- Upper Canada Rebellion
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Upper Canada Rebellion
caption=Battle of Windmill
date=7th December 1837 - 4th December 1838
place=Upper Canada (present dayOntario )
casus=
territory=Total defeat of the Rebels and the Hunters' Lodges, unification of Upper and Lower Canada into theProvince of Canada .
result=British victory
combatant1=United Kingdom Canadian Loyalists
combatant2=Hunters' LodgesRepublic of Canada
commander1=George Browne
Henry DundasJames FitzGibbon Allan MacNab
commander2=William Lyon Mackenzie Anthony Van Egmond Charles Duncombe Lester Hoadley KIANils von Schoultz
strength1=
strength2=
casualties1=
casualties2= The Upper Canada Rebellion was, along with theLower Canada Rebellion inLower Canada , a rebellion against the British colonial government in 1837 and 1838. Collectively they are also known as theRebellions of 1837 .Issues
In
Upper Canada , one of the most controversial issues in the early 19th century was the allocation of land. Much land had been set aside as "Crown reserves" or for the support of theChurch of England . These reserves of unworked land lowered the value of neighbouring farms because isolated farms were less efficient than farms close together, and people of other religious sects (particularly Methodists, Presbyterians and Roman Catholics) resented the preferential treatment of the official English church. The British government's system of allocating land was seen by many as excessively bureaucratic when compared with the American system.After theWar of 1812 the government of Upper Canada was run by the wealthy owners of most of this reserve land, known as theFamily Compact .As it had before the War of 1812, the government of Upper Canada continued to fear what it suspected might be a growing interest in American republicanism within the province. Reasons for this must be sought in the patterns of settlement across the province in the last half-century. Although the British had originally hoped that an orderly settlement in Upper Canada would inspire the former American colonies to abandon their democratic form of government, demographic realities intervened. 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 American settlers came after the American Revolution were attracted by the cheap land grants offered by Lieutenant-GovernorJohn Graves Simcoe to promote land settlement. Although these settlers, known as "late-Loyalists," were required to take an oath of allegiance to the British Crown in order to obtain land, 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. It was this reality that led American legislators to speculate that bringing Upper Canada into the American fold would be a "mere matter of marching." After the War of 1812 the government took active steps to prevent Americans from taking an oath of allegiance thereby making them ineligible to obtain land grants. Relations between the appointed Legislative Council and the elected Legislative Assembly, moreover, became increasingly strained in the years after the war over issues of both immigration and taxation.Reform movement
William Lyon Mackenzie , one of the more radical reformers in Upper Canada, made outright calls for republican government. Other reformers, however, such asRobert Baldwin , were less extreme in their views. Mackenzie, a Scottish immigrant, founded a reformist newspaper called "The Colonial Advocate" in 1824 in the Upper Canada capital of York (laterToronto ). He became active in politics, winning a seat in theLegislative Assembly of Upper Canada and eventually becoming the first mayor of the newly-renamed Toronto in 1834. Neither his radical reform movement nor Baldwin's moderate reform movement were very successful, and Baldwin resigned from the Executive Council of the then Lieutenant-Governor, SirFrancis Bond Head . Conservative opposition to Mackenzie also led to attacks on his newspaper press.Confrontation
:"See main article
Confrontation at Montgomery's Tavern "In 1836 and 1837, Mackenzie gathered support among farmers aroundToronto , who were sympathetic to his cause after an especially bad harvest in 1835. This had led to a recession, and in the following years, the banks had begun to tighten credit and recall loans. When the Lower Canada Rebellion broke out on October 9th, 1837, Bond Head sent all the British troops stationed in Toronto to help suppress it. With the regular troops gone Mackenzie and his followers seized a Toronto armoury, and organized an armed march downYonge Street , beginning atMontgomery's Tavern onDecember 4 ,1837 . But when the revolt began, Mackenzie hesitated in attacking the city. OnDecember 7 , Mackenzie's military leader,Anthony van Egmond , arrived. Van Egmond, a veteran on both sides of theNapoleonic Wars , advised immediate retreat, but Mackenzie remained hesitant. That same day, Colonel Moodie attempted to ride through a roadblock to warn Bond Head, but the rebels shot him. Mackenzie waited for Bond Head's force of about 1000 men and one cannon, led by ColonelJames Fitzgibbon , which outnumbered Mackenzie's approximately 400 rebels. The fight was very short and in less than half an hour the confrontation was over. The rebel forces dispersed.Meanwhile, a group of rebels from the settlement of London (in the west of Upper Canada), led by
Charles Duncombe , marched toward Toronto to support Mackenzie. ColonelAllan MacNab met them nearHamilton, Ontario onDecember 13 , and the rebels fled.The victorious Tory supporters burned homes and farms of the known rebels and suspected supporters. In the 1860s, some of the former rebels were compensated by the Canadian government for their lost property in the rebellion aftermath.
End of Rebellion
Mackenzie, Duncombe,
John Rolph and 200 supporters fled toNavy Island in theNiagara River , where they declared themselves theRepublic of Canada onDecember 13 . They obtained supplies from supporters in the United States resulting in British reprisals (seeCaroline Affair ). OnJanuary 13 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 [http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=38684] . The other major leaders, Van Egmond,Samuel Lount , and Peter Matthews were arrested by the British; Van Egmond died in prison, and Lount and Matthews were executed at 8 AM onApril 12 ,1838 in Toronto. Their last words were: "Mr. Jarvis, do your duty; we are prepared to meet death and our Judge."The rebels continued their raids into Canada, however, using the U.S. as a base of operations and cooperating with the U.S. Hunter Lodges, dedicated to the overthrow of British rule in Canada. The raids did not end until the rebels and Hunters were decisively defeated at the
Battle of the Windmill , nearly a year after the initial battle at Montgomery's Tavern.Consequences
Compared to the
Lower Canada Rebellion , the initial portion of the Upper Canada Rebellion was short and disorganized. However, the government inLondon , England was very concerned about the rebellion, especially in light of the strong popular support for the rebels in the United States and the more serious crisis in Lower Canada. Bond Head was recalled in late 1837 and replaced with SirGeorge Arthur who arrived in Toronto in March 1838 and sent Lord Durham, who was assigned to report on the grievances among the colonists and find a way to appease them. His report eventually led to greater autonomy in the Canadian colonies, and the union of Upper and Lower Canada into theProvince of Canada in 1840.A few of the rebels were hanged or transported, but most were
pardon ed. A general pardon (for everyone but Mackenzie) was issued in 1845, and Mackenzie himself was pardoned in 1849 and allowed to return to Canada, where he resumed his political career. Mackenzie was strongly disillusioned after his time in the United States, writing to his son that "after what I have seen here, I frankly confess to you that, had I passed nine years in the United States before, instead of after, the outbreak, I am sure I would have been the last man in America to be engaged in it" (Charles Lindsey, "The Life and Times of William Lyon Mackenzie and the Rebellion of 1837–38." 1862; cited by Betsy Dewar Boyce, "The Rebels of Hastings," 1992).ee also
See also
*Patriot War
*List of conflicts in Canada External links
*"Rebellion in Upper Canada, 1837" by J. Edgar Rea [http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/rebellion1837.shtml]
*Autobiography of William Lyon Mackenzie [http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=38684]
* [http://www.SamuelLount.com Samuel Lount Film] and [http://www.Samuel.Lount.org Samuel Lount's History] . The feature film is about the injustice of the system under the Family Compact's rule.
*"Mr. Jarvis, do your duty" by Serge Gorelsky [http://www.sg-chem.net/UC1838/]
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