. Brig. Gen. Nepean n 1795. D. Mathews (Administrator). -
Canadian Archæology. an Essay
UC-NRLF Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive in 2008 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation littp://www.archive.org/details/canadianarcholOOkingrich : Canadian Archeology, AN ESSAY. WILLIAM KIXGSFORD. MONTREAL WM. DRYSDALE & CO., 232 ST. JAMES STREET. 1886. ! ! Ach Gott ! die Kunst ist lang, Und kurz ist unser Leben. Mir wird, bei meinem kritischen Bestreben, Doch oft um Kopf und Busen bang. Wie schwer sind niclit die Mittel zu erwerben, Durch die man zu den Quellen steigt Und eh' man nur den halben Weg erreicht Musz wohl eiu armer Teufel sterben. Goethe, Faust. Ah me ! but art is long And human life is short. Oft in the throes of critic thought Have head and heart ceased to be strong. How hard the means which in our effort lie To reach the sources of what mortals know, But ere a man can half the distance go Verily, poor devil, must he die. Your home born projects prove ever the best ; they are so easy and familiar ; they put too much learning in their things now-a-days. Ben Johnson, Bartholomew Fair, Ist das Licht das Eigenthum der Flamme, wo nicht gar des Ker- zendochts? Ich enthalte mich jedes Urtheils liber solche Frage, und freue mich nur dariiber, dass Ihr dem armen Dochte, der sich brennend verzehrt, eine kleine Vergiitung verwilligen wolt fiir sein groszes gemeinnittziges Beleuchtungsverdienst Heine. Is the light the property of the flame, if it in no wa,Y be of the taper wick ? I abstain from any judgment over such a question, and I only rejoice that you are willing to make some slight amends to the poor wick, which consumes itself in burning, for its noble, universal, merit- orious service of enlightenment ! Canadian Archeology. -
Lakeview: Journey from Yesterday Kathleen A
Lakeview: Journey From Yesterday Kathleen A. Hicks LAKEVIEW: JOURNEY FROM YESTERDAY is published by The Friends of the Mississauga Library System 301 Burnhamthorpe Road, West, Mississauga, Ontario, L5B 3Y3 Copyright © 2005 by the Mississauga Library System All rights reserved Lakeview: Journey From Yesterday ISBN 0-9697873-6-7 II Written by Kathleen A. Hicks Cover design by Stephen Wahl Graphic layout by Joe and Joyce Melito Lakeview Sign by Stephen Wahl Back Cover photo by Stephen Wahl No part of this publication may be produced in any form without the written permission of the Mississauga Library System. Brief passages may be quoted for books, newspaper or magazine articles, crediting the author and title. For photographs contact the source. Extreme care has been taken where copyright of pictures is concerned and if any errors have occurred, the author extends her utmost apology. Care also has been taken with research material. If anyone encounters any discrepancy with the facts contained herein, (Region of Peel Archives) please send your written information to the author in care of the Mississauga Library System. Lakeview: Journey From Yesterday Other Books By Kathleen A. Hicks (Stephen Wahl) III The Silverthorns: Ten Generations in America Kathleen Hicks’ V.I.P.s of Mississauga The Life & Times of the Silverthorns of Cherry Hill Clarkson and its Many Corners Meadowvale: Mills to Millennium VIDEO Riverwood: The Estate Dreams are Made of IV Dedication dedicate this book to my family, the Groveses of Lakeview, where I was born. My grandfather, Thomas Jordan, and my father, Thomas Henry, were instrumental in building many houses and office buildings across southern Ontario. -
28-40 OB V35#1 Ap 2017.Pdf
The aspirations and disappointments of Charles Fothergill in Upper Canada, Ontario ’s pioneer ornithologis t/naturalist, from 1817 to 1840 John W. Sabean Introduction Charles Fothergill (1782-1840, Figure 1) For the general background of those was the first naturalist actively engaged articles, as everyone must now do, I in ornithological studies in southern relied heavily on James L. Baillie, Jr.’s Ontario, but due to a combination of article, “Charles Fothergill, 1782-1840”, misfortune and mismanagement, his published in an issue of the Canadian efforts did not lead immediately to an Historical Review (Baillie 1944). Baillie advancement in natural history. It was wrote nearly three quarters of a century not until a hundred years after