f5 • SANTA »A*IAitA * ^ m . O VIN»OinV3 JO « 5fi « Aimi/\iNn iHx o \ e vswrrt viNVt • 9 5fi / • AuniMNn mi •. • THf lIMAkI O* C^ ^£ n • VINlCMIlva iO • o THC UNlVtRSITT o as B « SANTA tAlttAltA «. o riynw vtNVt o O Of CAllfOKNIA a;S Sf\ « The UNtVtRSITI e o c > > 5 5 1 ? H ^1K(: parftman ^ebition THE MAKERS OF CANADA VOL. XV LORD SYDENHAM ,^2:i^^^^^^ o^>^-^' THE MAKERS OF CANADA LOED SYDENHAM BY ADAM SHORTT TORONTO MORANG & CO., LIMITED 1910 Entered according to Act of the Parliament of Canada in the year 1908 by Morang & Oo., Limited, in the Department of Agriculture. 3c^ LIRRABY I UNIVERSITY OF CAMFORiNU ] 5 I SAISTA liAllBARA PREFACE THE present volume, with the exception of the portion dealing with the earlier years of Lord Sydenham's life, is based entirely upon first-hand materials, many of which are still in manuscript in the Canadian Archives. The facts for the earlier portion of Lord Sydenham's career have been taken mainly from the memoir of his life, drawn from family papers compiled by his brother G. Poulett Scrope, and published in 1843. The same volume contains a narrative of Lord Sydenham's administration in Canada, prepared by his civil sec- retary, Mr. W. T. C. Murdoch, and includes several important private letters to members of his family and to other friends, particularly Lord John Russell. From contemporary newspapers and other periodi- cals and pamphlets, British and Canadian, has been derived much important information, as also from the British and Canadian blue books of the period. The most important sources, however, as revealing the inner policy of the colonial office and of the Canadian governor, are found in the private and confidential despatches between the colonial sec- retary. Lord John Russell, and Lord Sydenham, as also in the correspondence with various parties in Canada contained in the letter-books of the Gov- ernor and the civil secretary. The manuscript volumes containing these papers have been lately LORD SYDENHAM transferred from the office of the governor-general to the Canadian Archives, and are now included in the G Series of the Archives collections. Owing to the nature of the series in which this volume appears, special references to authorities are not given in foot-notes, but, wherever possible, the most important statements are given in the words of the original documents. In treating the life of Lord Sydenham as one of the "Makers of Canada" only those events have been dealt with which had a more or less direct bearing upon his training for the important duties which awaited him in Canada, or which were con- nected with his many-sided activities as governor- general of British North America. Ottawa, October 19th, 1908, A.S. CONTENTS CHAPTER I P»ge EARLY YEARS AND FOREIGN TRAVEL . 1 CHAPTER II ENTRY UPON PUBLIC LIFE ... 11 CHAPTER II T VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF TRADE . 26 CHAPTER IV A CABINET MINISTER .... 43 CHAPTER V GOVERNOR-GENERAL OF CANADA- ORIGIN OF THE CANADIAN PROBLEM . . 69 CHAPTER VI GOVERNMENT UNDER THE CONSTITUTIONAL ACT 73 CHAPTER VII LORD DURHAM'S REPORT ... 89 CHAPTER VIII A TANGLED PROBLEM . . . .109 CONTENTS CHAPTER IX Page A NEW TYPE OF GOVERNOR . . . 129 CHAPTER X FIRST IMPRESSIONS . . . .147 CHAPTER XI RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT ... 163 CHAPTER XII RADICAL CHANGES REQUIRED . . .177 CHAPTER XIII THE UNION PROBLEM ... 191 CHAPTER XIV AN ANALYSIS AND A FORECAST . . .216 CHAPTER XV THE CLERGY RESERVES . , . 237 CHAPTER XVI A SURVEY OF HIS WHOLE DOMAIN . . 253 CHAPTER XVII CONSUMMATING THE UNION . . .271 CHAPTER XVII I ELECTION AND OPENING OF THE FIRST UNITED PARLIAMENT . . . .287 CONTENTS CHAPTER XIX Page RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT IN PRACTICE . 301 CHAPTER XX LEADING GOVERNMENT MEASURES . . 315 CHAPTER XXI THE CLOSE OF A SESSION AND A LIFE . 331 CHAPTER XXII SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION . . .345 INDEX ..... 359 CHAPTER I EARLY YEARS AND FOREIGN TRAVEL THE place of Lord Sydenham as one of the makers of Canada is somewhat unique. That a stranger to Canada, occupying the position of governor-general for less than two years, should have exercised so decisive an influence on the polit- ical destinies of the country, impHed the conjunc- tion of notable personal qualities and an important national crisis. It implied, on the one hand, a very critical condition of the vital interests of the coun- try, the balancing of great forces in a condition of unstable equilibrium susceptible of being commit- ted to any of several different futures. On the other hand, it implied certain striking quaUties of personality, which fitted the governor to handle firmly, yet discreetly, difficult and complex situa- tions, in such a manner as to bring confidence out of uncertainty, and commit to a definite and logical development a conflicting mass of dangerous and fateful forces. Looked at from the point of view of its significance for Canada, Lord Sydenham's life, before his appointment as governor-general, is in- teresting chiefly as showing what were the original qualities of his personality, and what activities and influences shaped their development and prepared 1 LORD SYDENHAM him to deal with the critical situation which he had to face, not only in Canada, but in other British provinces of North America. In comparing the details of his life with those of previous Canadian governors, we recognize that though his predecessors numbered among them several very able and conscientious men, yet in no case did their social surroundings and practical ex- perience before assuming their duties in Canada prepare them to take a really intelligent and sym- pathetic view of the political, economic, and social conditions with which they were to deal. As a rule, they failed to estimate at all correctly the actual needs of the colony, or the probable future which was in store for it. In these respects Lord Syden- ham's previous training and experience gave him a great advantage over his predecessors. Not only his personal inclinations, but his business and polit- ical associations had prepared him to be much more intelligently responsive to Canadian condi- tions than the majority of that class of English- men from which colonial governors were common- ly chosen. The fact that he was the spontaneous choice of the city of Manchester as its representative in the House of Commons signified much, for Manchester was the most typical of those enlightened and enterprising centres of English industry which gave to Britain her unique supremacy during the nine- teenth century. It was the special centre also of 2 AN ENLIGHTENED REFORMER those liberal and progressive ideals looked upon at the time as almost revolutionary in their radical optimism, but now regarded as the commonplaces of daily practice. Lord Sydenham, as we shall see, was in thorough sympathy with these new and enlightened ideals, and yet, as a man of wide ex- perience of the world and its movements, he was not so radical in details as some of his friends and supporters, nor so impatient with existing condi- tions as to demand that the necessary reforms should be put in practice immediately and com- pletely. He recognized that that was most likely to endure which was accomplished gradually, and which carried with it the support and confidence of the intelligent body of the people. As a statesman and cabinet minister. Lord Syd- enham frankly professed his allegiance to the new standards of liberty and responsibility, even when it involved public disagreement with some of his ministerial colleagues. Some of these colleagues were to live to see his aspirations carried into prac- tice by those who were at that time political op- ponents. In the light of the influence which Lord Sydenham was to exercise on the future of Cana- dian political development, these features of his life and character are of much interest and importance. We shall consider, therefore, more particularly those circumstances and incidents of his earlier career which prepared him for his work in Canada. It will be necessary also to trace, in outline at least, the 3 LORD SYDENHAM conditions which led up to the crisis in Canadian affairs which furnished at once the need and the opportunity for a man of Lord Sydenham's quali- ties. Having furnished a sketch of the man and of his problem, we may then follow with some detail his conduct of Canadian affairs. One of those large and permanent mercantile establishments characteristic of the stability and integrity of British trade, and partaking in the permanence of its connections and the respect- ability of its traditions something of the character of the aristocratic institutions of the country, was the firm of J. Thomson, T. Bonar & Co. of Lon- don. For upwards of a century this house had been engaged in the Russian-Baltic trade, one of the oldest of the British mercantile connections, and had its regular establishment in St. Petersburg as well as in London. The heads of such important trading-houses were pretty certain to be connected sooner or later with the British aristocracy, which in no small measure has been indebted to these alliances for the main- tenance of its wealth and its physical and mental vigour. John Thomson, father of the future Cana- dian governor, added to his name, in 1820, that of Poulett m memory of his mother, the heiress of one branch of the ancient family of Poulett in Somersetshire. He married in 1781 the daughter of Dr. Jacob of Salisbury. Charles Edward Poulett Thomson, afterwards Lord Sydenham, was born at 4 PERSONAL INHERITANCE Waverley Abbey in Surrey on September 13th, 1799. He was the youngest of nine children. His mother being in poor health at the time of his birth, he entered upon life with a somewhat im- paired constitution, which greatly hampered him in later years, and contributed to his early death. Even as a child he was noted for his natural gifts of grace and beauty, which afterwards assisted in no small degree in winning the favour and sup- port of those who are essential to majorities, but are more susceptible to manners than to methods. His earher education was obtained chiefly through private schools and tutors, and in the fateful year of Waterloo, at the early age of sixteen, he entered upon the practical education of life in the St. Petersburg office of his father's firm. There he re- mained for upwards of two years, enjoying the freedom and educative influence of what was at that time one of the most interesting social centres in Europe. His connections gave him the entree to the most distinguished society of St. Petersburg, and his personal qualities gained for him the special inti- macy of such interesting and highly cultured mem- bers of the Russian nobility as Count Woronzoff", Russian ambassador to England during the period of the French Revolution, Count and Countess SabloukofF, special friends of his family, and the Princess Galitzin. All of these were highly cultured people, thoroughly versed in European politics and 5 LORD SYDENHAM diplomacy, and patrons of art and letters. In such society, at his impressionable age, young Thom- son's natural charm of manner was specially cul- tivated. Nor was his general education neglected, for he maintained an intimate correspondence with his former tutors, and received from them valuable counsel as to his studies. Owing to illness he returned to Britain in the autumn of 1817, and immediately afterwards accompanied his mother and two youngest sisters to Nice, where the winter was spent. The following summer was devoted to European travel, and the next winter was passed at Naples. Another tour through the south and west of France occupied much of the following summer. Having availed himself of the varied edu- cational advantages to be derived from travel, and his health being fully restored, young Thomson once more returned to mercantile pursuits in the London house. The interesting experiences, however, of his life in St. Petersburg, and the social and other ad- vantages which he had enjoyed in foreign travel, rendered it difficult for one of his eager tempera- ment to settle down immediately to the routine of mercantile life. His tastes and experience inclined him strongly towards a career in diplomacy. His extensive acquaintance with European languages, particularly Russian, French, German, and Itahan, his refined manners and courtly address, and his intimate associations with several important per- 6 IN BUSINESS AT ST. PETERSBURG sonages in the diplomatic service, rendered his choice a very natural one, and gave reasonable promise of success. But, amid the many claims for such positions at that time, his influence was not sufficient to procure him a suitable appointment, and his failure did much to reconcile him to a life of business to which he now seriously devoted him- self. Having acquired a thorough familiarity with the details of the business in London, he returned, in 1821, to the office of the firm in St. Peters- burg, with a share in the management and profits of the business. Taking the land route by way of Berlin and Riga he improved his practical know- ledge of the business and resources of the districts and cities through which he passed. In St. Peters- burg he resumed his acquaintance with its literary and diplomatic circles, making full use of his op- portunities for extending the range of his know- ledge and culture. Still eager for travel and observation, he spent the winter and spring of 1822-3 in a journey to Moscow and central Russia, including Kiev and Orel. In the course of this journey he enjoyed the hospitality of several of the Russian nobility in their country houses. On the 1st of August, 1823, he undertook another journey through the southern and eastern provinces of Russia. Among other places he visited the famous fair of Nishni Nov- gorod, an exchange centre for the overland trade of Europe and Asia, and the last survivor of the 7 LORD SYDENHAM great European fairs which at one time controlled the trade of the continent. Embarking on the Volga at Nishni Novgorod, he followed the whole course of that great Russian waterway, stopping from time to time to visit Tartar tribes and Catho- lic and Protestant colonies upon its banks. After a short stay at the historic city of Astrakhan at the mouth of the Volga, he retraced his route as far as Tzaritzin, crossed to the Don, and descended that river to Tcherkask, reaching the Sea of Azov at Taganrog. From there he visited the Caucasus, and returning by the Crimea arrived at the seaport of Odessa about the middle of November. Thence he took the great highway through southern Rus- sia to Poland, via Brody and Cracow, and on to Vienna, amid whose brilliant society he spent the remainder of the winter of 1823-4. The journals kept by this ardent young traveller indicate the intelligent thoroughness with which he studied the social and economic conditions of the countries through which he passed, steadily adding to those funds of knowledge and experience which he afterwards put to such effective use as president of the Board of Trade in the British cabinet. Leaving Vienna at the end of April he reached Paris only in time to attend the bedside of his dying mother. Returning to London with an experience of men and affairs quite unusual for a young man of those times, he devoted himself steadily for some years to the business of his firm, 8 THE LURE OF SPECULATION sharing the management with his elder brother and partner, Andrew. The long depression which followed the close of the great European wars ending with Waterloo, was slowly dissolving, in the early twenties, before the thrift and industry of the people. In Britain in particular capital, was being once more accumu- lated beyond the needs of immediate industry. In consequence, the rate of interest declined, credit was re-established, and opportunities were being sought, both within and without the country, for the employment of surplus funds. Conditions were propitious for the launching of new enterprises. Those first started were, for the most part, singu- larly fortunate, and these examples lent impetus to the new movement. There was little or no experience to warn against over speculation, and the natural consequences followed. The new specu- lative movement was flowing with a strong current when young Thomson returned from Europe and entered actively into business. Among the most promising foreign investments were those connected with British companies form- ed to exploit the reputedly rich mines of Central and South America, regions just liberated from the yoke of Spain and having their independence recog- nized by Canning. In fact, the first great specu- lative fever of the nineteenth century was upon the country. The ardent and optimistic nature of young Thomson could not but respond to the 9 LORD SYDENHAM all but universal wave of speculation which swept through the land. As Tooke tells us in his History of Piices, " Princes, nobles, politicians, placemen, patriots, lawyers, physicians, divines, philosophers, poets, intermingled with women of all ranks and degrees (spinsters, wives, widows) — hastened to venture some portion of their property in schemes of which scarcely anything was known except the names." Fortunately for the ardent young merchant his elder brother and partner, Andrew Thomson, strongly deprecated his engaging in such specula- tive ventures. Hence, though he entered actively into the direction of several of the American min- ing companies, his losses when the crash came were not so great as they might otherwise have been. The results of the great panic towards the close of 1825 furnished a sharp but salutary lesson which added a new phase of experience by no means lost upon the future Canadian governor. iO CHAPTER II ENTRY UPON PUBLIC LIFE THE more permanent developments in the re- awakening of British industrial and commer- cial enterprises had brought to hght the repressive effects of Britain's foreign trade policy. As a result, several of the younger and more progressive of British thinkers and statesmen revived and expand- ed the policy which had been advocated by Adam Smith and accepted by Mr. Pitt and other enlight- ened British statesmen. At their time, however, the French Revolution bursting upon the world had paralyzed for nearly forty years every Liberal and progressive movement in Britain. Sydney Smith has given us in his picturesque language a glimpse of the intellectual and political bhght which had fallen on England during this period. '* From the beginning of the century to the death of Lord Liverpool, was an awful period for those who ventured to maintain Liberal opinions; and who were too honest to sell them for the ermine of the judge, or the lawn of the prelate. A long and hope- less career in your profession, the chuckling grin of noodles, the sarcastic leer of the genuine political rogue ; prebendaries, deans, bishops made over your head; reverend renegades advanced to the highest dignities of the Church for helping to rivet the II LORD SYDENHAM fetters of Catholic and Protestant dissenters; and no more chance of a Whig administration than of a thaw in Zembla. These were the penalties exacted for liberality of opinion at that period; and not only was there no pay, but there were many stripes." Among the first to effect a break in this Con- servative reaction was William Huskisson, who became president of the Board of Trade in 1823. He made several very strong attacks upon the classic Navigation Acts and tariff anomalies, with the result that the former were greatly relaxed and the latter much amended. But the criticisms which Huskisson made and the convincing arguments which he brought to bear upon the whole commer- cial policy of the country, were far more wide- reaching than the measures which he succeeded in passing. They started an active discussion through- out the country, which was steadily maintained until the present system of free trade was finally adopted as a national poUcy. This new and vital discussion, which did so much to revive the in- tellectual life of the whole country and to reani- mate the decadent spirit of British politics, naturally attracted the attention of the young merchant engaged in international trade, and who had given so much attention to the practical study of econo- mic conditions in different countries. As a result of his studies and observations, Poulett Thomson had been led of his own accord to take a broad and 12 REFORM CANDIDATE AT DOVER liberal view of these new political issues, notwith- standing that the family traditions were quite of an opposite character. He thus found himself in perfect sympathy with the new movement led by Huskisson, and soon made the acquaintance of such exponents of the new principles as John Stuart Mill, Dr. Bowring, Jeremy Bentham, Henry War- burton, and Joseph Hume. He studied political economy with McCulloch, and frequently attended the discussions at the recently established Political Ec6nomy Club. His temperament was such that whatever he identified himself with he pursued with great zeal. He was filled also with a strong but wholesome ambition which ever spurred him on to larger ideals of self-realization. His ardour in the interest of the new Liberal movement, his wide experience and practical capacity, and the admir- able training of natural gifts which eminently fitted him for public life, all suggested his peculiar fitness as an exponent of the new ideas in parliament. In the summer of 1825, through the instrumen- tality of Dr. Bowring, he was approached by repre- sentatives of the Liberal element in the borough of Dover with a proposition that he should become their candidate at the next election. These advances coinciding with his own inclinations, he immedi- ately accepted the suggestion, issued an address to the electors of Dover about the middle of Septem- ber, and was busily canvassing the constituency during the following winter. In this movement he 18 LORD SYDENHAM was actively supported by his new friends of the utilitarian school. Bowring industriously assisted in his canvass, and even the shy and retiring Bentham, high priest of the new school, became so enthusi- astic in his cause that he removed for a time to Dover and actively canvassed for him, much to the astonishment of those who knew his normal dis- position. On the other hand, his own family regard- ed this new departure in politics in much the same light as his excursion into mining speculation, treating it with similar remonstrances and discour- agement. However, the tendency to self-reliance and self-confidence, which had been fostered by his early contact with the world, was proof against all disapproval and obstruction on the part of his relatives. Political contests in those days of unreformed parliaments were costly affairs, and such expenses following immediately on his losses in the specu- lative mania were severe drains upon his business capital, and naturally very annoying to his brother Andrew who was his business partner. Moreover, his enthusiastic prosecution of his political canvass was not favourable to the steady pursuit of business and was an additional incentive to exasperation on the part of his brother, who went so far as to threaten a dissolution of partnership. His political friends, confident of success, had promised him a comparatively inexpensive contest, but once they were into the thick of it the opposition was found 14 POLITICAL PRINCIPLES to be unexpectedly vigorous. This, however, only- served to reveal the characteristics of the future minister and Canadian governor. He spared neither his energies nor his purse, the latter suffering severely through the need for bringing in non- resident voters, these being the days of open voting and long-drawn polling. The election lasted ten days, and although the ardent young Liberal can- didate was successful, it was at a pecuniary sacrifice of at least three thousand pounds. He took his seat in parliament on the 18th of November, 1826. Once in the House, he soon had occasion to declare his principles. One of his earliest votes was in favour of the reduction of the duty on corn, in which, however, he and his associates were in a hopeless minority. The movement, which within the next ten years was to convert the nation, was still in the hands of a few courageous pioneers. For a time Mr. Thomson took little part in the debates of the House, devoting his time to a study of his new environment, its characteristics and suscepti- bilities. For some years the ministry was in a very unsettled condition. When Thomson entered par- liament Lord Liverpool was prime minister, and William Huskisson was president of the Board of Trade, having succeeded that stout advocate of the Corn Laws and the Navigation Act, F. J. Robinson, afterwards Viscount Goderich and Earl of Ripon. In 1827 Lord Liverpool resigned, and 15 LORD SYDENHAM Canning, foreign secretary since 1822, succeeded him as prime minister. This caused the resignation of the Duke of Wellington, Robert Peel, and Lord Eldon. But within four months Canning died and was succeeded by Robinson, then Lord Goderich, under whom Huskisson was appointed colonial secretary, and Charles Grant, afterwards Lord Glenelg, became president of the Board of Trade. Within another few months Lord Goderich was forced to resign, and Wellington and Peel returned to office, January, 1828, with the Duke as prime minister and Peel as home secretary, Huskisson and Grant still retaining the colonial office and Board of Trade, but later in the year they went out with Palmerston. Sir George Murray then became colonial secretary, and Charles V. Fitz- gerald president of the Board of Trade. These rapid changes, occurring within the first couple of years of Poulett Thomson's parUamentary career, presented many interesting object lessons in political combinations and adjustments, which were not lost on the young politician. That they were not inspiring, however, may be gathered from an extract from a letter to his brother in February, 1828. "Now and then it occurs to me that some ten or fifteen years hence, when I am broken in health, in constitution, and in spirits, and dis- appointed in both fortune and ambition, — which must happen, I am aware, for who has not been? — I shall envy your position, and regret the useless 16 QUALITIES IN DEBATE waste of time, health, and money of the present day." Though seldom taking part in the debates, when he did speak it was on questions with the concrete facts of which he was familiar. Thus when it was proposed to employ the weapon of retaliation by specially taxing corn imported from countries im- posing high duties on British goods, he was able to show from his practical knowledge of Russian con- ditions how injurious such a poUcy would be as affecting British trade with that country. His first important speech was delivered in May, 1827. It was in a debate on the state of the British shipping interest, and was in support of Mr. Husk- isson's policy which favoured the relaxing of the Navigation Acts. The speech made a very favour- able impression upon the House, and Mr. Huskisson alluded to it as follows: "The debate has afforded to the honourable member for Dover an oppor- tunity of manifesting an extraordinary degree of acuteness and knowledge in respect to the com- merce and navigation of the country, and of stating his information in a manner which must, I am sure, have made the most favourable impression on the House." In referring to the success of his speech in reply to congratulations, he made the following acute observation: "A man who tells the House facts with which the majority are unacquainted, is sure to be listened to, and the reputation for doing so will procure him attention upon other 17 LORD SYDENHAM points on which he, perhaps, does not deserve it." During the same session, on the 14th of June, Mr. Poulett Thomson first brought to the attention of the House of Commons the proposal to adopt voting by ballot in parliamentary elections. At that time, however, such a proposition was regard- ed as utterly un- British. Another measure intro- duced by him and doomed to immediate defeat, though equally certain of a complete triumph at a later date, was a bill for the repeal of the Usury Laws. This he advocated with much abihty in a speech which revealed his capacity to handle mone- tary and financial problems. In later years as gov- ernor of Canada he was specially called upon to deal with such matters. His voice and vote steadily supported the cause of civil and religious liberty, and during the session of 1828 he supported Lord John Russell's motion for the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts. In the following session of 1829 he scored another triumph in a speech in favour of Mr. Huskisson's pohcy for greater freedom of trade in the silk industry. His speech as usual was replete with new, accurate and effective information, presented in an interesting manner, and stated with great clearness and force. He was thoroughly convinced, on grounds alike of principle and practice, of the wisdom of a policy of free trade for a country like Britain, filled with native energy and potential enterprise, and capable 18 WISDOM IN REFORM therefore of indefinite expansion were only the artificial trammels upon foreign and domestic trade removed. He was inclined, indeed, to go much further in his advocacy of freedom of trade than Mr. Huskisson himself, encumbered as he was with the responsibilities of office and the need for get- ting measures through parliament. Nevertheless, the pioneer work being done by such members as Poulett Thomson brought new and hitherto un- tried regions within the range of practical politics, and by educating the public mind in advance pre- pared them to accept, if not to demand, the next steps in progress. At the same time he fully recognized the neces- sity, and therefore the wisdom, of treating the people to be educated in a conciliatory spirit. The contrast in manner between himself and some of his more doctrinaire friends is well brought out in his reply to one of them : — " My dEAR — , I see Black has put your effusions into the ' Chronicle.' I like your doctrine very well, but you fall into the line of which my friends the utilitarians are but too justly accused, and which with you, as with them, will go farther to defeat the extension of your principles, than your reason- ing will go to establish them. You, like them, begin every discussion by telling those who differ from you that they are d — d fools, not exactly the way to put them in an humour for cool argument. You seem besides to have formed a most erroneous 19 LORD SYDENHAM judgment of the facility with which any improve- ment can be carried into effect. To propose, to legislate, and to act on your law, you seem to think follow one another as glibly as cause and effect. Why, God bless you, the majority of the House of Commons, aye, 600 of the 650 senators, are op- posed upon principle to any change, be it what it may; and a whole session could be readily spent by them in considering whether they had better consider." We find, however, that such uncompromising Radicals as Cobden regarded his slower educational methods with a good deal of impatience and criti- cized his diluted radicalism with customary vigour. In 1829, when still only thirty years of age, Poulett Thomson found himself suffering from severe attacks of constitutional gout, a malady which afterwards gave him much trouble. Desiring rest and change of air he resolved to spend the winter in Paris, where during numerous visits he had acquired a number of distinguished friends in political and diplomatic circles. There he found an interesting group of publicists who sympathized with his views as to the desirability of a freer inter- national trade. Among these were M. B. Delessert, the philanthropist and naturalist who was a mem- ber of the Chamber of Deputies, noted also as having established the first industry for making sugar from beet-roots; M. DeBroglie the nobleman and statesman who was to play such an important 20 FRENCH FRIENDS part in French politics, domestic and foreign, with- in the next ten years ; M. De St. Julaire the bright and witty diplomat, afterwards ambassador of France at the court of Vienna. He was also a fre- quent visitor in the family circle of Louis Philippe, Duke of Orleans, who was to find himself within another twelvemonth on the throne of France. Poulett Thomson had hoped to enlist the high influence of the duke in favour of a more liberal international policy. No doubt so far as personal in- clination went he had the duke's sympathy while prince, and even as king, but the condition of France was not that of England. In Paris, ideas propagate rapidly, but in France social and econo- mic conditions alter very slowly, and this the future president of the Board of Trade was afterwards to discover. On the eve of the great Reform Act of 1832, Poulett Thomson, though usually confining his attention in the House to matters of trade and commerce, took part in exposing the anomalies and inequahties of the existing system of parlia- mentary representation. He devoted particular at- tention to the case of the Duke of Newcastle, who was accustomed to dispose of the electoral liberties of Newark in a very high-handed manner, and who, when his methods were criticized, replied with righteous indignation, " May I not do what I choose with my own ? " Even in the reformed parHament which followed, it was this same con- 21 LORD SYDENHAM stituency of Newark which the duke placed at the disposal of young Gladstone, whose fervent denunciation of reform, within the safe precincts of the Oxford Union, had captured the heart of the old nobleman. Returning to his special field, Poulett Thomson, in March, 1830, moved for a committee on the expediency of making a general revision of the national system of taxation. In an exceedingly able speech, comparable only to some of Mr. Gladstone's efforts in similar Unes, he dealt with the whole field of British taxation. Marshalling his large army of facts, figures and authorities, he marched them in perfect order and harmony in the most interest- ing evolutions across the whole plain of British fiscal policy, and finally massed them in the most effective support of a practically unanswerable con- clusion. His language was dignified, yet simple and direct ; his diction was elegant, yet natural and easy. For so young a man his range of knowledge was astonishing. He was familiar at once with the economic history of Britain and of the other states of Europe, as also with the existing condi- tions of the chief commercial countries of the world. He pointed out that the existing system of taxation, with the exception of a few special changes lately made, had simply persisted as Pitt had left it. But Pitt had been forced to raise revenue on the spur of the moment and from year to year, expecting every year of the war to be the last. He 22 SPEECH ON FISCAL REFORM had, therefore, simply Hved from hand to mouth, and was the last person to have claimed that he was establishing a permanent system of taxation. Fol- lowing up scientifically the real incidence of exist- ing taxation, he showed how costly the system was in that it drained the pockets of the people and impoverished industry far beyond the amount which was actually contributed to the exchequer. In his survey of the fiscal system and its pressure upon the raw materials of industry, he incidentally touch- ed upon the timber duties. He pointed out that the single article of timber was burdened with a tax of £1,500,000 per annum in order to promote a special interest, and force the country to take an inferior timber from special sources in the colonies. This and similar criticisms of the colonial timber bounty were to be remembered against him when he came to Canada. He claimed that with lower duties and freer trade there would be a great relief and corresponding stimulus to industry, while the revenue would be enlarged by at least a half. In thus passing in review the fiscal system of the country he did not propose to introduce a sudden revolution, but he did desire that the wisdom of recasting the fiscal system should be acknow- ledged and that the work should proceed intelli- gently and systematically. The mastery at once of principles and details which this speech revealed made it plain that when his party succeeded to power the government 28 LORD SYDENHAM would not have far to seek for a person to fill the presidency of the Board of Trade or, ultimately, the post of Chancellor of the Exchequer. As a matter of fact it fell to his lot to begin that systematic revision of the fiscal system of Britain which Mr. Gladstone brought to a conclusion with the sys- tematic introduction of the income tax, a policy which both Huskisson and Thomson were already advocating as a substitute for the taxes then ob- structing the trade and commerce of the country. No attempt was made to answer Thomson's master- ly exposition, the principles of which were indeed accepted by the Chancellor of the Exchequer and many others on the government side. Mr. Peel, himself afterwards, an exponent of similar views, avoided taking direction from the Opposition on such an important matter by claiming that to accept the motion would be to transfer the func- tions of the Chancellor of the Exchequer to a committee of the House. 24 CHAPTER III VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF TRADE THE unquestioned success which Poulett Thom- son had scored in the House of Commons had already completely reconciled his friends to his new sphere of activity, despite the heavy expense of frequent elections during these unsettled years. During 1830 several important events occurred. George VI died and was succeeded by William IV, necessitating a new election. Huskisson having met with untimely death, the suggestion was made that Poulett Thomson should be chosen to succeed him in the representation of Liverpool; but a strong local candidate coming forward, the idea was dropped. Finally, in November, 1830, the Duke of Wellington's government resigned and Earl Grey came in at the head of the first administra- tion pledged to reform, though some of its mem- bers were not very ardent in that cause. Viscount Althorp was the new Chancellor of the Ex- chequer, and his high appreciation of Poulett Thomson's abilities led to his being offered the position of vice-president of the Board of Trade and treasurer of the navy. With the death of Huskisson the public seemed to turn to Poulett Thomson as the natural suc- cessor of that distinguished advocate of large views 25 LORD SYDENHAM and Liberal principles, and as the fitting representa- tive of the rising commercial and industrial interests of the country. Moreover, Poulett Thomson, in addition to his wide grasp of economic conditions and needs, was much more tactful and discreet than Mr. Huskisson had been in deahng with the public, and especially with opponents. The presi- dent and nominal head of the Board of Trade in this ministry was I^ord Auckland, who was, how- ever, a very reticent and colourless minister, com- monly understood to have been added to the cabinet more for ornament than use, it being necessary to have a few peers in the ministry of reform to give it an air of respectability. Poulett Thomson, therefore, was virtually head of the department, and represented it in the House of Commons. He became actual president of the Board in 1834. Mr. Thomson's appointment made it necessary for him to withdraw from active participation in business, hence the partnership with his brother was dissolved. As he was re-elected without op- position, he immediately applied himself with char- acteristic energy to his new duties, seeking to realize in office what he had advocated in opposi- tion. In practice almost every reform, from the very nature of the case, involves the sacrifice of some vested interest or pre-established claims. Thus, for instance, when during the war foreign alkalies were irregular in their supply, heavy duties 26 DIFFICULTIES OF FISCAL REFORM had been imposed in order to foster the kelp fisheries on the north coast of Scotland from which a weak alkali was obtained. When, subsequently, trade had resumed its normal channel, the British soap industry found itself heavily handicapped by excessive duties on such articles as barilla, a crude soda-carbonate commonly brought from Spain or the Levant. When, as one of his first reforms, Thomson had secured a reduction of the duty on barilla, the Scottish landlords resented the fiscal change as fiercely as their English brethren did the suggestion of a reduction of the duty on corn. Such were the difficulties which the new president of the Board of Trade met with at every turn in his efforts to simpUfy and reform the complicated British fiscal system. It was generally supposed, from the nature of their relations, that Lord Althorp's first budget, brought down on February 11th, 1831, contained a good many features which originated with the new vice-president of the Board of Trade. At any rate he obtained full credit for every interference with vested interests which it contained, and received due castigation from the disappointed monopolists. The proposed reduction on the timber duties was thrown out on a combination of certain ship-owners and colonial investors with the Opposition and with a considerable element in the ministerial ranks, who felt that if this were permitted to pass their turn might come next. Yet, when the Op- 27 LORD SYDENHAM position came into power in 1841, their first budget contained a similar proposal, but though it shared the same fate it aided in preparing the way for the ultimate abolition of this very onerous preference granted by the Mother Country to the American colonies, and which in reality produced no corres- ponding advantage to the colonies, for it simply promoted the reckless and wasteful destruction of Canadian forests. Poulett Thomson was now so completely ab- sorbed in the intricate details pertaining to the financial and fiscal aspects of his office, that he took but little part in the great debates of 1831-2 on the Reform Bill. In this, however^ as we have said, he was deeply interested, and two of his most intimate friends. Lord Althorp and Lord Durham, had a chief part in the framing of the bill. He devoted special attention at this time to a commission appointed for the revision of the system of keeping the public accounts ; of this Sir Henry Parnell was chairman, and his friend Dr. Bowring, the noted authority on financial matters, was secretary. As the result of their labours, the accounting of the British public offices was brought into harmony with the most approved methods of modern business. We shall find Lord Sydenham directing a similar and much needed revision in Canada. In November, 1831, Mr. Poulett Thomson and Lord Durham went to Paris to follow up the 28 COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH FRANCE previous informal discussions and to set on foot negotiations for a new commercial treaty with France. The joint commission named by the two governments consisted of Mr. George \^illiers, afterwards Earl of Clarendon, and Dr. Bowring, representing England, and Messieurs Freville and Duchatel, representing France. The instructions for the British commissioners were drawn up by Poulett Thomson. There was not much difficulty, on the part of the commissioners, in arriving at a provisional agreement based on sound principles of international trade, but it was quite another matter to secure any actual alterations in the existing tariffs which might affect disadvantageously those interests which were at the time reaping profits at the public expense. The work of the commission continued at intervals until 1835, and though at the time only very limited concessions were se- cured, the way was prepared for much greater results later on. In the course of his work at the Board of Trade, Poulett Thomson still found that on every hand he had to contend with special interests, domestic and colonial, which either stoutly resisted all at- tempts at reform, or, under reactionary influences, sought to restore anomalies which had been re- moved either in Mr. Huskisson's time or his own. In 1832, notwithstanding objections to all inno- vations in the tariff, he introduced and piloted through parHament an important measure effecting 29 LORD SYDENHAM an extensive consolidation of the excise duties. The energy with which he threw himself into such work, involving as it did an immense amount of detail, naturally told upon his constitution. An item from his journal will indicate how great the strain was. August 28tfi, Saturday. — "A week of the hardest possible labour. I have not returned from the House any day till three o'clock ; on Wednesday not till four. It is impossible to stand this ! I find my body quite exhausted, and my mind equally worn out. All this week I have alter- nated between the Bank and Silk Committees, and then the House. On Wednesday I carried my Bill (the Customs Duties) through the -Committee: was at it from five till two in the morning, nine mortal hours! I passed my Bill to-day, thank God!" At the close of the session he made a tour through the manufacturing districts of the north of England and southwest of Scotland, acquiring a practical acquaintance with the typical industries of the country and the shipping centres of Glasgow and Liverpool. The principles which he upheld in the House of Commons were so thoroughly appreciated by the electors of Manchester that he had been urged to offer himself as a candidate for that borough when first erected into an independent constituency as the result of the Reform Act. Though highly flattered by the proposals of his Manchester friends, 30 ELECTED FOR MANCHESTER he doubted the wisdom of attempting to change his constituency. Hence, while expressing his high appreciation of the honour of representing such a borough, he dechned to undertake the campaign, and once more declared himself a candidate for Dover. Even on such terms his Manchester friends continued to prosecute their canvass; the result was, that while he was elected at the head of the poll in Dover, he was also returned by a large majority as one of the members for JNIanchester. As this expression of esteem and confidence came to him chiefly in virtue of his political principles and parliamentary services from a constituency representing one of the most enhghtened and enterprising sections of England, he naturally es- teemed it a signal honour. It was the more gratify- ing in that, owing to the peculiar composition of the House of Commons and the unsatisfactory state of parties, conscientious attention to the pub- lic interest and the details of office were but indif- ferently appreciated in most parts of the country outside a limited circle of enthusiasts. Though loath to break the ties which had been formed with many supporters in Dover, he could not but decide to accept Manchester. Its great importance as the chief manufacturing centre in Britain gave him just that added influence and weight in the House and in the cabinet which was needed to support the commercial and fiscal reforms for which he stood. 31 LORD SYDENHAM The borough of Manchester prepared to cele- brate in fitting manner its new Hberties and its new members. The speech of Mr. Poulett Thomson was worthy of the occasion. Undoubtedly the most vital issue before the country as a whole was the question as to how far the tide of reform which had been steadily rising for some years past was to be allowed to flow. Staunch Tories had consistently opposed it from the first, the more conservative Whigs, forming the chief body of the ministry un- der whose administration the Reform Act had been carried, had already said, "So far, but no farther," giving expression to their convictions in the famous " finality " dictum. On the other hand, the more doctrinaire Radicals, a steadily increasing element but with no very definite boundaries, saw opening before them an indefinite programme of democratic reforms, several of which appeared quite revolu- tionary to the more cautious statesmen of that day. It was the alarming programme of more reforms to follow which was chiefly responsible for the ap- plication of the "finality" brake by the Whigs who had passed the Reform Act. It was this question of future reforms which the new member for Manchester frankly faced before his new costituency, which now heard him for the first time. He declined to accept either the Con- servative or the Radical solution, but maintained that the correct policy was that of the open mind to sound ideas, and the open door for reasonable 32 MANCHESTER DOCTRINE progress. But this, he held, impUed a careful test- ing, by reference to the actual needs of the time, of every step in the series of progressive measures. Taking up in detail the questions of his own de- partment, he proceeded to give concrete illustra- tions of urgent reforms which were yet to be undertaken. In the forefront he naturally placed the need for a more liberal commercial policy. Referring to the opposition which his efforts had hitherto met with, he says, " I have been for years exposed to all the shafts which mahce or ignorance could point against me for the devotion which I have ever shown to these principles." And what were these principles ? " They are the most perfect freedom of exchange — a fair field for our industries — and no restrictions, beyond what for fiscal pur- poses are necessary, upon the exertions of our manufacturers." He then outlined in concrete shape the whole argument which was years afterwards to free the trade of Britain from its trammels, and enable her to lead the world for another half century. The following extract from his speech will quite fully indicate the principles which he advocated, and the manner in which he presented them. " But, say the advocates of this admirable recipe for getting rich by Act of Parhament, protection is necessary to secure our industry from foreign com- petition. What are the effects it has produced in this respect in this country? You see it illustrated at 83 LORD SYDENHAM home in a manner which cannot fail to have been present to every man's mind long ere this. Let me ask you what protection has been given to that great manufacture which gives employment to hundreds of thousands — nay, to millions I may say — within the great district which encircles your city? What protection has the cotton trade had? I answer, none whatever! Unaided by any legis- lative enactment — unassisted by the fostering hand of power — unprotected by the custom-house book — this great manufacture has grown from an in- fant's condition until it has attained a giant's strength. We see it with one arm encircle the con- quests of the New World, and with another shower its productions into the very heart of that country, the vast empire of India, which was formerly its successful rival, and extending and pushing forth the fruits of its industry even into the central regions of Africa, where no European foot was ever yet stamped. This, gentlemen, is the success which has attended a manufacture which was not the pet of the legislature. Let me now mark the course of another manufacture fenced round by protections of all kinds, equally a production of a foreign country — the raw material equally brought from a distance — and thus affording a fit compari- son with that which I have named. What was the case with silk? Was protection wanting there? Were there no laws which restricted foreign com- petition — were there no penalties upon those who 34 LAISSEZ FAIRE attempted to introduce it? And did all this pro- tection, amounting to absolute and total prohibi- tion, tend to make this branch of industry flourish and extend itself? Under the auspices of the coast blockade and the search warrant did it realize the theories of the protectionists? Was it found that that manufacture, rivalling and outstripping all its competitors in foreign countries, obtained an ex- tension like its poorer and unprotected, but there- fore more hardy, brother? No such thing — not only did it not attain the vigour which would enable it to reach foreign climes, but, in spite of your pro- hibitory laws — in spite of your penalties exacted from the unfortunate smuggler, it was met even in this country at every turn by its foreign com- petitors. In these two branches then, we may read the history of the fallacy of protection. My system, then, is this: Leave to industry a full and fair field — relieve us from your unwise protection — remove from us your well-meant but injudicious care — leave us alone, let our talent, our capital and our invention follow their free course, and what I see before me to-day removes, if I ever had, any doubt that we shall then have no rivals to fear, no competitors to dread. . . . "I contend, and I have contended, that if we consent to take from foreign countries that which they produce, they must of necessity receive from us in payment our productions. They may raise up libraries of custom-house books — they may surround 35 LORD SYDENHAM their territories with custom-house officers — they may fill their seas with cruisers — but, if we are to take anything from them, they must take from us in return. The principle, then, which I have advo- cated, is to follow out, straightforwardly, our own course, to remove the unnecessary restrictions and prohibitions from the productions of other countries, and to trust to one of two consequences resulting ; either a sense of their own folly, which will induce them to adopt a better system of legislation, or to that necessity which I contend must exist — if they wish to take advantage of us — that they should admit, somehow or other, what we can give them in payment." This will indicate how completely Poulett Thom- son had worked out for himself the free trade policy which has long been familiar to England, but which at that time was regarded with so much patriotic apprehension by many ill-informed yet able and conscientious men, and with so much aver- sion by others who were actuated only by a narrow and personal selfishness. In Manchester, however, these ideas were better understood and more in- telMgently appreciated, and, as their member was free to confess, " the confidence which you, the electors of this great metropolis of the manufac- turing industry of the world, have reposed in me, unsought and unsolicited, — an honour which I never hoped to obtain, and which I should never have sought to achieve, — is indeed the most con- 36 TARIFF REFORM vincing and irresistible answer to attacks of that description." The strenuous nature of the welcome which his new constituents extended to him may be inferred from the following entry in his journal. Sunday night, Bccemher 30th, 1832.—" This has been a week of prodigious excitement, and I have had no time to set down one word. Monday at the Exchange. Tuesday, Christmas Day, quiet. Thurs- day, the dinner, the proudest day of my life, 1,250 people sat down, Heywood in the chair. I spoke an hour and a half, and, I think, well. Friday dined at Heywood's, and Saturday night left for town, very ill. To-day sent for Copeland." It may be inferred that after the election of 1832 Poulett Thomson did not relax his efforts in the House of Commons or in the cabinet towards pro- moting tariff reform. While eloquently advocating the larger features of tariff reform such as the re- duction and final abolition of the Corn Laws, the reHef of sugar, timber, wool and cotton, which required, however, for their ultimate acceptance a long course of education, he went on with the work of classifying and simplifying the duties, re- lieving where possible the burdens on minor articles which while contributing little to the revenue distressed both manufacturer and consumer by the exorbitant rates which were levied. These reforms were managed with a quiet tact which escaped the notice at once of his organized op- 37 LORD SYDENHAM ponents and of the public at large. Thus, under cover of the general educational campaign for free- dom of trade on a large scale, between 1832 and 1839, the president of the Board of Trade had secured reductions of duty, some of them of very considerable percentages, on three hundred and seventy-two articles, and had greatly simplified the duties on many others. The same system and the same principles were followed by Sir Robert Peel and Mr. Gladstone in preparing for their larger measures at a later date. A subject to which he naturally gave special at- tention, and on which his experience was to be called into requisition in Canada, was that of bank- ing. On this subject he held very definite views, the views afterwards embodied by Sir Robert Peel in the Bank Act of 1844, which introduced the system still regulating banking in Britain. The essential feature of the system, as regards the issue of paper money, is that the paper currency of the country should be issued by a single national bank, solely against bullion, and would therefore fluctuate with the amount of bullion in the country. A certain permanent nucleus of the reserve might be held in government securities, which would not, however, affect the large margin of bullion, upon the ebb and flow of which the note issue of the country would depend. For a country situated as England, at the centre of the world's financial and exchange busi- ness, such a system has proved on the whole very 38 SPEECH ON CORN LAWS satisfactory. The practical experience and economic arguments with which Poulett Thomson supported his views, which were shared by the best financiers of the time, were amply justified in subsequent British history. As to whether such a system was quite as fully applicable to the condition of a colony such as Canada in 1841, we shall have to consider later. To Poulett Thomson's lot also fell the duty of superintending the passing of the Act for regulat- ing the labour of children in factories, and its subsequent administration by the commission ap- pointed to carry it out. At the close of the session of 1833, he sought a rest in a tour of the Rhine, and spent the month of October at Paris en- deavouring to forward the negotiations for a com- mercial treaty. During the following session of 1834, the Corn Law question was again much in evidence. The able and indefatigable member for Middlesex, Mr. Joseph Hume, brought on his long-expected mo- tion on the subject. Not content with the sliding- scale system of duties adopted in 1828, he urged a still further reduction to a moderate fixed duty. Mr. Poulett Thomson naturally came to the aid of the free trade forces, and on the 7th of March dehvered one of his most important speeches in parliament. As yet those opposed to the Corn Laws were decidedly in the minority in the House of Commons, even on the side of the Whig party. 