- George Rykert
George Rykert (
August 8 1797 –November 1 1857 ) was a businessman, surveyor and political figure inUpper Canada .He was born in
Rhinebeck, New York in 1797 and came to the Niagara District with his family around 1810. He served with the local militia during theWar of 1812 . After the war, he settled at St. Catharines and taught school there. He trained as a surveyor and became a deputy land surveyor for the province in 1821. He undertook a number of projects, including laying out a plan for the expanding community at St. Catharines and helping prepare estimates for a canal system on theSaint Lawrence River . He was involved in an unsuccessful contract to complete a section of theRideau Canal near the current site of Smiths Falls in 1827. In 1829, he opened a general store and wharf at St. Catherines with his brother-in-law; he also became involved in a distillery and agristmill . He became a justice of the peace in the Niagara District in 1832. In 1834, he was elected to theLegislative Assembly of Upper Canada in the 2nd riding of Lincoln; he was reelected in 1836.Rykert supported the sale of the
clergy reserves with the funds raised going to fund public works and schools as well as the needs of all religious groups represented in the province. He opposed the union of Upper andLower Canada and responsible government as described in Lord Durham's report. He was defeated byWilliam Hamilton Merritt , a former political ally, in a bid for a seat in the legislative assembly for the united province. In 1843, he became the agent in St. Catharines for the Commercial Bank of the Midland District. In 1845, he became a member of the police board for the town; he was elected to the town council in 1855 and served as reeve from 1856 to 1857. He also served as agent for a number of companies in the region and was president of the Port Dalhousie and Thorold Railway.He died in St Catharines in 1857 of a chest
cancer .His son John Charles later became a member of the
Canadian House of Commons .External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=4178 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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