- Henry John Boulton
Henry John Boulton (1790 –
June 18 1870 ) was a lawyer, judge and political figure inUpper Canada .He was born in
Kensington ,England , the son of D’Arcy Boulton, in 1790. Some time later, the family settled inNew York state and then moved to Upper Canada around 1800. He studied law at York (Toronto ) and then atLincoln's Inn inLondon . He was called to the English bar and, in 1816, the bar of Upper Canada. In 1818, he succeeded John Beverley Robinson as solicitor general and, in 1829, succeeded Robinson as attorney general. In 1830, he was elected to represent Niagara in theLegislative Assembly of Upper Canada . He instigated several expulsions ofWilliam Lyon Mackenzie from the assembly. In 1832, Lord Goderich, the colonial secretary, asked the provincial administration to stop attacking Mackenzie; Boulton was dismissed from office after expressing his opposition to these instructions.After he protested his dismissal, he was offered the post of chief justice of Newfoundland in 1833. He introduced a new system of selecting juries based on the method then used in England. He set up a law society in the province and set up regulations governing the admission of new lawyers to the bar. He also amended a number of traditional arrangements regarding credit in the fishing industry. Many of these changes were not well-received. After representatives from the colony presented their concerns in London, Boulton was removed from office.
He returned to private practice in Toronto. In 1841, he was elected to the
1st Parliament of the Province of Canada representing Niagara. In parliament, Boulton supportedRobert Baldwin 's concept of responsible government. His support of the reformers resulted in his defeat in the next election but ,in 1846, he was appointed to the Executive Council and elected in Norfolk in 1847. He proposed an amendment to theRebellion Losses Bill which excluded those convicted of treason from benefits which helped sell the bill inCanada West . After 1851, he retired from politics but continued to practice law until about 1860.He died at Toronto, Ontario in 1870.
His brother,
George Strange Boulton , was also a member of the Legislative Assembly and served on the Legislative Council.External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=4311 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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