89 LORD SYDENHAM Hence, in supporting Mr. Hume's motion, Poulett Thomson as a member of the government, though not yet in the cabinet, was in opposition to the majority of his colleagues, an opposition which was most pronounced in the case of Sir James Graham, First Lord of the Admiralty, to whose arguments in support of the sliding scale he devoted some strong, though respectful, criticism. The fact was that Sir James Graham had not been for some time on the best of terms with the majority of the cabinet, though one of the most advanced advocates of the Reform Act, and indeed a member of the small committee which drafted it. Though not in sympathy with the more extreme form of the Corn Laws, he was not as yet prepared to accept any serious lowering of the duties on grain. Yet he was destined some twelve years later to be Peel's most advanced supporter in securing the complete aboli- tion of the Corn Laws. At present his chief diffi- culty with his Whig colleagues was over the ques- tion of the Irish Church, he being an uncompro- mising supporter of the Establishment. This friction in the cabinet foreshadowed the readjustment which was soon to take place, and which was to relieve it of its most Conservative element. In the main body of his speech in support of Mr. Hume's motion, Poulett Thomson passed in review the actual history of the Corn Laws from the be- ginning of the existing system in 1815, pointing out that it had been a burden upon the public 40 PRACTICAL FREE TRADE while an unsteady and delusive favour to the farmer. He maintained that the strength of Britain lay in her manufacturing industries, which should be encouraged by the double process of fostering trade with other countries by purchasing their pro- duce, which in turn would encourage the purchase of British wares instead of forcing foreigners to prematurely attempt manufacturing for themselves because they could find no market for their own produce. This was indeed the situation which be- came so effective some years later in the United States as the justification for building up a pro- tective system there. As usual he did not argue his case upon merely abstract principles assumed to be applicable to all countries in the world. He dealt with the actual condition of Britain itself, which, however, he treated in no narrow manner, but in a broad and comprehensive spirit. There were, it is true, many ardent free-traders who insisted upon generalizing the British conditions in such fashion as to conclude that the trade pohcy which was most suitable for Britain must be equally suitable for all other countries, and that therefore the adoption of free trade in Britain might be expected to be followed by its adoption in all other countries. Though Poulett Thomson hoped to see the trade of the world much freer than it then was, he never- theless regarded as the best for Britain the free- dom of trade which he advocated, whatever policy other countries might adopt. It is one of the cir- 41 LORD SYDENHAM cumstances most flattering to the fulness and ac- curacy of his knowledge and the soundness of the judgments which he founded upon it, that nearly all of the practical principles which he maintained, and the features of political policy which he ad- vocated, have been fully realized in the course of British development. Yet, in advocating most of the features of his trade policy and financial re- forms, he was considerably in advance of his col- leagues, and, as we have seen, frequently in opposi- tion to them, where the question was permitted, as in the case of the Corn Laws, to be treated as an open one. But though thus closely in line with so many great features of policy which were ulti- mately to prevail, his early death prevented his seeing any of them finally accepted. 42 CHAPTER IV A CABINET MINISTER IN the last of May, 1834, the cleavage which had been gradually taking place within the cabinet resulted in an open rupture between the more Con- servative and more Liberal sections. Those who went out included Sir James Graham, INIr. Stanley the colonial secretary, the Duke of Richmond, and the Earl of Ripon, formerly Lord Goderich. Lord Auckland took Graham's position as First Lord of the Admiralty, enabling Poulett Thomson to suc- ceed to the titular headship of the Board of Trade with a seat in the cabinet. Otherwise this made little difference in the character of his work, as he had previously covered the whole field. Board of Trade matters being entirely related to the House of Commons, and Lord Auckland sitting in the House of Lords. Mr. Greville in his racy and cynical manner, has left us a sketch of Poulett Thomson about this time, which brings out in mild caricature several* of the distinctive features of the president of the Board of Trade. "I had a great deal of conversation with Poulett Thomson last night after dinner on one subject or another; he is very good-humoured, pleasing, and intelligent, but the greatest coxcomb I ever saw, and the vainest dog, though his vanity 48 LORD SYDENHAM is not offensive or arrogant; but he told me that when Lord Grey's government w^as formed (at which time he was a junior partner in a mercantile house, and had been at most five years in parlia- ment), he was averse to take office, but Althorp declared he would not come in unless Thomson did also, and that, knowing the importance of Althorp's accession to the government, he sacri- ficed a large income, and took the Board of Trade; that when this was offered to him, he was asked whether he cared if he was president or vice-presi- dent, as they wished to make Lord Auckland presi- dent if he (Poulett Thomson) had no objection. He said, provided the president was not in the cabinet, he did not care; and accordingly he condescended to be vice-president, knowing that all the business must be in the House of Commons, and that he must be (as in fact he said he was) virtual head of the office. All this was told with a good-humoured and smiling complacency, which made me laugh internally." Here we recognize his strong ambition, and entire self-confidence, and yet both rendered quite inoffensive by his sincerity of purpose, his great industry, and his determination to realize his am- bitions by proving his worth through his achieve- ments, the whole pervaded by an atmosphere of urbanity and charm of manner which was every- where acknowledged to be remarkably captivat- ing. 44 CABINET CHANGES The sequel to the withdrawal of the Graham and Stanley wing of Lord Grey's cabinet, was the resignation, a couple of months later, of Lord Grey himself, and the succession of Lord Melbourne as prime minister. Harmony being restored, the cabi- net which seemed on the eve of dissolution secured a new lease of hfe ; the majority, however, was too small, and there were too many live questions before the country, which stirred deep convictions and strong prejudices, to permit of the government holding its position in a comfortable or dignified manner. Its own chief political strength lay in the still greater weakness of its opponents, who, though offered several opportunities and having others within their power, yet found it impossible to take advantage of these to defeat the government, since they knew they could not sustain one of their own in the face of a combination of the Whigs, Radicals and Irish, upon whom Melbourne relied for his majorities. Lord Grey's administration had not been in much favour with the king, but when the more Conservative element had hived off, and it came under Lord Melbourne's leadership, it seemed to lose what grace it had in the king's eyes. When, in November, 1834, owing to Earl Spencer's death, Lord Althorp, his heir, passed to the House of Lords, the House of Commons lost the only leader in whom the king had any confidence. The king, therefore, declared to Lord Melbourne that he in- 45 LORD SYDENHAM tended to apply to the Duke of Wellington to form a ministry. Peel being at the time in Italy, the duke took the place of the whole cabinet, being himself sworn in for as many offices as it was necessary to fill. While waiting for the arrival of Peel the king had a glorious holiday, spiced by the joy which he felt in the discomfiture of his late cabinet. When Peel arrived and the ministry had been filled out, dissolution was granted and a new election called. It did not, however, give Peel suf- ficient backing, and the new government in spite of, and to a certain extent in consequence of, the loyal support of the king, suffered one defeat after another, beginning with their defeat on the appointment of the Speaker, a contest in which Poulett Thomson took a prominent part. They finally gave up in April, 1835. The king made the best of a disagreeable situation and took back the Melbourne government with "that dangerous little Radical," I^ord John Russell, as leader of the House. Poulett Thomson, who had been strongly supported at Manchester, returned as president of the Board of Trade with a seat in the cabinet. As we have seen, though capable of producing able, if not popular, speeches, Poulett Thomson was by preference a worker rather than a debater. Hence he seldom troubled the House with more than short statements in committee in explanation of measures which he had in charge. This was par- ticularly true in the sessions of 1835 and 1836, dur- 46 AN UNSTABLE GOVERNMENT ing which questions of the tithes, the Irish Church, municipal councils, and Orange associations were engaging the attention of the House. Incidentally there was a struggle going on between the Com- mons and the Lords, accompanied by a great deal of very unedifying political strategy, which gave point to the criticisms of the Radical press and platform as to the decadent condition of the exist- ing political parties, and the need for a new and more vigorous policy having respect to the needs of the masses rather than the whims of the classes. During these years also, owing to the conjunction of a narrow ministerial majority and the promin- ence of the Irish question, O'Connell was very much to the fore, and his party was understood to hold the fate of the government in its hands. With so slim a majority, however, the fate of the govern- ment was in several hands, which by no means improved the quality of its measures ; and still it could not be overthrown, for the Opposition was even more powerless to carry its own measures. One of those periodic financial and industrial depressions which specially characterized the nine- teenth century, was at this time deepening over the world, and destined to reach its nadir in 1837. During such unpropitious times Mr. Poulett Thom- son, having much to engage him in the duties of his own department, found little inducement to take part in the discussions in the House. Indeed, being now a member of the cabinet, he had not the 47 LORD SYDENHAM same freedom to express in public his personal con- victions on certain vital points, where these were still considerably in advance of the opinion of the cabinet as a whole. When all things seemed to be at their lowest ebb, Wilham IV died, and the Princess Victoria succeeded to the throne. This involved another election, during which Mr. Poulett Thomson had as an opponent at Manchester that rising young star of the Tory party Mr. W. 1^. Gladstone. As the Liberals had carried Poulett Thomson to vic- tory without his personal assistance, so the Tory element endeavoured to elect Gladstone, though he still sought re-election under the auspices of the Duke of Newcastle at Newark. Gladstone came in at the foot of the poll, and Poulett Thomson de- cidedly at the head of it, with Mr. Phillips as his colleague. During a subsequent reception at the hands of his Manchester friends, Mr. Gladstone complained of the unfair advantage which Poulett Thomson had taken of him owing to the connection of the Gladstone family with the slave-holding system of the West Indies. The accession of Queen Victoria brought a new lease of life to the Melbourne cabinet, but did not bring Mr. Poulett Thomson any more prominently before the public, inasmuch as he still confined his attention to the multifarious duties of his office, and the systematic pursuit of the policy to improve British trade relations with the various countries 48 A TORY ESTIMATE of Europe. His work lying so largely out of the line of ordinary politics, he came to be regarded by those who look chiefly to parliamentary debate as the one measure of political capacity, as a man who must have been considerably overrated. Hence the surprise which was expressed in several quarters when his appointment to Canada was announced. Still no one who knew him intimately had any doubt as to his great ability. The estimate of his political opponents, divested of party rancour, may be gathered from the brief account of his career given by Thomas Raikes in his journal. Raikes was a staunch supporter of all Conservative principles, the friend and confidant of Wellington, Peel, and other party leaders ; of Thomson he says, " I knew him from the early commencement of his career in life, which has been eminently successful. He was originally a merchant of the old firm of Thom- son, Bonar & Co., in the Russian trade. He ob- tained a seat in parliament, and was a great follower of the political economists, with Hyde- Villiers, and a few other young men who cried up the march of intellect, and advocated the new doctrines of reform. He was clever, and whenever he spoke on commercial questions, was always cor- rect in figures and references, though not an elo- quent speaker. He was an arithmetical man, which gained him the favour of Lord Althorp, with whom he always voted, and who, when the Whigs came into power, made him vice-president of the 49 LORD SYDENHAM Board of Trade. When Althorp was made Chan- cellor of the Exchequer, having little previous knowledge or habits of business, he was glad to have a practical man at his elbow, whom he might consult on every occasion. As the Whigs grew in power, Thomson was promoted, and became a cabinet minister. He entered into all the plans of his colleagues to maintain themselves by pandering to the popular cry of reform. He represented the city of Manchester, under the radical interest, as an advocate of free trade, and in that capacity I have some years back alluded to him in my journal." Poulett Thomson's prolonged efforts to improve the trade relations between Britain and the other European countries were only very partially effec- tive, chiefly because of the opposition of the general public in France to any change in the existing system, and the difficulty of improving trade re- lations with Germany so long as Britain would abate little or nothing of her duties on wheat, that item being one of the chief articles by which Germany must pay for her imports. With Austria he was more successful, and an important com- mercial treaty was signed in 1838, which broke up the prohibitive system which had hitherto prevailed in that country. The negotiations with foreign countries were, for the most part, incomplete when he left the Board of Trade. An institution of much importance for the pro- motion of British industry, founded during Mr. 50 INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT Thomson's presidency of the Board of Trade, was the School of Design at Somerset House estabHsh- ed in 1837. Superior to the countries of the con- tinent in many other aspects of industry and com- merce, Britain had tended to lag behind them in the matter of technical training. With a view to remedy this defect the School of Design was es- tablished, marking the beginning of a system of education as applied to industry which received a fresh impetus with the great exhibition of 1851, and led to the extending of these schools through- out the country. It also led to the development of the magnificent industrial museum of South Kensington. Another subject which specially engaged his at- tention was that of international copyright, which he earnestly sought to promote as one important feature of that larger intercourse between nations which was his cherished ideal. In 1838 he succeeded in having a bill passed enabhng the British govern- ment to enter into treaty arrangements with foreign countries for the establishment of international copyright. He endeavoured to negotiate such treaties with France and the United States, but they were as yet unprepared for such advances. As we have seen, his interest in the promotion of freedom of trade and intercourse was never con- fined to abstract principles. He had, indeed, a comprehensive and well-balanced conception of the general advantages of free trade, but it was the 51 LORD SYDENHAM outcome of a close study of the actual conditions of trade and industry. Experience had taught him that freedom of trade was to be secured in detail rather than in the gross, and this was the manner in which it was actually accomplished, for the final overthrow of the Corn Laws in 1846 was only the culmination of a series of inroads made upon them. Notwithstanding the numerous modifications of the general protective system and the Navigation Acts, from 1822 to 1846, the protective system was by no means abolished with the Corn Laws. Mr. Poulett Thomson's method of accepting every modification which could be secured and making it the logical basis for further concessions, proved the most effective system in the end. Its great virtue was that it demonstrated to the people in an educa- tive manner that the fears which they entertained as to the injurious effects of the extension of free in- tercourse were quite groundless. Thus the public prejudice was broken down in a natural and effec- tive manner. In the last speech which he delivered in the House of Commons on the subject of the Corn Laws, on Mr. Villiers' motion to go into committee on the subject in January, 1839, he thus states his attitude: " If I were asked whether it might not be better to have even a free trade in corn, I would reply in the affirmative also. But when I state this I am perfectly aware that here are considerable and weighty interests to be looked into which cannot be lightly treated; and that they should be all fairly 52 RAILWAY CHARTERS considered and equitably dealt with, and time given gradually to effect a change. I am therefore taking a practical view of the subject, ready to go into a committee upon it, in the hope that we shall be able to introduce such a practical change in the existing system of laws as may prove really bene- ficial to all parties, and which will not injure any interests whatsoever." In pursuance of this method he sought to follow up JMr. Huskisson's initiative in gradually extending the warehousing system, first by enlarging the list of seaports admitted to the privilege, and then by extending it to the inland towns. The latter extension, however, had not been secured when he left the Board of Trade, nor indeed for some years afterwards. In extending the range and usefulness of the Board of Trade, Poulett Thomson found that it could most effectively undertake the regulation of the railway system, which as an important factor in national life came into existence during his admin- istration of the department. He introduced a system of supervision of the rapidly increasing number of railway charters previously issued by the Home Office, which had not the facilities for enquiring into such matters. The number of charters had increased from nine in 1832 to forty-two in 1837, when they were checked by the crisis of that year. This principle of supervision of private bills with a view to protecting the interests of the general pubUc, he extended to all measures relating to trade, 53 LORD SYDENHAM and this was found to be a much better safeguard than the loose and irregular supervision by com- mittees of the House. Thus was begun that sys- tematic supervision of corporate enterprises which has since kept pace with the growth of economic corporations. With the usual shortsighted concep- tion as to what freedom of trade really implies, there were many who thought that this policy of regulating corporations in the public interest was a very inconsistent one to be so strongly advocated by an advanced free-trader. In 1832, while still vice-president of the Board, he assisted in organizing a special department of it for collecting and publishing digests of the statistics of the empire, and selected for the office Mr. G. R. Porter, whose well-known book The Pj^ogress of the Nation, has long been a work of reference and a mine of information as to the economic and social development of Britain from the beginning of the nineteenth century to 1845. Mr. Poulett Thomson's constitution, as we have noted, was not at all robust. Being already the victim of chronic gout, he found the double duties of supervising the increasing functions of the Board of Trade and of attending the long night sessions of the House of Commons to be rather more than his impaired health would permit. One rather obvious method of getting rid of attendance upon the sessions of the Commons, without giving up his office, would be to secure his elevation to the House 54 A WEAK CABINET of Lords. Ambition being a strong factor in his composition, such a recognition of his services would undoubtedly have been very gratifying, and there were numerous precedents. As he seldom spoke in the House, his elevation to the Lords would not have weakened the debating power of the cabinet, although it was by no means strong in that direc- tion. In outstanding names before the country, the ministry was decidedly weak. Sydney Smith very well expressed the general public sentiment on this subject. Speaking of Lord John Russell, the one outstanding personality in the ministry, he said, " I only mention Lord John Russell's name so often because he is beyond all comparison the ablest man in the whole administration ; and to such an extent is he superior that the government could not exist a moment without him. If the foreign secretary were to retire, we should no longer be nibbling our- selves into disgrace on the coast of Spain; if the amiable Lord Glenelg were to leave us, we should feel secure in our colonial possessions; if Mr. Spring Rice were to go into holy orders, great would be the joy of the three per cents. A decent, good- looking head of the government might easily be found in lieu of Viscount Melbourne. But, in five minutes after the departure of I^ord John Russell, the whole Whig government would be dissolved into sparks of Liberality and splinters of Reform." We get a glimpse of the estimation in which Poulett Thomson was held by his colleagues and of 55 LORD SYDENHAM the place which he occupied in the cabinet from Lord Melbourne's reply to certain rather urgent suggestions from Lord John Russell in October, 1838, as to necessary changes in the cabinet. Speak- ing of the proposed changes, including the possi- bility of removing Spring Rice from the position of Chancellor of the Exchequer, the prime minister says, "If you open the exchequer, consider whether it would be really wise or prudent or fair to pass over Thomson. He is a much abler man in finance than any of them, has a more complete knowledge of the subject, he is clear, short, distinct, and not trammelled with crotchets or scruples. Suppose he were to ask you, ' Why am I passed over ? ' what could you say to him ? You could not say ' You are not the best qualified,' because he certainly is. You could not say that 'You are unpopular,' because that is to make a man's fortune depend upon fancy, taste, and fashion. His connections in the city are as much an objection to his being president of the Board of Trade. I think he would be more easy and happy in the office after all the worry of the other." However, the sudden death of Lady Russell on November 1st put an end for a time to the pro- posed reconstruction of the cabinet. Shortly after- wards, owing to the defection of their Radical support, Melbourne and Russell decided to resign on May 7th, 1839. Peel undertook the formation of a ministry, but one of his conditions was that certain ladies, relatives 56 THE CANADIAN PROBLEM of the late ministers, should retire from immediate attendance upon the Queen. To this the young Queen refused to assent, with the result that within four days Melbourne and his ministry were back in office. The waning support which the Whig cabinet had received in the House of Commons had been partly due to the unpopularity of Mr. Spring Rice as Chancellor of the Exchequer. Moreover, Canadian matters, as we know, were in a terrible tangle, owing to the outbreak of the rebellion in Lower Canada and the subsequent indiscretions of Lord Durham as governor -general. Lord Glenelg, as colonial secretary, had been quite unable to command the situation, and though he was supplanted by Nor- manby, things were scarcely improved. Hence, in taking up office again, it was felt that some changes must be made in the ministry. As one result. Spring Rice, and not Poulett Thomson, was elevated to the peerage. Thomson then had to choose whether he should take the position of Chancellor of the Exchequer or go out as governor-general to Canada. What the final considerations were which determined his acceptance of the Canadian position, it is not easy to determine, though his journals throw some light on the subject, once the decision was made. The difficult appointment of Canadian governor was un- doubtedly offered to more than one before it was accepted by Poulett Thomson. There were even some who volunteered to take it. The JNlarquis of 57 LORD SYDENHAM Normanby, desiring to be relieved of the position of lord-lieutenant of Ireland, expressed to Melbourne his willingness to undertake Canada. Mentioning this to Lord John Russell in a note, Melbourne said, "I so much like Normanby 's readiness to undertake Canada, that I am loath to make any sarcastic observations upon it." They did not send him to Canada, however, but made him colonial secretary for a short time. Another marquis willing to undertake the difficult position was Lord Bread- albane. But though Melbourne was pleased to note the willingness of men of his rank to undertake pubUc service, his offer also was declined. On the other hand, the position was tendered to Lord Clarendon, Lord Dunfermline, and Earl Spencer, but declined for one reason or another. 58 CHAPTER V GOVERNOR-GENERAL OF CANADA— ORIGIN OF THE CANADIAN PROBLEM IT was doubtless the personal influence of Lord John Russell, coupled with the small prospect of achieving further political reputation in connec- tion with the discredited Whig administration at home, that finally determined Poulett Thomson to accept the position of Canadian governor. It was arranged at the time that, owing to the importance of the office. Lord John Russell himself should take the position of colonial secretary. That being so, Poulett Thomson knew that he would be relieved of all anxiety as to the imperial end of his mis- sion. The perfect understanding which existed between the colonial secretary and the colonial governor undoubtedly had much to do with the success of Lord Sydenham's administration. There appears to be little doubt that the new governor went out to Canada with the understand- ing that, if successful in his mission, he should be elevated to the peerage. Lord Sydenham's nature was one of those in which personal joy in the accomplishment of good work — in the carrying through of great ideas to a successful practical issue — was closely interwoven with that love of approbation which spurred him to additional effort, 59 LORD SYDENHAM if not for popular applause, yet certainly for the approval of those whose opinion he specially valued. At the same time his whole career proved that his strong confidence in his own judgment enabled him readily, if not joyfully, to stand prac- tically alone in defence of measures which had enlisted his sympathy or commanded his judg- ment. When his appointment to the Canadian gover- norship, which took place on August 29th, 1839, was announced, it was received with very varied comments. IMany of those who regarded him only from the point of view of popular standards, and who had little or no personal knowledge of him, condemned the selection in round terms. It is true that any choice was certain to be condemned on party grounds, political feeling being particularly bitter at the time, and Canada was one of the chief issues of the day. Judged, however, by the men who knew him intimately, or who had occasion to know what he had accomplished, there was no doubt as to his fitness for the position, and many who judged him harshly at the time of his appointment after- wards made ample amends in their acknowledg- ment of his distinguished success. It will at least be evident from the foregoing summary of the business and political career of Poulett Thomson, that he was exceptionally well qualified, from his thorough and practical know- ledge of the actual workings of the British system 60 A NEW TYPE OF GOVERNOR of political parties and cabinet government, to un- dertake the reconstruction of the Canadian govern- ment upon similar lines. His expert knowledge, at once of the public and private aspects of trade and finance, enabled him to greatly assist in introducing some rational system into the indescribable tangle of provincial finance, which was alike narrow in re- venue and prodigally wasteful in expenditure. Hitherto the British government had deemed it the part of wisdom to send as Canadian governors military experts instead of civil administrators; and, owing, one may suppose, to some beneficent system of compensation in nature, the very incompetency of the military administration in civil matters brought about in due course the requisite oppor- tunity for the exercise of military talents, thus proving conclusively, for those who had an understanding for such matters, the great foresight of the home government in having on the spot military governors ready to cope with rebellion within the colony and foreign sympathizers with- out. Now, however, that the former system had done its worst, a new Hne of experiment was to be essayed, and a new type of governor appointed. What then was the nature of the problem which the new governor had to face ? As was fully recognized in Lord Durham's Report, the central difficulty which lay at the basis of the racial troubles in Canada, and which pre- vented the settlement of the political and economic 61 LORD SYDENHAM problems which had grown up in that colony, was the policy of the Quebec Act. It was this measure which had established a radical and permanent cleavage between the French and English races in Canada. For the fatal consequences of this measure, therefore, Lord Sydenham had to provide a prac- tical if not, in the eyes of all parties, a popular solution. At the time of the conquest, the terms of capitu- lation and the Treaty of Paris, with a humanity as generous as it was rare under such circumstances, had guaranteed to the conquered people complete security of property and freedom of religious faith, demanding only submission to the general legal and poHtical institutions of the govjernment of which they were henceforth to be subjects. The British authorities made no attempt to interfere with the domestic customs and institutions of the French-Canadians ; while under the British constitu- tion and laws substituted for those of France, the general body of the people enjoyed an immunity from feudal exactions which contrasted happily with their former condition and introduced for Canada a period of unwonted prosperity. Unac- customed to the more advanced forms of British freedom and self-government, which had been gradually established in the older colonies to the south, few of the French-Canadians understood or sympathized with the claims for representative government raised by the small but growing 62 GOVERNMENT AFTER THE CONQUEST English element which, attracted by the oppor- tunities for trade, had resorted to the colony immediately after the conquest. These claims, though based upon the definite promises of the British government in 1763, which frankly con- templated for Canada a British future, were un- doubtedly somewhat premature. A special difficulty, as regards representative government, was presented by the character of certain English laws which had been expressly framed to exclude those professing the Roman Catholic religion from many of the normal priv- ileges of British citizenship. The vast majority of the Canadians being Roman Catholics, it was not practicable to apply to Canada the British conditions of representative government, hence a special constitution would have been required, with new forms of oaths, to permit of Canadians being elected members of the legislature, or of holding public offices. For such a special constitution, most of the Enghsh element in Canada were quite pre- pared, though, in default of special legislation, some of them were evidently quite willing to assume the responsibility of legislating for the colony. How- ever, no real inequality of rights seriously threatened the new subjects, and considering the many radical diffisrences between French and English political institutions, rapid progress was being made in anglicizing the colony. How rapid this was the astonished officials of the provincial government 63 LORD SYDENHAM afterwards amply testified, though with much chagrin. Increasing difficulties, however, with the older colonies, caused the military governors to look with growing suspicion upon the anglicizing process which was so rapidly going on in Canada. In the official mind the idea was soon firmly planted that the lack of submission to those in authority mani- fested by some of the adjoining British colonies was due to the removal of the dread of invasion from French Canada and its Indian allies. Hence, dis- regarding all else than the maintenance of British authority, the governing mind conceived the idea of restoring Canada to the condition which it had occupied under French rule, merely substituting George III for Louis XV, clothing him with the same feudal powers, and, as a necessary incident, restoring the military and feudal privileges of the noblesse, and placing the Church also in its former relationship to the system. This involved the re- versal of the previous British policy, adopted only after careful consideration of the present and future of the colony, — the abandonment of voluntary pledges and the abolition of such English laws and institutions as had been introduced, the discourage- ment of British immigration, and the securing as far as possible of the withdrawal of the English element already in the colony. To accomplish these results the Quebec Act was passed. Injustice to the authors of that Act and to 64 POLICY OF THE QUEBEC ACT the policy which it expressed, it must be acknow- ledged that they had no idea of attempting to govern under it two distinct races. It was framed to govern one race only, and that exclusively French- Canadian. Such a policy, however impracticable, was at least self-consistent. The subsequent ab- surdities in the Canadian government were due to a radical change of policy without a corresponding change of constitution, resulting in a system which was neither self-consistent nor practical. But before the Quebec Act could be put into execution the American revolution, of which it was one of the chief precipitating causes, had run its course, and rendered the policy of the Act useless. Through the irony of fate Canada now remained the most important portion of the British possessions in North America, and the Quebec Act, if honestly administered, would have guaranteed it a French, and not a British, future. For a time after the loss of the American colonies, the British people and their government seemed anxious to forget that unfortunate episode and the poUcy which had in- duced it. At any rate, while the central policy of the Quebec Act was rendered meaningless by the loss of the southern colonies, and while the coming of the Loyalists caused the administration of the French system to become very embarrassing, still the government had not the courage to revert to its former policy, and the fact that it was urged to do so by the Opposition naturally prevented its adop- 65 LORD SYDENHAM tion. On the contrary, the most unfortunate course possible was taken. A process of piecemeal en- croachment upon the Act and nullification of its leading principles was entered upon. This move- ment immediately precipitated the most vigorous protests on the part of the French lawyers, judges, and members of the council, supported by a few of the English officials who had been instrumental in getting the Act passed. The English element, how- ever, and the judges and officials who sided with them, began from the first to introduce English law and rules of court, and English features of administration quite contrary to the spirit of the Quebec Act. Technically, of course, the Quebec Act, while re- storing the French-Canadian system of law, tenures of land, and other feudal obligations, naturally pro- vided for additions and amendments to the law for the future, through the medium of a legislative council. But, under a policy which frankly abolished the British laws and institutions in order to restore the French system, it could not be imagined that, except by obvious breach of faith, the legislative powers of the council would be employed to gradu- ally abolish the French and reintroduce the EngUsh system. Yet this is what was actually attempted, and it was the very obvious lack of frankness in the process of reversing the policy of the Quebec Act, while professing to respect it, which increasingly exasperated the French-Canadians. The English law 66 CHAOTIC CONDITIONS and legal procedure were introduced into the prac- tice of the courts where the cases of English sub- jects were tried. The result was not only a breach of faith, but endless confusion in the courts. As was so fully admitted in the exhaustive reports of 1786-7, the English element in the colony refused to accept the Quebec Act as final, but instead of leaving the colony, as Carleton had hoped and as they themselves freely admitted would be necessary if the Act were to be taken as final, they remained and continued to contend for what they claimed to be their rights under the first pledges given by the government. It is true that various amendments to the law, in the direction of introducing British features, were brought up in council and hotly debated there. Yet, except during the brief administration of Lieutenant-Governor Hamilton, after the recall of Governor Haldimand, these amendments were in- variably defeated. The first English governors, — Carleton, who secured the passing of the Act, Haldimand, Hope, and Carleton again, during the first part of his administration as Lord Dorchester, stood by the Quebec Act, and sided with the French element against the British. But Dor- chester, after a futile effort to compel the English Loyalists to give up their British institutions and come under the yoke of French feudalism, gave up the contest and, while deprecating in a feeble manner the bitterness which was rapidly develop- 67 LORD SYDENHAM ing under the breakdown of his system, adopted a neutral attitude. He mildly protested against the dismemberment of the province but accepted the fatal compromise of the Constitutional Act, which, without repealing the Quebec Act which had arrayed the two races against each other, simply furnished each with a weapon to smite the other. The Constitutional Act divided the province, to placate the Loyalist settlements, and added a representative assembly to the legislative council provided by the Quebec Act. Otherwise it left the inhabitants to settle as best they could whether the future of Canadian institutions was to be British or French. In Upper Canada the majority at once settled the question in favour of a British future. In Lower Canada the majority would have settled the question as readily in favour of a French future had they been entirely permitted to do so. Pitt, prime minister at the time of the passing of the Constitutional Act, was absorbed in matters nearer home which naturally appeared of vastly more importance than the constitution of Quebec. He therefore dismissed the most vital issue in the Canadian problem with the easy declaration that, having permitted, by the division of the province, the people of Upper Canada to change from French to British institutions, the Lower Province would probably soon follow their example. The painful contrast which the antiquated and illiberal institu- tions of Lower Canada would present in comparison 68 THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS with the British institutions of Upper Canada would naturally, he claimed, open the eyes of the French- Canadians to the superiority of the British system, and lead to its voluntary adoption. Needless to say, with the exception of a few French -Canadians whose education and business associations rendered them famihar with British institutions, the only parties in Lower Canada who realized the undesir- able consequence of retaining the French system were the English element of the cities and of the newer settlements. But the more strongly they en- deavoured to secure the introduction of British features, the more stubbornly were they resisted by the French-Canadian majority, with the result that even the most obsolete and antiquated com- mercial features in the French-Canadian system were defended with a vigour and a length and re- finement of argument in direct proportion to their weakness. Moreover, as time went on, the adminis- tration of Upper Canada under the much-vaunted British institutions, seemed to present a very doubt- ful example of peace and feUcity. In the meantime, the governors who succeeded Dorchester increasingly allied themselves with the English element in the colony, and took every opportunity to enlarge the Enghsh and diminish the French features in the pubHc law and adminis- tration of the country. Naturally, with the expansion of the colony and the development of its commercial interests, the introduction of new and the amend- 69 LORD SYDENHAM ment of old laws would be required, but, owing to the peculiar antagonism which existed between the laws and customs of the two races, every proposed amendment to the French law was looked upon with extreme suspicion as simply a further attempt to encroach upon the French nationality. On the other hand, the numerous amendments to the Eng- lish law in the Upper Province passed without comment. Soon the national position of the two races came to be reversed. When the Quebec Act was passed the French were the loyal and the Brit- ish the disloyal element ; under the administrations subsequent to the Constitutional Act, the British became the loyal and the French the disloyal parties. Moreover, the French were constantly accused not only of disloyalty but of base ingrati- tude for not giving up at a later stage and under pressure, that which they had been voluntarily granted and encouraged to accept, many of the common people much against their will, when the Quebec Act was passed. In other words, having been at one time invited and even coerced to remain French they were afterwards accused of disloyalty for refusing to give up their French nationality and become British. But as the French-Canadian poet Frechette has put it, " while the French- Canadians undoubtedly owed Britain a permanent debt of grati- tude, it was from the fact that after the conquest she had not required them to become British." Had the French- Canadians been frankly left to them- 70 A PETRIFIED SYSTEM selves under the Quebec Act, they would un- doubtedly have gradually modified and developed what was in many respects an obsolete and anti- quated system of law even at the conquest. But, owing to the antagonism of races and institutions, they dared not admit any defects in their system or any necessity for amendments, since this would afford a pretext to substitute the laws of their rivals. One cannot avoid a certain sympathy with the unprogressive and even reactionary policy of the French-Canadians if one considers what would have been the consequences had a colony of Englishmen been conquered by France, and, to suit some special domestic policy of the French government, had not only been allowed but encouraged to maintain their British laws and institutions. And if, afterwards, without any change of constitution or professed change of policy, they found their English laws and institutions being gradually encroached upon with the obvious, and indeed confessed, intention of forc- ing them to become French, what must have been their feehngs, and, in consequence, their actions ? Can we suppose that a British colony thus treated would feel such affection for the sovereign power of France that they would voluntarily assist in such efforts to change their nationality ? They would undoubtedly strive to throw off the foreign yoke which alone prevented the untrammelled enjoy- ment of their native institutions. 71 LORD SYDENHAM It is true, as already indicated, that under the Quebec Act alone, with a governor in sympathy with the English element in the province, and consequently with a legislative and executive coun- cil ultimately of the same complexion, it would have been constitutionally quite a simple matter to have abolished the French-Canadian laws and institutions and substituted a British system in their stead. But having provided by the Constitutional Act for an assembly representative of the popular element in the province, it was impossible to restore the British laws without the consent of the popular majority, and this of course was steadily withheld. Thus, by one of the numerous ironies of fate which pursued British policy in Lower Canada, the intro- duction of representative government, without the repeal of the Quebec Act, instead of effecting, as was intended, the introduction of a characteristically British and angUcizing factor, proved to be the most effective means which could have been devised for putting a complete check upon every British innovation other than those which were irregularly, and more or less surreptitiously, introduced through the medium of the executive government. T2 CHAPTER VI GOVERNMENT UNDER THE CONSTITUTIONAL ACT IT had been quite generally assumed that the granting of representative government under the Constitutional Act w^ould confer upon the Cana- dians, whether in Upper or Lower Canada, all the privileges and blessings of the British constitution. But those who lightly employed such language to enhance the concessions made in the Constitutional Act, in a vain effort to dispose of the troublesome Canadian problem, seem to have assumed that the essence of the constitution consisted merely of three allied governing powers, the King, the Lords, and the Commons. These powers Britain had had for centuries, and yet had obtained from them very different systems of government, depending upon a special arrangement and balance of the three corre- lative powers, but depending still more upon the social and political atmosphere in which they operated, and which was the expression of changing temperaments, ideals, and the general public opinion of the body of the nation. Thus, not only did these co-ordinate powers give many kinds of government in the course of their past adjustments, but were to give wholly unexpected, and to many of that age, quite shocking phases of government for the cen- 73 LORD SYDENHAM tury to come. When, therefore, the Constitutional Act added to the governor and council of the Que- bec Act a representative assembly, it did not follow that, because the system superficially resembled that of the Mother Country, it must of necessity produce the same results in Canada as in Britain, or even similar results in the two provinces into which the territory of Canada was divided. Nor did it follow that the balance of power and the adjust- ment of executive responsibility, as worked out in Canada, would at all resemble the British system of responsible government. The governor who represented the king, just because his powers were delegated, of necessity occupied a very different position froni that of the king, whose powers were original, though greatly limited by gradually developed traditions and usages. In some respects much more depended upon a governor in Canada than upon the king in Britain, in others much less. In his executive func- tions he was much freer from traditional limitations, and depended to a far less extent upon the respon- sible advice of his councillors, though, for quite other reasons, he was commonly at the mercy of his council in many irresponsible ways. In other respects he was supposed to be governed by specific Acts of the imperial parliament, and to operate under an elaborate body of instructions which curtailed his freedom in certain directions while forcing his interference in others. He was also 74 EARLY TYPE OF GOVERNOR required both to seek and accept special instruc- tion and advice from the colonial office. But there were other differences quite apart from constitutional questions. The governor was not born and reared in the midst of Canadian con- ditions, with family traditions and personal interests all connected with the past, present, and future of the country. He came to Canada too often a stranger alike to its historic and its actual con- ditions, and, being commonly a military man, had little or no knowledge of the working principles of civil government. On the contrary, he had the traditions of a man in authority sent out to govern the distant possessions of the home country, the emigrants to which lost their capacity for sound judgment and the exercise of British liberty in much the same degree as if they had been recruited into the army. From the point of view of the colo- nists, too, the governor's position was very different from that of the king. While recognized, for the most part, as an exalted and important personage, this was chiefly due to the official position which he filled and the influence which he exercised with those in power at home, but his position was tem- porary and his powers delegated. His decisions might be appealed against, his tenure of office was uncertain, and by agitation it might be curtailed. Moreover, he was not, like the king, a person who could do no wrong, because of the responsibility of his ministers. His ministers might indeed be the 75 LORD SYDENHAM real advisers of his actions, but they were not responsible for them, being always able to take shelter behind the authority of the governor, who, in turn, was responsible to the home government, and might on occasion take shelter behind his in- structions from the colonial office. At the same time, every governor came to Canada as a stranger, and must, therefore, of necessity obtain most of his information and ideas on government from those who filled the administrative offices, and who were thoroughly familiar with local conditions, at least as seen from their particular angle of experience or interest. Hence each successive governor was naturally more or less at the mercy of his executive officers, the more important of whom commonly occupied seats in both the legislative and executive councils. The real governors of the colony were thus so sheltered that to attempt to attack them resulted in an assault on the governor, and through him on the British government. The governor's position, therefore, and his relationship at once to the coun- try and to the other estates in the government, were very diffigrent from those of the British king. The legislative council was supposed to be the counterpart of the House of Lords. A great part of the Constitutional Act was taken up with pro- visions for securing in the colony a body of land- ed aristocracy which, when furnished with suitable titles of honour, would provide the requisite no- bility from which to recruit the legislative council, 76 ARISTOCRACY AND A STATE CHURCH or Canadian House of Lords. The proximity of the exalted rank and dignity of these Canadian nobles would incidentally sharpen the tooth of remorse which was assumed to be gnawing the consciences of those fallen republicans in the lower regions to the south. As aristocratic institutions were still naturally associated with divine rights, so the normal support of an aristocracy was a State Church. Extensive provision was accordingly made in the same Act for the support of an Established Church. It is doubtful which of these two allied contributions of the Constitutional Act caused most trouble in the country before they were finally disposed of. The provision for an aristocracy contributed the Family Compact, with the necessary accompaniments of land-grabbing intrigues, for an impecunious aris- tocracy would inspire little awe and less envy. The provisions for a State Church contributed that apple of discord, the Clergy Reserves, which pro- vided so many and so sadly neglected opportunities for the display of Christian charity. As the members of the legislative council held their offices for life, they were free from the cor- rupting influences which press upon those who have to keep in touch with the vulgar multitude. They could, therefore, if so inclined, freely devote to public questions an enlightened mind and un- biassed judgment; or, if differently minded, they could devote themselves with equal effect to the 77 LORD SYDENHAM pursuit of private interests and class privileges, with a calm disregard of public opinion. The executive council, gradually shaping itself into a body of ministers with specialized functions, consisted, as a rule, of the special members of the legislative council who presided over the adminis- tration of government. Theoretically they were selected by the governor, practically, as we have seen, they were commonly selected by the office- holding cliques who monopolized the ear of the governor. The governor, however, was ultimately responsible for their actions, on practically the same terms as the president of the United States is responsible for his cabinet of secretaries. Not being mutually responsible to the people, as in the present form of the British or Canadian cabinet, they might be, and sometimes were, quite at variance with each other, whether as to the general policy of administration, or as to special, though vital, features. Quite generally, however, the absence of mutual responsibility to the legislature was supplied by the bonds of self-interest and mutual appoint- ment essential to the effective control of successive governors. These close corporations of office-holders were known in Upper Canada as the Family Com- pact, and in Lower Canada by various names, among them the " Scotch party." The foundation of the Family Compact in Upper Canada was laid by Governor Simcoe, who brought with him as his first executive officials a number 78 THE FAMILY COMPACT of men for the most part associated with him in the late Revolutionary War. Appointing these to the chief offices of trust and to seats in the legislative council, he virtually established for them a life tenure in the executive offices. These were the men who were encouraged by Simcoe to regard them- selves as the foundation stones of that new aris- tocracy which, with their successors, would be- come the bulwark of the British authority, and en- sure the remaining British possessions in America against the subtle inroads of democracy which had undermined the authority of the home government in the lost colonies to the south. These gentlemen took their functions very seriously. With lavish hand they bestowed upon themselves in the king's name vast tracts of the best land in the province. In the meantime, while the poorer immigrants in the surrounding