his death ago. What prompted his effort was the that his extraordinary achievements “discovery” (in several descendants’ came to light. Recently, I wrote a series homes) of 16 manuscripts between 1931 of articles for the newsletter of the Pick - and 1944. More than 40 years later Paul ering Township Historical Society about Romney made Fothergill the subject of Charles Fothergill’s years in Pickering his doctoral dissertation, a distillation of Township where he lived from 1831 to which was published in the Dictionary of 1837. I then followed those up with Canadian Biography (Romney 1988). another article on the “Nature Notes of Even that is more than a quarter centu - Charles Fothergill between 1831 and ry ago. While I was particularly interest - 1837”, specifically those notes that per - ed in Fothergill’s contributions to the tain to Pickering Township. Subsequent - history of Pickering Township, I was also ly, I published all of the articles in a spe - interested to see if Baillie’s and Romney’s cial edition of the newsletter (Sabean assessments of Fothergill might change 2015). -
Relics of Brock: a N Investigation
Relics of Brock: A n Investigation In the early morning hours of 13 October 18 12 Major-General Sir Isaac Brock, K.B., "President, administering the Government of the Province of Upper Canada, and. Commanding His Majesty's Forces therein, etc., etc., etc.",2 fell in battle at Queenston Heights, Upper Canada. Almost a century later his grand- nieces, Henrietta and Emilia Tupper of Guernsey, presented Canada with a uni- form coat presumed to have been worn by Brock in his last battle, a sash of the "ceinture flkchke" type, and a cravat also said to have belonged to the donors' ancestor. The first two relics are now among the many interesting exhibits in the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa, in whose custody they have been since 1967. There are, nonetheless, some problems with these artefacts. First, the donors could not provide any evidence attesting to their historical background; second, the reputation of these relics is marred by what appear to be discrepancies found especially in the secondary literature, and third, there are no indications of any real investigation ever having been undertaken after their arrival in Canada. This paper is an attempt to determine the facts of the case. A multiplicity of sources is used in the course of this investigation. Foremost among these are mostly private communications preserved in archives, both pub- 1 The author has received much help from a number of people, especially from Captain Michael H.T. Mellish, M.V.O., O.B.E., Guernsey; Mrs. Cynthia B. Eberts, former Curator of Costume, McCord Museum, and Mrs. -
Edward Jessup of West Farms, Westchester Co., New York and His
Gc 929.2 J4 985J 1192493 OENEAL-OGY COLLECTION ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY GC 929.2 3 1833 00855 5853 J4985J EDWARD JESSUP attU 5)fe Destmlrants. Edwa rd J[essup WEST FARMS, WESTCHESTER CO., NEW YORK, HIS DESCENDANTS. SEitfj an Introtiuction anti an ^ppcntitx: THE LATTER CONTAINING RECORDS OF OTHER AMERICAN FAMILIES OF THE NAME, WITH SOME ADDITIONAL MEMORANDA. BY REV. HENRY GRISWOLD JESUP. I set the people after their families. Nehemiah iv. 13. CAMBRIDGE: ^rfbatcls ^tinteli for t|)c Slutljot, BY JOHN WILSOX AND SON. 1887. Copyright, 1887, By Rev. Henry Griswold Jesup. ^ 1192193 CSi TO MORRIS K. JESUP, I ^^ AT WHOSE SUGGESTION THE WORK WAS UNDERTAKEN, AND WHOSE UNFAILING INTEREST HAS FOLLOWED IT TO > ITS COMPLETION, ^ THIS HISTORY AND RECORD OF THE LIFE AND THE DESCENDANTS OF If/S AMERICAN ANCESTOR Eg (UTortiialla Jlngcrifieli. PREFACE. THE present work was begun in 1879 at the solicita- tion of Morris K. Jesup, Esq., of New York city, and has been prosecuted during intervals of leisure up to the date of publication, a period of nearly eight years. The amount of time and labor involved can be justly estimated only by those who have been engaged in simi- lar undertakings. The materials have been drawn from a great variety of sources, and their collection and arrange- ment, the harmonizing of discrepancies, and, in extreme cases, the judicious guessing at probabilities, have in- volved more of perplexity than the ordinary reader would suppose. Records of every description, and almost with- out number, have been examined either personally or through the officials having them in charge, and in one case as distant as Cape Town in South Africa, — records of families, churches, parishes, towns, counties, in foreign lands as well as in the United States ; land records and probate records, cemetery inscriptions, local histories, and general histories, wherever accessible. -
