- John Henry Dunn
John Henry Dunn (1792 –
April 21 1854 ) was a businessman and political figure inCanada West . He served as Receiver General forUpper Canada from 1820 to 1841.He was born on
Saint Helena of English parents in 1792. In 1820, he was named Receiver General and left for York (laterToronto ). During Dunn's term in this post, an agreement regarding sharing of customs revenues between Upper andLower Canada remained unresolved for some time, forcing him borrowing money from private lendors to finance government expenditures. In 1822, he was named to the province's Legislative Council. Dunn also served as president of theWelland Canal Company from 1825 to 1833 and helped to raise funds for the project from both public and private sources. In 1836, he was named to theExecutive Council of Upper Canada . However, three weeks later, Dunn resigned with his fellow councillors when lieutenant governor SirFrancis Bond Head refused to take the advice of the council into account with respect to the governing of the province. He was named Receiver General for the newly-formedProvince of Canada in 1841 and was elected to representToronto in the Legislative Assembly in the same year. In 1843, he resigned from his post to protest Governor Metcalfe's refusal to consult the Executive Council on patronage appointments. After he was defeated in an attempt to gain reelection in 1844, he returned to England the following year with his family.He died in
London in 1854.His son, Lieutenant
Alexander Roberts Dunn , later received theVictoria Cross for his role in theCharge of the Light Brigade .External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=3889 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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