settlements were raising these idle lands into valuable estates, they subsisted on the various offices of considerable emolument in the province, and in various ways so identified them- selves with the king's interest that to doubt their authority or their rights was to dispute the royal prerogative, to question their pretensions was dis- loyalty, to attack their privileges was treason, and to seek to overthrow their power, or to subordinate the executive to the representative body was re- publicanism and rebellion. In Lower Canada, after furnishing the French- Canadians with an assembly as their organ, the 79 LORD SYDENHAM legislative and executive councils became the strong- hold of the English element, who, naturally fur- nishing a controlling atmosphere for the successive governors, persuaded them that in spite of the Quebec Act the province was destined to be ulti- mately British. By means of more or less active measures they assisted in promoting that idea. The French element, becoming more pronounced in their opposition to this policy, utihzed, with in- creasing skill, their majority in the assembly to block this purpose. But, by putting themselves in opposition to the English element, they became a party of disloyalty, losing incidentally the confi- dence of the governor and therefore all prospect of filling any important offices in the administration of the province. Obviously, during the regime of the Constitu- tional Act, the legislative council in both provinces was anything but an obsolete institution. It was the only vital organ for expressing the wishes of the British element in Lower Canada; in a some- what less special degree it was the organ of a very select class of interests in Upper Canada. Since all legislation must either originate with the as- sembly or at least receive its sanction, the majority in the assembly could, on the one hand, insist upon their favourite measures being brought forward, or, on the other, block any measures distasteful to them which might originate in the council or were introduced by the minority in the assembly who 80 A TENDENCY TO DEADLOCK sympathized with the council. As from the first the French-Canadians were in a majority in the assembly of Lower Canada, and could control it when so minded, and as, after the introduction of the Constitutional Act, the English element pre- dominated in the council, the race cleavage was enabled to express itself effectively in the two branches of the legislature. But, while each branch of the legislature was all-powerful in blocking any objectionable movements on the part of the other for the introduction of new laws or the amendment of old ones, each was correspondingly impotent to insure the enactment of any legislation, no matter how vital it might be for the interests of the country. Only such measures, therefore, could be passed as were of a neutral character as regards the racial issues, or such as were absolutely requisite for even a hand-to-mouth provincial existence, and on which a compromise might be arranged. The leaders of the popular party in Canada be- came famihar with the superficial aspects at least of the powers and functions of the House of Com- mons in Britain and the virtual responsibility of the ministers of the Crown to the majority in that House. It was then readily perceived that, if this principle could be introduced and secure recogni- tion in Canada, it would enable the popular party to control the situation. In the Lower Province it would give to the French -Canadian nationality, through its leaders, a complete control of the 81 LORD SYDENHAM government of that province, while in Upper Canada it would enable the party controlling the majority in the legislature to control also the ex- ecutive government. In Lower Canada, once the French-Canadian party was efficiently organized, this would have meant that, by the introduction of this one feature from British constitutional practice, the French-Canadians would have been able to prevent any other British element from being brought in to contaminate their historic institu- tions. They would then have been free to accom- plish Carleton's aspiration in preventing any further British immigration to Lower Canada, and would have regarded with much complacency the exodus of the British settlers to escape the French system. In Upper Canada it would probably have had the opposite effect, as the majority in the assembly pro- fessedly favoured progress and innovation, though it must be admitted, from a survey of the measures which they frequently advocated, that their con- ception of progress was distinguished for its ardour rather than its wisdom, and their innovations were frequently ill-digested and even impossible. In neither province, however, with a very few excep- tions in Upper Canada, did those who advocated the British system of a government controlled by the popular branch of the legislature understand what that really meant as operated in England. Nor did they realize what were the characteristic details of political organization and practical ad- 82 CONTROL OF THE PROVINCIAL PURSE ministration which must of necessity accompany responsible government in order that it might be operated in Canada with anything hke the same efficiency as in Britain. It was one of the chief functions of Lord Sydenham's administration to enlighten the Canadian politicians on this subject, and to demonstrate to them, from his own personal experience, how many other factors and how much of detailed organization were indispensable to the elementary working of responsible government. It was, however, a well-known historic fact that the chief means by which the English House of Commons had risen from a very subordinate to a distinctly controlling position, was its command over the national purse. This avenue to power had not, it may be imagined, been neglected by the popular leaders in the assembly of either province. However, certain difficulties had been met with from the first. Before the days of representative government in the Canadas, certain imperial Acts had provided sources of revenue which were beyond the control of the assembly. This revenue was pro- vided for before Britain pledged herself, in a belated effiDrt to reconcile the American colonies, not to levy further specific taxes upon any of the colonies. Moreover, in the earlier days of the assembly, cer- tain revenue Acts were made permanent, but these could be amended, to give the assembly annual control, only with the assent of the legislative council, which was of course steadily refused, the 88 LORD SYDENHAM purpose of the amendment being too well under- stood. With these permanent sources of revenue and some assistance from time to time from im- perial funds, it was possible for the executive government to continue its functions even when the assembly refused to vote supplies. For such public objects as the assembly could not afford to neglect, they were compelled to vote specific sums. Control of the revenue being an all-important factor in the conflict with the executive and legislative councils, especially in Lower Canada, the contest tended to centre round this problem. The central object of attack, however, was the legislative council with its adjunct the executive council. The lines of attack were not always very consistent with each other. It was finally demanded, as the most direct way out of the difficulty, that the legislative council should be made elective, which would give the French the command of both houses of the legisla- ture. In Upper Canada, there being no racial problem, there was much less definiteness in the issues which divided the political groups. Class privileges and an office-holding oligarchy were the chief objects of attack. A whole volume of grievances was ulti- mately compiled, but the majority of the items re- solved themselves into instances of arrogance and self-seeking by the favoured group who sought to monopolize the most promising resources of the province, especially the public offices. One of the 84 TO DISCREDIT REFORMERS most prominent subjects of discord, the Clergy Re- serves, was simply a case in point, being essentially a question of class privilege in the enjoyment of public funds. In Upper Canada the movement to- wards popular control of the executive was steadily working out, though in a rather crude fashion. It was simply a matter of time, accompanied, of course, with much politicial friction, as to the final control by the assembly. It suited the purpose of the Compact party and of the lieutenant-governor, who was their very willing instrument, to identify the Mackenzie episode with the purpose of the reform party, in order to brand their movement as essentially treasonable. In this, for a time, the oli- garchy was fairly successful. The cause of reform appeared to have received an indefinite set-back, when, fortunately for its advocates, the Durham Report exploded the reactionary programme. While condemning the small body of desperate men who attempted or favoured rebellion, Durham's Report strongly supported the more rational features of the reform policy, and boldly advocated the adoption of the British system of responsible government as an ultimate remedy for the political difficulties of the Upper Province. In Lower Canada, on the other hand, most far- sighted observers had perceived, even from the time of the adoption of the policy of the Quebec Act, and afterwards at the time of passing the Constitu- tional Act, that the situation in that province must 85 LORD SYDENHAM lead ultimately to an open rupture between the two races, and even between the two provinces. To in- sure to the French-Canadians all the essentials of their nationality, and yet to deny to them the logical and necessary consequences of a complete control of their domestic affairs and of an ultimate escape from the national humiliation of a foreign yoke, was nothing short of the refinement of racial cruelty, which, fortunately for the reputation of British humanity, the English people have repeatedly con- demned when practised by other countries. To expect the French-Canadians to voluntarily forego their nationality, and peacefully resign themselves to British citizenship, was the height of absurdity. There was plainly no alternative, consistent with reason and humanity, other than that of granting them full independence as a distinct people, or to take away once and for all the occasion of those tantalizing dreams of French nationality, and give them to understand that, however distasteful for the present, their ultimate fate was to be a corpor- ate part of an Anglo-Saxon colony with unified and harmonious political institutions. Wisdom and humanity had long demanded one or other of these alternatives. No one of the long series of frequently changing colonial secretaries and their delegated governors could find any other solution. But, with the exception of a half-hearted attempt to reunite the provinces in 1822, in the face of the plainest warnings, no one of them had the 86 THE FINAL OUTCOME courage to face either alternative. They sirriply temporized while the situation steadily grew worse, each contenting himself with the prayer that peace might be vouchsafed in his time. At last the inevit- able and long-expected happened. It matters little whose pipe sets the heather on fire when any spark will start a blaze. Had the French-Canadians been as well organized as they were ripe for revolt, and had those begin- ning the rebellion enjoyed competent leadership, a few initial successes would have brought the great majority to their assistance, while almost none would have declined to join an independent French govern- ment. The Loyalist party in such a case would have been easily taken care of. But French-Canadian leadership was wofully deficient, and the rebellion was short-lived ; nor was a second outbreak, im- mediately following Lord Durham's departure, any better managed or more successful. 87 CHAPTER VII LORD DURHAM'S REPORT AT len^h the British government recognized that the problem of Lower Canada had really to be faced. Lord Durham, with an able staff, was despatched to Canada, clothed with extraordinary powers. He was given a very free hand to adopt such measures as were necessary to restore tranquillity, and to report upon the most effective means of governing the colony for the future. But though his powers were wider than those of any governor since Dorchester, he managed to travel beyond them, involving himself and the home government in a very awkward dilemma. The Opposition taking full advantage of this. Lord Durham's recall was ren- dered inevitable, after a meteoric course of some five months. This is not the place to discuss the authorship of Lord Durham's Report, but a study of it, in the light of the documents from the conquest down to the time of its appearance, shows that those who prepared the materials for it, as the result of those "various and extensive inquiries into the institu- tions and administration of these provinces " which Lord Durham had set on foot, had carefully gone over the history of their subject. They were evident- ly familiar not only with the leading public docu- 89 LORD SYDENHAM ments, whether printed or in manuscript, but had apparently gone over much private and confidential correspondence which has only quite recently been opened to general research. In addition they had taken much pains to obtain from the most repre- sentative persons the various views and policies entertained by different sections of Canadian opinion. As was to be expected, each party in Canada ac- cepted as just and enlightened those portions of the Report which dealt favourably with their views and aspirations, but were inclined to regard the more unfavourable criticisms as largely due to false infor- mation or as the fruits of groundless prejudice. Al- though originality and novelty seemed- to many to be striking features of Lord Durham's Report, yet in reality there is very little in it which is not found in previous reports or elsewhere. It is in fact one of its strongest features that it adhered closely to the facts as they had been carefully ascertained in the past, or as they were to be discovered at the time by any open-eyed and fair-minded investigator, seeking only to make a survey of the actual crisis and of the historic conditions which led up to it. It is this unprejudiced attitude towards the whole Canadian problem as an absorbingly interesting historic experiment in practical politics, which gives to the Durham Report its freshness and vitality. The first portion of it is devoted to the problem of Lower Canada, in which is brought out the folly 90 FRUITS OF MISTAKEN POLICY of the earlier British governors who, on plausible but shortsighted grounds, turned aside the first normal movement towards a unified British colony. In its present English sections, it is true, this would have been much more thoroughly penetrated with the French -Canadian institutions than it is to-day, but still in a blended harmony with the British system of public law and government, as in the original Dutch colony of New York, or the more modern state of Louisiana. But, the mistake once made by the introduction of the Quebec Act, the Report demonstrates, with ample detail and from every line of approach, that, without attempting to change the foundation lines of the old policy, a new one was attempted to be engrafted upon it. This policy was doomed to utter failure and to ensure an ultimate conflict of races. Now that the conflict had issued in physical violence, the English element demanded that the struggle of rival races be ended, and that, as the obvious future of the continent was an Anglo- Saxon one, this must be recognized in policy as well as in fact. " Lower Canada must be English, at the expense, if necessary, of not being British." The next important question taken up by the Report was the defective constitutional system, as revealed in both provinces by the friction and periodic deadlock developed between the different sections of the legislature and with the executive government. It demonstrated the impossibility of working an assembly which could not directly affect 91 LORD SYDENHAM the executive, and the futihty of attempting to se- cure harmonious and acceptable government where the executive was completely removed from popu- lar control and from all opportunity for explaining or justifying its actions before the representatives of the people. It was also shown that the members of the executive government held a vested interest in their offices, to the extent of expecting full com- pensation for removal or readjustment, and that class privilege was so highly developed as to be regarded as an indispensable bulwark of British supremacy and Canadian loyalty. The natural con- sequences of this condition of affairs were revealed in the experience of the Canadas, where a lack of responsibility and efficiency was shown -in every de- partment of government, the legislature as well as the executive, the assembly as well as the council. The outcome of this part of the investigation was the advocacy of a form of mutual responsibility as between the diffigrent factors of the government, so that they should be required to act in harmony, rendering it impossible for one to fall permanently out of touch with the other. Among the other important features of Canadian government touched upon with more or less detail, was the lack of municipal institutions to take charge of the details of local administration and to famil- iarize the people with the essentials of responsible government. The provincial finances of necessity received special attention; in Upper Canada in par- 92 MUCH NEED FOE REFORM ticular they had fallen into hopeless confusion, alike as to the sources of revenue and its administration and expenditure. There was a chronic interpro- vincial dispute also, relative to the proportion of revenue due to each province from the proceeds of the customs duties levied in Lower Canada, and also as to the relative obligations of the two pro- vinces towards improving the system of water communication by way of the St. Lawrence route, the great commercial highway of both provinces. The vexed question of the Clergy Reserves was also dealt with, though the conclusion reached was not very favourable to the idea of an endowed national church as a bulwark of monarchy. The Report advocated that the revenues from these lands should be placed at the disposal of the legis- lature of each province. It was implied also that the revenue had better be devoted to the advance- ment of intellectual culture, rather than to the fostering of unchristian church rivalry. The backward progress of the Canadas and of the Maritime Provinces was dealt with at consider- able length, and a striking contrast was drawn between the Canadian and American sides of the boundary line as regards commercial enterprise, the development of natural resources, and the at- traction of capital and population, especially from the British Islands. In Canada, however, this was a subject as painful as it was obvious, and those who were represented as chiefly responsible for the con- 93 LORD SYDENHAM dition of the Canadas resented the comparison as utterly unpatriotic, and as evincing republican and anti-British sympathies. Other matters dealt with at considerable length, in connection with the economic difficulties of the Canadas, were immi- gration, land-granting and land-jobbing generally. Finally, as a means of putting an end to a system which had resulted in the present crisis, and as the beginning of improved racial condi- tions, though unfortunately at a very late date and requiring many years to remedy the evils already rooted in the colony, the reunion of the provinces was strongly advocated, but on such a basis that the French-Canadians should be pre- vented from commanding the majority of the votes in the united legislature. For the French-Canadians were to be given to understand, once and for all, that their dream of an independent nationality was impossible, and that in a thorough union with the Anglo-Saxon element their whole future was bound up. In this united country they must look for a larger field in which their talents might have freer scope than would ever have been possible in the narrower and more uncertain range of an indepen- dent French dominion. When Lord Durham's Report was published, though naturally unpalatable to the French- Canadians, for a time at least, it was scarcely other than was to be anticipated after the late crisis which had resulted in the suspension of representa- 94 RECEPTION OF THE REPORT tive government in Lower Canada. There was therefore but little discussion of it on the part of the French. The English element in Lower Canada were so satisfied with its general conclusions, and especially with the recommendation of the reunion of the provinces, which was expected to redeem them from bondage, political and economic, that they passed over in silence, and many of them doubtless with a consciousness of their essential truth, the criticisms passed upon the objectionable constitutional methods employed by the legislative and executive councils in Lower Canada. As a matter of fact, many of the most abnormal uses made of both assembly and council in Lower Canada were but the natural and inevitable ex- pression of the radical racial struggle there. In Upper Canada, however, the party of loyalty, who were in their own eyes and in those of their friends the representatives of British authority and the defenders of the country against republicanism and rebellion, found their methods and system severely criticized, and their principles of govern- ment declared impossible of continuance. It is true that the methods of their opponents were as un- sparingly criticized, and were shown to be equally impossible; but the central principles wliich they advocated, though with some confusion of ideas, were regarded as looking in the right direction, and pointing the way towards a more stable and workable form of government. To the champions 95 LORD SYDENHAM of prerogative the Report brought dismay, followed by anger and denunciation and the now familiar representation of the home government as itself tainted with disloyalty when its policy may not happen to harmonize with this or that colonial party which has made its particular interests the touchstone of imperial principles, and has assumed loyalty as one of its party cries. The favourite amusement of the baser sort of Loyalists in Upper Canada was to burn in effigy those members of the imperial cabinet who were suspected of being dis- loyal to the Family Compact's conception of im- perialism. The party of reform, struggling to dissociate themselves from the few misguided enthusiasts who had endeavoured to excite the people to rebellion in the name of reform, hailed Lord Durham's Re- port with unqualified delight. The criticisms of the Report on the crude methods of Reformers in con- ducting practical politics, and in their lack of appreciation of what organized government of the British type involved, were lost in their joy at find- ing both the methods and principles of the Family Compact condemned, and the central principles for which they had contended, however blindly, recog- nized as in essence correct. Their spirits revived; I^ord Durham's Report became their Bible, with its golden texts from which they preached, often with no very refined exegesis, the gospel of respon- sible government. Those who accepted the policy 96 THE COMPACT MAKES REPLY of the Durham Report were known by their oppon- ents as Durhamites, with various aliases such as re- bels, repubhcans, Yankees, traitors, with a long and frequently picturesque line of qualifying epithets not at all of a flattering nature. The Reformers replied in kind, and the Family Compact and their supporters had quite as many aliases with suitable qualifying terms, suggestive of corruption, tyranny, and oppression. Increasing torrents of mingled argument, declamation, and abuse being brought forth and finding a ready demand, the newspapers multiplied under the stimulus of the controversy. The Compact party found it highly necessary to make a formal reply to Durham's Report, as the very citadel of their enemies. This was accomplished through the medium of two reports, one from a se- lect committee of the House of Assembly of Upper Canada on the state of the provinces, the other a report of the select committee of the legislative council on Lord Durham's Report. These are very interesting documents, and show that, whatever the defects of the Family Compact, its representative members were certainly not lacking in ability. In the report from the assembly much space is devoted to a detailed recital of the depredations committed by escaped rebels from Canada, and by the various groups of sympathizers on the American side of the border. These are adroitly used to give colour to the attitude of the whole American people and their government. Altogether they painted a most un- 97 LORD SYDENHAM flattering picture of the people of the United States and their repubhcan institutions, which are repre- sented as exciting feelings of disgust in all right- minded Englishmen. This recital is employed to exalt the devotion of those who have saved Canada from the clutches of such an enemy, and who are made to suffer outrage and aggression solely be- cause of their loyalty to their country. They served also to offset that contrast, unfavourable to Canada as compared with the United States, which was presented in Lord Durham's Report, and which they endeavoured to represent as an unwarrantable slur upon the mass of the Canadian people. Incident- ally, too, the respectable people of the province, who are the vast majority of course, are represented as supporters of the views and feelings of the critics of Lord Durham and his Report. Having painted such a dark picture of repub- lican institutions and of their debasing effect upon human nature, what must be the character of any misguided Canadian who should look with a fav- ourable eye upon that particular form of repub- licanism known as responsible government ? When they have occasion to refer to Mr. Buller, Lord Durham's chief secretary, whom they evidently regard as the chief author of the Report, he is represented as a believer in republican institutions, an American sympathizer, and an advocate of anti- British and anti-monarchical principles. It requires no further argument, therefore, to prove his base- 98 VIRTUOUS INDIGNATION ness and tlie lost character of any who should favour his views. In their specific criticism of the Report, they represent the disappointment with which the loyal portion of the Canadian population learned of the selection of Lord Durham for the critical mission entrusted to him. He was known to be too favour- able to those political views which alone had brought upon Canada all its misfortunes, but, as we have said, their chief compliments are paid to INIr. Buller, the open advocate of the views of Papineau and Mackenzie. They excuse themselves from going into details on many of the most essential features in the Report; they will merely take up typical features. They do not object to being represented as the party of wealth, power, land grants, government offices, and all other good things, but express surprise that these possessions should not be taken as prima facie evidence that they are the very people who ought to be in power. Assuming that the faction de- signated the Family Compact was supported by the great majority of the people of Upper Canada, they claimed that it was highly improper to repre- sent " the great body of the people of the country as a ' Compact,' " and solemnly proceed to show that the chief office-holders in the executive gov- ernment were not specially connected through her- editary descent. They even endeavoured to make common cause with the Reformers against the Durham Report, indicating that the latter were 99 LORD SYDENHAM not treated with proper courtesy, inasmuch as they, too, came under certain criticisms, their ranks being represented as containing some who have a lean- ing towards the institutions of the United States rather than those of the Mother Country. Altogether the reply was a very adroit perform- ance, and though it does not appear to have checked the cause of reform very much, yet it brought com- fort to many of the faithful to whom Lord Dur- ham's Report came as a most disconcerting blow in their hour of triumph. As regarded the specific re- commendations of the Report with reference to the future government of the Canadas, they touched upon two points only, the legislative union of the provinces, and the responsibility of the officers of government to the legislature. The first they were prepared to accept under certain special conditions which will be referred to later. But the second was regarded as " inconsistent with the dependence of these provinces as colonies upon the Mother Coun- try." The report from the legislative council was much briefer than that from the assembly, but expressed practically the same sentiments. The criticism is of the same character, deals with much the same points, and is delivered in the same strain. The accuracy of the Report is first assailed as to certain details of fact and inference, and then, with a wide sweep of the arm, these defects are communicated to the whole body of the Report. Passing over, as in the 100 CONTRASTED SYSTEMS case of the assembly's report, the question of the Clergy Reserves, they devote special attention to the subject of responsible government, as most nearly affecting those in control of the provincial government. They admit it to be a very natural inference that the system of government in the Mother Country might be extended to all the Brit- ish dominions, but they regard it as practically impossible to preserve the colonial relations on such a basis. They are convinced that Lord Durham's plan " must lead to the overthrow of the great col- onial empire of England." Their contrast between the principles of the existing system and that which Lord Durham would introduce is thus ex- pressed : — " According to the present system, the governor of a colony exercises most of the royal functions, under the general direction of the ministers of the Crown ; he is strictly accountable for his conduct, and for the use he makes of the royal authority ; he recommends for office persons in the colony, or ap- points those selected by the minister ; and he en- deavours to conduct his government according to the policy of the imperial cabinet, with a view to the present prosperity and future greatness of a country in which England has a deep interest; and above all things, with the intention of preserving, against all opposition, the unity of the empire. . . . " According to the system proposed by the Earl of Durham, the advisers of the lieutenant-governor 101 UNTVEnSITi OF CALIFORNIA LORD SYDENHAM would not be officers who, in accordance with the poHcy of the home government, endeavour to aid the lieutenant-governor in concihating the affections of the people ; but they must be the creatures of the prevailing faction or party in the assembly, advising the governor altogether with a view to the wishes of the House for the moment, regardless of the opinions of the supreme parliament or those of the imperial cabinet, and having (though nominally subordinate) the power of forcing all their measures upon the governor. " The colonial governor must, in this case, be left without discretion or responsibility, and follow what- ever changes may occur ; in his colony he could take no directions from the minister of the jCrown, nor, indeed, communicate with the supreme government, unless in the terms dictated by his responsible ad- visers, to whose directions he must submit far more completely than the sovereign to the advice of the cabinet. ... " Either this must be the course pursued by a governor, with responsible advisers, or he must think for himself, independently of those advisers ; and, as a matter of course, throw himself for infor- mation and advice upon irregular and unknown sources. In such an event, the responsible advisers resign; they have, perhaps, a majority in the provincial parliament, but they may, notwith- standing, be very wrong. Then comes a dissolution of the provincial parliament, and, perhaps, an ex- 102 A REAL DIFFICULTY pression of public opinion, by a bare majority, against the government, and probably inimical to the interests of the empire. Who, then, is to yield ? The government must, in fact, retire from the contest, whether right or wrong, or carry on public affairs without any advisers or public officers. " This cannot be done ; so that, after all, the gov- ernor of the colony must be responsible to the pre- vailing party in the colony; and, so far as empire is concerned, he becomes the sovereign of an indepen- dent realm, having no discretion, and therefore no responsibility. " Under such a system, colonial dependence would practically be at end." This is undoubtedly a very clever presentation of the central difficulties to be met with in introducing a system of responsible government. In the light of what has actually happened it may be said to be technicaUy correct, and yet in practice untrue. Un- doubtedly, if formally specified and consciously introduced at one stroke, as was no doubt contem- plated by the more ambitious advocates of respons- ible government, it would have been impossible to preserve the colonial relationship. But we have never even yet had responsible government on those terms. There has never yet been a specification as to where the line is to be drawn between the authority of the home government and the independence of the col- onial government. It was, as we shall see, one of 103 LORD SYDENHAM Lord Sydenham's chief triumphs that at the one period in our history when there was a temptation to draw such a line under persistent questioning, he managed to introduce the essence of responsible government without being forced to draw the line. Time was required and the exercise of much tact in so arranging the transition that while responsible government was being developed, and the necessary changes in the Canadian administrative system were being effected, a new and informal bond expressive of the spirit rather than the letter of the imperial relation should have time and opportunity for de- velopment. This gradual growth of a new body of tradition and unwritten custom of the constitution had to proceed some distance before the existing harmony between the monarchical institution of the sovereign and the democratic institution of the Canadian cabinet could be brought into working harmony. This form of government is demonstrably impossible, according to every a pjio?i principle of law and politics, before it actually takes shape. In Canada, therefore, the Family Compact had little difficulty in theoretically demonstrating, as above, the impossibility of the co-existence of responsible government and the preservation of the ties of em- pire with the Mother Country. Naturally, the ad- vocates of responsible government had as little, few of them indeed as much, insight into what was involved in their policy as regards British connec- tion as the members of the Family Compact, tor 104 THE ISSUES INVOLVED the latter had much more carefully studied that aspect of the matter. The more ardent adv^ocates of responsible govern- ment looked to it chiefly for the accomplishment of a practical policy of executive government, under which only those could be retained in office who could command the confidence of a majority of the assembly. At the time of Lord Durham's Report they were much more anxious to be able to drive certain individuals out of office than to determine the niceties of the principles upon which their suc- cessors should hold office, or what relation they should bear to the governor-general and the home government. Lord Durham's Report had declared that not a single prerogative of the Crown was to be impaired. On the contrary, several prerogatives not hitherto exercised were to be brought into effisct, as was in- deed accomplished by Lord Sydenham. On the other hand, the Crown must consent to carry on the government by means of those in whom the re- presentative body in the legislature has confidence. If this were simply a matter of persons, there would of course be little difficulty. The Crown, we may suppose, has determined on a certain policy involv- ing the exercise of certain prerogatives. If the only question were, is this line of policy to be carried out, and are these prerogatives to be exercised through the medium of persons in whom the repre- sentative body has confidence, or through those in 105 LORD SYDENHAM whom it has not confidence, then the answer fur- nished by Lord Durham's Report is clear and dis- tinct. The poUcy must be carried out, and the pre- rogatives exercised by those in whom the repre- sentative body has confidence, whether personce gratce to the Crown or not. Now it must be ad- mitted that this was the chief problem for the time being. But if the question should arise, as un- doubtedly it must and actually did arise, what is to happen if there is a difference of opinion be- tween the home government and the colonial leg- islature as to concrete measures or a line of policy ? Then we have a question of measures and not of persons. The real difficulty to be faced is that the representative body in the colony wiH have con- fidence only in those ministers who refuse, when necessary, to accept the policy of the Crown, or to permit the exercise of objectionable prerogatives. For this situation it must be confessed that Lord Durham's Report does not offer a specific solution; it simply vaguely appeals to the practice in Eng- land, and claims that it may be exercised in the colonies as well. But the British king and govern- ment are not constitutionally required to act in harmony with the policy and prerogatives of any ulterior power, whereas the government of Canada was assumed by Lord Durham's Report to be under this restriction. It was plain, therefore, that on these terms the general reference to the English principles did not fully meet the Canadian conditions. Tech- 106 WHERE THE REPORT FAILED nically the Report was certainly open to this criti- cism, and there was as yet no adequate reply forth- coming to the dilemma skilfully presented by the legislative council. The speeches and articles of the advocates of responsible government who took Lord Durham's Report as their gospel, got no further than the Report itself in their efforts to clear up this difficulty. One and all fall back upon the parallel between the governments of Canada and Britain, and the necessity for a universal application of the British constitution to all parts of the British em- pire. The Montreal Gazette, the able exponent of the views of the English element which had held the ascendency in the executive and legislative councils in Lower Canada, and which was strongly in favour of the reunion of the provinces but opposed to re- sponsible government, was particularly clear on the subject of the many difficulties involved in the for- mal acceptance of the principle of responsible gov- ernment. It defied any of the persons or papers in favour of this principle, from Lord Durham to the Toronto Examiner (Mr. Hincks's paper), to say what it was that they meant by responsible govern- ment, and declared that they either did not know or dared not say. Indeed, in the vast majority of cases it was quite obvious that they did not know. But it might be reasonably supposed in the case of a few men, such as Francis Hincks and Joseph Howe, whose papers, the Examiner of Toronto and 107 LORD SYDENHAM the Nova Scotian of Halifax, gave much the ablest presentations of the principle of responsible gov- ernment, that they did not quite care to declare all that was latent in the principle. Obviously, here was an issue which required a practical, rather than a theoretic, solution. It has not to this day received a theoretic solution, as wit- ness the long list of failures which have been and are still being produced in the attempt. So peculiar was the problem that, as in the case of the British constitution itself, those who were chiefly instru- mental in furnishing a working solution were the least ready to furnish a theoretic statement of it. As we s-hall see, it was left to Lord John Russell and Lord Sydenham to present a practical* solution for Canada by a more adequate expression of what was involved in practice in the British system as advocated by Lord Durham's Report. 108 CHAPTER VIII A TANGLED PROBLEM AFTER the recall of I^ieutenant-Governor Sir F. B. Head, who, with the narrowest and most irreproachable logic, followed the theory of the Family Compact as to the relation of the colonial to the imperial government, Sir George Arthur was appointed lieutenant-governor of Up- per Canada. As a man of practical wisdom and business training he was much superior to Lieuten- ant-Governor Head, and under more fortunate circumstances would doubtless have proved a fairly efficient, though somewhat timid, governor. But, as he was himself anxious to prove on the arrival of the new governor-general, he had followed faithfully in the steps of his predecessor, under- standing that to be the wish of the colonial office. He considered it his chief duty to maintain peace in the colony, and re-establish the situation which existed before the crisis. Everything tended therefore to render him a typical victim of the at- mosphere furnished for him by the Compact party. In all his public utterances he breathed only the sentiments expressed in the two replies to Lord Durham's Report above referred to. Sir George Arthur had already written to the home government, in May, 1839, one of those naive 109 LORD SYDENHAM and almost pathetic despatches which he penned during that year. In this he points out the very awkward position in which the Durham Report has placed him. He claims to hav^e received from T^ord Glenelg, before leaving England, a personal assur- ance that the line adopted by Sir F. B. Head had been satisfactory to the home government, and an intimation that he should follow the same policy. This he admits that he carefully did, allying him- self with the Compact party, the friends of Head, and following their lead. Great excitement had prevailed throughout the province. Several indi- viduals, he admits, were arrested upon very slight evidence and treated as traitors. He himself had been as lenient as possible, but then -it was neces- sary to be severe on the rebels, otherwise he would have incurred " the dangerous resentment of the Loyalists." Howe's paper, the Nova Sco- tian, remarked upon the highly indecent and bloodthirsty spirit displayed in the editorials of the Tory papers in their demands for the blood of every merely suspected rebel. But, the lieutenant-gover- nor continues, Lord Durham's Report had harshly criticized the party of loyalty, and found justifica- tion for many of the grievances complained of by the Reformers, or Republicans. He, on the con- trary, had taken every opportunity in public and in private to praise the party of loyalty, and to severely lecture the other party for the evils which they had so unwarrantably brought upon the country, until 110 SIR JOHN COLBORNE he had reason to beheve that the latter were, for the most part, in a properly contrite spirit. It must be obvious, therefore, what a revulsion of feeling had been caused by those parts of the Durham Report to which he has referred. He will not deny that there may be considerable truth in them, but it was a great mistake to permit those portions of the Report to be published. Sir John Colborne, the able commander of the forces in Canada, who had preceded Head as lieu- tenant-governor in Upper Canada and also Lord Durham as governor-in-chief in Lower Canada, had again succeeded to Lord Durham's powers on his dramatic departure from the country. Colborne was a man of strong individuality and thorough inde- pendence of character. Essentially of the old school in colonial politics, and trained for military rather than for civil government, he had nevertheless ac- quired much valuable experience in Canada, and his counsel was highly valued by both Lord Sydenham and Sir Charles Bagot. After the suppression of the first outbreak of re- bellion in Lower Canada the English element with one voice maintained that it must never again be in the power of the French-Canadians to obstruct the normal progress of Canada, or to cherish the vain ambition that they might separate the province of Lower Canada from British connection and set up an independent French nationality. To secure this purpose without an indefinite suspension of repre- 111 LORD SYDENHAM sentative government, the reunion of the Canadas was proposed, on such a basis as would place the French-Canadians in a minority in the legislature. To promote the advocacy of this policy in Lower Canada, and to secure the consent and co-operation of the people of Upper Canada for its accomplish- ment, were the chief purposes of the Constitutional Associations of Quebec and Montreal, with branches in other centres. This movement was promoted by the leading citizens and commercial men of these cities, prominent among whom were Hon. George Moffat, Hon. Peter McGill, WiUiam Badgeley, Andrew Stuart, and J. Forsythe. They had very fully presented their arguments before Lord Dur- ham and his chief secretary Charles Buller, arguing in favour of the reunion of the Canadas and against the expediency of attempting to secure a union of all the British North American provinces. Special difficulties in the way of the latter were hkely, they foresaw, to postpone any union for some time, while the Canadian crisis demanded prompt action. The Hon. George Moffat was delegated to promote the cause in Upper Canada. They sent a delegation to Britain also to urge the measure on the home government, and to present petitions to the queen and both Houses of Par- liament in favour of it. The home government was doubtless fully as much influenced by the representations of the leading business men of the Canadas, backed by their London correspon- 112 UPPER CANADA AND REUNION dents, as by the recommendations of the Durham Report, The poHcy of the reunion of the Canadas was favourably regarded by tlie general body of the people of Upper Canada, chiefly, however, on econ- omic grounds, as promising for their commerce a free intercourse with the world. In February, 1838, the assembly had passed a series of resolutions at- tributing the chief cause of the evils under which the Canadas were suffering to the unwise division of the colony into two provinces, and had framed an address praying for their reunion. The council did not approve of the resolutions, for the reunion was not at all popular with the official element in Upper Canada, who, while recognizing that it presented some advantages for the province as a whole, also recognized that it was likely to disturb their official positions and their hold upon the administration of the government. A united province would doubtless furnish a wider field for political ambition, but who could tell whether that larger life might not be for others. Then, if the capital should be located else- where, even should they still be fortunate enough to follow it, what would become of their local in- vestments and their numerous subsidiary methods of augmenting their incomes ? These were serious questions which tended to make cowards of the bravest officials, hence they decided to enjoy the benefits they had rather than seek for others that they knew not of. They therefore discouraged the 113 LORD SYDENHAM union project, and so, in consequence, did Sir George Arthur. But the latter, recognizing from the drift of discussion in England that the home government was likely to favour union, began to hedge by declaring that whatever decision was ultimately adopted by the home government must be loyally accepted by the colonies. The assembly, being largely under the influence of the prevailing element in the council, endeavour- ed to meet its wishes. On the 27th of March they presented a new set of resolutions, the preamble to which was as follows: "That in reference to the resolutions of this House upon the subject of a legis- lative union of the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada, this House is distinctly opposed to that measure, unless the conditions as embodied in the following resolutions be fully carried out in any A ct to be passed by the imperial legislature for that purpose." The resolutions which followed stipulated that the seat of government should be in Upper Canada ; that the eastern or Gaspe portion of Lower Canada be joined to New Brunswick; that the quali- fication for members of the assembly and council be fixed in the Act of Union; that it should not make void any of the appointments of the pre- sent legislative council, while future appointments should safeguard the commercial, agricultural, and other interests of the province ; that the number of members in the assembly should consist of fifty from I^ower Canada, and from Upper Canada 114 CONDITIONS OF UNION of its existing quota ; that the elective franchise in counties be confined to those who hold their lands in free and common socage, from and after a given date not later than 1845, the imperial parliament to facilitate the change of tenures in Lower Canada so as to permit of the free exercise of the franchise; that there be a readjustment of the electoral divisions of Lower Canada; that the Eng- lish language be employed in the legislature, courts, etc. ; that courts of appeal and impeachment be es- tablished; that the surplus revenue of the post- office, and all other branches of revenue be placed under the control of the legislature ; that the debt of both provinces be chargeable upon the joint rev- enue ; that the legislature have control over customs duties, subject to the restrictions of the 42nd section of the Constitutional Act of 1791 ; and that, with the above exceptions, the Constitutional Act re- main inviolate. But even this carefully guarded form of union did not prove wholly acceptable to the majority of the council. It was rejected by a vote of ten to eight, the council reaffirming its position as elaborately laid down in the report on the state of the province and the address to the Queen of February 13th and 28th, 1838, in which they main- tained that the system under which the colonies were being administered was the only admissible one. If, as they said, the home government had only been firmer in maintaining this instead of weakly granting concessions to the agitators in Upper and 115 LORD SYDENHAM Lower Canada, there would be no trouble in the colony at present. To revert to the former system was the only reasonable policy. A number of the official class, as an alternative to the union of the two provinces, were inclined to re- vert to the older view of imperial federation advo- cated before the American revolution, and at various intervals afterwards. This view was expressed in several pamphlets of the time, and was voiced by Attorney- General Hagerman in the House of As- sembly during the debate on the resolutions. His plan was to erect the combined British North American provinces into a kingdom, such as Ire- land, to be governed in a similar manner. In other words, the British North American provinces, in- stead of having any local legislatures to breed troubles, would send a certain number of members to the British House of Commons, while the ad- ministration of the colonies would be carried on through the medium of a viceroy and permanent officials, as in the case of Ireland. This he considered would obviate the more serious objections to the present system. By removing the provincial barriers to trade and intercourse it would permit of the general development of pubUc works, promote im- migration, and secure the only form of responsible government which was at all admissible. It was quite obvious that the Canadian situation was in a very tangled condition, and that, in addition to the multitude of minor differences between the 116 CANADIANS AT CROSS-PURPOSES members of the various groups, the chief divisions of the population were entirely at cross-purposes as regards the two great issues, the reunion and re- sponsible government. The French-Canadians gen- erally strongly favoured responsible government, but were equally strongly opposed to the union ; the English element in Lower Canada were the most active advocates of union, but were strongly opposed to responsible government. The Compact party in Upper Canada were opposed to union, ex- cept as a last resort and under numerous safeguards, and they were uncompromisingly opposed to re- sponsible government ; while the reform element in Upper Canada were more favourable to union, as reUeving the Upper Province from many financial and commercial disabilities, and were altogether in favour of responsible government. Obviously the home government in deciding its policy, and in se- lecting the governor-general to be sent out to bring it into operation, would have to reach their decisions mainly on the basis of their own best judgment. At the time of Lord Sydenham's appointment; the general decision of the British ministry as to the future of the Canadas was expressed by Lord John Russell in his speech of June 3rd, 1839. Following the royal message of a month previous, he declared that " it is now my duty, as a minister of the Crown, to call upon parliament to lay the foundation for a permanent settlement of the affairs of Canada." After referring to the unfortunate ter- 117 LORD SYDENHAM mination of the mission of Lord Durham, and indi- cating that the time for any further reporting on the condition and government of the country had passed, he said it was necessary to declare their per- manent policy as to the future government of the country. The chief source of trouble in Canada had been the unwise policy of determining to preserve intact the French institutions, and on this ground separating the province into two parts, with the inevitable result that the French province of Lower Canada tended to frustrate the commercial develop- ment of the Upper Province by blocking communi- cations with the sea. But further, as it was impossible to prevent the development of English communities in Lower Canada, there was ensured a conflict between the races. The chief features in the progress of the conflict were traced, and the conduct of both parties was shown to have been unjustifiable on constitutional grounds, but natural and inevitable on account of the original mistake of the British government. When, however, the home govern- ment showed an inclination to heed the com- plaints of the popular party in Lower Canada, they were met with greatly increased demands, "demands which in fact would, if granted, have established under the name of a British province, an independent French colony in Lower Canada." The demands of the assembly being refused, the supplies were withheld, but, so far as needed for the maintenance of the executive government, these 118 ALTERNATIVES TO UNION were furnished by the British treasury. This further exasperated the French-Canadians, some of whom proceeded to such lengths that warrants were issued for their arrest on the charge of high treason. They left the country, and rebellion was precipitated, the constitution of Lower Canada suspended, and Lord Durham sent out. The original mistake, then, was that which led to the division of Quebec province. The primary rem- edy to be applied, therefore, seemed to be the reunion of the provinces. But, before considering that, he passed in review other proposals urged in some respectable quarters and which had been seriously considered. First there was the suggestion to govern Lower Canada indefinitely under a governor and special council. But this seemed so repugnant to the feelings of the American continent that it would be sure to perpetuate discontent among both races. Neither was it considered feasible to adopt the policy of uniting the district of Montreal to Upper Canada, leaving the rest of Lower Canada to be governed as before. That would only very partially relieve the commercial difficulties of Upper Canada, while it would leave the same troubles as before to be faced in the rest of Lower Canada, and after past experience that must be regarded as im- possible. Still another proposal was that for the union of all the provinces of British North America, each with a separate assembly, and with one supreme legislature over all. Before Lord Durham went out 119 LORD SYDENHAM to Canada he had consulted Sir James Kempt, who had pointed out that from the very irreguhir and defective means of communication between the Maritime Provinces and the Canadas it was not at all practicable. However, after considering all the proposals, I^ord Durham went out very much im- pressed with the scheme for a general union of all the provinces; but after a full conference with per- sons representing all the colonies he had aban- doned the project, and recommended the union of the Canadas alone. This then seemed to be at the time the