Brockton's Name Recalls Isaac Brock's Cousin James
The Newsletter of the Friends of Fort York and Garrison Common v. 13 No. 1 Mar. 2009 1 Brockton’s Name Recalls Isaac Brock’s 6 Administrator’s Report Cousin James 6 Council Approves Design Team for 3 Henry Bowyer Lane’s Fort at Toronto, 1842 June Callwood Park 3 Conversation with Colin Upton 7 First Steps to Renewing the Fort 4 In Review 8 Upcoming Events 5 New Committee Chair Brockton’s Name Recalls Isaac Brock’s Cousin James Dan Brock, John England, Gillian Lenfestey, Stephen Otto, Guy St-Denis and Stuart Sutherland contributed to this article. Many ordinary people enjoy more than Andy Warhol’s fifteen minutes of fame before resuming their modest lives. James Brock’s time in the limelight of Upper Canada lasted about fifteen months from October 1811 until late 1812, but left a lasting mark on Toronto. Paradoxically, his imprint on the city in the name of ‘Brockton’ has proven more indelible than Brock Street, as lower Spadina was called until 1884 in honour of his famous kinsman, Sir Isaac Brock. Frequently said to be Isaac’s brother or nephew, James was actually a first cousin. Isaac’s father John and James’s father Henry were brothers. James was born at St. Peter Port, Guernsey, on April 3 1773, to Henry Brock and Suzanne de Sausmarez, both members of prominent families. He was raised in comfortable circumstances in “Belmont,” a large house with extensive grounds, and likely began his education in one of the local clergy-run schools where he was taught in French, the working language on the island until the late 19th century. -
ONTARIO (Canada) Pagina 1 Di 3 ONTARIO Denominato Dal Lago Ontario, Che Prese Il Suo Nome Da Un Linguaggio Nativo Americano
ONTARIO (Canada) ONTARIO Denominato dal Lago Ontario, che prese il suo nome da un linguaggio nativo americano, derivante da onitariio=lago bellissimo, oppure kanadario=bellissimo, oppure ancora dall’urone ontare=lago. A FRANCIA 1604-1763 A GB 1763-1867 - Parte del Quebec 1763-1791 - Come Upper Canada=Canada Superiore=Alto Canada 24/08/1791-23/07/1840 (effettivamente dal 26/12/1791) - Come Canada Ovest=West Canada 23/07/1840-01/07/1867 (effettivo dal 5/02/1841) (unito al Canada Est nella PROVINCIA DEL CANADA) - Garantito Responsabilità di Governo 11/03/1848-1867 PROVINCIA 1/07/1867- Luogotenenti-Governatori GB 08/07/1792-10/04/1796 John GRAVES SIMCOE (1752+1806) 20/07/1796-17/08/1799 Peter RUSSELL (f.f.)(1733+1808) 17/08/1799-11/09/1805 Peter HUNTER (1746+1805) 11/09/1805-25/08/1806 Alexander GRANT (f.f.)(1734+1813) 25/08/1806-09/10/1811 Francis GORE (1°)(1769+1852) 09/10/1811-13/10/1812 Sir Isaac BROCK (f.f.)(1769+1812) 13/10/1812-19/06/1813 Sir Roger HALE SHEAFFE (f.f.)(1763+1851) 19/06/1813-13/12/1813 Francis DE ROTTENBURG, BARON DE ROTTENBURG (f.f.) (1757+1832) 13/12/1813-25/04/1815 Sir Gordon DRUMMOND (f.f.)(1771+1854) 25/04/1815-01/07/1815 Sir George MURRAY (Provvisorio)(1772-1846) 01/07/1815-21/09/1815 Sir Frederick PHILIPSE ROBINSON (Provvisorio)(1763+1852) 21/09/1815-06/01/1817 Francis GORE (2°) 11/06/1817-13/08/1818 Samuel SMITH (f.f.)(1756+1826) 13/08/1818-23/08/1828 Sir Peregrine MAITLAND (1777+1854) 04/11/1828-26/01/1836 Sir John COLBORNE (1778+1863) 26/01/1836-23/03/1838 Sir Francis BOND HEAD (1793+1875) 05/12/1837-07/12/1837 -
Cultural Heritage Baseline Conditions Report - 2014