only practicable solution. Lord John Russell did not, however, consider it wise to specify any given number of representatives for Upper or Lower Canada, nor was it a sound prin- ciple to say that population alone should determine representation. He considered that 1842 would be sufficiently early for the calling of the first united legislature. He then passed on to consider some of the detailed recommendations of Lord Durham's Report. He favoured his general policy with refer- ence to the establishment of municipal government, did not believe in an elective council, but held that the parties appointed to the legislative council should previously have been members of the as- sembly, or held other important positions in the colony. He was willing that the Crown revenues should be placed entirely at the disposal of the assembly, subject to a permanent provision for the civil list. He then went into the question of re- 120 A CAUTIOUS ADVANCE sponsible government at considerable length, in- dicating a large measure of concession. " It seems to me as much a rule of sense as of generosity, that there are some questions on which it would not be desirable that, on the opinion of the Secretary of State for the Colonies, the opinion of the House of Assembly should be put aside," hence the opinions of the assembly should be treated with every re- spect. "But I am not prepared to lay down a principle, a new principle, for the future govern- ment of the colonies, that we ought to subject the executive there to the same restrictions as prevail in this country." Referring to the numerous petitions and repre- sentations received from different bodies in Canada on the subject of the union, he mentioned the re- solutions of the legislature of Upper Canada which had just been received that day, and in which they insisted upon conditions and terms which could not, in his opinion, be reasonably or fairly granted. He also referred to the reports of the assembly and council of Upper Canada on Lord Durham's Re- port, and their claim that they should be heard before anything final was determined upon with reference to the future of the colony. In deference to these opinions he did not propose to settle the details immediately. If the resolutions he has to propose are accepted, he will introduce a bill, but it will not be proceeded with until the Canadians have had an opportunity to express their views 121 LORD SYDENHAM upon the measure. He recognized also that what- ever pohcy was adopted with reference to Canada would naturally aiFect Nova Scotia and New Bruns- wick. The resolutions which he presented were as follows: (1) "That it is the opinion of this House that it is expedient to form a legislative union of the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada, on the principles of a free and representative government, in such manner as may most conduce to the pros- perity and contentment of the people of the united provinces." (2) "That it is expedient to continue till 1842 the powers vested in the governor and special council of Lower Canada by the Act of last session, with such alteration of these powers as may be deemed advisable." In the debate which followed, Mr. Hume, the Radical M.P. and correspondent of Mackenzie, objected very strongly to leaving matters in sus- pense till 1842. What the people of Canada wanted was a constitution under which they could govern themselves. Sir Robert Peel, on behalf of the Opposition, made a very non-committal statement, mildly criticizing the government for not being ready to go on with the details of their pohcy. Mr. Charles Buller was glad the government had adopted the principle of the union of the Canadas, but would have preferred to see them adopt the larger suggestion of Lord Durham's Report, a union of all the provinces. He also regretted that Lord John Russell should have expressed an 122 A TENTATIVE UNION BILL opinion adverse to the introduction of responsible government into the colonies. He would not, how- ever, oppose any bill for the union of the Canadas, since such a measure must bring with it in time the practice of responsible government. After considering more fully the communications from Sir George Arthur and the reports from the assembly and council of Upper Canada, which pro- tested against the settlement of the future of the Canadas without giving to the people of the pro- vince an opportunity to be heard on the subject, Lord John Russell announced to the House of Commons that he would withdraw the resolutions with reference to the union of the Canadas and submit a draft bill which would be subject to alteration and amendment at tlie suggestion of the legislatures of the provinces. He thus indicated his willingness to permit the Canadians, so far as they could agree among themselves, to have a voice in determining their future system of government. This bill, introduced on June 20th, 1839, was en- titled, " A Bill for Re-uniting the Provinces of Upper Canada and Lower Canada, and for the Government of the United Provinces." The special features of the bill were, in addition to the union of the provinces, a provision for a system of municipal government by the subdivision of the united pro- vinces into five districts, and the constitution of district councils. Each of these districts again was to be subdivided into nine electoral districts, re- 128 LORD SYDENHAM turning two members each to tlie provincial parliament. The district of Gasp<^ and the Islands of Madeleine were to be transferred from the pro- vince of Lower Canada to that of New Brunswick. As most of the details of this measure were after- wards altered, under the advice of Lord Sydenham, its characteristic features will be sufficiently indi- cated in his criticism of the measure. To bring this draft bill before the Canadian people, to recommend to them its general prin- ciples, and to secure the necessary local information for the perfection of its details, and, when sanctioned by the home government, to bring the united legis- lature into practical operation, and thus launch the new government of the Canadas upon a happier and more stable career, constituted the important though difficult task assigned to the Right Honour- able Poulett Thomson when he was selected as Canadian governor. Meantime, as the result of the publication throughout the country of Lord Durham's Report, there was growing up a new excitement in Upper Canada. Meetings were being held in every quarter for the discussion of the question of responsible government, which was furnishing a real issue for the formation of rival political parties. This natur- ally caused quite a readjustment of views. Many who had no sympathy with the policy of vio- lence now found that they had in Lord Dur- ham's Report a respectable rallying-point, where 124 SIR GEORGE ARTHUR'S ATTITUDE the views of Bidwell iiiid Baldwin were separated from the methods of the ultra-Radicals. Sir George Arthur was very much alarmed at the progress of the responsible government idea. " The question of the union is now very little discussed in Upper Canada; " he reports, " not only Republicans and ultra- Reformers, but some excellent persons of Liberal principles are most clamorous for ' respon- sible government,' and, strange enough, this is demanded by persons who, in other respects, strongly condemn Lord Durham's Report, as well as the bill that has been sent out, as too democratic, and likely to lead to aspirations which they protest they do not desire, whilst they ask for a measure that must inevitably dissolve the union." In the latter part of August, 1839, Sir George Arthur took a very public stand in opposition to responsible government. The occasion selected was the formal transmission to him of a set of resolu- tions adopted at a general meeting of the people of the district of Gore held at Hamilton on July 27th, 1839. Some eight resolutions were passed expressing attachment to the British Crown, but claiming that the report of the committee of the assembly in criticism of Lord Durham's Report did not represent the sentiments of the majority of the people of the province, and expressing entire approval of the Durham Report and its recom- mendations. They maintained that a speedy carry- ing out of its recommendations would have a most 125 LORD SYDENHAM beneficial effect upon the province, and particularly "that a responsible government, as recommended in Lord Durham's Report, is the only means of restoring confidence, allaying discontent, or per- petuating the connection between Great Britain and this colony." They desire the dissolution of the present assembly, and pledge themselves to support only such candidates as favour Lord Durham's Report and the union of the Canadas. The meeting appointed a committee to draft an address to the queen based on these resolutions, and to invite co- operation from the other districts of the province. Copies of the resolutions were also to be sent to Lieutenant-Governor Arthur, the colonial secretary, and the Earl of Durham. Sir George Arthur replied on August 24th. He acknowledged the respectable and representative character of the meeting. Having given the subject of responsible government " the most deliberate consideration," he asserts, both as his own view and, he believes, the view of the home government, that such a proposal would destroy the union be- tween the colony and the Mother Country, and render the former independent. There would be no harmony of policy as there ought to be between the colonial and the British governments. As for himself, he professes special interest in the colony and outlines some improvements w^hich might be made, but repudiates the implication that any special set of persons have an undue influence over 126 WELL-MEANT BUT ILL-ADVISED him. The resolutions and the reply were published in full in the official Gazette, a copy of which was forwarded to the colonial office. In acknowledging it, Lord John Russell commends the lieutenant- governor's good intentions, but cautions him not to do it again. As we shall see, Arthur's statements were shortly afterwards the occasion of no little embarrassment to himself, when he learned the sentiments of the new governor-general, and even of the colonial office. 127 CHAPTER IX A NEW TYPE OF GOVERNOR WE have now seen how numerous and conflict- ing were the cross-currents of interest and pohcy which divided the inhabitants of the Canadian provinces. We have seen also what was the general purpose of the home government as to the future administration of the colonies, and from a general survey of the situation we may in some measure realize what a difficult task the new governor had undertaken, and what special qualities of rapid per- ception, breadth of sympathy, sound judgment, and endless patience and tact would be required to accomplish a working basis for the Canadian government, not to mention an entirely consistent and smoothly operating political system. It was not until the middle of September, 1839, that the news that Lord John Russell had taken up the colonial office, and that the Right Honour- able Poulett Thomson had been appointed as governor-general of British North America, reached Canada. The announcement was received with much doubt even by the Reformers, and with dismay and anger by the EngUsh element in Lower Canada and the Compact party in Upper Canada. His free trade principles were particularly distasteful to the commercial element in Quebec and Montreal, 129 LORD SYDENHAM who took their cue largely from their principals in London, most of whom were deeply interested in the Canadian timber trade, which was supported chiefly by heavy British bounties. They were also at that time pressing to have Canadian grain and other produce granted special privileges in the British markets. Further, the new governor's known sympathy with radical principles indicated that he was likely to favour in Canada the advo- cates of responsible government and other heresies. So alarmed were the British interests connected with Canada that, on learning of the selection made for the Canadian governorship, they petitioned against Mr. Poulett Thomson's appointment. The Canadian newspapers, as a rule, judged him from the point of view of the matters in which they disagreed with him. In consequence, those of the most opposite parties were disposed to condemn him without a hearing. The French papers were opposed to him because he represented the union policy of the home government and a British future for Canada ; those of the EngUsh section in Lower Canada were hostile because he was the enemy of the Canadian timber trade, and because he was supposed to favour responsible government; the Compact party in Upper Canada opposed him be- cause of his union policy, his sympathy with responsible government, and his general radical tendencies. The Quebec Mercury, though voicing the alarm of the timber trade, expressed the hope 130 ANTICIPATIONS that when he saw the actual condition of trade from the Canadian point of view lie would probably be more favourably disposed towards an industry which engaged British capital, labour and shipping. The Montreal Gazette, after expressing great regret at the departure of Sir John Colborne, declared that his successor belonged to a party which com- manded little respect in Canada, However, as governor, he must receive a certain deference, and be given a fair chance, but it adds this solemn warning, "We promise him that, should he deviate from the stern integrity, the devoted loyalty, the unwearied zeal and strict impartial demeanour of his predecessor, he will have to sustain an opposing force which no authority can repel, no ingenuity avert, no talent subdue." Thus it would appear that there were others besides French-Canadian Nation- alists and " Yankee- visaged Reformers" who could make it unpleasant for a British governor who did not happen to conform to their views. The King- ston Chronicle and Gazette, one of the more moderate of the organs of the Tory party in Upper Canada, thus refers to the new governor. "Perhaps the most important part of the news to the Canadian reader, is the appointment of the Right Honourable Charles Poulett Thomson as captain- general and governor-in-chief of these provinces. Mr. Thomson, besides being a Whig Radical, has for years been a known opponent to the Canada lumber trade ; being himself deeply interested in 131 LORD SYDENHAM the Baltic timber business. His appointment, under these circumstances, cannot be viewed with any great complacency by the loyal portion of this community. He is, however, a man of experience and abilities as a merchant, and his proposed visit across the Atlantic may be the means of dispelling some of his former prejudices, as has been the case with all others under similar circumstances. His Excellency and suite are to come to Quebec in the Pique frigate." The committee of the North American Colonial Association, a London organization which took a special interest in Canadian affairs, through their chairman, R. Elhce, sent an address to the prime minister, Lord Melbourne, expressing their regret at the reported retirement of Sir Jo1in Colborne from the Canadas, and stating their conviction that the separation of the civil and military authority would be very dangerous at that time. Finding that the Right Honourable Poulett Thomson is contemplated as his successor, while they have no criticism to make of Mr. Thomson personally, yet they deem it their duty to express "their deliber- ate conviction that his known opinions on sub- jects involving the interests of the colonies would necessarily deprive him of their confidence, with- out which it would be impossible for him to ad- minister the government of the colonies with advantage or safety." In several other quarters more virulently loyal there were even more vigor- 132 SUSPENDED JUDGMENT ous expressions of dissatisfaction with the new appointment. It will be seen that the new governor was not awaited in Canada with the usual confidence by those elements who were wont to find the successive governors prepared by their previous associations to be entirely sympathetic with their views and vested interests, and therefore prepared to fall ready victims to their influence. It was evident that this new type of governor, a civilian, a practical statesman, and a Liberal, was to be severely tested from the day of his arrival. Though the Reform organs in Canada had said little with reference to the new governor, being uncertain as to his policy, the attacks which he received in the organs of their opponents naturally inclined them to sympathize with him in advance. As time passed, further light came from over the Atlantic. The Montreal Courier published an ex- tract from a letter received from an English gentle- man interested in Canadian affairs, which had a somewhat reassuring effect. "I have had an interview with the new governor, who appears anxious to get all the information he can respecting his new government. What I have seen of him promises very fair ; he is in favour of the union of the two provinces, seems to think well of the bill introduced into parliament for that purpose ; he thinks the colony ought to, and must, be made British, the better to secure its allegiance 133 LORD SYDENHAM to Great Britain ; he is anxious that no impressions should go abroad that he brings with him into the government any settled line of politics, or a wish to pursue any course that can be considered incon- sistent with the best, or at variance with the British, interests of the country; and hopes to receive the assistance of the well-disposed, the better to attain this object. It is, no doubt, right to give to every man, more particularly to such a high officer as a governor, all due credit for his good intentions, but the surer criterion is to judge by his acts and not by his promises. Mr. Thomson's political creed heretofore, has not been in fav^our of the colonies, particularly in regard to the timber duties; and being lately a member of the present administration may induce many to stand aloof from him, from an apprehension of his political principles. This, however, would be wrong, and injurious to the very cause we are all interested to promote; he ought, in the outset at least, to receive the countenance and assistance of the valuable part of society, to keep bad advisers from him, if we hope to derive benefit from his administration. There is no doubt that Mr. Thomson's views, in accepting the government of Canada, are to acquire a name that may promote his own advancement; and nothing can do this so effectually as his success in effecting a proper system of government in that country. Mr. Thomson is a man of business habits — he was formerly a partner in a great commercial 134 AN INTERESTING FORECAST house in Russia, and by his talents was promoted to the Board of Trade; and I should hope he will not be backward in promoting the commercial interests of his new government. He leaves this in a few days, and intends to take up his residence at Montreal." But by far the most interesting and important announcement of the policy of the British govern- ment and of the attitude and intentions of the new governor on the eve of his departure for Canada, was given in the Colonial Gazette of London, in its issue of September 18th. This appeared three days after the departure of Mr. Poulett Thomson from Liverpool, but, in virtue of the recently established steam service on the Atlantic, reached Canada and was reproduced in all the leading Canadian papers before the governor-general's arrival at Quebec. The claim of the paper that its information was authoritative is completely borne out by the con- fidential correspondence between the governor and the minister. The interest and value of this article are due to the fact that it is a completely unreserved, even indeed, in parts, an overstated expression of the real attitude of both Russell and Thomson as to the main lines of the policy to be pursued with reference to Canada, a policy which we find was in the main duly carried out, subject only to the minor modifications required by a close study of local conditions undertaken by the governor-general during his residence in the country. It was obviously 135 LORD SYDENHAM impossible, however, for either the minister or the governor to directly or personally express several of the views and features of policy attributed to them by the Colonial Gazette. The more important por- tion of the article is here given : — " As soon as it was clear that the pelting of the pitiless storm on the head of poor Pow would not deter him from proceeding on his mission, we endeavoured to ascertain what line of policy he intended to pursue in Canada as a representative of the imperial government. Our inquires have been successful. We are now able to state the views and purposes with which Mr. Thomson him- self has declared that he undertakes this perilous mission. We shall speak at least on his authority, he may change his mind, or may want firmness to carry into effect his own deliberate intentions ; but that these were, before he left England, such as we shall now describe, we assert with perfect con- fidence. We shall state only that which we could prove, if necessary, by legal evidence. If our repre- sentations are true, it is of the highest importance that they should be believed by the colonists. " In the first place, then, according to our infor- mation, Mr. Thomson expects a very unfavourable reception in Lower Canada, on account of his known opinions with respect to the timber trade, but hopes to obtain the confidence of the British race in that province as soon as they learn his opinions on other Canadian subjects. 136 POLICY ON THE RACE ISSUE " Secondly, he has been convinced by I^ord Durham's Report, despatches, and convci'satioii, that French ascendency in Lower Canada is simply impossible, that any attempt to preserve the French-Canadian nationality would not merely fail but would be an act of wickedness, inasmuch as its only effects would be to prolong the agony of a nation which, as such, is doomed to extinction, and to exasperate those bitter national animosities which can never cease till the French shall, as such, be swamped by the legislative union. He is satisfied of the extreme impolicy and cruelty of the vacillating course pursued by successive governments at home, none of which has yet made up its mind on the French and English question in Lower Canada, all of which have hesitated between two opposite opinions, now favouring the French and then the Enghsh, but neither long, nor either decidedly; whereby both races have been subjected to in- numerable evils, for which the only possible remedy is the establishment of a thoroughly English nation- ality, with complete equality for the French as British subjects. He abjures the principle of ascendency for the numerical majority as utterly impracticable in Lower Canada, because the French race, though the stronger in mere numbers, is the weaker in every other respect; but he upholds the principles of ascendency for the majority with regard to all Canada, where the English predominate in num- bers ; and he is therefore resolved to promote by all 137 LORD SYDENHAM the means in his power a complete union of the provinces. He rejects the notion, which some few passionate men entertain, of crushing the French by injustice and violence, but adopts without quah- fication or reserve the plan of swamping the French, once for all, by rendering them a minority in United Canada. In a word, he cordially embraces Lord Durham's opinions on the question which concerns Lower Canada. "Thirdly, as respects the Upper Province, the new governor believes that the evils which afflict that colony have been occasioned by neglect and mismanagement on the part of the imperial govern- ment; that the only complete remedy for deep- rooted abuse is the union of Upper Canada with the Lower Province, whereby one powerful colony would become respectable in the eyes both of the authorities at home and of the neighbouring states; that the great majority of the inhabitants of Upper Canada are essentially loyal, and most desirous to maintain the connection with England; that the only traitors in the province are a very small minority, composed of some followers of Mackenzie — foolish and cowardly braggarts, who may be safely despised ; and that the worst enemies of the colony are the Family Compact faction, which, therefore, it is most expedient to destroy, root and branch, without an hour's delay. "Fourthly, with respect to the question of re- sponsible government, Mr. Thomson is of opinion 138 FAVOURS RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT that no settlement of Canadian affairs can be satis- factory or permanent unless the new colonial government be founded on the principle of repre- sentation and also on the principle of admitting the natural consequence of representation — namely, the administration of local affairs in constant har- mony witli the opinions of the majority in the representative body. On this point also, notwith- standing Lord John Russell's declaration against responsible government, by that name^ Mr. Thomson adopts the views of Lord Durham as put forth in the high commissioner's report. He conceives that representation is a mockery, and a very mischievous mockery too, if the executive is not made respon- sible to those in whom the people confide. By what special means he would secure this indispensable condition of peace and order under the repre- sentative system, we are not informed; but we have reason to conclude that he intends to be guided upon this point by the opinion of the lead- ing men of the British race in both Canadas. He could not resort to any more competent advisers." The fifth section of the article refers to the determination of the British government, through Russell and Thomson, to settle the future govern- ment of Canada during the following session, but to do this subject to maintaining British connection in accordance with the wishes of the most repre- sentative colonists themselves. The sixth section refers to the intention of the new governor to give 189 LORD SYDENHAM the Upper Province an opportunity to pronounce on the future government of the colony by dis- solving the present legislature. The seventh section • refers to the necessity, while the governor is in Upper Canada, of leaving in Lower Canada some one wlio would adequately represent him there. " His choice, we understand, has fallen upon the present chief-justice of Quebec, Mr. James Stuart; of whom it may be said, without at all disparag- ing others, that he is the ablest and most states- manlike person in British North America. He enjoys, more than any other, the confidence of the English race in I..ower Canada and more than any other Englishman the confidence of the French, notwithstanding their hatred of him as the leader of the English. As the champion of* the English race, the great advocate of the union, the de- nouncer of official abuses, the first lawyer, one of the greatest proprietors, and the chief functionary of the province, appointed by Lord Durham amid the shouts of applause from the whole British population, Mr. Stuart is the fittest man in Canada to advise any governor-general." The article closes with a rather unflattering forecast as to the firmness of the new governor in carrying out this pro- gramme, " While, therefore, we repeat our full conviction that Mr. Thomson is gone to Canada with the opinions and objects which we have here enumerated, let it be distinctly understood that we have little hope of seeing them realized, except 140 THE GOVERNOR'S INSTRUCTIONS through the united and steadfast determination of the colonists to make use of him as an instrument for the accomplishment of their own ends." How far Mr. Thomson was to refute this last estimate, his short but crowded career in Canada was to prove. The general formal instructions given to gover- nor-general Thomson were dated September 7th, 1839, and were composed of those given to his predecessors, beginning with Lord Dalhousie in 1820, and including the additional instructions, so far as not repealed, issued to the succeeding gover- nors down to Lord Durham and Sir John Colborne in 1838. At the same time he was given certain additional instructions in consequence of the Act passed in 1839 to amend and enlarge the scope of the Act for " making temporary provision for the government of Lower Canada," and which pro- vided for the giving of a more representative character to the Special Council of I^ower Canada, the membership of which was increased to twenty. In the letter which accompanied these instruc- tions and his commission as governor-general, his friend and late colleague Lord John Russell, now colonial secretary, stated that his special knowledge as a late member of the ministry rendered it un- necessary to go into details with him on the duties of his new office. However, it was necessary for future reference that he should record the in- tentions of the ministry on the chief points of 141 LORD SYDENHAM Canadian policy, and on which Thomson would be required to co-operate with the minister. The draft bill for the reunion of the Canadas, which had been introduced into the House of Commons, embodied the results of a careful consideration of Lord Dur- ham's Report. It had been delayed, however, in deference to Sir George Arthur's recommendations and the resolutions of the council and assembly of Upper Canada. It will be his duty, therefore, to ascertain the general desire of the province, though the home government is strongly convinced of the wisdom of the central features of that policy. These are, the legislative union of the provinces under terms which will regard the just claims of each province, the maintenance of the three estates, the settlement of a permanent civil list to ensure the independence of the judges and the freedom of the executi^^e officers, and the establishment of a system of local or municipal government. He must, there- fore, endeavour to get these principles accepted. In the general administration of the province, how- ever, they will greatly rely upon his judgment and recommendations as based upon a direct study of conditions. If he finds a fair and reasonable spirit in the present assembly of Upper Canada, he may appeal to that; if not, he may dissolve it, and appeal to a new assembly. If union is found quite impracticable, he must present to the home govern- ment some practical alternative. He is urged to secure a settlement as quickly as possible, for delay 142 THE GOVERNOR'S INSTRUCTIONS will foster bitterness. He will evidently be called upon to explain what control the popular branch of the united legislature will have over the executive government, and the tenure of office by its chief officials. It is obviously impossible to give a cate- gorical answer to that question. It must simply be recognized as a working principle that harmony is to be maintained between the legislative and ex- ecutive branches, and that, therefore, the council must be made up of people who are able to com- mand the confidence of the majority of the in- habitants of the province. The extravagant military plans of fortifications for the defence of the colonies, advocated in the correspondence of Sir John Col- borne, are not favoured by the ministry, and will not be carried out, at present at least. As to military inatters, however, he will have the advice of Sir Richard Jackson, the commander of the forces, to succeed Sir John Colborne. Lord Dur- ham's Report has shown the unwise policy hitherto pursued in the alienation of the Crown Lands, which might have been used to promote immigra- tion. It is difficult, however, to confiscate these extensive land grants, or to impose a heavy tax on them. This will be an important question to be discussed by the united legislature. With reference to Lower Canada in particular, the increased powers of the Special Council will enable him to do more for that province than any of his predecessors, and this is the more urgent on account of the past 143 LORD SYDENHAM neglect of many highly necessary measures. Chief among these will be the introduction of municipal institutions, in order to provide for elementary local needs and the promotion of general educa- tion. In the accomplishment of his purposes he may exercise his power in Upper Canada to any requisite extent, even to superseding Sir George Arthur, though still availing himself of his experi- ence. The remainder of the letter deals with details of financial matters and the fate of reserved bills, some of which will be discussed later. Here then we have in outline the programme laid out for the new governor, who, in virtue of the confidence reposed in him by his late colleagues, and especially by his friend and immediate superior the colonial secretary, was to enjoy an unusual range of personal discretion, and this in turn would enable him to give a corresponding range to the executive government and the local legislature. Thus was made possible a tentative and experi- mental introduction of a real measure of responsible government, though among a people up to that time quite unacquainted with the practical working of such a system. A considerable educational pro- cess, under a competent instructor, was obviously necessary before the full weight of government could be laid upon any local organization. Having given such an extensive range of potential power to the governor-general, it was necessary to instruct Sir George Arthur to accommodate him- 144 SIR GEORGE ARTHUR TO ASSIST self, where necessary, to the exercise of tliese powers, and to lend his loyal assistance in carrying out the policy of the new governor-general. Ac- cordingly, immediately after giving to Poulett Thomson the comprehensive survey of his duties, powers, and privileges, which has been outlined, the colonial secretary wrote to Sir George Arthur instructing him to put himself in personal com- munication with the governor-general as soon as possible after his arrival in Canada. He is informed that Poulett Thomson is thoroughly in touch with the views of the home government on the whole range of colonial policy, and is instructed as to the bills of the previous session which had been re- served. He is, therefore, to place his local know- ledge and experience at his disposal, and to follow his directions. 145 CHAPTER X FIRST IMPRESSIONS IT was on September 13th, after these prelimin- ary arrangements and understandings with the home government, that the new governor-general sailed in the frigate Pique from Portsmouth, and after a stormy voyage of thirty-three days reached Quebec on October 17th. In the meantime, as we have seen, he was being very vigorously canvassed in the colonies over which he was coming to pre- side. We have seen the estimate of his character and the presentation of his views made by well- informed authorities in England. An entry in his journal, while on shipboard, indicates the personal attitude in which he approached the task before him. It shows that he recognized that he was not coming to Canada to be a figurehead, but to be a central force in bringing about the reunion of the provinces, and in reconstructing the political and financial systems. " It is a great field, too, if 1 bring about the union, and stay for a year to meet the united assembly, and set them to work. On the other hand, in England there is little to be done by me. At the Exchequer all that can be hoped is to get through some bad tax. There is no chance of carrying the House with one for any great com- mercial reforms, timber, corn, sugar, etc. ; party and 147 LORD SYDENHAM private interests will prevent it. If Peel were in, he might do this, as he could muzzle or keep away his Tory allies, and we should support him. " On private grounds I think it good too. 'Tis strange, however, that the office which was once my greatest ambition (the Exchequer) should now be so disagreeable to me that I will give up the cabinet and parliament to avoid it. After all, the House of Commons and Manchester are no longer what they were to me. I do not think that I have improved in speaking — rather gone back. Perhaps in Opposition, with time to prepare, I might rally again ; but I do not feel sure of it. I am grown rather nerv^ous about it. The interruption and noise which prevail so much in the House cowes me. I have cer- tainly made no good speech for two years. It is clear, from what has passed, I might have kept Manchester as long as I liked. But till put to the test by leaving it, one could not help feeling ner- vous and irritated by constant complaints of not going far enough or going too far. The last years have made a great change in me. INIy health, I suppose, is at the bottom of it. On the whole I think it is well as it is." The above extract shows also that the stale and unprofitable condition into which the Whig party had fallen, from too long and too precarious a tenure of office, had proved to him that it was impossible, for the immediate future, to find in British politics an adequate expression for his 148 FIRST OFFICIAL DUTIES personality or his aspirations. In Canada alone did there seem to be such a field, and into it, therefore, he threw himself without backward longing. After remaining two days on board ship, await- ing the arrival of Sir John Colborne from Montreal, he landed, opened the Royal Commission and was sworn into office on October 19th. On the same day he issued a proclamation announcing his ap- pointment as governor-general and his entrance upon the duties of the office. The spirit in which he intended to discharge his duties as governor-general is thus briefly expressed: " In the exercise of this high trust it will be my desire, no less than my duty, to promote to the utmost of my power the welfare of all classes of Her Majesty's subjects. To reconcile existing differences ; to apply a remedy to proved grievances; to extend and protect the trade, and enlarge the resources of the colonies en- trusted to my charge; above all, to promote what- ever may bind them to the Mother Country by increasing the ties of interest and affection will be my first and most anxious endeavour. In pursuit of these objects I shall ever be ready to listen to the representation of all, while I shall unhesitatingly exercise the powers confided to me to repress disorder, to uphold the law, and to maintain tran- quilhty." He recognized the unsatisfactory condition of affairs in Lower Canada, and hoped to be able to 149 LORD SYDENHAM find a means of restoring the constitution. He ac- knowledged the essential loyalty of the people of Upper Canada, but recognized their financial embarrassment, which hampered trade and pro- vincial development. These defects, however, he hoped to remedy, relying upon the patriotism of the people and the wisdom of the legislature. Finally, he called upon all who have the good of British North America at heart to lay aside all minor differences and co-operate with him in pro- moting the welfare of the provinces. Altogether it was a simple, candid, and businesslike statement, quite unlike many of the stilted and perfunctory proclamations to which the people of the colonies had been accustomed. The proclamation was awaited with the greatest interest, as the first utterance of a governor of a totally different type from any of his predecessors, and concerning whose personality, views, and motives the liveliest hopes and fears had been aroused. But especially was it felt by every intelligent citizen that the whole future not only of the Canadian provinces, but of British North America, was hanging in the balance, so much depending upon the wisdom and policy of the new governor-general. On this same day His Excellency was presented with an address by the magistrates of the city and district of Quebec. This was of a very non- committal character, except for the very parochial appeal that the city of Quebec might not be 150 A FAVOURABLE IMPRESSION deprived of the residence of the governor-general, there having been a tendency of late to favour Montreal. This the new governor adroitly met by declaring that it would afford him the sincerest satisfaction to contribute at all times to the pro- sperity of Quebec, and, when circumstances per- mitted, to reside within its walls, in order to cultivate the good feeling and regard of its in-, habitants. This was only the first of many scores of instances in which all classes of the people were to be charmed with the ability of the governor to turn the most unpromising materials, personages, and conditions to account, in order to ingratiate himself with the Canadian pubUc. Altogether, the new governor's first day in Canada produced a most favourable impression, and began a revulsion of feehng in his favour which, within a very short time, had removed almost all doubt and distrust as to his personal quahties, and had laid a solid foundation for that great personal popularity which was to be so power- ful an influence in mitigating political bitterness, breaking down factious opposition, and promoting those larger political objects to which the governor- general had devoted himself. On the day of his arrival he despatched a letter to Sir George Arthur transmitting a copy of his commission and instructions, together with a war- rant reappointing Sir George as lieutenant-governor of Upper Canada. This despatch met the lieutenant- 151 LORD SYDENHAM governor at Kingston, on his way to Montreal to pay his respects to the new governor-general, as re- quested by Lord John Russell. One of the first official acts of Poulett Thomson was the appointment of T. W. Clinton Murdoch, Esq., to be civil secretary of the general govern- ment, and of Major George D. Hall to be military secretary and chief aide-de-camp. Mr. Murdoch was a gentleman of exceptional ability, who rapidly acquired a very intimate knowledge of Canadian history and of the actual conditions of the country. His rare capacity for affairs, his sound judgment, indefatigable industry, and admirable tact enabled him to render invaluable assistance to Lord Syden- ham during his term of office, and at the earnest solicitation of Sir Charles Bagot he continued as civil secretary during the greater part of his admini- stration. With characteristic energy, amounting almost to impetuosity, the new governor immediately plunged into the details of Canadian affairs, taking every method and opportunity of making himself inti- mately acquainted with Canadian conditions. On the twenty-first he held a levee at the Castle St. Louis, which was attended by the principal inhabitants of Quebec and district, without distinction of parties. At the close of this function came the Committee of Trade of Quebec to pay their respects to the new governor, hitherto only known to them as "the enemy of the Canadian timber trade," in 152 THE COMMITTEE OF TRADE which trade most of them were interested. How- ever, they made the best of it, and being merchants themselves they told him that they saw with pride the government of the country entrusted to one who had himself been a merchant. Notwithstanding that the opinions whicli he had been understood to entertain with reference to an important branch of the Canadian trade differed materially from their own, they believed that his efforts as governor of the colonies would be directed to the promotion not only of the political, but of the commercial interests, including the timber trade. They recog- nized the difficulty as well as the importance of the general task before him: to establish a just and steady form of government, to develop the latent resources of the provinces by improving the means of communication, to revive commerce, and to re- call to Canada the stream of immigration now diverted elsewhere, and they promised him their co-operation towards the accomplishment of these objects. To this address also he made a felicitous reply, appealing to their pride and fellow-feeling as merchants, soliciting their all-important assistance, and promising the most hearty co-operation in all mutual interests. The following day he left for Montreal, there to meet Sir George Arthur in conference on the affairs of Upper Canada. He reached Montreal on the twenty- third, and on the twenty -fifth Sir George Arthur arrived. On the twenty- sixth he 153 LORD SYDENHAM received an address from the merchants of the city, to which he made one of his brief but effective repHes. With his long training in the intricate details of the Board of Trade, he at once grappled with the tangled problems of Upper Canada. He held numerous conferences with Sir George Arthur, whose breath was rather taken away by the rapidity with which he covered the ground and followed up his conclusions with decisions as to policy. He found that conditions were sufficiently tran- quil in the Lower Province to permit of his leaving it for a few months. In the meantime, he could devote himself to the more immediate object of his mission, in taking up the union question with the Special Council, and on his return from the Upper Province, he would be able to discuss *the detailed needs of Lower Canada at greater length. It had evidently been his intention to dissolve the House of Assembly in Upper Canada, and lay the proposition for a union of the provinces before a House elected specifically on that issue. He found, however, that this would occasion consider- able delay. Moreover, the lieutenant-governor was apprehensive lest a new election at that time should be attended with undue excitement, resulting pos- sibly in riots in certain parts of the province. It appeared also that the existing assembly was not opposed to the measure of re-union, though in- cHned to attach onerous conditions thereto as regards the majority in the Lower Province. But 154 INCREASING POPULARITY even should the assembly indicate a tendency to seriously run counter to the general wishes of the people, it was still within the power of the governor to dissolv^e the House and appeal to the electors. All things considered, therefore, he resolved to proceed to the Upper Province about the middle of November, and before the close of water com- munication. Accordingly, Sir George Arthur was instructed to return to Toronto and to summon the provincial parliament for December 3rd. Already the vigorous yet prudent activity dis- played by the new governor-general, his obvious desire to acquaint himself with all phases of public opinion, and to reach the most equitable and practi- cable conclusions, caused him to rise steadily in the general estimation. His movements and his utterances were followed with the keenest interest, and fully chronicled in the leading newspapers of Lower and Upper Canada. There was, of course, a special curiosity as to his attitude on the subject of responsible government. His repeated assertion of his intention to maintain and, if possible, strengthen the connection between Britain and the colonies, reassured the more conservative element, while his known sympathy with the chief recommendations of Lord Durham's Report and his avoidance of any hostile criticism of the advocates of responsible government, gave no occasion to the Reformers to apprehend that he had renounced his Liberal views. 155 LORD SYDENHAM His interviews with Sir George Arthur had caused no little uneasiness in the mind of that outspoken opponent of responsible government. The lieutenant-governor now saw very clearly that the stand which he had lately taken against that heresy, and his known sympathy with the legis- lative council in its opposition to the union, were no longer to be supported by the chosen repre- sentative of the home government. Having pro- mised to assist the governor-general in his various measures in Upper Canada, he began to have visions of himself publicly repudiating his previous utterances, abandoning his friends of the Compact, and, quite generally, performing the unpleasant task of supporting in the name of the home government what he had previously condemned in -the name of the same authority. Reflecting upon these things on his way back to Toronto, and doubtless taking counsel with his friends there, he wrote a long letter of explanation to the governor-general, dated November 9th. After informing the governor that, according to his desire, the provincial parliament had been con- vened to meet on December 3rd, he took advantage of the occasion to give His Excellency some infor- mation on Upper Canadian conditions, and especial- ly as to his personal position before he took over the government of the province. He repeated the state- ment that he had been instructed at the time of his appointment to follow the policy of his predecessor, 156 SIR GEORGE ARTHUR EXPLAINS Sir F. B. Head. These directions on the part of the home government he had taken pains to make public, believing that it justified him in "giving every possible encouragement and support to the constitutional party who desired British connection and monarchical institutions under the existing con- stitution of 1791, in opposition to the Reform party, whom my predecessor considered collectively dis- loyal and desirous of republican institutions." In following this policy he believed that the condition of the province had been distinctly improving up to the time of the appearance of Lord Durham's Report, and he had hoped among the better dis- posed Reformers to regain all the ground that had been lost. He saw no hope of reconciling the American party or those Reformers who had long associated with them in striving for the introduc- tion of republican institutions, under which he evidently included responsible government. But he had hoped to win the moderate Reformers, though without any departure from the principles of the constitutional party, who were, above all things, not to be offended. As to a union of the provinces, he believed that many who favoured it in 1822, when it failed to carry, had since become opposed to it. He also referred to the joint address of the legislative council and assembly to the late king deprecating the policy of the union, the reply to which had informed him " that the project of a union between 157 LORD SYDENHAM the two provinces has not been contemplated by His Majesty as fit to be recommended for the sanction of parliament." He also stated that Lord Durham himself had on several occasions expressed his decided objection to union. Hence, when con- sulted about it by members of both Houses, he had always opposed it. He claimed to have taken the precaution, however, to state that it would not be well to be too sure of the course to be taken in England, and that it would be desirable to accept whatever measures were finally determined upon there. He now finds that the home government has adopted a union policy, and that His Ex- cellency has come out to endeavour to carry it into effect. But though he has personally opposed it, he believes from the sentiments he has heard expressed that, as an abstract proposition, it could be carried in Upper Canada, though perhaps not in the form presented in the bill sent out from Britain. However, the question which has given rise to most discussion since the appearance of Lord Durham's Report is that of responsible govern- ment. The Report virtually recommends that the executive council be made responsible to the House of Assembly, and this is almost universally accepted as recommending that form of government con- tended for even to rebellion by Mackenzie and Papineau. This he maintains has rehabilitated that whole movement, and so-called " Durham meet- ings " have been held in various parts of the pro- 158 THE OLD DILEMMA vince to advocate this policy. Many of these meetings have indeed been very perplexing, be- cause, while warmly supported by the late rebels, they have also been favoured by persons of un- doubted loyalty, some of whom have admitted that their object was to exclude eventually Her Majesty's secretary of state from any interference in the local concerns of the province. His own attitude towards the idea of responsible government has been to decidedly discountenance it, considering himself as justified in this attitude by the statements of Lord John Russell and the Marquis of Normanby in the British parliament. He flatters himself also that his course has caused this " dangerous innovation " to lose much of its popularity. Referring in particular to his reply to the address presented to him as a result of the "Durham meet- ing" at Hamilton, he presents the usual alternatives as set up at that time by the opponents of respon- sible government. " A governor, if the Crown allowed him to name his council, would surely for his own peace and success, select persons dis- posed to work in harmony with the legislature. By the responsible government now sought men want to place the council, in effect, over the governor, and to set aside altogether the influence of the imperial government by rendering the executive govern- ment wholly dependent upon the provincial parlia- ment." It might be stated parenthetically that it was just because hitherto no governor had ever 159 LORD SYDENHAM attempted to follow the first alternative that the second was advocated by extreme Reformers. How- ever, after presenting his abstract alternatives, Sir George Arthur proceeds half unconsciously to justify most of the agitation for responsible govern- ment. He admits that the cry for reponsibihty does not surprise him, for the chaotic condition into which both the executive and legislative councils of the government had fallen left no real responsi- bility anywhere. " Partly owing to the House of Assembly having taken into its own hands matters purely executive, and partly from other causes, there has been, in reality, in some transactions, no responsibility, and great intricacy exists, and a want of system, in the manner in which the public accounts have been kept, some of the departments have worked most inconveniently to the public, and there are, as it seems to me, no adequate checks over the receipts and disbursements of public money." He had proposed when tranquilhty was restored to show by drastic measures of execu- tive reform that an honest and efficient governor could eradicate the evils of the existing conditions and introduce a new "system of government under which all public officers may be made strictly re- sponsible, in every practical and useful sense of the term." In other words, his conception of responsi- bility was responsibility to a benevolent despotism. But there was apt to be a very uncertain series of despots. 160 AN EMBARRASSING POSITION After referring to the embarrassed condition of the provincial finances and the necessity for de- veloping the resources of the country, and to that end completing the public works already under- taken, Arthur proceeds to sum up the difficulties of the situation in which he finds himself. He con- siders that it was his special function to provide for the safety of the province, and though that is not altogether insured, still he recognizes that it may be the policy of the British government to make considerable changes in the system of administra- tion. On the principles of the union he had left a way of escape for himself, but on the principle of responsible government he infers from his brief interview with His Excellency that his views are not in accordance with those which he himself has been publicly expressing. This may indeed cause some embarrassment to the new governor, for " it is impossible not to perceive how difficult it must be for Your Excellency to avoid being entangled with past transactions." As regards himself under these new conditions, " Her Majesty's government has placed me in circumstances of very considerable embarrassment, from which I have endeavoured to relieve myself, so far as I can, by this unreserved and detailed explanation." He trusts, therefore, that the governor will not require him to take a course for the future too glaringly inconsistent with that of the past, as it would destroy his influence as an auxiliary in carrying out the new policy. 161 LORD SYDENHAM It is plain from this that while it was acknow- ledged that the governor-general had come out to Canada prepared to introduce a new policy in the administration of the country, he was to find him- self hampered, not only by the prejudices of the majority of the people in positions of power and influence, but by the previous policy and definitely expressed convictions of former governors, even Lord Durham himself being quoted against the recommendations of the Report which bore his name. 162 CHAPTER XI RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT LORD John Russell on receiving a despatch from Lieutenant-Governor Arthur, after the depar- ture of Poulett Thomson from Britain, detailing tlie rising excitement over the subject of responsible government, and recounting his own public utter- ances in opposition to it, evidently felt that some further directions on the subject should be sent to the governor-general. At the same time he con- sidered it necessary to provide some more practical means than that which existed for enabling the governor to keep his executive in harmony with the legitimate aspirations of the legislature. As a letter of counsel to the new governor and an expression of the latest views of the colonial office, we have the following important despatch addressed to Poulett Thomson. " DoAVNiXG Street, October 14, 1839. " Sir, — It appears from Sir George Arthur's de- spatches that you may encounter much difficulty in subduing the excitement which prevails on the question of what is called ' Responsible Govern- ment.' I have to instruct you, however, to refuse any explanation which may be construed to im- ply an acquiescence in the petitions and addresses 168 LORD SYDENHAM upon this subject. I cannot better commence this despatch than by a reference to the resolutions of both Houses of Parhament, of the 28th April and 9th May, in the year 1837. " The assembly of Lower Canada having re- peatedly pressed this point, Her Majesty's confi- dential advisers at that period thought it necessary not only to explain their views in the communica- tions of the secretary of state, but expressly called for the opinion of parliament on the subject. The Crown and the two Houses of Lords and Commons having thus decisively pronounced a judgment upon the question, you will consider yourself pre- cluded from entertaining any proposition on the subject. " It does not appear, indeed, that any very definite meaning is generally agreed upon by those who call themselves the advocates of this principle; but its very vagueness is a source of delusion, and, if at all encouraged, would prove the cause of em- barrassment and danger. "The constitution of England, after long struggles and alternate success, has settled into a form of government in which the prerogative of the Crown is undisputed, but is never exercised without advice. Hence the exercise only is questioned, and however the use of the authority may be condemned, the authority itself remains untouched. " This is the practical solution of a great prob- lem, the result of a contest which from 1640 to 164 IMPERIAL AND COLONIAL AUTHORITY 1690 shook the monarchy and disturbed the peace of the country. " But if we seek to apply such a practice to a colony, we shall at once find ourselves at fault. The power for which a minister is responsible in England is not his own power, but the power of the Crown, of which lie is for the time the organ. It is obvious that the executive councillor of a colony is in a situation totally different. The gov- ernor, under whom he serves, receives his orders from the Crown of England; but can the colonial council be the advisers of the Crown of Eng- land? Evidently not, for the Crown has other ad- visers, for the same functions, and with superior authority. " It may happen, therefore, that the governor receives at one and the same time instructions from the queen and advice from his executive council, totally at variance with each other. If he is to obey his instructions from England, the parallel of con- stitutional responsibility entirely fails; if, on the other hand, he is to follow the advice of his council, he is no longer a subordinate officer, but an independent sovereign. " There are some cases in which the force of these objections is so manifest, that those who at first made no distinction between the constitution of the United Kingdom and that of the colonies, admit their strength: I allude to the questions of foreign war and international relations, whether of 165 LORD SYDENHAM trade or diplomacy. It is now said that internal government is alone intended. " But there are some cases of internal govern- ment in which the honour of the Crown or the faith of the parliament, or the safety of the State, are so seriously involved, that it would not be possible for Her Majesty to delegate her authority to a ministry in a colony. " 1 will put for illustration some of the cases which have occurred in that very province where the petition for a responsible executive first arose — I mean Lower Canada. " During the time when a large majority of the assembly of Lower Canada followed M. Papineau as their leader, it was obviously the aim of that gentleman to discourage all who did their duty to the Crown within the province, and to deter all who should resort to Canada with British habits and feelings from without. I need not say that it would have been impossible for any minis- ter to support, in the parliament of the United Kingdom, the measures which a ministry, headed by M. Papineau, would have imposed upon the governor of Lower Canada ; — British officers pun- ished for doing their duty, British emigrants de- frauded of their property, British merchants dis- couraged in their lawful pursuits, — would have loudly appealed to parliament against the Cana- dian ministry and would have demanded protec- tion. . . . 166 A PRACTICAL SOLUTION " While I thus see insuperable objections to the adoption of the principle as it has been stated, I see little or none to the practical views of colonial government recommended by Lord Durham, as I understand them. The queen's government have no desire to thwart the representative assemblies of British North America in their measures of reform and improvement. They have no wish to make those provinces the resource for patronage at home. They are earnestly intent on giving to the talent and character of leading persons in the colonies advantages similar to those which talent and char- acter, employed in the public service, obtain in the United Kingdom. Her Majesty has no desire to maintain any system of policy among her North American subjects which opinion condemns. In receiving the queen's commands, therefore, to pro- test against any declaration at variance with the honour of the Crown and the unity of the empire, I am at the same time instructed to announce Her INlajesty's gracious intention to look to the affec- tionate attachment of her people in North America as the best security for permanent dominion. " It is necessary, for this purpose, that no official misconduct should be screened by Her Majesty's representative in the provinces; and that no private interests should be allowed to compete with the general good. Your Excellency is fully in posses- sion of the principles which have guided Her Majesty's advisers on this subject; and you must 167 LORD SYDENHAM be aware that there is no surer way of earning the approbation of the queen than by maintaining the harmony of the executive with the legislative authorities. " While I have thus cautioned you against any declaration from which dangerous consequences might hereafter flow, and instructed you as to the general line of your conduct, it may be said that I have not drawn any specific line beyond which the power of the governor on the one hand, and the privileges of the assembly on the other, ought not to extend. But this must be the case in any mixed government. Every political constitution in which different bodies share the supreme power is only able to exist by the forbearance of those among whom this power is distributed. In this respect the example of England may well be imitated. The sovereign using the prerogative of the Crown to the utmost extent, and the House of Commons exerting its power of the purse to carry all its resolutions into immediate effect, would produce confusion in the country in a twelvemonth. So in a colony ; the governor thwarting every legitimate proposition of the assembly, and the assembly continually recurring to its power of refusing sup- plies, can but disturb all political relations, em- barrass trade and retard the prosperity of the people. Each must exercise a wise moderation. The governor must only oppose the wishes of the assembly where the honour of the Crown or the 168 THE PRINCIPLES INVOLVED interests of the empire are deeply concerned; and the assembly must be ready' to modify some of its measures for the sake of harmony, and from a reverent attachment to the authority of Great Britain." With the exception of a slight logical inconsist- ency which will be referred to later, we have in this despatch an almost complete expression of the theory of responsible government within the British empire as it is exercised to-day. The relationship has been stated a thousand times since this was written, but we have here a statement of all the essential prin- ciples which govern the whole subject. For the sake of clearness and further reference, the principles in- volved may be distinguished and stated thus: — (a) The prerogative of the British Crown is as absolute to-day as it ever was, being simply the expression of British sovereignty. (b) The prerogative of the British Crown is not exercised by the monarch alone, but under advice controlled by the two Houses of Parliament. (c) The degree or proportion in which the pre- rogative of the Crown is exercised by the three estates — the King, the Lords, and the Commons — is not, and cannot be, prescribed. This is a matter which has been adjusted from time to time by trial, experiment, and usage, in such a way that in cer- tain matters the will of the monarch is practically final, in others the will of the Lords, and in others the will of the Commons, but in all cases with the ' 169 LORD SYDENHAM tacit consent of the others. In the course of time, however, the larger and more distinctly national issues have gradually come chiefly under the will of the Commons, as expressed through the ministry of the day, accepted by the Lords, and assented to by the king. {d) There is no power over and above the British ministry as exercising the royal prerogative. {e) In the colonies there is such a power, the power, namely, of the royal prerogative as exer- cised by the British ministry. {f) When a colonial governor receives advice from the home government which conflicts with that received from his advisers in the colony, he must obey the advice from the home government, otherwise his colony is a sovereign or independent power. {g) It is not possible to make a distinction be- tween colonial sovereignty and British sovereignty, depending upon the subjects dealt with; such as, in the first case, matters of internal economy, and, in the second, matters of inter-imperial or foreign re- lations. This is simply a question of degree, the principle being the same in both cases. {h) As to what does or does not lie within the power of a colonial government, as distinguished from the British government, no hard and fast dis- tinction can be made. Everything is a matter of wisdom and adjustment. The British government should have no desire to embarrass the legitimate 170 THE ONE DEFECT development of the colony, and the colony should not insist upon demanding that which violates the honour of the Crown and the unity of the empire. (?) The adjustment of powers between the governor, the council, and the assembly in the colony can no more be defined and prescribed than the adjustment of powers between the monarch, the Lords, and the Commons in England. Every- thing must be adjusted under a wise moderation and respect for the necessities of the constitution and the needs of the country. In carefully considering these propositions, we observe that the one defect in the system appears in the want of harmony between the principle laid down in (e) and (f), and the principle declared in {h). Yet {/i) is evidently the more logical and per- fect statement. Propositions (e) and {f) contain the very defects which all the other principles in the series are intended to eliminate, alike for Britain and Canada. In {k) it is correctly stated that there can be no precise definition as to where the author- ity of the British government and that of the colonial government limit each other. That must be determined by trial, experience and usage. An unreasonable and unbending claim* to exclusive jurisdiction by either party is as liable to produce a rupture of the empire as a similar attitude on the part of one of the estates in the government of Britain itself, or of a self-gov^erning colony. The giving way, therefore, in the case of a disagreement 171 LORD SYDENHAM is not to be entirely and of necessity on the side of the colonial government as claimed in (c) and (f), but is in every case a matter for reasonable dis- cussion and adjustment, and must be decided in the light of what is best for all parties, as recog- nized in {/i), which is simply an expression of Lord John Russell's statement that " Her Majesty has no desire to maintain any system of policy among her North American subjects which opinion condemns." Hence, when the governor is required to protest against a disregard of the honour of the Crown or of the unity of the empire, he is " at the same time instructed to announce Her Majesty's gracious intention to look to the affectionate attachment of her people in North America as the best security for permanent dominion." It will be seen then that this despatch really covers the whole ground, carrying with it as it does the logical correction of its own defects. There was, of course, nothing in this despatch to hamper Governor Poulett Thomson from admitting, as applicable to the colonies, the most complete theory of responsible government. But, in actually bringing that theory into practice, many and serious difficulties still stood in the way. In the first place neither the conservative element nor the professed advocates of responsible government understood what was involved in bringing such a principle into actual practice. The Conservatives were doubtless the more completely in the dark, entirely miscon- 172 REFORMERS ALSO MISTAKEN ceiving and misrepresenting it; but the Reformers, professed advocates of the principle, both claimed and allowed far too much. They were willing to admit that the British government had an unques- tionable authority in Great Britain itself and the empire at large, without any interference from the colonies. For the time being, also, they were willing to admit that Canadian external relations, including trade relations with foreign countries, all relations between the colonies themselves, and between the colonies and the Motlier Country, belonged to the sphere controlled by Britain alone. But they claimed an equally absolute authority over all domestic affairs of the provinces, without considering, how- ever, whether domestic and foreign affiiirs did not involve a separation of bone and marrow. Their general principle left no common ground on which mutual powers were to be exercised, and logically involved an ultimate separation between the Mother Country and the colonies, after a series of conflicts over those very colonial relationships which for the time were admitted to be entirely within the juris- diction of the Mother Country. But experience has proved that the claim for responsible government which was put forth at this time, from the most opposite motives, by the French-Canadians on the one hand, and the advanced Reformers in Upper Canada on the other, has not only never yet been realized, but is now all but abandoned. It is now but the phantom enemy of ultra-imperialists who 173 LORD SYDENHAM seem to believe that responsible government still means wliat it did to I^afontaine and Baldwin at this period, but whieli they themselves put aside on attaining to power. These mistaken ideas as to what responsible government involved, Poulett Tliomson had to deal with, and endeavoured to dispel, introducing in their place that constitutional practice of responsible government by trial and ex- periment through mutual concession, the results of which were to be crystallized into the practice and custom of a constitution moulded upon British lines. In attempting to introduce into Canada the prac- tice of the British constitution, what the new gover- nor was met with was the fact that the Canadian system as then administered on Family Compact lines, was an American and not a British system. In the American system the legislative and the execu- tive departments are distinct from each other. The president and his cabinet are not members of either house of Congress, and have no direct control over the voting of supplies or the passing of Acts, except through the tendering of advice by a message from without, and the power of veto after measures have been passed through Congress. So in Canada at this time the governor and his executive council were not members of the representative portion of the legislature, and had no direct control over the voting of supplies or the passing of Acts, except the power of veto exercised by the governor in 174 AMERICAN AND CANADIAN SYSTEMS reserving bills, and by a nominated council in re- jecting them. Again, in the American system the president selects the various secretaries, who, as chiefs of the executive departments, compose his cabinet, but they are otherwise quite independent of each other, and do not require to agree in their views on all the leading issues of pubhc policy. Similarly, the chief executive officers in Canada were, nominally at least, selected by the governor, but were otherwise independent of each other, and did not require to agree in their views on general public policy. Nominally the Canadian executive chiefs held their offices as the American secretaries, at the pleasure of the governor representing the Crown. But, as part of the system by which in Canada the servants came to control the master, they had managed to establish virtually a life tenure in their offices. It was on this vital point of tenure of office that the chief practical difference between the Canadian and the American systems lay. In the United States the president was elected by the people, in Canada the gov^ernor was ap- pointed from Britain. In the United States the senate was indirectly elected by the people, in Canada the legislative council was nominally ap- pointed by the Crown, but really nominated by a group chiefly composed of the executive and legis- lative councils themselves. A similar distinction held with reference to the president's cabinet and the governor's executive council. Thus, in the 175 LORD SYDENHAM United States, though there was not responsible government in the EngHsh sense, yet ultimately- all the officers of the go\ernment were indirectly amenable to the popular suffrage. In Canada, where there was no responsible government of the British type, neither was the government even indirectly amenable to popular suffrage. 176 CHAPTER XII RADICAL CHANGES REQUIRED IT is quite obvious that many and radical changes were required in the Canadian system of gov- ernment before it could attain even to the Am- erican, much less to the British, form of responsible government. To convert the Canadian system from the decidedly non- British condition in which it had been placed and maintained, chiefly by the power of the Family Compact party, was the essential and all-important work required of the new gover- nor in connection with the introduction of respon- sible government. This had been recognized in Lord Durham's Report as the most difficult task in the introduction of responsible government, though the Report itself apparently erred in repre- senting it when introduced as indistinguishable from complete and independent sovereignty. What then were the most important changes which must be made in the Canadian system of government in order to render it possible to operate that system of responsible government advocated in the Durham Report, which Lord John Russell accepted and encouraged Governor Poulett Thom- son to introduce ? In the first place, the members of the executive council must be made to hold their positions at the pleasure of the Crown. Should 177 LORD SYDENHAM the Crown in future, as Lord John Russell's de- spatch indicated, pay special respect to the wishes of the representatives of the Canadian people, then the members of the executive council must be brought into harmony with the legislature. The legislative council, even as an appointed body, must no longer represent a close corporation of court favourites. In tlie spirit of mutual confidence established between the Crown and the people, the council must be filled with those who will com- mand the respect of the province. Again, in order that the chief executive officers might represent a connected and self-consistent policy, which would be able to command the intelligent support of a majority in the assembly, the executive officers must be in sufficient agreement on all the essential points of provincial policy that there might be no public friction among them. To this end it was necessary that they should be organized under an acknowledged leader. In other words, there must be formed a responsible cabinet composed of the chief executive officers, with seats in one or other branch of the legislature, and able to command the support of the majority of the assembly. To secure such a harmony of interests as would bring into a working agreement the legislative, executive, and imperial interests was just the object to be secured by that informal adjustment of powers which Lord John Russell's despatch represented as the true and only expression of responsible government 178 A GREAT ACHIEVEMENT within self-governing portions of the British em- pire. To introduce these great changes, amounting to a virtual revolution as regards the previous system of Canadian politics, and to lay tlie foundations for a system of precedent and custom which would in time render Canadian cabinet government as stable and its evolution as safe as that of the British constitution itself, was the unique service to be rendered by Lord Sydenham. Once definitely in- troduced, the system had to be gradually developed in its practice and traditions, and the division of responsibility on this or that subject had to be re- adjusted from time to time. Similarly, the weight of responsibility as between the home government and the colonies had to be gradually shifted and adapted as the development and self-reliance of the colonies increased, and in proportion as they showed tlieir appreciation of their liberty and their ability to work harmoniously with the home government on those lines of mutual respect and confidence re- ferred to by Lord John Russell. The first great step in this transformation of colonial practice was of necessity the breaking up of the proprietary position of the chief executive officers, which was the essence of what was known as the Family Compact. The Compact was not in reality a political party, for the members of it did not, as a matter of fact, always agree among themselves on questions of public poHcy. Neither 179 LORD SYDENHAM was it, as its members constantly pointed out in their stock argument in rebuttal, a body of persons specially connected by blood relationship. It was simply a group of persons, more or less bound together by strong ties of personal interest, estab- lishing and maintaining their hold upon the execu- tive offices, and consequently upon the governors, and all public grants, emoluments, and appoint- ments depending upon the executive power. The dissolving of the proprietary control of the execu- tive offices was accomplished very adroitly by another despatch from Lord John Russell, laying down the future conditions as to the tenure of these offices. This important despatch, also ad- dressed to Governor Poulett Thomson, is as follows : — " DowNiNCx Street, October 16, 1839. " Sir, — I am desirous of directing your attention to the tenure on which public offices in the gift of the Crown appear to be held throughout the British colonies. I find that the governor himself, and every person serving under him, are appointed during the royal pleasure, but with this important diffisrence : the governor's commission is, in fact, revoked when- ever the interests of the public service are supposed to require such a change in the administration of local affairs ; but the commissions of all other public officers are very rarely indeed recalled, except for positive misconduct. I cannot learn that during the present or the two last reigns, a single instance has 180 TENURE OF OFFICE occurred of a change in the subordinate colonial officers, except in cases of death or resignation, in- capacity or misconduct. This system of converting a tenure at pleasure into a tenure for life, originated probably in the practice which formerly prevailed of selecting all the higher class of colonial function- aries from persons who, at the time of their appoint- ment, were resident in this country ; and amongst other motives which afforded such persons a virtual security for the continued possession of their places, it was not the least considerable that, ex- cept on those terms, they were unwilling to incur the risk and expense of transferring their residence to remote, and often to unhealthy, chmates. But the habit which has obtained of late years of preferring, as far as possible, for places of trust in the colonies, persons resident there, has taken away the strongest motive which could thus be alleged in favour of a practice to which there are many objections of the greatest weight. It is time, therefore, that a differ- ent course should be followed, and the object of my present communication is to announce to you the rules which will be hereafter observed on this subject in the province of Lower Canada. "You will understand and will cause it to be made generally known, that hereafter the tenure of colonial offices held during Her Majesty's pleasure will not be regarded as equivalent to a tenure during good behaviour; but that not only such officers will be called upon to retire from tlie public service as 181 LORD SYDENHAM often as any sufficient motives of public policy may suggest the expediency of that measure, but that a change in the person of the governor will be con- sidered as a sufficient reason for any alterations which his successor may deem it expedient to make in the list of public functionaries, subject, of course, to the future confirmation of the sovereign. " These remarks do not extend to judicial offices, nor are they meant to apply to places which are altogether ministerial, and which do not devolve upon the holders of them duties in the right dis- charge of which the character and policy of the government are directly involved. They are in- tended to apply rather to the heads of departments than to persons serving as clerks or in similar capacities under them. Neither do they extend to officers in the service of lords commissioners of the treasury. The functionaries who will be chiefly, though not exclusively, affected by them, are the colonial secretary, the treasurer or receiver-general, the surveyor-general, the attorney- and solicitor- general, the sheriff or provost-marshal, and other officers who, under different designations from these, are intrusted with the same or similar duties. To this list must also be added the members of the council, especially in those colonies in which the legislative and executive councils are distinct bodies. " The application of these rules to officers to be hereafter appointed will be attended with no prac- 182 JOY AND SORROW tical difficulty. It may not be equally easy to enforce them in the case of existing officers, and especially of those who may have left this country for the ex- press purpose of accepting the offices they at present fill. Every reasonable indulgence must be shown for the expectations which such persons have been encouraged to form. But even in these instances it will be necessary that the right of enforcing these regulations should be distinctly maintained in prac- tice, as well as in theory, as often as the public good may clearly demand the enforcement of them. It may not be unadvisable to compensate any such officers for their disappointment even by pecuniary grants, when it may appear unjust to dispense with their services without such an indemnity." This despatch was hailed with delight by the responsible government party, because it was re- cognized as evidently designed to open the way for a change of ministry whenever the members of the executive council had lost the confidence of the legislature. On the other hand it was received with something like consternation by the office-holders, and with very great doubt by their backers and the Conservative element generally. They, too, recog- nized that it meant the virtual introduction of responsible government, though without specific- ally naming it. "People are no longer to hold offices subject to good behaviour," said the King- ston Chronicle, "giving us plainly to understand that good behaviour is an indifferent sort of re- 183 LORD SYDENHAM commendation to a Whig colonial ministry." The Quebec Gazette, unshakenly devoted to the old paths, criticized the measure very harshly, fearing that while it implied on the face of it responsibility to the executive and the Crown, it was very likely to degenerate into responsibility to the majority, as- it would be difficult for the governor to resist the majority, and practically impossible for the execu- tive officers to do so. In Canada the heads of departments lived by their offices, and had not, as in Britain, the independent means which would enable them to place principle before profit and refuse to change their views in response to the clamours of the multitude. The Toronto Patriot, however, already wavering in its opposition to the new governor, saw no great danger in that form of responsible government, the responsibility being to the Crown. While the policy of this despatch undoubtedly rendered responsible government possible, yet, as we have seen, much remained to be done before it could be rendered actual. There was as yet no constitutional machinery for effiscting an orderly change of ministry. There was no regular party system with recognized leadership, and consequently no plain indication to the governor, through formal divisions of the House, as to what particular policy on any given issue the public would support. Neither was there any organization to suggest with any certainty who were the individuals command- 184 MUCH YET TO BE DONE ing the confidence of a majority in the assembly on any special issue, and still less indication as to whether the parties who might receive the support of the majority on this or that issue could agree among themselves as to a general policy or a mutually acceptable programme on the leading issues. With all this lack of organization there could be no position corresponding to that of the prime minister of to-day. There were indeed various tentative efforts towards the formation of political groups, but they were generally organized for the purpose of promoting this or that special object. The Reformers were never definitely united on any issue before that of responsible government, and as they were united on nothing else, they could not have worked responsible government. There was a general though vague distinction between Reformers and Conservatives, which under definite organization would naturally crystallize into two great parties, but there was as yet little harmony between the different sections of either wing. As we have seen, in taking the attitude of the different sections of the people on the two great questions then before them — union and responsible govern- ment — the arrangement of groups on one of these questions was quite different from their arrange- ment on the other. In Upper Canada also, that other great question, the Clergy Reserves, divided the people differently from either of the others. Numerous other instances of cross-divisions could 185 LORD SYDENHAM be given, if we followed up the attitude of leading politicians on other important matters discussed within the preceding years, and on which it was essential that a ministry should have a connected policy. The existing situation was such, then, that any popular ministry formed directly in response to the cry for responsible government would be apt to have a sweeping majority on one question and find itself in a hopeless minority on many others. But, as we know, a responsible government of the British type cannot be carried on upon these terms. There must be party organization with accepted leader- ship and a coherent programme. Obviously the very machinery for working re- sponsible government had to be created. In order to create it, introduce it, and get it into a fairly good working condition, it was necessary that the governor-general should virtually take the initia- tive, and for the time exercise very extraordinary powers, playing the combined role of prime minis- ter, lieutenant-governor, and governor-general; and in the meantime be given a remarkably free hand by the home government. Thus it fell out that the governor-general who was to introduce responsible government and prepare the way for a gradual re- tirement from actual politics of all future governors- general from Lord Elgin on, was himself to exercise a personal power in ministerial control unknown to any of his predecessors or successors. In breaking up the Compact party and their hold upon the 186 CONDITIONS OF TRANSITION administration, the governor had to temporarily take over all their powers into his own hands in order to bestow them afresh either upon the same men under new conditions of office, or upon a new set of ministers taking up tlieir duties on a mutu- ally responsible basis. To make such a transition possible in Canada, under the conditions of the time, two things were necessary, first, that the governor must thoroughly understand the practical workings of the cabinet system based upon party government. This qualifi- cation Lord Sydenham certainly had, and was the first of Canadian governors to possess. On the other hand, it would never have done to transfer the executive power directly from the Compact party to a number of their opponents, amenable only to an amorphous assembly, quite untrained in the most vital features of British parliamentary procedure. Such a policy, though advocated, as we shall see, by conscientious Reformers such as Bald- win, would have been utterly impracticable. It would have inevitably produced riot in Upper Canada, and was simply inconceivable in Lower Canada. But, however distasteful to the ultra- Conservatives, it was strictly within tlie powers of the governor-general, according to the soundest doctrine of the Compact party, to take the direc- tion of the executive government into his own hands, even while permitting the existing holders of office to remain, subject however to his plea- 187 LORD SYDENHAM sure. This the new instructions on the tenure of office permitted the governor to do. Thereafter, in making any changes in office, he could place in the executive positions such persons as he recognized might command the respect and confidence of a majority of the assembly. But, as this would be for some time an experimental process, by keeping sufficient reserve power in his own hands he could, on the one hand, correct any mistakes in the filling of the offices, and, on the other, prevent his minis- try from being thrown out before the new system had had time to crystallize into a working organiza- tion. As the ministry acquired facility in work- ing in harmony with each other, until they could hold together of their own accord and trust them- selves to the tender mercies of a parliamentary majority, itself requiring considerable coaching, it would be possible for the governor to relax his power and admit ultimately the complete responsi- bility of his ministry. How much patience, wisdom, and tact, rapid and accurate judgment of men and measures, how much of the wisdom of the serpent masked under the harmlessness of the dove this process required, only those who are familiar with the chaotic condition of Canadian public life, the bitter recriminations, deep jealousies, and far-reach- ing antagonisms of that period, can understand. To attempt to effect such an administrative re- volution in an atmosphere surcharged with the most opposite views on the question of responsible 188 DIFFICULT NAVIGATION government was especially difficult, for it was quite obvious that during the whole process of transition the question would be repeated in scores of forms, and with the most opposite motives: Must the ministry resign on an adverse vote ? It was plain that at the beginning of the process the ministry could not necessarily be sacrificed on every adverse vote, even on important issues, while at the close of the process the ministry must of necessity resign on a definite adverse vote. At the beginning of the process the ministry were the chosen instruments of the governor-general, and depended upon him for their cohesion, their unity of policy and tenure of office ; but at the end of the process they were the instruments of the legislature, and dependent upon the majority of the assembly for their political support and tenure of office. During the interval all the difficult stages of transition must be traversed. This transition process was naturally distasteful to impatient and rigid theorists of both extremes, bringing upon the governor the opposition of ultra- Tories and ultra-Radicals. In addition to proving practically the only feasible method of introducing the British system of re- sponsible cabinet government into Canada, Lord Sydenham's policy achieved the introduction of this system on the terms laid down in Lord .lohn Russell's despatch. At the close of the first session of the united parliament, after a great deal of suc- cessful fencing, the principle was at length openly 189 LORD SYDENHAM recognized that the ministry must resign on an ad- verse vote; yet it was recognized on such terms that the rights of the three estates, the assembly, the coun- cil, and the Crown, were preserved. All definition of their respective spheres of influence was avoided ; the responsibility of the ministers and the colonial relationship were left simply as working principles, and they have remained such from that day to this, amid all the readjustments of the balance of power between the three estates and within the empire. The messages of Lord John Russell on responsible government and the tenure of office marked the beginning of this process ; the working out of it is to be traced in the practical details of I^ord Syden- ham's administration and that of his successors within the following decade. 190 CHAPTER XIII THE UNION PROBLEM AFTER the departure of Sir George Arthur, Lord Sydenham remained dihgently con- sulting with the most representative citizens of Lower Canada, and especially with the chief-justice, James Stuart. Chief-Justice Stuart was a man of exceptional ability, learning, and professional experience, and was probably more than any other person in the country respected and trusted by both French and English elements. Recogniz- ing at once the value of such a man as an ad- viser, especially on the subject of the union, the governor frequently consulted with him, and at- tached the greatest weight to his counsel. In- vestigation had convinced him that the more stable elements in Lower Canada, French as well as Enghsh, were now desirous of a speedy termina- tion of the unsatisfactory condition of the existing Canadian government. The alienated French-Cana- dians naturally made use of the suspension of con- stitutional government as a basis for continued agitation. Public opinion throughout the province was very much divided; some demanded a return to the former constitution, others would deprive the French-Canadians of all share in the govern- ment, breaking up the province into sections, giving 191 LORD SYDENHAM political rights to some and denying them to others. Even some of the extremists, however, believed that union was the only practicable measure. On all grounds the speedy adoption of the union measure seemed essential to the peace and pro- sperity of the country; as regards details, there were some who desired that the imperial govern- ment should take the whole matter into its own hands without consulting local opinion or local interests, but the majority of the best opinion of both races favoured union upon principles of fair- ness alike to the two provinces and to the two races. The governor-general called the Special Council together on November 11th, 1839, and submitted to them the proposals for reunion. In order that it might not be supposed that he had used his per- sonal influence to select members of council speci- ally favourable to the union, he did not exercise the right of making changes in the council, but simply accepted the body as appointed by Sir John Colborne. In July, 1839, Colborne had appointed ten additional members to the Special Council. These he carefully selected from the most in- fluential persons of each district, in order to render it as representative and respectable a body as poss- ible for the passing of urgently necessary laws. To this body then the governor-general sub- mitted the union proposal. Their opinion in favour of the measure was almost unanimous, and was 192 VERDICT OF THE SPECIAL COUNCIL conveyed to the governor in the form of an address and six resolutions. Tlie latter embodied the re- quirements that the union should include provision for a permanent civil list, that that portion of the debt of the Upper Province incurred in improving the navigation of the St. Lawrence, the common highway between the two provinces, should be a charge upon the joint revenue, and that the new legislature should be one " in which tlie people of these two provinces may be adequately represented, and their constitutional rights exercised and main- tained." The resolutions were opposed by only three members out of fourteen, the three being Messrs. Cuthbert, Neilson, and Quesnel. Mr. Neilson, who was the editor and proprietor of the Quebec GazettCy maintained, as we shall see, an opposition to the union measure which deepened with every defeat which he sustained, and which culminated in his attacks on the union in the first legislature of the united province. The press of Upper Canada naturally followed the proceedings of the Special Council with much interest, knowing that its verdict would be used to influence the vote in the Upper Canadian legis- lature. The Conservative press regarded the resolu- tions adopted as much too favourable to the French-Canadians. As the Kingston Chronicle^ one of the most representative of these papers, put it, there was to be no distinction between French rebels and loyal subjects, and disaffected districts 193 LORD SYDENHAM were to be treated on the same terms as others. Rebels, Durhamites, Radicals, and Loyalists are to find equal favour in the eyes of the governor- general. This may appear very generous on the part of the governor but it may prove quite fatal to British interests. It closed with the hope that the legislature of the Upper Province may raise its voice against such dangerous proceedings. The Sherbrooke Gazette, as representative of the Eng- lish element in the townships, did not share in the optimistic opinions of the Montreal Gazette or Herald, who thought that the union would be the means of putting an end to the separate national aspirations of the French-Canadians, and would result in the fusion of the two races. It feared that there might be a sufficient number in Upper Canada in favour of responsible government to unite with the great majority of I..ower Canada, and thus con- trol the united legislature and lead round to the same conditions as in 1837. Neilson's paper, the Quebec Gazette, taking the same stand as its pro- prietor in the council, opposed the union from the opposite point of view, because, as he claimed, it was likely to overthrow the power of the French- Canadians in the united assembly. Having secured a favourable verdict from the only legislative body in Lower Canada, the gover- nor set out for the Upper Province, leaving Sir R. D. Jackson, commander of the forces, as admini- strator in Lower Canada during his absence. The 194 AN ENERGETIC GOVERNOR chief-justice he desired to follow him in order to assist in the revision of the union measure, should it be accepted by the legislature of Upper Canada. The industry and impetuosity with which Poulett Thomson followed up every matter in which he was deeply interested proved a novel and almost alarm- ing experience for the Canadian officials, who were quite unaccustomed to a governor-general who so completely exercised his powers to regulate details, and who threw himself so enthusiastically into his work. His anxiety to reach Toronto at the earUest moment so as to have as much time as possible to get into touch with men and conditions there before the opening of the assembly, determined him to leave Montreal at an unusually early hour on the morning of November 18th. Driving over to Lachine, he expected to find a special steamer pro- vided by the commissariat department to take him up the lake. We can imagine his chagrin at finding only the regular passenger steamer there, the cap- tain of which decUned to undertake any special trip before the regular hour for receiving mails and passengers. In consequence. Commissary- General Routh at Quebec received a very sharp letter from Mr. Murdoch, the civil secretary, demanding an explanation of the lack of a special conveyance and requesting that in future, when the governor- general had occasion to travel, a special officer of the commissariat department should be in attend- ance to provide tlie means of transport. 195 LORD SYDENHAM The first part of his trip the governor thus de- scribes: "The journey was bad enough; a portage to La Cliine; tlien the steamboat to the Cascades, twenty-four miles further; then road again (if road it can be called) for sixteen miles ; then steam to Prescott, forty miles; then road, twelve miles; then, by change of steamers, into Lake Ontario to King- ston Such as I have described it is the boasted navigation of the St. Lawrence I " Reach- ing Kingston on the twentieth at 1 p.m., he was received with all military honours, as befitting at once the governor-general and the chief centre of the troops in Upper Canada. He was also presented with two addresses, the product of several public meetings during the previous week, one from the magistrates, clergy, and inhabitants of the town; and the other from the merchant forwarders and traders, as having a special bond of sympathy with the governor. His Excellency made, as usual, brief but appropriate and felicitous replies, and within three hours was afloat again on the government steamer Traveller^ on his way to Toronto, where he arrived the following forenoon, November 21st. The next day at noon he was received in state in the executive council chamber by the members of the council and the heads of the Church, the bench, the educational institutions, and the govern- ment departments. There he took the oaths of office, and in turn administered them to the mem- bers of the executive council. Finally, he received 196 RECEPTION IN TORONTO from Sir George Arthur the pubhc seal of the pro- vince, as taking over the provincial government. Then came an address from the mayor and cor- poration. The Patriot thus gives its first impressions of the new governor as he appeared at these functions. "His Excellency, the governor-general, is a younger looking person than we expected to see: he is ap- parently about thirty-five years of age, and his appearance strikingly intelligent and agreeable. His Excellency wore a civil uniform of blue, superbly embroidered with massive gold lace. He received with marked urbanity the gentlemen introduced to him. We are sorry to notice that His Excellency appeared to labour under severe indisposition." In the address from the mayor and council, the governor is given to understand that the policy of the imperial government had raised doubts and un- certainty in the minds of loyal and well-aff'ected inhabitants, and as he is understood to be looking for expressions of public opinion on the question of the legislative union of the provinces, they would respectfully express their conviction that any legis- lative union not based upon the ascendency of the loyal part of the inhabitants, or which would give to the French-Canadians, diplomatically referred to as "that portion of the population who, from educa- tion, habits and prejudices, are aliens to our nation and our institutions," the same rights and privileges with the loyal British population who have risked 197 LORD SYDENHAM their lives and properties for their sovereign and constitution, would be fatal to the connection of the Canadian provinces with the Mother Country. If, therefore, His Excellency chooses " to preserve inviolate and unchanged " the constitution under which they live, he may confidently rely upon " the highest municipal body in the province " for sup- port. His Excellency in reply quietly assured them that he was charmed with their sentiments of loyalty, but gently indicated that Her JVIajesty's government was really loyal also, and that while the connection between the colonies and the Mother Country was undoubtedly to be main- tained, "to be of permanent advantage, it must be founded upon principles of equal justice to all Her Majesty's subjects." Not content with these numerous and trying ceremonies as a day's work, His Excellency the same day set on foot a number of special inquiries in order that he might be furnished with informa- tion as to the condition of the province. Its finan- cial embarrassment being one of the most critical problems and an all-important feature in the ques- tion of union, he directed the receiver-general, Hon. J. H. Dunn, to prepare a return of the re- venue and expenditure of the province for the past five years. While these preliminaries were preparing, his traveller's instinct induced him to make an excur- sion to Niagara. He thus refers to his trip. " I 198 A BUSY LIFE started again on Saturday for the Falls. It is only thirty-six miles across the lake to Queenston, and then seven to the Falls. So, by starting early in a government steamer, which I kept, I did the thing in a day, and returned here to sleep. Then again at Niagara, Queenston, and Drummondville, I had to face addresses and the military; still I got three or four hours for the Falls, and certainly they beggar all power of description." On ISIonday he held a public levee at Government House at one o'clock, and this apparently was attended by all sorts and con- ditions of men. At the close of this function the merchants of the city presented an address in which they appealed to him to employ his distin- guished abilities and intimate knowledge of com- merce to devise measures for restoring prosperity and once more directing immigration and capital to the Canadian provinces. The governor promised his best assistance in return for their co-operation in readjusting the constitution. The same day he received a second address from the general inhabit- ants of the city. The remaining few days before the opening of the legislature he spent in endeavouring to learn the attitude and relative strength of the various elements within the province, in order that he might judge of the most effective presentation to make of the union proposal, in his message to the legislature. What he discovered was not very encouraging, as the following extract from a private letter will indicate. 