GARDINER EXPRESSWAY AND LAKE SHORE BOULEVARD EAST RECONFIGURATION ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT Cultural Heritage Baseline Conditions Report - 2014 i Gardiner Expressway and Lake Shore Blvd East Reconfiguration Environmental Assessment Cultural Heritage Baseline Conditions Report 2014 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................. 1 1.1. Purpose of the Baseline Conditions Report ......................................................... 1 1.2. Study Area ......................................................................................................... 1 2.0 STUDY METHODOLOGY .................................................................................................. 5 2.1. Data Gaps .......................................................................................................... 5 3.0 DESCRIPTION OF BASELINE CONDITIONS ........................................................................ 6 3.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................... 6 3.1.1. Old Town of York and St. Lawrence Neighbourhood .............................. 6 3.1.1.1. Summary Historic Context ......................................................... 8 3.1.1.2. Cultural Heritage Resources Inventory .................................... 11 3.1.2. Lower Yonge .................................................................................................... 13 3.1.2.1. Summary Historic -
Slave in Upper Canada William Renwick Riddell
Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Volume 14 | Issue 2 Article 6 1923 Slave in Upper Canada William Renwick Riddell Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/jclc Part of the Criminal Law Commons, Criminology Commons, and the Criminology and Criminal Justice Commons Recommended Citation William Renwick Riddell, Slave in Upper Canada, 14 J. Am. Inst. Crim. L. & Criminology 249 (May 1923 to February 1924) This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology by an authorized editor of Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. THE SLAVE IN UPPER CANADA I WILLIAM RENwI-Ci RIDDELL The dictum of Lord Chief Justice Holt: "As soon as a slave enters England he becomes free,"2 was succeeded by the decision of the Court of King's Bench to the same effect in the celebrated case of Somerset v. Stewart3 where Lord Mansfield is reported to have said: "The air of England has long been too pure for a slave and every man is free who breathes it." James Somerset, 5 a negro slave of Charles Stewart in Jamaica, had been brought by his master to England "to attend and abide with him and to carry him back as soon as his business should be trans- acted." The negro refused to go back, whereupon he was put in irons and taken on board the ship Ann and Mary lying in the Thames and bound for Jamaica. -
Mapping 1812 a Teaching Guide by the Association for Canadian Studies
MAPPING 1812 A teaching guide by the Association for Canadian Studies CONTENT UNIT 1 – The War of 1812 and the 03 Canadian-American Borderland J.I. Little UNIT 2 – French Canadian Participation EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, ASSOCIATION 06 in the War of 1812 FOR CANADIAN STUDIES Donald Cuccioletta Jack Jedwab UNIT 3 – The Houdenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy: COLLABORATORS (AUTHORS) 09 Neutrality and Allies in the War of 1812 J.I. Little Donald Cuccioletta Donald Cuccioletta Susan W. Hardwick UNIT 4 – The Burning of York and Washington Barbara J. Messamore and Canadian National Identity Cecilia Morgan 13 Susan W. Hardwick Luc Lépine Hector Mackenzie UNIT 5 – The Story of the Star-Spangled Banner LEAD RESEARCHER 18 Susan W. Hardwick Julie Perrone UNIT 6 – Sir Isaac Brock and the War of 1812 REVISORS 21 Barbara J. Messamore Rose Fine-Meyer Jan Haskings-Winner UNIT 7 – Tecumseh Robert Mewhinney Byron Stevenson 25 Barbara J. Messamore TRANSLATOR UNIT 8 – Laura Secord’s Walk Marie-Kristine Landry 29 Cecilia Morgan CURRICULUM SUPPORTED UNIT 9 – The French Canadian Militia Manitoba Grade 11 – Social Studies 32 Luc Lépine Nova Scotia Grade 11 – History Ontario Grade 12 – History UNIT 10 – A Diplomatic Ending: The Treaty of Ghent Prince Edward Island Grade 12 – History 36 and Other Measures to End the War of 1812 Québec Secondary Cycle 2 – Hector Mackenzie Social Sciences: History Saskatchewan Grade 12 – History The Association for Canadian Studies acknowledges the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canadian Studies Program of the Department of Canadian Heritage for this project. CRedITS FOR COVER PHOTOS: James FitzGibbon’s 1820 testimonial regarding Laura Secord, public domain Sir Isaac Brock, painting by George Theodore Berthon (1883), public domain Map of Upper Canada, Library and Archives Canada Québec from above, Library and Archives Canada / Acc.