199 LORD SYDENHAM " I have now the Upper Province to deal with, which will, I fear, be a more difficult matter. But I do not despair ; and certainly, so far as all the real interests of the country are concerned, the union is far more necessary to Upper Canada than to the other. If it were possible, the best thing for Lower Canada would be a despotism for ten years more ; for, in truth, the people are not yet fit for the higher class of self-government — scarcely indeed, at present, for any description of it; and by carry- ing oneself the measures which a House of Assem- bly will probably never carry, one might gradually fit them for both, and, at all events, leave them an amount of good institutions which the united legis- lature, when it came, could not destroy. But in Upper Canada the case, as it appears to me, is widely different. The state of things here is far worse than I had expected. The country is split into factions animated with the most deadly hatred to each other. The people have got into the habit of talking so much of separation, that they begin to believe in it. The constitutional party is as bad or worse than the other, in spite of all their professions ■of loyalty. The finances are more deranged than we believed even in England. The deficit £75,000 a year, more than equal to the income. All public works suspended. Emigration going on fast from the province. Every man's property worth only half what it was. When I look to the state of government, and to the departmental administra- 200 AN UNPROMISING OUTLOOK tion of the province, instead of being surprised at the condition in which I find it, I am only as- tonished it has been endured so long. I know that, much as I dislike Yankee institutions and rule, / would not have fought against them, which thou- sands of these poor fellows, whom the Compact call ' rebels,' did, if it were only to keep up such a government as they got. The excitement upon ' re- sponsible government ' is great. Not that I believe the people understand what they are clamouring for by that word; but that they feel the extreme uneasiness of their situation, owing to financial em- barrassments, and hate the dominant party in the government with intense hatred. I do not wonder at the cry for responsible government, when I see how things have been managed. " Then the assembly is such a House ! Split into half a dozen different parties. The government having none — and no one man to depend on ! Think of a House in which half the members hold places, yet in which the government does not command a single vote; in which the placemen generally vote against the executive ; and where there is no one to defend the government when attacked, or to state the opinion or views of the governor ! How, with a popular assembly, government is to be conducted under such circumstances, is a riddle to me. I am now more than ever satisfied that the union affords the only chance of putting an end to the factions that distract the country; the only means of recruit- 201 LORD SYDENHAM ing its finances by persuading Great Britain to help the Upper Canada exchequer; the only means by which the present abominable system of govern- ment can be broken up, and a strong and powerful administration, both departmental and executive, be formed. And unless the people will assent to the general outline of it, and parliament will then carry the details, upon which they would never agree, with a high hand, the province is lost. From all that I can hear or see, I would not give a year's purchase for our hold of it, if some great stroke is not given which shall turn men's thoughts from the channel in which they now run, and give a fresh impetus to public works, immigration, and the practical improvement of the country's resources. " It is indeed a pity to see this province in such a state. It is the finest country I ever knew, even what I have seen of it in a circle of thirty or forty miles from here ; and by the accounts I receive the upper part is even superior. Lower Canada is not to be named in comparison. The climate, the soil, the water-power, and fticilities of transport, finer than anything in North America. " Whether in their present state of violent ex- citement I shall be able to persuade the people to come to reasonable terms, I cannot venture to say; but I am sure it is the last and only chance. After having brought and to think that the French- Canadians ought to have their full share of the representation, I shall not despair of anything. But 202 THE SPEECH FROM THE THRONE what I hear, and have as yet seen, of the House of Assembly, is not encouraging. If they are not will- ing, however, I shall appeal to the people without hesitation; for the state of things admits of no delay, and no half measures." According to programme, the legislature was opened on December 3rd with a very direct and businesslike Speech from the Throne, which, in laying out the programme of matters to be con- sidered by the legislature naturally placed in the forefront the question of the union, to be submitted for their consideration at an early date. Accordingly on the seventh the subject was brought before them in a message in which the governor referred to the steps already taken in the imperial parliament. He touched on the unsatisfactory condition of the gov- ernment in Lower Canada, and referred to the de- ranged condition of the finances of Upper Canada. Public improvements were suspended, private enter- prise checked, the tide of immigration diverted, and the general system of government distasteful to many. While the imperial parliament have decided upon a reunion of the Canadian provinces, they desire to have the concurrence and advice of the people of Canada on a subject of so much import- ance to themselves. He indicates the impossibility of improving the finances of the Upper Province without a union and settlement with Lower Canada, which controls the customs duties on Upper Cana- dian trade. The co-operation of Lower Canada is 203 LORD SYDENHAM also necessary to carry out the proposals under way for improving the means of communication. The terms upon which the governor-general de- sired the consent of the legislature of Upper Canada were, first, an equal representation of each province in the united legislature ; second, the granting of a sufficient civil list ; third, that so much of the exist- ing debt of Upper Canada as has been contracted for public works of common interest should be charged upon the joint revenue of the united pro- vinces. In making these proposals the message also in- dicated the grounds on which they were to be justified. In giving an equal representation to each province Lower Canada might seem to be placed in an unfavourable position, but, considering the future of both provinces and the expansion of Upper Canada through immigration, extending trade, and industrial enterprise, an equal proportion seemed justifiable. However, it is plain that if this had been the sole reason, the reply of the French- Canadians would have been valid; namely, that there was no occasion to give to Upper Canada an enlarged representation before the coming popula- tion had arrived. The real reason was known to every one, and might as well have been frankly stated. It was that the government had to decide between a predominantly British or a predomin- antly French future for Canada, and they, some- what naturally no doubt, decided in favour of the 204 JUSTIFYING THE TERMS former. The French were as naturally disappointed, and vented much of their displeasure upon the governor as the instrument of their defeat, ignor- ing all that he did to insure them the fairest possible treatment within that single condition. Indeed his efforts in favour of the French-Cana- dians caused him to incur the suspicion and resent- ment of a considerable section of the English element, who thought him much too sympathetic with the French- Canadians. The justification for the second of the terms, the granting of a sufficient civil list, was the necessity for protecting the independence of the judges and insuring the carrying on of the essential services of the executive government. This meant, of course, the holding of sufficient power in the hands of the central government to insure a stable form of administration as regards the essentials of the con- stitution. With reference to charging the debt of the Upper Province upon the joint revenue, the justi- fication lay in the fact that the Lower Province benefited by the improvements in transportation, for which the debt had been incurred. Undoubtedly the enterprising portion of Lower Canada, and therefore especially the English element in it, pro- fited greatly by the rapid expansion of the wealth and population of the western portions of the country, due to the improved means of communi- cation. As an argument for union, however, it 205 LORD SYDENHAM overlooked the fact that improving the navigation in the upper St. Lawrence and encouraging immi- gration and settlement were the very reverse of commendable in the eyes of the French-Canadian Nationalists, who fully realized that success i^ these lines meant the ultimate extinction of their ascend- ency and of their hopes. The terms of the union, one might suppose, would have commended themselves to the English element of Upper Canada. It may be recalled that during the previous session the union proposal had been accepted by the assembly, though under re- strictions which could not be admitted, as being too unfair to the French-Canadians, but they were rejected by the council. The new terms proposed by the governor-general, and which were much more favourable to the Lower Province, were ulti- mately accepted by a large majority in the assembly, with a slight variation in the proposal with refer- ence to the civil list, and the dropping of any limitation as to the debt of the Upper Province to be assumed by the united government. The four resolutions embodying the terms of the union had been introduced by Solicitor-General Draper who had favoured the union during the previous session, but only on the terms then laid down, and which even now he much preferred, though not openly, owing to his relations to the government. Several attempts were made by the minority elements, chiefly the Compact party, to either 206 THE UNION RESOLUTIONS CARRIED block the union altogether, or to alter the terms, chiefly in the direction of making the conditions more onerous for the French-Canadians. The amend- ment against the union, as such, was defeated by forty-four to eleven, which showed quite ap- proximately the strength of the Compact element. One wing of the Radicals favoured an amendment to the effect that the union question should be referred to the people of the province for a direct verdict, but this was defeated by the same majority, forty-four to eleven. It was significant that the fourth resolution dealing with the debt of the Upper Province was carried without a division. After the resolutions were passed, on the question of an address to the governor-general the more Conservative element endeavoured to attach cer- tain further conditions to the terms of union, such as, that the seat of government must be in Upper Canada, that English should be the official language in the united legislature, that there should be a real estate qualification for members of the legislature, and that, except for the fact of the reunion, the principles of the constitution of 1791 should be preserved inviolate. These, however, were defeated by a majority of twenty-nine to twenty-one. The leaders of the minority opposed to the union were Attorney-General Hagerman, J. S. Cart- wright, and Henry Sherwood. The fact that the solicitor-general and the attorney-general were on opposite sides in so important an issue will indicate 207 LORD SYDENHAM how far the practice of the Canadian government was from that of Britain. In his speech against the union ISlr. Hagerman frankly stated that, though a member of the government, he still felt at liberty to oppose the measure presented by the governor- general. He admits that under the new interpreta- tion as to tenure of office the governor might have dismissed him, but the fact that he did not under the circumstances was, he considered, much to his credit. We shall have the governor's comment upon this a little later. Hagerman attacked the union resolutions on different grounds. He took a very characteristic attitude towards the French- Canadians; he considered that they had no claim upon the people of Upper Canada to assist them in regaining their rights under the constitution. Ig- noring the whole policy of the British government in the past treatment of the French-Canadians, he maintained that they were the most thankless people on earth, considering all the favours that had been heaped upon them. The union of the pro- vinces would not cure such people, whom he abso- lutely distrusted; they should be put back under the Quebec Act, not, as we find, to enjoy the com- plete restoration of French institutions granted under that Act, but to be deprived of their con- stitutional rights, and to be governed entirely by a nominated council. He criticized the financial pro- posals, but himself suggested a much more complex and unworkable substitute, which in the end was 208 A CHANGE OF MIND to enlarge the income of the Upper Province at the expense of the Lower. As to eqiiaUzing the repre- sentation of the two provinces, the governor's pro- posal had the appearance of injustice to Lower Canada, and could only make the French-Cana- dians more irreconcilable to British institutions. He could not, therefore, agree with his friend Mr. Cartwright that if Upper Canada were given sixty- five members and Lower Canada fifty the union might be rendered a safe measure ; his own alterna- tive is the Quebec Act machinery without the Quebec Act contents. Altogether the result of the assembly's action, when compared with the attitude of the previous session, was a distinct triumph for the policy of the governor-general. But the change of attitude was still more marked in the case of the legislative council, where, in place of the uncompromising rejection of the more favourable proposal of the previous session, the union was accepted by a re- spectable majority on the terms proposed by the governor. The resolutions were introduced in the council by the Hon. W. B. Sullivan in a very in- teresting speech, considering that he was one of those who had voted against the union during the previous session. He took the curious ground that the separation of the provinces had been necessary in order to give the English element a footing in the Canadas, but now the reunion was necessary in order to prevent the French from blocking their 209 LORD SYDENHAM further progress. He referred to the previous pro- posals for union, which had been successfully ob- jected to by both nationalities, each one fearing that it might be swamped by the other. Some other solution of the difficulty then seemed possible ; now all others had been exhausted, and the French had proved themselves unworthy of the liberties which had been granted them, hence their consent to the union was not necessary. As a speech in- tended to gain over the majority in an Upper Cana- dian council it was well planned, but it was equally effective, if that had been necessary, in alienating the sympathies of the French-Canadians. In winning over the majority of the council the personal influence of the governor was most ob- viously effective, the remaining minority consisting almost entirely of the most irreconcilable element among the placemen of the Compact party. As the Commercial Herald, the Compact organ of Toronto, remarked, " We are sorry to perceive that the viceregal sun, as the Montreal Courier ex- presses it, is thawing the ice of opposition in certain quarters where more firmness was expected." The effectiveness of the personal influence of the new governor was freely commented upon in papers of all shades. Even in the debates in the assembly and council it was noticed that a great change had come over several of the members who had pre- viously passed very sharp criticisms upon the col- onial policy of the Whig ministry. 210 THE GOVERNOR'S INFLUENCE The governor undoubtedly used his personal in- fluence in the way of argument and persuasion to the utmost of his ability, and with very remarkable effect. Several of the Toronto papers most opposed to the union directly accused him of using coercion upon those in office. It is true, as we shall see, that he considered it one of the radical defects of the existing Canadian system that officers of the govern- ment should vote in opposition to government measures ; but that he did not use his official power to force office-holders into line on the union ques- tion was shown from the fact that of the ten who supported Robinson's motion against the union, five were officials holding office at the pleasure of the Crown, and of the twenty-one who supported Cart- wright's motion nine were in the same position. Once the resolutions were passed in the assem- bly, many of the opponents of the union, including several of the newspapers, among them the King- ston Chronicle, accepted it as a settled policy, and frankly looked forward to great benefits to result from it. Nevertheless in other quarters opposition to the union proposals continued to find vigorous expression among the most opposite elements in both provinces. Among the Upper Canadian papers, the Toronto Commercial Herald and the Cobourg Star mingled with their criticisms of the measure personal attacks upon the governor-general. The Quebec G-azette, though strongly opposed to re- sponsible government, was equally opposed to the 211 LORD SYDENHAM union, regarding the proposal, however, as a sacri- fice of the French element, not of the English, as was so steadily maintained in Upper Canada. Its opposition to the union was mainly based, in argu- ment at least, on the difficulty of bringing it into operation as between two races "who have been kept distinct in everything in consequence of British legislation." There certainly was no doubt about the difficulty of working the union after so long a policy of separation, but neither the Quebec Gazette nor any other paper had an alternative pohcy that did not involve either the consigning of Canada to civil war, or the governing of it under an indefinite despotism, however benevolent, which* must also in- evitably end in strife. However, as presenting the difficulties of the existing situation, the articles in the Quebec Gazette and other papers opposed to the union were sufficiently instructive. The Toronto Examiner, Mr. Hincks's paper, and the accepted leader of opinion for the more rational Reformers, strongly supported the union, and on one of the very grounds on which the Quebec Gazette so strongly opposed it; namely, that it must inevitably lead to responsible government, as "no secretary of state would have moral courage enough to refuse the just demands of the united people." As to the Tory element, the Examiner took rather a cynical view of the office-holders, claiming that they would support the governor in order to protect their places, while the element 212 THE REFORMERS' SUPPORT which was in some degree free from such official positions as depended directly upon tlie governor would oppose him to the bitter end. The E.vaminer was rather severe upon Mr. Draper for the un- certain position which he occupied, alternately pro- fessing to represent the government as its organ in the introduction of the resolutions, and again, as a private individual, professing disappointment that it did not go far enough in safeguarding the interests of Upper Canada. As a matter of fact, the general body of the Reformers were the most faithful sup- porters of the governor's measure, and he did justice to their support in the following terms. " It is impossible to describe to you the difficul- ties I have had to contend with to get this matter settled as it has been in the assembly. I owe my success altogether to the confidence which the Re- form party have reposed in me personally, and to the generous manner in which they have acted by me. A dissolution would have been greatly to their advantage, because there is no doubt that they would have had a great majority in the next assembly; and it must have been most galling to them to see me, as well as themselves, opposed by a number of the placeholders without my turning them out. But they gave up all these considera- tions, and in this country, where the feeling of hatred to the Family Compact is intense, they are not light, and went gallantly through with me to the end. The journals of the proceedings in the 213 LORD SYDENHAM assembly, which I send you, will show you the sort of opposition I have had. To the union itself there are not more than eight or ten out of the whole House who are opposed, — all the Family Compact; but these few contrived to propose all sorts of things, to which they knew I could not assent, as conditions to its acceptance, in order to secure the votes of the placemen, and some few others, who were pledged last session to these foolish stipulations. But the Reformers and the moderate Conservatives, unconnected with either the Com- pact or with office, kept steady ; and the result has been that on every occasion the opposition were beaten hollow, and all their proposals rejected by large majorities. I had dissolution pressed upon me very strongly, and there is no doubt that with it I could have got over all difficulty ; but then I must have made up my mind to great delay, and I doubt whether the measure would have gone home in time for you to legislate. However, thank God, it is all right at last, though I assure you the anxiety and fatigue have been more than I like." 214 CHAPTER XIV AN ANALYSIS AND A FORECAST NO sooner had the union measure safely passed the legislature of Upper Canada, than, with customary energy. Governor Thomson resumed the task of making himself familiar with the working of the various executive departments and their re- lations to the legislative branch of the government. He had already set on foot a series of inquiries, and had required a number of comprehensive re- turns to be prepared for his information. The re- sults of these inquiries were far from encouraging. On December 15th, 1839, in a long confidential despatch to Lord John Russell he gives the general results of his investigation, accompanied by the usual direct and penetrating comments, the whole throwing a flood of light upon the condition of affairs which had prevailed up to that time. There is also an admirable forecast of the only possible lines for remedial measures in the future. It is stated at the outset that the administration of the affairs of the province is in a very unsatisfac- tory condition, and yet it is impossible to speak too favourably of the province itself and of its resources. He summarizes its many excellent features, but points out that the extremely dis- tracted political condition of the country has 215 LORD SYDENHAM arrested progress and threatens it with retrogres- sion and even bankruptcy. " The Province is overwlielmed by debt which it has no means of supporting ; pubHc works are at a stand ; emigration to the States is going on and a deterioration in the value of every man's property causes discontent and dissatisfaction." For this the abortive rebelHon is only very partially responsible, and moreover there is not the slightest doubt of the essential loyalty of the great body of the pepole, though charges of disloyalty are, for political reasons, directed against those who advocate an extension of popular rights. There is, on the other hand, great dissatisfaction with the majority of the officers of the executive government, and this is by no means confined to the popular party, but is manifested by many of those who support the pre- rogative of the Crown. His own investigations have shown that there are permanent causes for party bitterness, and "just grounds for dissatisfaction on the part of the people with the management of their affairs. These are, the total want of system and power in the conduct of government and the defective State and departmental administration." He proposes to take these up in detail, but first he has certain observations to make on the "general system of government." " Wherever the constitution has vested in repre- sentative Bodies the privilege of making Laws, it becomes the duty of the Executive Govt, to initiate 216 A STRONG GOVERNMENT NEEDED and perfect the Measures necessary for the good of the Country, and above all to endeavour to give to the action of those Bodies the direction which will make their labours most efficient. This duty, one of the most important that can devolve on a Govern- ment, has hitherto been entirely neglected in Canada. ** In either House in England, upon the intro- duction of any considerable Measure or upon the demand on the part of the public for any extensive Change in the Laws, the Natural question is, what Course does the Government propose to pursue, and it is universally admitted, whoever may be in power, and by the opponents no less than the sup- porters, that a great and important measure can be properly undertaken only by the Govt, itself, or at all events the opinion of the Govt, must be clearly and decidedly stated. But here the opposite Course has been pursued. In the Legislature the Local Government has not only abstained from taking the initiative in measures of Legislation, but it appears to have studiously repudiated those Legiti- mate means of influence without which it could scarce be carried on. " Thus, notwithstanding the presence in the Assembly of many Official persons, the conduct of measures recommended by the Crown or on which the Govt, entertained a very decided opinion has been generally left to individual members, no per- son being authorized or instructed to explain to the 217 LORD SYDENHAM House the views of the Government. Nay more, it has happened that on important questions respect- ing which the local Executive could not properly be indifferent, public Officers have been found taking the most prominent part on opposite sides, apparently without any reference to the opinions or wishes of the Govt. Thus the Govt, became chargeable either with indifference to the proceed- ings of the I^egislature and the welfare of the province, or with weakness in not controlling its own Officers. " In either case the effect on the public mind has been very injurious and the result that much de- fective Legislation, altho' complained "of, has been uncorrected, while the Executive Govt, has in a great measure lost its legitimate influence over the action of the Legislature upon matters which have been under their deliberation. " The evils resulting from this defective organiza- tion of Govt, are exemplified in the most striking manner in the present financial state of this Pro- vince. The Country has plunged headlong into debt without the slightest effort on the part of the Govt, to warn the Assembly of the improper and unwise course it was following. Nay, the very con- trol over the expenditure when voted and even the examination of the Accounts have been removed from the Executive, and suffered without a protest to devolve on the popular branch of the Legisla- ture — the very worst body for the performance of 218 THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL such a duty. Yet while such has been the practice 1 have every reason for beheving that in no place would the enunciation of the opinions of the Govt, produce more effect or be attended with more weight than in these Colonies. The Natural in- fluence enjoyed by the Govt, is great. " I find that in tlie House of Assembly many of the members are placeholders of one description or another and there is among the independent and middle party in the Colony, so far as I can judge, a strong desire to be made acquainted with the views and opinions of Govt, upon the different measures submitted to the Legislature." Thus does Lord Sydenham put his finger upon the very essence of responsible government in practice, and yet not one in a thousand of those who were incessantly wrangling over the subject in Canada gave evidence of having any true con- ception of what it really involved or how it must be put in practice. Another subject on which the governor reports much dissatisfaction, accompanied by more or less drastic demands for alteration if not for reform, was the composition and working of the legislative council. " The members usually selected for this Council have been either Officers of Govt, or Gentlemen resident within or near the Capital." The appointment of people from a distance has commonly proved a merely honorary distinction. The work of the council has been carried on by 219 LORD SYDENHAM five or six individuals resident in Toronto or ser- vants of the Crown, "a mere clique in the Capital." The government, however, has had no vital con- stitutional connection with them. They have been "frequently opposed both to the Govt, and the Assembly and considered by the people hostile to their interests." Yet it is this body " in defence of which all the authority and power of the Imperial Parliament has been invoked." If the government had amended the composition of the council so as to bring it into some harmony with the assembly, he considers that the greater number of the com- plaints regarding it would not have arisen, and there would not have been any serious demand for an elective council. A movement in this direction had been made by Sir George Arthur, who had in- troduced twelve new members of council, selected from different parts of the country and regarded as having most weight and influence in their respec- tive sections. The result has been very beneficial, many of these gentlemen attended the council this session; the debates have assumed a true parlia- mentary character, and the deliberations of the council have aroused interest and commanded re- spect. It is along this line of policy that hope for the future of the council lies. The system hitherto pursued with reference to the executive council has been equally faulty. This body undertakes many duties which might perhaps be better discharged through the different depart- 220 THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL merits of the government. At present, however, he is treating only of the executive functions of the council. It had been the practice of late to place responsibility for the acts and decisions of the whole government upon the executive council, thus relieving the governor from personal responsi- bility. At the same time the council is, as a rule, a stationary body, in no way selected as holding opinions in harmony with the majority in the assembly. Their opinions, indeed, are often known to be opposed to those of the people. These char- acteristics of the council have afforded one of the chief occasions for the cry for responsible govern- ment. It has been one of the regular assumptions of the home government that the governor himself, and not the executive council, must be responsible for his administrative acts. It may sometimes ap- pear convenient for the governor to shelter himself behind the executive council, but it is poor pohcy. Moreover, the executive council should be brought into constant and essential harmony not so much with the governor as with the assembly, for the executive council must have the confidence of the people. " With regard to the Administrative Depts. of the Govt., Your Lordship can scarcely imagine anything more ill digested than the system on which they have hitherto been conducted." Sir George Arthur, himself a man of experience in practical business, had made great efforts to in- 221 LORD SYDENHAM troduce a better system, but much still remained to be done and the case was urgent. That the re- organization must be undertaken by the governor, and could not be shifted to any other authority, ap- peared obvious to Lord Sydenham. In the first place, there was as yet no responsible body upon whom the duty could be laid, and in any case the governor considered it his duty. " The principal and more responsible duty of the Administration must of course under any system fall on the Gover- nor assisted by his Secretary. It is proper and necessary that it should be so, since were it other- wise the Governor could not exercise that control over the administration of affairs which is the in- dispensable condition of his responsibility. But the manner in which this principle has been carried into practice is open to very serious objection." He then points out that in the early days of the province the governor and his secretary personally attended to all the departments of the administration, in- cluding the smallest details. This system had cer- tain advantages which made for unity, efficiency, and economy. However, the stage for such a system had long passed, and yet the system itself had not been altered. The subordinate officers of government were still supposed to be directed by the governor in person, yet they were very much left to themselves, had become irresponsible, and had lost energy and efficiency. The result has been, as brought out in the investigations which are in 222 REFORM IDEALS progress, that even in the financial department, where accuracy is most essential, there is great irregularity in the system and t|ie checks provided for security have for years fallen into disuse. What losses may have resulted is not yet determined. In the light of the very defective system of government which prevails in the provinces the discontent of the people is no matter for astonish- ment. Under proper remedies a better state of public feeling should in time be secured. This, however, raises the question of future administra- tion, and therefore of reponsible government. Re- ferring to Lord Russell's despatch of October 14th, in which he defines the attitude of the government on the subject, Poulett Thomson says that he thoroughly agrees with the principles there laid down. But he has found, in Upper Canada at least, that the views of the leading advocates of respon- sible government are not properly represented in England. He has found them on the whole to be fairly reasonable. There is no very accurate concep- tion, however, of what is meant by the term re- sponsible government; the general reference seems to be to the form of responsibility advocated by Lord Durham in his Report, but even there it is not defined. While it is quite evident that there can be no formal subordination of the governor to the council, he considers that both Lord John Russell and himself accept the spirit of Lord Dur- ham's Report on the subject, and he thus continues: 223 LORD SYDENHAM " It has been my anxious desire to meet and dis- cuss with the principal advocates of this demand their views and opinions. I have stated clearly to all with whom I have conversed the views so well expressed in Your Lordship's Despatch. I have de- clared that to attempt to make a council respon- sible to any one but the governor for advice tendered to him, is incompatible with Colonial Government, and can never receive the sanction either of H. M. Govt, or Parliament. At the same time, however, that this pretension must necessarily be resisted, I have stated no less forcibly that it was the earnest wish not merely of H. M. present Government, but must no less be the interest of every British Minister to govern the Colony in accordance with the wishes and feelings of the People; and that whilst the Governor could not shift any portion of his own responsibility upon the Council, it would of course be his best policy to select as members of that body, whose duty it would be to tender him advice for his considera- tion, men whose principles and feelings were in accordance with the Majority, and that it must equally be his policy upon all merely local matters where no Imperial Interest would be concerned to administer the affairs of the Colony in accordance with the wishes of the Legislature. *' To these opinions I have found a ready assent and I have received from all the warmest advocates for the watchword of responsible Govt, the assur- 224 A HOPEFUL OUTLOOK ance that if these principles and those contained in Your Lordship's despatch respecting the tenure of Office in the Colony are carried practically into effect the object they seek would be entirely answered. And certainly as far as present appear- ances go, I am bound to believe them sincere ; for since these declarations, and above all since the appearance of that Despatch which has given the greatest possible satisfaction, the excitement on the subject has altogether ceased. In spite, there- fore, of the anticipated dangers ensuing from this cry, of the great excitement which prevailed, and of the disheartening appearance which the province presents at the present moment, I hope I am not too sanguine in believing that a better state of things may be arrived at. By the Union of the Provinces the important changes which are in- dispensable will be greatly facilitated. A good de- partmental organization may be effected, a more vigorous and efficient system of Govt, may be established, which, conducted in harmony with the wishes of the People, will at the same time be enabled to give a direction to the popular branch of the Legislature and also check the encroach- ments upon the powers and functions of the Ex- ecutive, which have been carried so far and have produced so much mischief Power will pass out of the hands of any small party whose possession, or supposed possession, of it has produced so much irritation, and the people will be satisfied that 225 LORD SYDENHAM whilst there is a steady determination on the part of the Home Govt, to resist unconstitutional de- mands, there is no desire either that the affairs of the Province should be mismanaged for the sup- posed benefit of a few, or that a minority opposed to them in feeling and principle should govern it in opposition both to themselves and to the Home Govt." This confidential report at once fully analyzes the evils under which the Upper Province in par- ticular was labouring, and clearly expresses the line of policy which the governor intended to follow. It shows also that he had the same rational and prac- tical conception of responsible government as that laid down by his friend the colonial secretary. In his reply to this communication Lord John Russell stated that he had read it with the greatest interest, entirely approved of the interpretation of respon- sible government given in it and of the policy which he proposed to follow, and congratulated him in the warmest terms on the efficient manner in which he had begun his administration and the remarkable progress which he had already made. As already explained, the very great personal in- fluence exercised by Poulett Thomson as governor has been largely transferred to the prime ministers of the present day and their cabinets, and even in part to the leader of the Opposition. But it was just the vigorous exercise of the governor's influence in 1840-1, in bringing the Canadian administration 226 A NEW CONSTITUTIONAL BASIS out of the exclusive but unorganized power of an irresponsible oligarchy and into harmony with the wishes of the people, as expressed by the majority of their representatives in the assembly, which per- mitted subsequent governors to leave more and more of the details and responsibilities of office to a departmentalized system of cabinet government. It was this system which Poulett Thomson himself inaugurated, and in doing so of necessity performed the functions of the first prime minister in Canada. The policy outlined in the foregoing important despatch expressed what is still the constitutional theory of the Canadian government, and it is this combination of theory and practice which permits of the maintenance without friction of the double relation of colonial self-government and imperial connection. At the same time, the changes here outlined had yet to be made, and the new system proposed had yet to be constructed and introduced. There was certain to be resentment and recrimina- tion on the part of those who supported or profited by the anomahes and abuses so fully exposed. One of the most radical difficulties which stood in the way of the introduction of the first elements of responsible government was encountered by the governor-general in the first session of the legis- lature. Responsible gov^ernment is of course un- workable where the ministers of the Crown are divided on government measures, and yet, as we have seen, when the question of the union was 227 LORD SYDENHAM before the assembly both the attorney-general and the solicitor-general sided with the minority against the government measure, the attorney -general openly condemning the policy of the union. There having been as yet in Canada nothing correspond- ing to a united ministry, no necessity was felt that the chief officers of the Crown should follow a united and consistent policy on public measures. The conduct of the law-officers excited no surprise, not even among the advocates of responsible government. On the contrary, when it was seen that some of the officers of the Crown, as for instance Hon. R. B. Sullivan president of the council, had changed their views on the Union Bill, they were severely criticized for being influenced by the governor-general. Referring to this anomalous condition of Canadian politics, the governor in an- other confidential letter says of the action of the law-officers, " This is a proceeding subversive of all the principles upon which government can alone be administered under a representative system, however it may have been permitted in the colony before, and I should not for one instant have toler- ated it under any common circumstances or hesi- tated to relieve these officers from their official connection with the administration .... but the peculiar position in which the treatment of this question last session had placed parties induced me to allow what I should have otherwise considered quite inadmissible." Owing also to the nature of 228 A UNITED MINISTRY INSURED the subject before the assembly, the governor did not wish to appear as coercing the opinions of any one, even the officers of the Crown. Lord John Russell quite approved of the governor's attitude on this subject, and it was very evident that there would soon be a new order of things in the Cana- dian system. Hereafter the leading officers of the Crown must form a united ministry under the leadership at first of the governor himself. Should any of the members of the executive council not agree with measures supported by the governor and a majority of the council they would be ex- pected to resign their positions in the government, and the enforcing of this was made possible by Lord John Russell's despatch on the tenure of office. Naturally enough this new line of policy created consternation among the official heads of the Com- pact party. At the same time their mouths were temporarily stopped by their constant assertion that they were responsible not to a majority of the assembly but to the governor as representing the Crown. During the whole of the discussion on re- sponsible government they had looked only to the reform element in the assembly as the one attack- ing party, and had uniformly employed the author- ity of the Crown as their defence. Now, to their dismay, the first practical movement towards re- sponsible government emanated from their very citadel of refuge ; they were at one stroke deprived 229 LORD SYDENHAM of their customary weapons of defence and attack. It was equally obvious, however, that the leaders of reform in the assembly and in the country, while generally supporting the position of the governor, were frequently nonplussed by his unlooked for moves ; for they, too, found responsible government being introduced along unexpected lines. For the most part, the Reformers appear to have expected that the responsibihty of the officers of the Crown to the assembly would mean simply a change in the personnel of these officers, but without any other radical change in the system of government. They had not apparently considered it essential to responsibile government that the members of the executive council should agree among themselves, or that they should come under anything like cabinet discipHne. In fact the line along which responsible government could alone be effisctively introduced was largely unforeseen by either ele- ment in Canada. In the meantime, notwithstanding the passing of the resolutions in favour of the union of the pro- vinces, the discussion of the details of the measure continued with unabated vigour. The Compact party had not relaxed its opposition to the measure and still hoped, with some show of reason, to defeat it in the imperial parliament, if not in the Commons yet at least in the Lords. John Beverley Robinson, chief-justice of the province, had gone over to England, ostensibly for the benefit of his 230 OPPOSITION TO THE UNION health, yet incidentally he prepared an exhaustive pamphlet in opposition to the union and the general policy of the Durliam Report. Through the assistance of Conservative friends, he gained the ear of the Duke of Wellington, and persuaded him that should the union take place a combination of the French-Canadians and the Upper Canadian Reformers, or rebels, would undoubtedly gain the ascendency and the colony would be lost. The Duke took fire at this, and with his customary determination vowed to secure the defeat of the measure. Peel, on the other hand, his co-leader of the party, knew very well that the Duke was being misled, and refused to countenance opposition to the only practicable measure for a solution of the Canadian problem. The result was that the Cana- dian question caused for a time an estrangement between the chiefs of the Conservative party in Britain, much to the chagrin of their followers. When, however, the bill finally came up in the Lords, the Duke of Wellington, though personally opposing it, did not exert his influence to have it thrown out, as was doubtless within his power. Immediately after the passing of the union reso- lutions in the legislative council, the chief oppon- ents of the measure, Elmsley, Strachan, Allan, Crookshank, Macaulay, Vankouglinet, ISIcDonnell and Willson, recorded their dissent. This turned on the points that the terms of the union resolutions did not sufficiently insure British connection, that 231 LORD SYDENHAM they recognized a certain equality between rebels and loyal British subjects, did not insure a property and educational qualification for members of the legislature, permitted the continuation of feudalism and the official use of the French language, did not insure that the seat of government should be in Upper Canada, and, finally, that the details of the measure were to be left to the wisdom and justice of the imperial government, when the present im- perial government in their opinion possessed neither attribute. In consequence of the renewed agitation, the matter was again brought up in the assembly, where a number of resolutions were passed and an accompanying address sent to the governor. These related chiefly to the foregoing points brought for- ward by the minority in the legislative council. They also urged that a vigorous immigration from Britain should be promoted in order that the coun- try might be made British in fact as well as in name, and that there should be a municipal system in Lower Canada similar to that in Upper Canada to provide for local works by local taxation. In forwarding these resolutions to the home government His Excellency stated that most of them had been put forward at the time of passing the first resolution, but had been rejected. Even now they are to be treated mainly as suggestions. He himself is not prepared to go so far as they desire, especially in the matter of the English lan- guage and the qualifications for members. 232 PARTIAL TO FRENCH-CANADIANS It was quite evident that the governor, though determined to maintain Canada on the basis of a British colony, was, in the eyes of the British ele- ment of both provinces, much too partial to the French-Canadians. The JNIontreal Courier frankly regarded the impartiality of the governor as one of his objectionable qualities, as rendering him too favourable to the French- Canadians. The Compact element in Upper Canada would not concede his impartiality, claiming that he distinctly favoured French-Canadians and rebels. Yet notwithstanding all the enmity which he incurred to preserve to the French-Canadians their rights as British subjects, he was regarded by those who had the ear of the majority of them as an enemy of their race, chiefly because the equahty which he would secure to them was that of British subjects. The Lower Canadian point of view, hostile to the governor's pohcy, was represented in a series of re- solutions passed at a special meeting in Quebec on January 17th, 1840. It was declared that no ade- quate steps had been taken to ascertain the feelings of the inhabitants of Lower Canada on the subject of the union, the resolutions of the Special Council were repudiated as not representative of Lower Canada, while the representatives of Upper Canada had been consulted through their legislature. Under the Constitutional Act, following the Quebec Act, the province had been divided so as to give each section its own laws and institutions. If now re- 288 LORD SYDENHAM united those radical differences in laws and in- stitutions would be destroyed. Anticipating refer- ences to the obviously intolerable conditions of the province of late years, they naively expressed the assurance that if allowed to retain their provin- cial independence the people of Lower Canada would in future avoid all previous errors, would promote harmony between the different sections of the government, would not withhold supplies, would make arrangements to give fair representa- tion to the English element in all parts of the pro- vince, and would agree to the raising of revenue to improve ship navigation from the sea to the Great Lakes. They had, however, no similar faith in the English element of Upper Canada, who, under the union, would tax the great majority of the people for the benefit of a mere section of the province, while the debt of Upper Canada, contracted for the improvement of that province, would be imposed upon the inhabitants of Lower Canada. They there- fore maintained that the Constitutional Act should remain in force until the people of Lower Canada voluntarily agreed to change it. It was resolved that petitions to the queen and both Houses of ParUament founded on these resolutions should be prepared. These remonstrances were signed by forty-eight persons, representing many of the lead- ing French magistrates, professional and business men of the city of Quebec, and also by a few English sympathizers, such as John Neilson editor 234 FOR AND AGAINST UNION of the Quebec Gazette and T. C. Aylwin, who were bitterly opposed to the union. As a counterblast to this movement, a meeting, promoted by the British and Irish citizens of Quebec, was held at the Albion Hotel, on January 31st. M. Le IMesurier was elected chairman, and a number of resolutions, preceded by strong speeches, were moved in favour of the union policy. On all points they expressed views directly opposed to those of the French resolutions. Obviously no solution of the Canadian problem could be afford- ed by any form of plebiscite. A plebiscite assumes national unity on all the main issues of political life, but it was exactly on the fundamental issues that no unity existed in Canada. 235 CHAPTER XV THE CLERGY RESERVES HAVING secured the primary object of his mis- sion in obtaining from the existing legisla- tive bodies in Canada an early and favourable ver- dict on the union measure, His Excellency was en- couraged to employ his influence in further prepar- ing the way for the successful introduction of a united legislature. Already the governor had abun- dantly proved the strength of his will and the vig- our of his personahty. Amid the shifting sands and baffling cross-currents of Canadian politics, it was with a happy relief that many who were not the special champions of this or that section of policy instinctively turned to a man with an intelligent and comprehensive grasp of affairs, who was sure of himself and of his destination. During his rapid and effective canvass of the actual condition of the province, both as to men and affairs, the governor had learned that the most troublesome question in Upper Canada was that of the Clergy Reserves. As this was a question pecul- iar to Upper Canada it was particularly desirable that it should be disposed of, if possible, before the union came into effect. In the united legislature much would depend upon reducing the causes of friction and the multiplication of factions. The 237 LORD SYDENHAM governor's object in taking up the question im- mediately is thus stated by himself in his corres- pondence: "I am much wanted at Montreal; but I think I shall stay on here for three weeks or a month longer, in order to try my hand at the Clergy Reserves. My popularity is just now at its utmost height, and it may be possible to use it for that purpose. The House adjourns to-day, and I shall employ this week in trying whether 1 can bring people together upon any decent plan of settlement. But I confess I am not sanguine; for there are as many minds almost as men, and they are all dreadfully committed, both in the House and with their constitutents, upon t^iis question, for twenty different projects. If it were possible, however, to come to some conclusion which would not be addressed against in England, it would be the greatest boon ever conferred on this province, for it causes a degree of excitement throughout it which is scarcely credible. I will at least make some attempt at it, if possible." As the governor states, the question of the Clergy Reserves had been for many years a source of the most bitter feelings throughout the province. Designed originally to insure to the people of Up- per Canada the teaching of the Protestant religion and a close dependence upon the British Crown, these reserves had done more than anything else to bring Christianity into contempt, and to loosen Britain's hold upon tlie colony. It is not possible 238 ORIGIN OF THE RESERVES here to go into the prolonged and numerous con- troversies over this subject; it must suffice to indi- cate briefly the essential features of the question. Following vaguely and roughly the idea of the Mother Country as to an established church, various provisions had been made in the American colonies, and subsequently advocated in Canada, for the assistance of the clergy in the colonies. The idea of setting apart a portion of the Crown lands for this purpose was discussed in relation to Canada before the framing of the Constitutional Act, the first drafts of which, however, contained no reference to the subject. This feature was intro- duced by special message from the king, and in the final form of the Act provision was made for set- ting apart in each province one- seventh of the lands thereafter to be granted, " for the Support and Maintenance of a Protestant Clergy within the same." The Church of England interpreted the "Protestant clergy" to mean the clergy of the Es- tablished Church of England ; but when Presbyter- ian Churches were introduced the Church of Scot- land laid claim to a share of the proceeds from these lands as an established church in the United King- dom. This claim was brought up in the assembly in 1823-4 by IMr. Wilham Morris, for years tlie cham- pion of the Church of Scotland in the legislature. The assembly presented an address to the king ask- ing for a recognition of the claims of the Church of Scotland. The controversy thus introduced be- 239 LORD SYDENHAM tween the two established churches, led to claims on behalf of other churches whose representatives pointed out that the Act specified only a Pro- testant clergy, and that the clergy of the estab- lished churches had no monopoly of Protestantism. This wider interpretation having been effectively propagated, another address was adopted by the assembly in 1826, declaring that the reserves "ought not to be enjoyed by any one denomina- tion of Protestants to the exclusion of their Chris- tian brethren of other denominations." Either, therefore, the Clergy Reserves should benefit every denomination, or, if that were deemed inexpedient, the proceeds " should be applied to the purposes of education and the general improvement of tlie pro- vince." The Earl of Bathurst, seeking to avoid the issue, replied that the assembly had misunderstood the intention of the Act ; whereupon the assembly passed a series of resolutions strongly objecting to a monopoly of the reserves by the Church of Eng- land. It also drew attention to the very inadequate provision made for education, and declared that the proceeds of the Clergy Reserves ought to be " ap- plied to increase the provincial allowance for the support of district and common schools, and the endowment of a respectable provincial seminary for learning, and in aid of erecting places of worship for all denominations of Christians." A bill was passed giving effect to these resolutions, but was rejected by the council. 240 THE CAUSE OF THE CONFLICT In 1826 the assembly, in an address to the queen with reference to the provincial university, ex- pressed the popular desire that the proceeds of the Clergy Reserves " should be entirely appropriated to purposes of education and internal improve- ment." They expressed the conviction also that the churches would be adequately provided for by private liberality. In 1829 and 1830 bills were passed by the assembly for the sale of part of the reserves, the proceeds to be devoted to the above purposes, but these also were lost in the council. The assembly reaffirmed its position in the resolu- tion of 1831 and the accompanying address to the imperial parliament for an Act authorizing the sale of the Clergy Reserves, and the application of the proceeds " for the advancement of education, and in aid of erecting places of public worship for various denominations of Christians." The close of the session checked this movement, but the subject was resumed the following session, and an address adopted praying for an application of the proceeds of the reserves to education only. In the session of 1832-3 a bill to re-invest the reserves in the Crown came to nought. In 1834 a bill for the application of the reserves to education was passed, but again lost in the council. In 1835 a similar bill was sent to the council, which instead of dealing with it adopted a series of resolutions stating the various claims made upon the reserves and praying the imperial parliament to settle the question. On 241 LORD SYDENHAM these being sent to the assembly they adopted a resolution declaring that their wishes and opinions remained entirely unchanged. In 1836 the assembly passed another bill for the sale of the reserves and their appropriation to general education. The coun- cil entirely reconstructed the bill so as to authorize the re-investing of the reserves in the Crown for the benefit of religion. The assembly restored it to its original form, and the council then rejected it. In the new and strongly Conservative assembly of 1836-7, a resolution was adopted, by thirty-five to twenty-one, declaring it to be desirable that the Clergy Reserves should be employed " for the pro- motion of the religious and moral instruction of the people throughout this province." To this the council replied that if " moral instruction " meant nothing but religion, they would agree to it, and there the matter rested during that session. The following session, 1837-8, the assembly, after a heated debate, adopted a resolution advocating the re- investing of the reserves in the Crown " for the support and maintenance of the Christian re- ligion within the province." A bill for that purpose was brought in, but, owing to the disturbed con- dition of the province due largely to this very question, was not proceeded with. In the first session of 1839 the question absorbed a great deal of attention and excited much bitterness. A series of resolutions was passed, by twenty-four to twenty, making provision for glebes for the Churches of 242 VARYING PROPOSALS England and Scotland and the Wesleyan Metho- dists. The remainder of the reserves was to be sold and the proceeds invested in provincial de- bentures, the returns from which should be em- ployed, first, in paying the clergymen of the Churches of England and Scotland a stipend not to exceed a hundred pounds; second, in paying a specified number of clergymen of the Wesleyan Methodist Church, in connection with the English conference, an allowance not to exceed a hundred pounds each, the surplus to be employed in the erection of places of worship throughout the pro- vince. A bill founded on these resolutions was passed, but, being ' considerably amended by the council, was afterwards rejected in the assembly, and a resolution adopted declaring that the Clergy Reserves should be sold and the proceeds paid over to the receiver-general for the current uses of the province. It was also resolved that the imperial parHament be requested to pass an Act placing the funds arising from past sales at the disposal of the provincial legislature. A bill based upon these re- solutions was, after much close voting, passed by the casting vote of the speaker. It was amended in the council to vest the proceeds in the imperial parhament to be applied to "religious purposes." The amendments were finally accepted in the assembly by a majority of one, on the last day but one of the session, when some of the opponents of the council's amendments had left town. This bill 243 LORD SYDENHAM was sent to Britain, but the law-officers of the Crown, on technical grounds, held it to be uncon- stitutional, and as there was little prospect of its effecting a settlement, even if sanctioned, it was disallowed and the matter referred back to the local legislature. Such was the stage at which this vexed question had arrived when Lord Sydenham faced the pro- blem which had been the despair of a long line of preceding governors, who could neither prevent its constant reappearance nor find any acceptable solu- tion for it. In dealing with the question, not only were the assembly and council both to be faced, with their strongly divergent views and interests; but, even should they be brought into sufficient harmony on any measure, it would still have to run the gauntlet of the home government, itself divided on such measures as between the Lords and Com- mons. Moreover, it was certain that any measure which diverted the proceeds of the reserves from religion, or even from the Church of England, would have little prospect of gaining the sanction of the House of Lords. In casting about for some solution of this chronic problem, a practicable rather than an ideal measure was the only one worth attempting. The history of the question obviously indicated that the existing House of Assembly was, for Upper Canada, an unusually Conservative one, and thus inclined to concede much towards the convictions of the council, and 244 LORD SYDENHAM'S SOLUTION thereby also to secure concessions from the coun- cil. Having sized up the situation and mapped out his line of policy, on December 23rd Governor Poulett Thomson sent his message to the House of Assembly, giving the reasons for the disallow- ance of the Act of the previous session, and de- claring that he would shortly call the attention of the assembly to this subject. Accordingly, on January 6th, 1840, he sent to the assembly a message on the subject of the Clergy Reserves. He frankly acknowledged the difficulty of the subject, owing to the varied convictions and interests not only in Canada but in Britain also, where any measure dealing with a problem involving a modi- fication of the Constitutional Act must be sub- mitted to both Houses of Parliament. At the same time there was an extreme necessity for disposing of the subject, in view of the probable reunion of the provinces. He had, therefore, directed a meas- ure to be prepared for their consideration which provided that the remainder of the Clergy Reserves should be sold and the proceeds funded, and that the annual return should be distributed, according to specified terms, between the Church of England, the Church of Scotland, and such other religious bodies as were recognized under the laws of Upper Canada, for the support of religious instruction in the province. Such a solution he considered would be in accordance with the original object of the 245 LORD SYDENHAM appropriation, and, if accepted by the legislature in Canada, would probably insure a final settlement of the question. On the same day Solicitor-General Draper brought in the promised bill for the dis- posal of the Clergy Reserves and the distribution of the proceeds. It was quite evident that the measure would be very distasteful to the whole of the reform element, who had just assisted the governor so effectively in passing the union resolutions. The governor was abundantly aware of this, but considered that there was not the slightest possibility of getting a bill, drawn on the usual reform lines, through either the legislative council in Canada or the House of Lords in England. Even to the measure as in- troduced he knew that there would be strenuous opposition on the part of the friends of the English Church, and even of the Church of Scotland. He knew that all his influence and persuasive powers would be required to meet the opposition of the more extreme parties on both sides, but the solu- tion offered seemed to him the only one which had a chance of passing. The attitude of the Reformers had already been expressed in certain resolutions passed at a meeting in Toronto, on December 30th, Dr. Baldwin in the chair. In these the Reformers in the assembly were commended for supporting the union policy of the governor-general. It was declared, however, that the only acceptable solution of the Clergy Reserves 246 RECEPTION OF THE SOLUTION question would be the application of the proceeds to either education or public improvements. It was maintained also that on the subject of the Clergy Reserves the present legislature did not properly represent the people of the province. Both Baldwin and Hincks had evidently been consulted on the subject of the reserves and were informed in ad- vance of the settlement to be proposed by the governor. The Toronto Examiner, Hincks 's paper, announced in advance what the character of the new bill was likely to be. It condemned, however, any such settlement, though admitting that the House of Lords in England would scarcely consent to a diversion of the reserves from religious uses. At the same time it was declared to be the duty of the legislature to insist upon a settlement accept- able to the people of Canada. When the bill was brought in, the Examiner declared that it had supported the general policy of the new governor, and would not even now actively oppose his administration, but maintained that he had made a great mistake in his plan for settling the Clergy Reserves. As the discussion on the measure continued, it was evident that the governor was winning over quite a number of Re- formers who, while doubtful of the wisdom of this measure, would accept it as a settlement in default of anything better. On the other hand, the ma- jority of the Conservatives found in this measure at least one item in the programme of a Liberal 247 LORD SYDENHAM governor which they could accept, even with quaH- fications. It was not, of course, to be expected that such a burning issue could be disposed of without much acrimonious debate. Not only did the heathen rage, but the prelates also, for Bishop Strachan and the uncompromising Anglicans were as incensed at the inclusion of dissenters as the secularists were at the participation of any clergymen. The country was accustomed to bitter controversies of this kind without a settlement, but now, owing chiefly to the wisdom and tact of the governor alike in the framing of his measure and in the enlisting of sup- porters, a settlement was effected, for in the end the bill successfully passed both branches of the legislature. But it had still to receive the sanction of the home government, and Strachan hoped to defeat it in the House of Lords. In a private letter to I>.ord John Russell, the governor wrote, " If the Lords reject the Bill, upon their heads be the con- sequences. I will not answer for the Government of the Province, if the measure should come back. In case there is any blunder made by the lawyers, you must re-enact the Bill in England ; for here it can- not come again without the most disastrous re- sults." As the Act undoubtedly involved an altera- tion of certain features in the Constitutional Act of 1791, it was judged to have exceeded the powers of a colonial legislature. But the imperial parliament, following the governor's advice, itself passed a bill effecting the same purpose, and thus, for a number 248 CONSTITUTIONAL EXPERIMENTS of years at least, the Clergy Reserves question was disposed of. It might, indeed, have been perman- ently disposed of Iiad not the irreconcilable Bishop of Toronto insisted upon re-opening the question in his efforts to secure the whole of the endowment for his own Church, with the result that, liaving roused the secularist element once more, Hincks was enabled to achieve as prime minister what he had advocated as editor of the Examiner, and in the end the Church lost everything. During this last session of the legislature of Upper Canada, Sydenham had been experimenting with the new system of an organized cabinet and responsible government, though its complete ex- pression could not be secured until the passing of the Union Bill. At the same time, though ingen- ious efforts were made to draw from him definite statements on the theoretic aspects of responsible government and British connection, knowing quite well that this was a matter calling for a practical and not a theoretic solution, he adroitly avoided precise definitions, simply stating "that he had received Her Majesty's commands to administer the government of these Provinces in accordance with the well understood wishes and interests of the people, and to pay to their feelings, as ex- pressed through their representatives, the deference that is justly due to them." The governor's experience of the session, the attitude which he had adopted, and the contrast 249 LORD SYDENHAM of strong government leadership under a cabinet system with the previous methods of conducting the provincial business, are well brought out in a private letter to Lord John Russell. " I have pro- rogued my Parliament, and I send you my Speech. Never was such unanimity! When the Speaker read it in the Commons, after the prorogation, they gave me three cheers, in which even the ultras united. In fact, as the matter stands now, the Pro- vince is in a state of peace and harmony which, three months ago, I thought was utterly hopeless. How long it will last is another matter. But if you will settle the Union Bill as I have sent it home, and the Lords do not reject the Clergy Reserves Bill, I am confident I shall be able to keep the peace, make a strong Government, and get on well. It has cost me a great deal of trouble, and I have had to work night and day at it. But I was resolved on doing the thing. . . . " The great mistake made here, hitherto, was that every Governor threw himself into the hands of one party or the other, and became their slave. I have let them know and feel that I will yield to neither of them — that I will take the moderate from both sides — reject the extremes — and govern as I think right, and not as they fancy. I am satis- fied that the mass of the people are sound — moder- ate in their demands, and attached to British institutions; but they have been oppressed by a miserable little oligarchy on the one hand, and 250 FINANCIAL REFORM NEEDED excited by a few factious demagogues on the other. I can make a middle reforming party, I feel sure, which will put down both. " You can form no idea of the manner in which a Colonial Parliament transacts its business. I got them into comparative order and decency by having measures brought forward by the Govern- ment, and well and steadily worked through. But when they came to their own affairs, and, above all, to the money matters, there was a scene of confusion and riot of which no one in England can have any idea. Every man proposes a vote for his own job; and bills are introduced without notice, and carried through all their stages in a quarter of an hour! One of the greatest advantages of the Union will be, that it will be possible to introduce a new system of legislating, and, above all, a restric- tion upon the initiation of money-votes. Without the last I would not give a farthing for my bill : and the change will be decidedly popular; for the members all complain that, under the present system, they cannot refuse to move a job for any constituent who desires it." At the close of this session a re-adjustment of offices took place, the chief object of which was the governor's well-known purpose to bring the mem- bers of the government into greater harmony and unity on public issues. The previous record of Mr. Hagerman, the attorney-general, was notoriously at variance with the more liberal policy introduced 251 LORD SYDENHAM by Governor Poulett Thomson. Though he had accepted the Clergy Reserves Bill with a fairly good grace, it was quite obvious that his position, while embarrassing to himself, would bring little strength to the government. It was arranged, therefore, that Judge Sherwood should retire from the bench with a pension, and that Mr. Hagerman should succeed him, while Solicitor-General Draper becoming attorney-general, Mr. Robert Baldwin, the acknowledged leader of the Reformers, should enter the government as solicitor -general. This arrangement was duly sanctioned by the home government and went into effect. 252 CHAPTER XVI A SURVEY OF HIS WHOLE DOMAIN LEAVING the administration of Upper Canada in the hands of Sir George Arthur, immedi- ately on the close of the session the governor re- turned to Montreal and summoned the Special Council, in order to dispose of such matters of purely local concern as required immediate atten- tion, or as would only have proved an embarrass- ment among the more general matters which were certain to crowd the first session of the united leg- islature. That the political outlook in the Lower Province was not of a very promising character may be gathered from the following private letter which summarized the situation. " I have been back three weeks, and have set to work in earnest in this province. It is a bad prospect, however, and presents a lamentable con- trast to Upper Canada. There great excitement existed ; but at least the people were quarrelling for realities, for political opinions, and with a view to ulterior measures. Here there is no such thing as political opinion. No man looks to a practical measure of improvement. Talk to any one upon education, or public works, or better laws, let him be English or French, you might as well talk Greek to him. Not a man cares for a single prac- 253 LORD SYDENHAM tical measure — the only end, one would suppose, of a better form of government. They have only one feeling — a hatred of race. The French hate the English, and the English hate the French; and every question resolves itself into that and that alone. There is positively no machinery of govern- ment. Everything is to be done by the governor and his secretary. There are no heads of depart- ments at all, or none whom one can depend on, or even get at ; for most of them are still at Quebec, and it is difficult to move them up here, because there are no public buildings. The wise system hithereto adopted has been to stick two men into some office whenever a vacancy occurred; one Frenchman and one Britisher! Thus we have joint Crown surveyors, joint sheriffs, etc., each opposing the other in every thing he attempts. Can you conceive a system better calculated to countenance the distinction of race ? . . . . The only way, under these circumstances, in which I can hope to do good, is to wait for the Union in order to get a Government together; and that I shall do. Mean- time, what I am chiefly anxious about now is to get a good division of the province for judicial purposes, which I shall make fit in with the pro- posed municipal districts. I hope to get an entirely new system of judicature, introducing circuits for the judges, and district courts for minor civil causes. I have already established stipendiary magis- trates; and a rural police in this district, com- 254 ORDINANCES menced by Lord Seaton, I mean to extend gener- ally over the whole province, in a few weeks, by an ordinance." In accordance with this programme, a couple of draft ordinances to regulate the practice of the courts of judicature were early presented to the Special Council. The first, which related to the su- perior courts, was drawn by Chief-Justice Stuart, and was printed for distribution. The criticisms re- ceived were carefully considered, and the ordinance when passed gave general satisfaction. The second provided for the establishment of minor or district courts, as in Upper Canada. Another ordinance which gave rise to much debate and petitions pro and con, was one for incorporating the Seminary of St. Sulpice in Montreal. The object of this was to permit the seminary to obtain an equitable com- mutation of its dues, and thus extinguish feudal tenures in the Island of Montreal. In the estima- tion of a number of influential English citizens of Montreal, this ordinance was regarded as a further evidence of the governor's undue partiality for the French-Canadians. He considered, however, that the commission of 1836 had established beyond question the equitable claim of the seminary. Ordinances were also passed re-establishing civic corporations for the cities of Quebec and Montreal, the former charters having expired during the late troubles. There were altogether twenty-one ordin- ances passed, including two railroad measures. The 255 LORD SYDENHAM council was prorogued on June 28th, and the governor thus briefly reported the proceedings. " I have closed my Special Council, and send you home my ordinances. They have done their work excellently well, thanks to Stuart and my new solicitor-general, who turns out admirably I have passed some, but not all the measures which are indispensable previous to the Union. The Registry Bill still remains; but that I shall get through in the autumn, after it has been for two or three months before the public, which was the course 1 adopted with the Judicature Bill, and found most advantageous. Education also stands over ; for it is impossible to do anything in that until we get the municipahties erected in the dis- tricts." The new measures were received with very mixed feelings, and undoubtedly the governor was quite justified in his remark that "nothing but a despotism could have got them through. A House of Assembly, whether single or double, would have spent ten years at them." The Quebec Gazette, which was so bitterly opposed to the Union Bill and to responsible government, preferring government from England rather than by any popular majority in Canada, was nevertheless strenuously opposed to the despotic system which came from England. In summing up a lengthy criticism of the work of the governor and Special Council the Gazette said, "The system of legislation by a Governor and Council 256 SYDENHAM VISITS NOVA SCOTIA prudently and discreetly managed, might have been beneficial, for a time; but it has been completely worn out, in little more tlian two years; thereby furnishing another striking instance that power, even in the hands ,of enlightened and liberal men, soon degenerates into the grossest abuse when there is no present and ever- active check." Never- theless, the Gazette continued to rail at all forms of responsible government. Immediately after proroguing the Special Council at Montreal, the governor-general set out for Que- bec on his way to the Maritime Provinces, which were also committed to his care. In Nova Scotia, in particular, an embittered agitation was in pro- gress, centring around the inevitable question of responsible government. Mr. Joseph Howe was the leading exponent of the new policy on that subject. It was understood in Canada that "the object of His Excellency's visit to Nova Scotia is to meet the Legislature of that Province, and explain the views entertained by Her Majesty's Government on the subject of Responsible Government." As a matter of fact, the friction between the lieutenant- governor, Sir Colin Campbell, and the executive council on the one hand, and the house of assemb- ly on the other, had reached a crisis. On April 30th Lord John Russell requested the governor- general to proceed to Nova Scotia " to inquire into the causes of these lamentable dissensions; but while Her Majesty is determined not to admit of 257 LORD SYDENHAM any thing derogatory to the honour or reputation of Sir Colin Campbell, Her Majesty will be dis- posed to listen favourably to any suggestions you may be able to make for the better government, and future contentment of a portion of her people from whom the Queen and her Predecessor have received so many proofs of loyalty and attach- ment." In reply the governor promised that, though sorely needed in Canada, he would meet the colonial secretary's wishes. In a confidential despatch he stated that, so far as he could learn from his communications with that province, there were few, if any, vital issues at stake, save only the lack of personal harmony between the members of the executive council and the assembly. He re- garded the situation as but a striking instance of the unwisdom of attempting to maintain in office persons who are objectionable to the majority of the assembly. The colonial government, legislative and executive, should be a unit on all important matters and command the confidence of the popular majority, so that the advice which they tender to the governor may be taken as expressing the wishes of the people. It will then be a matter of imperial policy as to whether or not the advice of the colonial government should be taken, and for that decision the governor alone must be re- sponsible, not the colonial executive. The action taken by the Nova Scotia assembly, in the present instance, rendered it difficult to 258 THE USUAL DIFFICULTIES either refuse or concede their demands. So far as he could judge, before studying the situation on the ground, his recommendation would be, " to send out a Civil Governor to dissolve the Assem- bly; to re-model the Executive Council upon its true principle, and to deal finally with the state of things as it may then arise." He closes the despatch with this significant remark, " The state of things indeed affords to my mind only another instance of the mischief which must inevitably arise from en- trusting the delicate and difficult task of governing with a popular assembly to persons whose previous pursuits have left them practically unacquainted with the management and working of such bodies." Arriving in Halifax, July 9th, he was sworn in as governor the same day. The next day he held a levee at Government House, received and replied to the usual addresses, and immediately plunged into the details of the provincial troubles. Consult- ing the leading men of all parties, he found the political situation to be very much what he had anticipated in his despatch from Montreal. There had been no quarrel with the lieutenant-governor personally, nor over any measures of vital public interest. The difficulties were entirely due tO' jealousy as to the division of power and patronage between the assembly and the executive council, a body established only three years previously. Upon the governor alone devolved the task of defending the executive council, which according 259 LORD SYDENHAM to the governor-general was well-nigh impossible of defence. It was composed of eleven men, only two of whom had seats in the assembly, and the majority did not possess the confidence of the people, being a constant source of weakness in- stead of strength to the administration. The legis- lative council also had been a source of weakness, its members having been selected too exclusively from the party opposed to the majority of the assembly. Here again, as in Canada, he found the central defect to be the lack of a well-organized govern- ment in touch, through the assembly, with the needs and wishes of the people. This lack of the basal principle in responsible government he ex- presses as follows: " By far the most serious defect in the Government is the utter absence of Power in the Executive, and its total want of energy to attempt to occupy the attention of the Country upon real improvements or to lead the Legislature in the preparation and adoption of measures for the benefit of the Colony. It does not appear to have occurred to any one that it is one of the first duties of the Government to suggest improvements where they are wanted. That the Constitution having placed the power of Legislation in the hands of an assembly and a Council it is only by acting through these Bodies that this duty can be per- formed, and that if the proper and legitimate Functions of Government are neglected, the neces- sary result must be, not only that the improve- 260 IN HARMONY WITH HOWE ments which the People have a right to expect will be neglected and the prosperity of the Country checked, but that the Popular Branch of the Legis- lature will misuse its power and the popular mind be easily led into excitement upon mere abstract Theories of Government to which their attention is directed as the remedy for the uneasiness they feel." He found that his analysis of the situation in Nova Scotia and his proposed remedies were entire- ly approved by Joseph Howe, then editor of the Nova Scotian and leader of the popular party in the assembly. " I have received from that gentle- man and his friends and also from many others who are considered as of the opposite party, the assurance of their readiness entirely to concur in the course which I propose to adopt with regard to the formation of the Councils, and lend their hearty co-operation to the harmonious working of the system." The central principle in the new system proposed is thus expressed: "I consider that principle to be, that seats in the Executive Council shall be held only by the Officers of the Government or by INIembers of either branch of the Legislature. That the leading Officers of Government should take their ftiir share of respon- sibility by becoming Members of it, if they wish to retain their Offices. That where it may be expedi- ent to give Seats in the Council to Gentlemen not connected with Office, leading men should be 261 LORD SYDENHAM selected, giving a fair preponderance to those whose general opinions concur with those of the majority of the assembly without excluding alto- gether others, which in a small Colony, where parties are not and cannot be ranged as they are in England, seems advisable." He then goes on to specify in detail the changes to be effected, prefer- ably by a new governor. He closes this long confi- dential despatch with a clear statement of the position which a governor-general must occupy in the colonial system of North America, and which clearly indicates that in the initial stages at least of responsible government, the governor must be his own prime minister. " It appears to me indispensable to the good conduct of Colonial Government that the initiation should be taken by the Executive in all measures for the improvement of the Province, and this can be effectually done by no one but the governor himself He is in fact the Minister, and unless, therefore, he is from his habits inclined to consider questions of Civil Government, and has some acquaintance with the mode in which, first of all, the task of preparing measures is to be performed by those who hold Office under him, and next with the working of popular institutions, it is in vain to expect either that harmony can long be maintained, or that the Colony should prosper as it ought to do. Moreover he must be responsible for selecting his own cabinet 262 THE GOVERNOR AS PRIME MINISTER " If the Queen's Representative is to be respon- sible to Her Majesty and Her Advisers, and not to his Council — if the people are to look to him, and not to any responsible advisers of his in the Colony, he must act as a minister does in England. He must feel it to be his first duty to endeavour to act in harmony with the wishes of the people, he must impart vigour to every branch of his Government, he must distribute his subordinate Officers in the way which may be most acceptable to the Legislature, thro' whom he has to act, and he must shew the Colony that he will himself take the lead in all that may appear to be for their interest." What Lord Sydenham did not fuUy foresee was that when this system of organized cabinet govern- ment was once definitely introduced, the function of acting " as a minister does in England " would be chiefly transferred to a minister in Canada, leaving to the governor the purely formal function of representing the home government in sanction- ing that which is " in harmony with the wishes of the people." Thus would be avoided that which Lord Sydenham recognized as the chief difficulty in his conception of a governor as prime minister; namely, what was to become of the governor when his ministry was no longer acceptable to the people? If the prime minister in England may be driven from power by a vote of want of confidence, must not a Canadian minister, even if governor, suffer 263 LORD SYDENHAM the same fate? Sydenham admitted that he ought to be recalled, but saw the difficulty, from the point of view of imperial connection, of recalling a governor as the result of an adverse colonial verdict upon his ministry. But by separating the functions of colonial prime minister, once they were firmly established, and imperial governor, the fall of the colonial minister would not involve the recall of the colonial governor. It is true the governor would thenceforth represent but a relatively small portion of his previous combination of functions, but he would be the visible symbol, as the king is in Britain, of the continuity of government amid the changes of ministries and the dissolution of parlia- ments; the visible symbol also of the unity of the Empire. The permanence and unity were preserved by Lord Sydenham's plan for the introduction of a responsible cabinet government with the governor as the first prime minister. He thus adroitly bridged the chasm between a line of governors who recog- nized little necessity for accepting advice, and a line of governors who were to recognize as little necessity for giving any. While in Halifax, the governor-general received a visit from Sir John Harvey, lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick, conveying the desire of the people of New Brunswick that he should visit that province. Lord Sydenham accordingly paid a short visit to St. John and Fredericton. There he found a governor and a government fulfilling his 264 NEW BRUNSWICK FORTUNATE ideas of a true colonial administration. " There reigns in New Brunswick the most perfect tran- quillity and an entire harmony between the Execu- tive Government and the Legislature. This state of things is greatly owing to the course which has been pursued by the Lieutenant - Governor whose personal popularity appears to be very con- siderable and no doubt much is due to the good sense of the Inhabitants. The happy effects of it are to be seen in the rapid advance which the Pro- vince is making to wealth and prosperity." Sir John Harvey had already expressed his views on responsible government, and they very closely cor- responded with those of Lord Sydenham. Returning to Halifax on July 26th, he set out for Quebec on the twenty-eighth, reaching that city on the thirty-first. On his way to JNIontreal he passed through the Eastern Townships. Every- where he put himself in personal touch with the people, receiving most hearty responses. Realizing fully the political advantage of such a course, and finding that the Union Bill had now passed the British parliament, he immediately set out upon an extensive tour of the western province. This proved of the utmost importance to him in that first trying session of the united legislature. The tour occupied the greater part of August and September, 1840. His experiences are best given in his own words, taken from a private letter which deals with various incidents more freely 265 LORD SYDENHAM than his formal despatches, though these are also enthusiastic over the future prospects of the pro- vince. " This tour has indeed been a triumph — a series of ovations. You can conceive nothing more grati- fying than my progress through Upper Canada, especially in the west ; nor, indeed, with one ex- ception, anything more fortunate ; for I have had beautiful weather and good health, and have been able to keep my time very exactly at the different places, so as to receive all intended honours, and satisfy and please the people. '* That exception was Lake Erie. The Govern- ment steamer in which I embarked Was altogether the filthiest and vilest concern which ever floated on water. Admiralty, not Provincial, of course; and my patriotism prevented me from hiring a Yankee steam-boat instead, which would have con- veyed me safely and comfortably. We had a storm on the lake, and got very nearly lost ; and what was as bad, I could put in nowhere to see the coast, but was obliged to run for Amherst burg. The same thing happened on Lake Huron, where the sea runs as high as in the Bay of Biscay; and, to complete the catastrophe, in running up the river Thames to Chatham away went the rudder and tiller, both as rotten as touchwood. So I aban- doned the Toronto to cut a fresh rudder out of the woods, and was right glad to get the rest of my tour by land. 266 THE WESTERN TOUR " I had a carriage on board and plenty of saddle- horses, and as the roads are not impassable at this time of year, on horseback at least, I made out admirably. " Amherstburg, Sandwich, River St. Clair, Lake Huron, Goderich, Chatham, London, Woodstock, Brantford, Simcoe, the Talbot Road and Settle- ment, Hamilton, Dundas, and so back to Toronto. You can follow me on a map. From Toronto across Lake Simcoe to Penetanguishene on Lake Huron again, and back to Toronto, which I left last night again for the Bay of Quints, ^//parties uniting in addresses at every place, full of confid- ence in my government, and of a determination to forget their former disputes. Escorts of two and three hundred farmers on horseback at every place from township to township, with all the etceteras of guns, music, and flags. What is of more import- ance, my candidates everywhere taken for the en- suing elections ; in short, such unanimity and con- fidence I never saw, and it augurs well for the future. Even the Toronto people, who have been spending the last six weeks in squabbling, were led, I suppose by the feeling shown in the rest of the province, into giving me a splendid reception, and took in good part a lecture I read them, telling them that they had better follow the good example of peace and renewed harmony which had been set them elsewhere, instead of making a piece of work about what they did not understand. 267 LORD SYDENHAM " The fact is, that the truth of my original notion of the people and of this country is now confirmed. The mass only wanted the vigorous interference of a well-intentioned Government, strong enough to control both the extreme parties, and to proclaim wholesome truths, and act for the benefit of the country at large in defiance of ultras on either side. "But, apart from all this political effect, I am delighted to have seen this part of the country ; I mean the great district, nearly as large as Ireland, placed between the three lakes — Erie, Ontario, and Huron. You can conceive nothing finer I The most magnificent soil in the world — four feet of vegetable mould — a climate certainly the best in North America — the greater part of it admirably watered. In a word, there is land enough and capa- bilities enough for some millions of people, and for one of the finest provinces in the world; the most perfect contrast to that miserable strip of land along the St. Lawrence, called Lower Canada, which has given so much trouble. " I shall fix the capital of the United Province in this one of course. Kingston will most probably be the place ; but there is everything to be done there yet, to provide accommodation for the meet- ing of the Assembly in the spring." The addresses which he everywhere received ex- pressed confidence in the new administration and renewed hope for the future. His replies were no mere permutations on formal platitudes, but were 268 LOWER CANADA LESS HOPEFUL filled with vital principles and a vigorous handling of the chief issues before the country, adapted to local needs. His frank yet courtly manner, his shrewd appreciation and sympathetic treatment of the real needs of the people, and his magnetic personality quite captured the hearts and confidence of the people, who recognized in him an entirely new style of governor who dealt with Canadian pro- blems from a new, popular, and firsthand point of view. He was not so successful, however, with the people of Lower Canada, who, for various reasons, were less fortunately situated for taking an inde- pendent view of the problems of the country, and were more completely under the control of their former leaders. " Great efforts are made by some few of the old Leaders of the Papineau Party to mislead the people, and they are seconded in a most mischievous manner by Mr. Neilson of Quebec. But altho' they may be successful in imposing on the credulity and ignorance of the habitants so far as to obtain the return to the United Legislature of a small party of violent men opposed to British connection, I am satisfied that they will not again induce the Peasantry to support any attempt at disturbance." 269 CHAPTER XVII CONSUMMATING THE UNION LORD John Russell, in a despatch of July 24th, had announced to the governor-general that the royal assent had been given to the Union Bill, and asked him to prepare for the introduction of constitutional government according to that Act. The Union Act permitted for the first time in Canada, or indeed in any colony, a representative assembly to control the voting of supplies, while the executive government alone introduced money bills and was charged with the administration of the government, including the appointment of all officials. Hitherto " in many of our colonies these functions have been mixed or reversed, to the great injury of the pubUc weal." The passing of the Union Act also involved the issue of a new commission to the governor of the united province. As it was understood, however, that the governor's commission could not be issued before the appointment of the legislative and ex- ecutive councils, Poulett Thomson was asked to send home nominations for these positions. More- over, the governor's commission and the royal in- structions which always accompanied it, would determine in many important respects the manner in which the powers conferred under the Union 271 LORD SYDENHAM Act were to be exercised. But the forms of the governor's commission and the royal instructions had been but shghtly altered since 1791, and as the home government was naturally not very familiar with local Canadian conditions, Poulett Thomson was invited to furnish suggestions for his own com- mission and instructions, — a unique mark of con- fidence evidently due to his former connection with the government. A new seal for the province was also reported to be in process of execution. This juncture in the country's affairs and in the fortunes of the governor-general was naturally re- garded as the fitting occasion on which to acknow- ledge the important and effective Services which Poulett Thomson had already rendered in connec- tion with the union of the Canadas and the re- establishment of colonial government upon a stable basis. Hence, before the issue of his new com- mission as governor-general, Poulett Thomson was elevated to the peerage with the title of Baron Sydenham of Sydenham in Kent and Toronto in Canada. As already indicated, a few measures still re- mained to be brought before the Special Council before the consummation of the union. For the consideration of these Lord Sydenham, immedi- ately after his return from the west, summoned, for the last time, the members of the Special Council. The most important measure to come be- fore it was an ordinance for the establishment of 272 MUNICIPAL INSTITUTIONS municipal institutions, though the governor-general had not expected to bring this before any legis- lative body in Canada. The draft bill for the union of the Canadas which he had sent to the colonial secretary contained full provision for a municipal system. The importance which Lord Sydenham attached to this feature of the Union Bill is thus vigorously expressed on learning that these clauses were in danger of being dropped, " No man in his senses would think for a moment of the Union without its being accompanied by some sort of Local Government, in which the people may con- trol their own officers, and the executive at the same time obtain some influence in the country districts. "Without a breakwater of this kind between the Central Government and the people, Government with an Assembly is impossible in Lower Canada, and most difficult in Upper Canada ; and it is absurd to expect that any good system can or will be established by the Provincial Legislature, even if time admitted of its being proposed to them. No colonial legislature will divest itself of the great power it now possesses of parcelling out sums of money for every petty local job ; and although by the Union Bill the initiative of money votes will be confined to the Government, this provision will be- come null, because the moment that the executive is called upon to provide for all these local ex- penses, with the details of . which it cannot be 273 LORD SYDENHAM acquainted, it must renounce the task, and leave it in the hands of the members themselves. A distinct principle must be laid down that all purely local expenses be borne by the localities themselves, settled and voted by them, and that only great works be paid for out of the provincial funds. " Nor is it only with reference to the Canadas that it was all-important for Parliament itself to have laid down the principle and details of Local Government. Since I have been in these Provinces, I have become more and more satisfied that the capital cause of the misgovernment of them is to be found in the absence of Local Government, and the consequent exercise by the Assembly of powers wholly inappropriate to its functions. Members are everywhere chosen only with reference to the ex- tent of job for their particular district which they can carry. Whoever happens to lead a party in the House of twelve or fourteen members, may at once obtain a majority for his political views by jobbing with other members for votes upon them, or, by rejecting their jobs as the penalty of refusal, oust them from their seats. This, indeed, is admitted by the best men of all parties, and especially of the popular side. But it is equally admitted that they cannot of themselves change the system. In both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick I was told that if Parliament laid down a system of Local Govern- ment for Canada, then it was likely that in these 274 MUNICIPAL CLAUSES DROPPED Provinces too the Assembly would adopt it ; but, without that, it would be impossible to get it done. So, by this step, if Lord John has really been forced to take it, not only has all chance of the Union Bill working well been destroyed, but also the hope of a change of system throughout all the Provinces. Last year, if you remember, we made it a sine qua non to the Union ; indeed, our scheme was altogether based on it. The establishment of Municipal Government by Act of Parliament is as much a part of the intended scheme of Government for the Canadas as the union of the two Legis- latures, and the more important of the two. All chance of good Government, in Lower Canada especially, depends on its immediate adoption." But when the Union Bill came before the British parliament it was found that there were such strong objections to the municipal clauses in it that Lord John Russell considered it expedient to drop them rather than jeopardize the whole measure. In his despatch to Sydenham, September 14th, he declared that "nothing but a wish to prevent a division among those who supported the Union Bill, induced me to refrain from pressing the municipal clauses on the House of Commons." And in a later despatch, when he had received Lord Sydenham's remonstrances on the omission of the municipal clauses, he explained that, on the one hand, he could find no Canadian authority in support of them, while Peel and Stanley, though 275 LORD SYDENHAM friendly enough to the general union measure, strongly opposed its municipal features, as did also Mr. Gillespie and others well acquainted with Canada. Lord Sydenham received formal instruc- tions, however, to bring before the united legisla- ture the question of municipal government, "in such form and manner as you shall judge most advisable for the attainment of an object to which Her Majesty's government attach the highest value." Accordingly, Lord Sydenham took advantage of the closing session of the Special Council to intro- duce a general municipal system into Lower Can- ada, outside of the cities of Quebec* and Montreal already provided for by special ordinances. This was accomplished through an " Ordinance to pro- vide for the better internal Government of this Province by the establishment of Local and Muni- cipal Authorities therein." Partly out of respect for the prejudices of those who balked at dangerous democratic innovations, and partly that the central government might hold the leading-strings while the infant municipal authorities learned to walk, the central government retained considerable con- trol over the official appointments and financial obligations of the new municipalities. Lord Syden- ham was strongly impressed with the necessity for thus providing numerous local schools for the training of the people in the elements of respon- sible government. Up to this stage, as he had 276 A MUNICIPAL SYSTEM observed, the people had received no training in those habits of self-government which were so necessary in enabling them to properly choose their representatives in parliament; nor was there any opportunity furnished for testing at close range the talents and quality of candidates for seats in the legislature. Having little or no experience of the difficulties of government, the common people were inclined to blame the central authorities for all that went wrong in purely local affairs. When we think of the pressure put upon the Dominion and provincial governments at the present time for the construction of local works, and the consequent temptation to the bribery of constituencies, we can understand what Lord Sydenham saved the country, when, for the com- bined provinces of Quebec and Ontario, he relieved the central government of responsibility and pat- ronage in the case of the multifarious works and services which were devolved upon the district councils created under his comprehensive municipal system. The system was afterwards extended, with a few amendments, to Upper Canada, under an Act of the united legislature. An outline of the system will be given when we refer to the general municipal Act. Another important measure dealt with at this last session of the Special Council, related to the establishment of offices for the registration of titles to land. This had been the occasion of almost as 277 LORD SYDENHAM great debate in Lower Canada as the Clergy Reserves in Upper Canada. It had been the subject of much enquiring and reporting, and many bills had been introduced to deal with it. In the im- portant report of 1828 the whole matter had been thoroughly gone into. It had been shown that a serious drawback to the province of Lower Canada was involved in the system of secret and implied mortgages — " Hypotheques tadtes et occultes " — which rendered it almost impossible to be certain of a clear title to any lands which might be pur- chased. Ancient French laws and customs, born of a social system of rigid caste and changeless owner- ship, formed part of that " nationality " inherited at the conquest, which, in the struggle for the maintenance of French ascendency after the Que- bec Act, was to be rendered even more cTiangeless than in the least progressive days before the French Revolution. The more complete the demonstration of its obstructive character, the more obstinately did the typical French-Canadian cling to it and anathematize the tyranny of those who would change, in other words anglicize, his institutions. Yet the commercial and progressive French-Cana- dians were prepared to welcome the change, once safely made. In the latter part of November, Lord Sydenham was able to report, " I have got a registry bill, ' the ass's bridge ' of the Province for the last twenty years, which meets with nearly universal assent from both French and English. 278 REGISTRY OF LAND TITLES It will be law in a few days, and will be really a miracle." The range and purpose of the new ordinance are sufficiently indicated in the title and preamble: — ** An Ordinance to prescribe and regulate the Registering of Titles to Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments, Real or Immovable Estates, and of Charges and Incumbrances on the same ; and for the Alteration and Improvement of the I^aw in certain Particulars in Relation to the Alienation and Hypothecation of Real Estates and the Rights and Interest acquired therein. " Whereas great losses and evils have been ex- perienced from secret and fraudulent conveyances of real estates, and incumbrances on the same, and from the uncertainty and insecurity of titles of lands in this province, to the manifest injury and occasional ruin of purchasers, creditors, and others ; and whereas the registering of all titles to real or immovable estates, and of all charges and incum- brances on the same, would not only obviate these losses and evils for the future, but would also, with some alteration of the existing laws, whereby the removal of inconvenient and inexpedient restraints and burthens on the alienation of real estates might be effected, greatly promote the agricultural and commercial interests of this province, and advance its improvement and prosperity : etc. " There were altogether some thirty-two addi- tional ordinances passed at this last session of the 279 LORD SYDENHAM Special Council, relating to such important in- terests as highways, harbours and navigation, rail- ways, regulations respecting aliens, the erection of gaols and the administration of justice. In conse- quence of these exacting legislative duties, which occupied the attention of the governor until Feb- ruary, 1841, the proclamation of the union, the organization of the new government, and the pro- vision for the election of the first legislature for united Canada were unduly delayed, much to the chagrin of Lord Sydenham, who naturally desired as much time as possible to prepare his legislative programme. The problem as to the seat of government had already been discussed by Lord Sydenham in a private and confidential despatch of May 22nd, 1840. There were five different places whose claims were canvassed, Quebec, Montreal, Kingston, To- ronto and Bytown, now Ottawa. The latter was eliminated almost immediately, for, though remote from the frontier, it was also remote from the more settled portions of the country and afforded no suitable accommodation. From the point of view of immediate accommodation, Toronto and Quebec were naturally best equipped, but both were too far removed from the centre of the united province. Toronto, in addition, was incapable of defence and in winter shut off from regular communication with Britain. It had been urged, apparently by representatives of Quebec and Toronto, that the 280 THE SEAT OF GOVERNMENT legislature might meet alternately in the two pro- vinces, which was farcefied into the proposition that the capital should be placed on a scow and towed around to the leading cities in rotation. The final choice lay between Montreal and Kingston. From the point of view of defence, Kingston was the safer ; as regards communication with Britain, Montreal was nearer in summer and Kingston in winter, via New York. Montreal was the larger and more important city, Kingston the more cen- trally located for the whole province. Judged from the existing requirements, their claims were about equally balanced, but having regard to the future development of the country, Kingston had un- doubtedly the advantage. Moreover, Sydenham frankly confessed that he considered it desirable that the capital of the province and the sittings of the legislature should be removed from the pres- ence of a large French population, and especially from the influence of a host of petty lawyers and doctors, such as filled the Montreal district and had already created trouble. On the other hand, it would be of advantage to the French-Canadian members to bring them into an English section of the province with a new social and political atmo- sphere. On the whole, therefore, he gave the prefer- ence to Kingston. Replying to his despatch on the subject, Lord John Russell quite approved of Syd- enham's reasons for fixing upon Kingston. It was not, however, until the beginning of February, 281 LORD SYDENHAM 1841, that it became publicly known that Kingston was to be the capital of the united province. By an Order-in-Council, dated August 10th, 1840, Lord Sydenham had been vested with auth- ority to proclaim the union. Not, however, until February 5th, 1841, did he find it possible to issue his proclamation appointing February 10th as the date on which the union of the provinces should take effect. This date was chosen as the conjunction of several anniversaries ; those, namely, of the mar- riage of the Queen, the Treaty of Paris, 1763, the giving of the royal assent to the Act suspending the constitution of Lower Canada, and the pro- roguing of the legislature of Upper Canada the previous year. Accordingly, on that date Lord Sydenham assumed the office of Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the United Province, according to the forms prescribed in his commis- sion. At the same time, he issued a proclamation to the people of the united province with the object of impressing upon them the privileges and respon- sibilities which were conferred upon them, and the great future which was in store for the country should these opportunities be properly utiHzed. " In your hands now rests your own fate, and by the use which you will make of the opportunity must it be decided." On February 15th Lord Sydenham issued a pro- clamation summoning the parhament of United Canada to meet at Kingston. The election writs 282 THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL were returnable on April 8th, and lie hoped to assemble the parliament on May 26th, when the water routes, the chief highways of the country, would be open. The date of opening the legislature was afterwards postponed to June 14th. He had ah'cady nominated as members of the executive council the principal officers of the late provincial governments ; namely, Messrs. R. B. Sullivan, J. H. Dunn, D. Daly, S. B. Harrison, C. R. Ogden, W. R. Draper, R. Baldwin, and C. D. Day. The only appointments to office, however, were Mr. Daly, the late provincial secretary of Lower Canada, and Mr. Harrison, late civil secretary of Upper Canada, to be secretaries for the united province ; and JNIr. Dunn, late receiver-general of Upper Canada, to be receiver-general of the united province. These appointments were indispensable to the carrying on of the business of the country. As has been already indicated, the frankly avowed object of the Union Act was, without infringing upon the personal rights or religious convictions of the French-Canadians, to do away with the eternal conflict for racial supremacy by insuring to the country a British future as regards its national institutions and imperial connection. In order to accomplish this, it was necessary to equalize the power of the two races in such a way that, under representative institutions and responsible government, there would be a reason- able assurance of a British majority in the legis- 283 LORD SYDENHAM lature. That did not imply that party divisions would necessarily follow racial lines ; indeed it was fully expected that this would prevent such a re- sult, and this soon proved to be the case. It was well known that any possible form of settlement would be, for a time, unpalatable to the French- Canadians. Even the least objectionable of all, and the most hopeful for the future — that involved in the union policy — was certain to give occasion to the demagogues to stir the liveliest apprehension of the ignorant masses of the people as to the inevit- able oppression and loss of civil and religious liberty which were to follow the consummation of the union. The general body of the French-Canadians knew nothing of how Lord Sydenham had de- fended their rights, as against the extreme demands of the ultra-loyal element in the Upper Province, and to a certain extent in the Lower Province as well, or the criticisms he had received in conse- quence. Hence it was easy to persuade them, as was industriously done, that he was their avowed enemy and oppressor ; as the promoter of the union measure he was the author of all the apprehended evils which were to flow from it. As Lord Sydenham had feared, confirmation of the popular opinion of the governor was drawn from the fixing of the electoral limits of Quebec and Montreal. In order to give the im- portant British mercantile element an opportunity for representation amid an encircling majority of 284 QUEBEC AND MONTREAL SEATS French-Canadians, portions of the suburbs of these cities were thrown in with the adjoining counties. What, however, gave this an especially sinister look in the eyes of the French-Canadians, was the fact that, mainly on the representation of Sir Robert Peel, then leader of the Opposition in the British parliament, these seats were given two re- presentatives each. Lord Sydenham immediately recognized how this would be interpreted, and thus referred to the awkward position in which it placed him: — " I had suggested that one Member should be given to each of the cities of Quebec and Mont- real, and under proper regulation and without any great appearance of injustice the probability is that a member really representing the Com- mercial Interest might have been returned in this way for each City. In consequence, however, of the representations of different Canadian Mer- chants in London, H. M. Government and Par- liament deemed it expedient to allot two Members to each of these Cities, the consequence of which is, that if the limits of the two places are not restricted in a way which may be represented to be extremely unjust with regard to the number of voters to be retained for the nomination of so many as four Members, the object which I had in view, and which Parliament, in ignorance of the real state of the case, sought to carry still farther, namely, the return of such representatives, will 285 LORD SYDENHAM be entirely defeated, and the Mercantile Interest of Quebec and JNIontreal will have no more voice in the choice of their members than they would in the nomination of any of the JNIembers for the French counties. This is highly emban-assing, and another proof, if one were wanting, of the danger of meddling with details when the parties doing so are imperfectly informed of the facts. After mature consideration, however, I have determined to carry out what I consider to have been the views of Parliament and, at whatever risk of out- cry or accusation, to make such an apportionment of the limits of these two cities, by excluding the whole or the greater part of their suburbs, as shall effectually secure to the trading com- munity the power of returning the representatives of their choice, not looking indeed to Politics, or to race, but to a commercial representation such as was sought by Sir Robert Peel in his proposal for giving a nomination to the Chambers of Com- merce. Your Lordship, however, may expect that this course will be objected to by the French- Canadian population and some of their supporters, and probably the objections may find advocates in Parliament in England. It is, therefore, my duty to state to you the necessity which compels me to adopt it, and I trust that a sufficient answer will be given in case I am attacked for it." 286 CHAPTER XVTII ELECTION AND OPENING OF THE FIRST UNITED PARLIAMENT IN both provinces, where there was the prospect of anything hke a close contest, it was quite evident that there was to be an exceedingly vigor- ous election campaign. There had been no election in Lower Canada since the outbreak of the rebel- lion, and the last election in Upper Canada was regarded as having been carried by the Compact and Orange elements, with the assistance of Lieu- tenant-Governor Head, in such a manner as to prevent the legitimate expression of the popular will. The great issues of the stability of the union, the dominance of race, and the future of responsible government were all dependent on the outcome of the elections. The attitude of the most responsible and in- fluential element among the French-Canadians towards the Union Act and the government to be formed under it, is given in an address by the " Quebec Committee " to the electors throughout the province. This was published in the Quebec Gazette, of February 22nd, Mr. Neilson, the editor and proprietor, being one of the chief members of the committee. The keynote of the address is given in the following paragraph with 287 LORD SYDENHAM reference to the practical duty of the electors : " No consideration whatever should induce us to vote for any candidate who does not disapprove of that Act and its iniquitous provisions ; for, in voting for such a candidate, we would give our consent to the Act, and approve of those who have advised it. We should proclaim our own dishonour and dishonour our country in stretching forth the neck to the yoke which is attempted to be placed upon us, till it be repealed or amended, so that the injustice which it authorizes shall cease." It was everywhere admitted that this attitude and these principles dominated the French-Cana- dian elections. All things considered, the attitude was perfectly natural, but it involved at least this plain fact, that the government could make no terms with the French-Canadian members until, through experience of the working of the Union Act and of the attitude of the government towards their interests as citizens of a united Canada, they had modified their views and abandoned their pledges of absolute opposition. Thanks to Lord Sydenham's policy and the appreciation of the more enlightened French-Canadians, it was possible for his successor, Sir Charles Bagot, to make the first practical move towards incorporating in his ministry leading French-Canadians who could command a respectable following of their fellow- members. It might have been possible for Lord Sydenham to win over individual members of the 288 A PASSING NECESSITY French-Canadian party, but in doing so he would have captured, not a section of an army, but a few isolated deserters. He had himself offered to Messrs. Roy and Marchand seats in the legislative council, on the sole condition that they should attend during the session of the legislature and not treat the appointment as a merely honorary one; but they declined. Time and experience alone could deal with that problem, hence the criticism of Lord Sydenham's government, as lacking a representative French-Canadian element, was quite beside the mark. The fault was neither his nor that of the body of the French-Canadians ; it was a passing necessity of a stage in national develop- ment. But that the necessity was a passing one, may fairly be placed to the credit of the policy which Lord Sydenham inaugurated and which ren- dered possible the action of his successors. An interesting side-light on the preparation for the elections in the Upper Province is shed by a private letter from Robert Baldwin to Lord Syden- ham. After referring to the chances for the elec- tion of Mr. Dunn and himself, he says, speaking in the third person: "Mr. Baldwin has just trans- mitted to Mr. Murdoch, for His Excellency's in- formation, a list of names of persons whom he has been led to beheve would make good returning officers in some of the counties, and also the names of places where the elections could be most con- veniently held. The materials for this list were 289 LORD SYDENHAM collected chiefly when Mr. Baldwin was on the circuit. As to the persons, he endeavoured to as- certain that they were men of reasonable intelli- gence, personal respectability, and not of violent temperament. As to the places, he endeavoured to ascertain that they were as conveniently situat- ed as possible for all, or at least the greater num- ber, of the electors, but, above all, that they were as far as possible removed from the neighbourhood of any Orange clique. He has in some instances mentioned the names of persons and places which were represented to him as peculiarly ineligible." These precautions, however, did not secure the avoidance of riot and even bloodshed at several of the elections in Upper Canada, particularly in and around Toronto, where the ultra-loyal and ultra-Protestant element conceived it to be at once their privilege and their duty to employ violence in support of British institutions and in opposition to a government too strongly tainted with French- Canadian sympathies and responsible government radicalism. Yet this was the same government against which a solid French-Canadian opposition was being successfully organized in Lower Canada, because of its supposed leanings towards Orangism and ultra-British sympathies. We cannot refer in detail to the many objection- able and regrettable episodes which characterized the elections in a number of constituencies, especi- ally in the districts around Montreal and Toronto. 290 ELECTION RESULTS Responsibility for the riotous conduct was pretty evenly divided between the rival interests, but wherever violence was used in favour of a candi- date favourable to the union policy or responsible government, it was of course attributed directly to the government, and even to the governor himself. Thus did Lord Sydenham immediately experience one of the chief difficulties which of necessity attached to the double function of governor and prime minister. The election returns were known early in April, and the results were thus summed up in a letter from Mr. INIurdoch, tlie civil secretary : — " Govern- ment members, 24 ; French members, 20 ; moder- ate Reformers, 20 ; ultra-Reformers, 5 ; Compact party, 7 ; doubtful, 6." Considering the issues on which they were elected, the French members, at first at any rate, could be safely counted upon to oppose without question every measure brought forward by the government. On most essential matters the majority of the moderate Reformers would support the government, while the ultra- Reformers and the Compact party would oppose it. On other issues, however, many votes would depend upon the particular question before the House. The government seemed fairly sure of a good working majority. But considering the whole past history of Canadian representative bodies, the most difficult task before Lord Sydenham would be to maintain a united administration on all 291 LORD SYDENHAM essential government questions. The opposition to the government might, on occasion, prove very formidable ; for parties of the most incompatible views, such as the French-Canadians, the Compact party, and the ultra- Reformers, might enthusiastic- ally unite in opposition to the government, and might even put-vote it, without the slightest possi- bility of forming another administration to take its place. The members of the legislature were finally sum- moned to meet at Kingston on June 14th, 1841. Postponement of the date previously fixed was due partly to the state of the governor's health, he having been prostrated by a particularly severe attack of gout, and partly in order to permit agricultural operations to be sufficiently advanced to allow the country members to attend. Lord Sydenham thus describes to the colonial secretary the preparations made for the accommodation of the legislature : — "In pursuance of what I had the honour of stating upon a former occasion, I decided on call- ing the first Parliament at Kingston and of placing the seat of Government there. Upon investigation I found that I could obtain without difficulty the necessary accommodation both for the Legislature and the Government Offices, of a temporary nature, but still affi)rding more convenience at less cost than if I had fixed upon either Montreal or Toronto. The Hospital which was recently erected, 292 LOCATING THE GOVERNMENT but has remained unoccupied, will, with slight alterations, afford better accommodation for the meeting of the Legislature than even at Toronto. I have hired a new range of buildings which was destined for warehouses and can be easily finished for their new purposes as Govt. Offices, for all the different Departments of the Government, and they will be far superior in convenience to any that are to be found in any of the Three Cities of the Province. I have hired a house for the Residence of the Governor- General, which with some additions will answer the purpose, and altho' the different Officers of the Government will be obliged to sub- mit to inconveniences for a time, I have no doubt that accommodation can be provided. The expense will not be very considerable and will be defrayed from the balance of the Crown Revenues which I have transferred, upon the declaration of the Union, to the Military chest, to answer the claims upon it for various services." The building used for the accommodation of the legislature is once more the main structure of the Kingston hospital. The government offices referred to, a row of low stone buildings on Ontario Street erected by the INIarine Railway Company, are now devoted to much humbler uses. The house selected for the governor's residence, a plain but comfort- able stone mansion with ample grounds, beautifully situated on the lukeshore on the western border of the city, was erected and at the time owned 293 LORD SYDENHAM by Baron Grant, and is still known as " Alwing- ton." Just before the opening of the legislature, Mr. Robert Baldwin, who had been solicitor-general for Upper Canada since the close of the session of 1840, and who had held a similar position as a member of the government since the proclamation of the union, suddenly proposed to Lord Syden- ham, within a couple of days of the opening of the legislature, that he should entirely recast his government and replace some of the most im- portant members by a combination of French- Canadians and ultra-Reformers. From the point of view of elementary political wisdom, in the face of so delicate a situation as then confronted the governor, the proposal was preposterous and would undoubtedly have been so treated by Mr. Baldwin himself when at a later date he had to frame and lead a ministry. To Lord Sydenham, Mr. Baldwin's action naturally appeared more or less treacherous; and yet Mr. Baldwin was evidently actuated by honourable sentiments, if not guided by practical wisdom. His attitude may be more readily understood after reading the seemingly naive, and yet remark- ably able and adroit letter of Mr. Morin to Mr. Hincks, written between the elections and the assembling of parliament. Notwithstanding the utter hostility to the union, and the consistent repudiation of responsible government by Mr. 294. THE BALDWIN INCIDENT Neilson, whom Mr. JNlorin acknowledges to be the leader of the French-Canadians and to possess their entire confidence, Mr. JMorin, with his charm- ingly innocent and almost affectionate manner to which his own thorough goodness of heart lent an air of perfect sincerity, laboured to prove that the French-Canadians and the Reformers of Upper Canada were natural allies and desired practically the same objects. If, therefore, they united to- gether they could command the situation — an opinion which there was no disputing. He an- nounced also that he himself and a number of others were going up, a few days in advance of the opening of the House, to confer with repre- sentative Reformers with a view to effecting a combination. It was with these men that Mr. Baldwin had been negotiating, and that they had completely captured him is indicated by the pro- position which he placed before Lord Sydenham on the eve of the opening of the House. As it turned out, both Morin and Baldwin were entirely mistaken in their estimate of the situation. Mr. Neilson, and not Mr. Morin, proved to be the true prophet of the political attitude of the French- Canadians in the first session of the legislature. It is true that as the session progressed the more enlightened French-Canadians, of wliom Mr. JMorin himself was a conspicuous example, were often found voting in opposition to the general body of their fellow-countrymen, but the majority, with 295 LORD SYDENHAM Mr. Neilson as their leader, steadily opposed all Liberal measures. Owing to the position which he had taken at the opening of the session, Mr. Baldwin himself was constrained to oppose some of the most liberal measures of the government, such as the intro- duction of a comprehensive municipal system, the extension of the main highways of Upper Canada, the reform of the usury laws, etc. On the other hand, it was due to Mr. Hincks and the general body of the Reformers that these important measures were passed. Mr. Hincks has told us in his Reminiscences that he, in common with Mr. Baldwin and many other Reformers, firmly be- lieved, before coming into close touch with the general body of the French-Canadian party, that it was possible to form a combination of Reformers from Upper and Lower Canada which would com- mand a majority in the House and compel the governor-general, in accordance with his avowed principles of responsible government, to frame an administration which would command their con- fidence. He found, however, as the result of practi- cal experience, that it was quite impossible, at that time, to unite in one Reform party the majority of the French-Canadian representatives who followed Mr. Neilson and the Reformers from Upper Canada. In his own words, pub- lished in his paper the Examiner later in the session : — 296 HINCKS'S STATEMENT " We found, moreover, when we came to act in parliament with men, the great majority of whom we had never met before, that we could not act as a party man with several gentlemen who must be considered active leaders of the Lower Canadian Reformers. There is no individual in the House of Assembly for whom, as a private individual, we entertain a more sincere respect than the venerable and kind-hearted member for the County of Quebec, Mr. Neilson ; but as a politician, we have found ourselves almost invariably opposed to his views. We have been an attentive reader of the Gazette for several years, and our sub- scribers must be well aware that its principles are entirely dissimilar from those advocated in the columns of the Examiner. Mr. Aylwin is another prominent leader of the same party, and with this gentleman we hold no views in common. Lower Canada politics are indeed a mystery to us. In some instances the contrasts are most singular. The Liberals of Lower Canada send us Messrs. Neilson, Aylwin, Berthelot, and Burnett as Re- formers, while the Tories send us Messrs. Sol.- Gen'l Day, Black, Dunscombe, Holmes and Simp- son. — Without in the least degree adopting the opinions of the latter gentlemen, we hesitate not to say that they are many degrees more liberal than the former." Under these conditions Mr. Hincks's position was perfectly plain. 297 LORD SYDENHAM *' The formation of a new Ministry on the de- clared principle of acting in concert with the united Reform party having failed, all parties were compelled to look to the measures of administra- tion, and we can now declare that, previous to the Session of Parliament, our opinion was given repeatedly and decidedly, that in the e\'ent of failure in obtaining such administration as would be entirely satisfactory, the policy of the Reform party was to give to the existing administration such a support as would enable it to carry out liberal measures which we had no doubt would be brought forward. We have adhered to that opinion. We consider that it would have teen political suicide, because we were thwarted in our own views, to aid the Tories in embarrassing an admin- istration disposed to carry out Reform measures, although not so fast as we could desire." As to the extreme action taken by Mr. Baldwin, he has this to say, in the same article: "We are now warranted in saying that a large majority of the party desired that Mr. Baldwin should have remained in the council, and that he should only have abandoned it in case he found that other influence preponderated over his own." Mr. Baldwin's influence with his party had been very great, and on any reasonably defensible issue his defection would have been a serious blow to the government; but in this case, in resigning from the government on such an issue and adopt- 298 SYDENHAM AND BALDWIN ing an attitude of extreme opposition, he lost for a time the sympatliy of the general body of the Reformers, who preferred the much sounder policy of JMr. Hincks, the other great leader of the Reform element and a man at once of sounder con- stitutional principles and of more far-sighted politi- cal wisdom, if not of so interesting a personality. The governor-general thoroughly appreciated Mr. Baldwin's valuable qualities and his great influence with the Reformers. As his despatches show, he sympathized with his general principles, though not with his reckless haste for their extreme real- ization. He had gladly taken advantage of the first opportunity to bring Mr. Baldwin into the government and had done his utmost to meet his personal scruples, as when he took upon himself the responsibility of modifying in his case the oath of office prescribed in the Union Act; he there- fore felt the more aggrieved when Mr. Baldwin attempted to break up the government on the eve of a most critical session. 299 CHAPTER XTX RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT IN PRACTICE THE first weeks of the new legislature were very naturally devoted to experimental tactics on the part of the various groups which composed the House, with a view to testing the strength and sympathies of the different parties and the possible combinations which might be effected. The House of Assembly contained many able men with strong views and considerable capacity for expressing them. As a result, during the first weeks of the session there was a great flow of parliamentary oratory of a fairly high order, though somewhat sharp in tone and bitter in flavour. Once, however, the more strenuous members of the House had sufficiently utilized the safety-valve of speech, and the various groups had oriented themselves, and especially when it was realized that the govern- ment was to have a good working majority, the "do -nothing -but -talk session," as the Kingston , Chronicle styled it, began to get down to the serious business of legislation. Many interesting analyses of the general political situation appeared shortly after the opening of the session ; but the most concise and penetrating, and that which was most completely justified by subse- quent events, was made by I^ord Sydenham him- 801 LORD SYDENHAM self, as given in a confidential despatch to Lord John Russell, and which may be given in full as it deals with the Baldwin incident as well. " I have already transmitted to your I^ordship copies of the Speeches with which I opened the Un- ited Parliament of Canada on the 15th instant, and of the answer which I received from both Houses. ^ "A few days previous to the meeting of the Legislature the appearance of affairs was not promising for the harmony of the first proceedings of the House of Assembly, nor was I at all sur- prised tliat such should have been the case. The people of Upper and Lower Canada respectively, are nearly, if not quite, as unacquainted with the habits and feelings of each other, with the political history and with the character and opinions of the more prominent public men of the division which was not their own, as they would be if they were separated by the Atlantic. It is indeed difficult to believe the extent to which this want of know- ledge prevails, even amongst persons of good general acquirements and education, but the fact admits of no doubt. I was therefore perfectly pre- pared to expect that considerable misunderstanding and embarrassment would arise at first, which could only be removed by time affording the means of arriving on each side at a more correct judgment of the real views of either party. " I have so frequently alluded to the state of public feeling in both Provinces, that it is unneces- 302 CANADIAN PARTIES sary to describe it at any length. Party, according to our English sense, can scarcely be said to exist, and the English Party names though adopted here do not in the slightest degree describe the opinions of those who assume them or to whom they are assigned. They therefore serve only to delude. " The composition of the House of Assembly is not a bad representation of the feelings of the Province. " The Members returned from Lower Canada may be divided into two Classes, the Canadians and the British, not that either is exclusively com- posed of one or the other, but from the principles on which they were returned, which, like every- thing in that Province, was one of distinction of race. Thus, tho' a person of English origin might be chosen by a purely French-Canadian constitu- ency, it was because he avowed the most violent exclusively French-Canadian principles and was opposed to the Union, and a person of French origin, assisted by the British, received that assist- ance because he expressed sentiments favourable to British connection, and to the anglification of the Provinces. The Canadian Party, however, must again be subdivided. It contains a number of those who formerly sat in the House of Assembly, and advocated all the most violent measures under JNIr. Papineau's guidance; but it contains also others who are not desirous of having those scenes re- newed, and will undoubtedly become moderate 808 LORD SYDENHAM and useful members of the Legislature. Until, however, the question of the Union was disposed of, they would remain united with the others. The other Party which I have called the British, and which consists of nearly one-half the representation allotted to Lower Canada, are Gentlemen of both British and French origin, but returned as I have stated above, and have warmly at heart the interest and improvement of the Country. " In Upper Canada, the representation may be thus classed. There are very few members, not more than two or three, who may be supposed to represent what is called the ' Compact.' There are a considerable number of Persons wHo, altho' for- merly not altogether unconnected with that party, have enlarged their views and are most anxious for a Government conducted on a liberal and less con- fined basis. There are a large Body of men called Reformers who sincerely and anxiously desire to see practical improvements carried on, and there are a very few classed under the same name, whose views I cannot pretend to define, but whose object seems to be agitation. " This is the real character of the House, and was well known to me to be so, but it is that which could only become apparent to the Public or to the Members themselves, after its assembling. The de- lusive nature of the party nicknames, borrowed from England, which I have before referred to, and falsely applied by the Press, gave to it a differ- 304 REFORiMERS AND REFORMERS ent appearance which nothing but tlie test of action and the communication of real opinions, could re- move. " The extreme party in Upper Canada, to which I have last adverted, though numerically so in- significant, being the most active, attempted, a few days before the meeting, to assume the lead and ^,ct in the name of the larger body of their Col- leagues, who were known like themselves under the designation of ' Reformers,' and then (either being themselves deluded, or at all events deluding others into a belief that the French-Canadian Party were Reformers too; whilst all those Gentlemen from Lower Canada who had been returned on British feeling were designated by them as enemies to popular rights) endeavoured to effect a junction between the great Body of Upper Canadian Mem- bers and the Canadian Party of the Lower Pro- vince, a combination which would have proved most formidable to the good Government of the Country and have rendered all my efforts unavail- ing, for a time at least. " It is needless to say that such a combination could not have stood the test of any long time, for there is really nothing in common between the parties. The Canadians are opposed to the Union — care nothing about the responsible Government which the Upper Canadians are so thankful for having had conceded to them to the intent of your Lordship's Despatch. They want no improvements 305 LORD SYDENHAM — wish to incur no farther debt — in short have no principle in common, but the ignorance of each other's real sentiments rendered it not improbable that the manoeuvre might for the moment succeed, and in that case the effect upon public opinion in England, caused by a stormy opening of the Session, might have been very disastrous. " This was rendered still more probable by the circumstance of my Solicitor- General for Upper Canada, Mr. Baldwin, altho' a Member of the Government, using his best endeavours to promote it. Acting upon some principle of conduct, which I can reconcile neither with honour or common sense, he strove to bring about this Union, and at last having, as he thought, effected it, coolly proposed to me, on the day before Parliament was to meet, to break up the Government altogether, dismiss several of his Colleagues and replace them by men whom I believe he had not known for twenty-four hours, but who are most of them thoroughly well known in Lower Canada (without going back to darker times) as the principal opponents to every measure for the improvement of that Province which has been passed by me, and as the most un- compromising enemies to the whole of my admini- stration of affairs there. " I had been made aware of this Gentleman's proceedings for two or three days, and certainly could hardly bring myself to tolerate them, but in my great anxiety to avoid if possible any disturb- 306 BALDWIN'S JNJISTAKE ance, I had delayed taking any step. Upon receiving, however, from himself this extraordinary demand, I at once treated it, joined to his previous conduct, as a resignation of his office, and informed him that I accepted it without the least regret. " I transmit to your I^ordship a copy of Mr. Baldwin's letter, and of my answer, in reply to which I received his formal resignation. I gave him full power to publish not only these documents, but the whole of any correspondence he has ever had with me, of which permission he has not thought proper to avail himself, and I do not therefore trouble you with anything beyond these two letters. " Parliament accordingly assembled on the fol- lowing day with ISIr. Baldwin no longer a Member of my Council, and the correctness of the view which I had taken of the real state of parties and of the course which would be followed by them, has been most amply and satisfactorily confirmed. " No Union whatever has taken place between the parties designated as the ' Reformers ' of Upper and Lower Canada. The whole Body of Upper Canada Members with the exception of two or three extremes on either side, have given me their best and most active support. JNIr. Baldwin has only been able to carry with him into opposition three or four from the whole of that part of the Province, and obtains the support of the Canadian Party from the Lower Province only. This, too, he 807 LORD SYDENHAM has been enabled to acquire (as a whole) only by making or supporting motions entirely, in their sense, against the Union Act, and as the question is now disposed of, by the debate on the address, that portion of this party which I have described as not desirous to perpetuate agitation will un- doubtedly separate and lend their assistance to the Administration. As it is, even with the whole of the party united, the divisions in the debate on the Address have been two to one, or even in a still greater proportion. " I therefore now entertain no doubt that the problem which I have felt, in common with your Lordship, so anxious to work out, will be practic- ally solved. The Assembly acting in perfect har- mony with the Executive, will, I confidently ex- pect, occupy itself seriously and steadily upon the measures which will be submitted to it by me, or be devised by the Members themselves, and the Session will proceed usefully, peacefully, and in a manner to inspire confidence in England, and afford just grounds to the Imperial Parliament for rendering that assistance to the Province which Her Majesty's Government has pledged itself to propose, and for which the people of Canada feel deeply grateful. " There may be some feeling displayed respect- ing the Civil I^ist as settled in England, but I do not anticipate any serious difficulty on that score." 308 RESPONSIBLE OPPOSITION Incidental to this experimental stage of the session was the question as to how far the governor proposed to go in rendering the government re- sponsible to the majority of the legislature, as tested by the resignation of the ministry should it suffer defeat on a government measure, or on a direct vote of want of confidence. Lord Syden- ham very fully realized that this question could not be safely settled in the first stages of the session — perhaps not in the first parhament. He had to deal with a body of men who had no experience of responsible government in practical operation. In Britain, or in later days in Canada, the opposition would not wantonly defeat a govern- ment where it had no possible chance of taking office and maintaining itself in power, for the indis- pensable correlative of a responsible government is a responsible opposition. Moreover, by well established custom, the outcome of long practical experience, a government does not accept defeat on all adverse votes. There was not as yet, how- ever, any accepted custom in Canada, nor any op- position which seriously sought to come into power. Mr. Neilson led the only coherent opposition, the object of which, so far from being to come into power, was to destroy the constitution altogether and thus break up the union. By a combination of forces, much more antagonistic to each other on constitutional matters than to the government in power, it might have been possible, as was actually 309 LORD SYDENHAM the case on a few minor issues, to secure a major- ity against the government. For the government to have resigned on such an adverse vote would have been to insure not the working of responsible government but its complete frustration in its initial stages. Until, therefore, Lord Sydenham had fully tested the strength of the government major- ity and its cohesion under a variety of attacks, cunningly devised for purely destructive purposes, he was not prepared to state categorically whether the government must resign or not in conse- quence of an adverse vote. At the same time he freely admitted that the executive must govern in accordance with the well-recognized -wishes of the majority. At a later stage of the session, when the House had gained some experience of the new parliamentary methods and when Lord Sydenham had realized that the government majority was sufficiently stable, he frankly admitted, subject only to imperial connection, the principle of domestic responsibihty as expressed in the follow- ing resolutions moved by Mr. Harrison, leader of the government in the House of Assembly. "1. That the head of the Executive Govern- ment of the Province being, within the limits of his Government, the representative of the Sove- reign, is responsible to the Imperial authority alone; but that nevertheless the management of our local affairs can only be conducted by him, 310 A SATISFACTORY DECLARATION by and with the assistance, counsel, and informa- tion of subordinate officers in the Province. " 2. That in order to preserve between the dif- ferent branches of the Provincial Parliament that harmony which is essential to the peace, welfare, and good government of the Province, the chief advisers of the representative of the Sovereign, constituting a provincial Administration under him, ought to be men possessed of the confidence of the representatives of the people ; thus affording a guarantee that the well-understood wishes and interests of the people, which our gracious Sove- reign has declared shall be the rule of the Pro- vincial Government, will on all occasions be faithfully represented and advocated. "3. That the people of this Province have, moreover, a right to expect from such Provincial Administration the exertion of their best endeavour that the Imperial authority, within its constitu- tional limits, shall be exercised in the manner most consistent with their well-understood wishes and interests." This declaration of policy was naturally regarded as quite satisfactory and as establishing at once, rule by majority, responsible government, and the necessity for harmony between the British and Canadian governments, not by the Canadian government accepting subordination to British poHcy as a matter of necessity, but as a matter of mutual arrangement and compromise. Know- 311 LORD SYDENHAM ing only the outward stages by which this declara- tion of policy had been reached, it was perhaps not unnatural for a number at that time, or even since, to have held that Lord Sydenham did not really subscribe to these principles, but simply accepted what was forced upon him by others. Now, however, that we have access to his confi- dential despatches, several of which have been freely quoted in this volume, it is plain that these resolutions embodied not only the principles, but even the language which Lord Sydenham had steadily set forth from the time that he had care- fully appreciated the political situation in Canada. Lord Sydenham's successor, Sir Charles Bagot, fully comprehended Lord Sydenham's views and statements on this subject, having the advantage of Lord Sydenham's secretary, Mr. Murdoch, as the interpreter of his policy. Lord Metcalfe, how- ever, who succeeded Sir Charles Bagot, recurring to the rigid logic of British supremacy while acknowledging that Lord Sydenham's administra- tion so obviously involved responsible government that he could not believe Lord Sydenham unaware of the fact, yet considered him in reality opposed to it. Lord Metcalfe thus expressed his view of Lord Sydenham's policy in a despatch to Lord Stanley: — "In adopting the very form and practice of the Home Government, by which the principal Minis- ters of the Crown form a Cabinet, acknowledged 312 LORD METCALFE'S ASSUMPTION by the nation as the executive administration, and themselves acknowledging responsibility to Parliament, he rendered it inevitable that the Council here should obtain and ascribe to them- selves, in at least some degree, the character of a Cabinet of JMinisters. If Lord Sydenham did not intend this, he was more mistaken than from his known ability one would suppose to be pos- sible; and if he did intend it, he, with his eyes open, carried into practice that very theory of Responsible Colonial Government which he had pronounced his opinion decidedly against." That Lord Sydenham pronounced his opinion decidedly against such responsible government is nowhere proved from his own statements. What Lord Metcalfe assumed was that such responsible government could not co-exist with British con- nection and the responsibility of the Canadian governor to the home government; but this is exactly what Lord Sydenham claimed could be maintained in practice and what he himself con- sidered his chief service to have both introduced and maintained. It was this same principle which Lord Elgin was to re-estabUsh, after Lord Met- calfe's somewhat reactionary but very instructive policy, though with a division, by that time made possible, of the chief functions of the governor and the prime minister. It is this same principle which, gradually expanding with the enlarging interests of the country, has been maintained from 813 LORD SYDENHAM that day to this; though there have not been wanting various reactionary movements discover- ing anew Lord Metcalfe's conviction that such an imperial connection is unworkable, and that we must, like him, revert to some form of the system discarded by Lord Sydenham. 314 CHAPTER XX LEADING GOVERNMENT MEASURES WE may now glance at some of the leading measures of a very crowded and important session, and ov^er the head of which Lord Syden- ham introduced and rendered more or less familiar the system of a responsible and coherent cabinet. In his Speech from the Throne Lord Sydenham naturally dealt with the most difficult question facing the government, the financial condition of the country. In several despatches he had already referred to the deplorable financial condition in which Canada found itself, owing partly to bad management and partly to political difficulties, which, on the one hand, were emphasized by a commercial crisis which was continental in its range, and which in turn was rendered still more severe by the political condition of the country. The result was that after spending large sums, relatively to the resources of the country, on pub- lic works, chiefly canals, they had been suspended in an unfinished condition owing* to the collapse of provincial credit. Through the employment which they gave in summer to newly-arrived settlers, the public works had been an indispensable means of tiding needy immigrants over the first year or two in 315 LORD SYDENHAM Canada. During the winters they were able to build their houses and make sufficient clearing on their bush farms to furnish them with food until further improvements brought them larger returns. The closing of the public works, therefore, inv^olving the loss of markets for both produce and labour, checked immigration, while political and economic despair encouraged emigration to the middle western states, then opening to settle- ment and promising prosperity and political free- dom. To rehabilitate the colonial finances was obviously as immediately essential to returning confidence in the country's future as the establish- ment of political freedom and self-government. Financial difficulties as between the two provin- ces constituted one of the natural results of the division of Canada in 1791. In Lower Canada was situated the most favoured portion of the St. I^awrence route, the national highway of both pro- vinces. Holding the gateway for practically all of the imports and exports of both provinces. Lower Canadian officials sat at the receipt of customs, and her great merchants commanded large profits on both the outward and inward trade of the country. The French-Canadians had long been accustomed, by natural thrift and a prohibitive trade policy, to live upon their local resources, and had little or no experience of civil taxation. As a province. Lower Canada had ample revenues and moderate expendi- tures. In Upper Canada, however, the national 316 FINANCIAL CONDITIONS highway was beset by colossal obstructions, to be surmounted only by expensive public works. There also, in proportion to tlie population, was the ter- minus of the greater part of the imports and the origin of a large share of the export trade which supported the revenue and mercantile profits of Lower Canada; hence the perennial controversy between the two provinces as to the division of the customs revenue. Meanwhile, Upper Canada found itself burdened with large expenditures and enjoy- ing a small revenue. To remedy the unequal dis- tribution of expenditure and revenue, as between the two provinces, was one of the purposes of the union measure; while to frustrate its accomplish- ment, under the representation of preventing the burden of Upper Canada from falling upon Lower Canada, was one of the chief incentives against the union in the latter province. In a despatch to the colonial secretary, dated March 11th, 1840, Lord Sydenham had sum- marized the financial conditions of the two pro- vinces. Their outstanding obligations were classified under the following heads: — (1) for expenditures of a general nature, (2) for public works, (3) for advances to private corporations, (4) for public works where the interest is a charge upon local taxation. In Lower Canada the only debt came under the second head, advances having been made to the extent of £.50,000, and authorized to the extent of £45,000 more. In Upper Canada the 317 LORD SYDENHAM debt under the first head was about £62,000, being chiefly for war losses in 1812. The amount advanc- ed in Upper Canada under the second head was £704,000, with a further sum of £200,000 for interest on previous loans. The public works re- ferred to under this head were chiefly the AVelland and St. Lawrence Canals, which accounted for £817,000. The Rideau Canal had been built and paid for by the British government as a military work. The amount under the third head, chiefly expended on minor public works, with the interest due, was about £36,000, for which securities were held against the companies. The advances under the fourth head were chiefly for central macadam- ized roads, and amounted to £210,000. The local districts, in accordance with an Act of the legisla- ture, were liable for the interest on this sum. In a later despatch of June 27th, 1840, it was shown that the credit of Upper Canada was so low that it could not borrow £63,000 at less than eight or nine per cent., and could not sell five per cent, debentures for more than seventy-five or eighty. With its present revenue the annual deficit of the province was estimated at £28,735. Even the re- venue of the united province would barely meet the expenditure. " Your Lordship will thus at once perceive that assistance will be required from the mother country to place the finances of the United Province in a satisfactory condition; and that the aid which I was authorized to promise in order to 318 A GUARANTEED LOAN obtain the assent of the Upper Canada I^egislature to the measure, if necessary, must hereafter be afforded." He was pleased that it had not been necessary to make use of the promised assistance in order to carry the union measure, though the people of Upper Canada looked to the union and the assistance of the home government to enable them to restore their financial equilibrium. He con- sidered that the assistance of the imperial govern- ment would be absolutely necessary when he came to place the finances of the united province on a sound basis, and he knew of no better way in which that assistance could be afforded than by means of the original proposition to guarantee a Canadian loan. This would relieve the province of a high rate of interest on the existing debt and facilitate the raising of sufficient capital to complete the in- dispensable public works. After further correspondence on the subject, just before the opening of the session, Lord John Rus- sell sent a despatch to Lord Sydenham outlining the policy of the home government in relation to Canada, and part of this was made the basis of Lord Sydenham's Speech from the Throne in opening the legislature. In this despatch the debt of the united province was placed at £1,226,000. With the sum needed to complete the public works for establishing a free communication be- tween the provinces, the total amount required would be £1,500,000. The home government, he 319 LORD SYDENHAM says, agree with Lord Sydenham as to the expedi- ency of employing the credit of England for the support of the Canadian finances. It would hardly do, however, to force, by Act of Parliament, those already holding Canadian securities to give up their contracts, but the home government agrees to guarantee a loan for the completion of the public works as proposed, and also for the payment of such part of the debt as is now due, or as the creditors may be induced to accept. In accordance with this arrangement Lord Sydenham was en- abled to promise, in his speech at the opening of the legislature, that Her Majesty's government "will propose to Parliament, by affording the guarantee of the Imperial Treasury for a loan to the extent of no less than a million and a half sterling, to aid the province, for the double purpose of diminishing the pressure of the interest on the public debt, and of enabling it to proceed with those great public undertakings whose progress during the last few years has been arrested by the financial difficulties." Closely connected with the subject of public works, as we have seen, was that of immigration, in which Lord Sydenham took a deep interest and on which much correspondence had passed between himself and the home government. That he held very sound views on this important subject, the following brief extract from his many papers on emigration will indicate. 320 WISE AND UNWISE EMIGRATION " I have sent home a long Report on Emigra- tion ; which some of you won't hke because it tells the truth, and declares that to throw starving and diseased paupers under the rock at Quebec ought to be punishable as murder. Send me out good English peasants who know what work is; give them the means of getting up the country six or seven hundred miles where it is to be had ; and I will take as many as you can get, and promise them independence. Or give me some yeomen with a few hundred pounds each, and let them take prudent advice — buy cleared farms — not throw themselves into the bush, where they are as helpless as they would be in the Sahara Desert ; and I will secure them comfort and perfect independence at the end of a couple of years — but not money. That is a thing never to be mentioned. Pigs, pork, flour, potatoes, horses to ride, cows to milk; but you must eat all your produce, for devil a purchaser will you find. However, the man's chief wants are supplied, and those of his family; he has no rent or taxes to pay, and he ought to be satisfied. But send me no Irish paupers; nor young gentlemen with £500 or £600, who fancy that upon that they may be idle, and are hardly used because they cannot get an income of £200 or £300 a year in return for it. The Province absolutely teems with people of this character — lawyers, broken down merchants, clerks, soldiers — who have come out here to farm; lost their money through their ignorance of the 321 LORD SYDENHAM business; or have been unable to brook plenty without civilized life's enjoyments — the lot of those who succeed best; and all these are applicants for places, of which there is one perhaps to one hun- dred candidates. So you see competition is nearly as rife here as in the mother country." On this point also Lord John Russell thoroughly agreed with Lord Sydenham. As he admitted, "It is a hardship to Canada that she should be obliged to maintain the pauper emigrants from the United Kingdom who arrive in a state of destitution and disease." Assistance for poor but suitable immi- grants was formerly provided by an immigrant tax, and this. Lord John Russell thought", should be re- established by the Canadian legislature. He would favour a tax of five shillings per head, to be paid by the home government instead of by the ship captains as formerly. But there should be an agent in Britain to certify to the fitness of the emigrants, and only those who held certificates would have their tax paid by the home government. In his Speech from the Throne, therefore, Lord Syden- ham was able to couple with the promised British guarantee for a Canadian loan, the assurance of improved prospects for desirable immigrants, and a promise of a money grant from the British parlia- ment " to assist in facilitating the passage of the immigrant from the port at which he is landed to the place where his' labour may be made avail- able " 322 LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT As has been already indicated, the measure be- fore the legislature to which Lord Sydenham attached the greatest importance was the bill for the establishment of local self-government, and which was substantially the same as the ordinance for that purpose passed by the Special Council of Lower Canada. This measure was opposed by the Conservatives as a dangerous concession to re- publican principles and institutions, while the French-Canadians opposed it as a typical British invasion of their cherished national system, and as a means of causing the people of the parishes to pay for what they were previously accustomed to extract from the central government. Mr. Baldwin and a few of the ultra- Reformers who had allied themselves with the opposition, found it convenient to base their antagonism to the bill on the ground that it did not go far enough and at one stroke pass to the limit of local democracy. It was on this measure, and in the face of such tactics, that Mr. Hincks definitely broke for a time with Mr. Bald- win. Hincks fully recognized that Baldwin's atti- tude, in such a house and at such a stage of development, meant the wrecking of any measure in favour of local self-government, and the inde- finite postponement of that most desirable object. He therefore used his influence with the moder- ate Reformers in favour of the measure, and un- doubtedly was largely instrumental in its being successfully passed. It was this Act which estab- 323 LORD SYDENHAM lished for Canada our general municipal system, and which made it possible for JNIr. Baldwin him- self, eight years later, to develop it a step further by giving more authority to the councils over their executive officers. The chief features of the District Councils Act were, that the province was divided into incor- porated municipal districts whose powers were to be exercised by a warden appointed by the gover- nor and a body of councillors elected by the rate- payers of the townships. The clerk was selected by the council and the treasurer appointed by the governor. The public works provided for by the council were to come under the supervision of a duly qualified surveyor of the district, appointed by the warden and approved by the governor. As at present, limitations were placed upon the finan- cial powers of the council, and the system of assess- ment and taxation was provided for by a provincial Act. The by-laws of the council were subject to disallowance by the governor within thirty days of their submission. As at present also, the charter granted by a special Act to any incorporated city or town was not affected by the general municipal Act. The District Councils took over the powers and functions of the old Courts of Quarter Sessions composed of the officially appointed magistrates for the districts, and which exercised such limited municipal functions as were permitted under the older system. 324 THE DISTRICT COUNCILS ACTS In a despatch of August 28th, Lord Sydenham reported the successful passing of the measure and made the following among other comments. " The Bill as proposed by the Government met with serious opposition during its passage through the House of Assembly. Those who are opposed to any extension of popular power objected to it on that ground, those who are in favour of extreme popular concessions opposed it on account of the checks which it imposed on the abuse of this power, and many others were hostile to it secretly, though not avowedly, on the ground so justly stated by Lord Durham, that it took away from the House of Assembly one of its chief privileges, that of jobbing by its members for personal or local advantage. Nothing indeed but the circumstance of my having already established these institutions in Lower Canada by the authority of the Special Council could have secured the passage of the Bill for the rest of the Province, and it is to that alone that I owe the success of the measure, as well as the still more gratifying fact that it has now become the law of Upper Canada upon exactly the same conditions as in the other Province, and without the alteration of a single provision, so far as they could be made applicable to the more advanced state of society here." In this same despatch he reports but one other of the great measures to which he had devoted special attention as still to be dealt with, — the great public 325 LORD SYDENHAM works for the improvement of the province. His chief care was that, whatever works were under- taken, sufficient provision should be made for de- fraying the cost, so as to preserve the credit of the province. " I have accordingly transmitted to the House of Assembly a message upon the subject, together with the report from the president of the board of works, by which I have placed before Parliament and the country the best infor- mation I possess as to the works which are likely to prove most advantageous and a scheme for de- fraying the cost." In this message and the report accompanying it was presented a comprehensive plan of public works for improving provincial trans- portation, extending from the Bay of Chaleurs to Lake Huron. It provided for the completion of the Welland and St. Lawrence Canals, the deepening of the St. Lawrence below Montreal, the opening of the Richelieu by the Chambly Canal, estabhsh- ing connections between the lakes on the Trent Canal system, erecting a port and lighthouses on Lake Erie, constructing timber slides on the Otta- wa, and the establishment and improvement of central highways from Quebec to Sarnia, as well as in various other directions in both provinces. The total cost was estimated at £1,470,000 sterl- ing. It was not intended, however, to undertake all these improvements at once, though it was desirable to have a comprehensive plan for the future. 326 A PROVINCIAL BANK In dealing with the financial aspect of this pro- gramme he introduced a feature to wliich he at- tached special importance. "A very considerable amount of the capital required might be raised, without any charge whatever for interest, by the assumption by the province of the issue of paper payable on demand, which is now enjoyed by private banks or by individuals, without their being subjected to any charge whatever in return for the power thus granted to them by the state.'' This was the introduction to Lord Sydenham's plan for a reconstruction of the Canadian banking system, and the establishment of a provincial bank of issue. Though it was a measure open to dis- cussion on quite independent grounds, it was in- troduced by him as an integral part of the general plan for rehabiUtating the provincial finances and providing for the much-needed public works. Lord Sydenham's plan for a bank of issue had been worked out in connection with English con- ditions, and was the fruit of his labours on the bank committee in the British House. Its essential features were afterwards embodied in Sir Robert Peel's Bank Act which is still the basis of the Bank of England. The central feature was that the government should resume and retain the exclusive right to issue paper money payable on demand. The advantage to the government would be pre- cisely that now obtained, so far as it goes, by the issue of Dominion notes ; namely, a free loan of the 327 LORD SYDENHAM difference between the amount of notes outstand- ing and the amount of buUion held in reserve for their redemption. This reserve Lord Sydenham placed at twenty-five per cent., so that approxim- ately the advantage to the government would be a free loan of seventy-five per cent, of its note issue, less the cost of management. The government notes were to be issued through the chartered banks, much as at present, in return for bullion or approved securities. An allowance for a limited time was to be made to the existing banks as partial compensation for the loss of their own note issue. The chief difficulty in the way of such a measure at that time was that the banks depended much more than at present upon their note issue as a means of making their loans and discounts. Under present conditions deposits largely offset discounts, while the note issue is much smaller and more uniform in volume. The seasonal fluctuation in discounts — a very important matter in 1841 — greatly affected the expansion and contraction of the note issue. The banks enjoyed the privilege of issuing notes considerably in excess of their paid-up capital; thus, with full control of their own note issue, they were able to expand and contract their loans quite freely. But, if their notes were to be obtained from the government bank only, in return for specie or public securities, the need for a rapid expansion could scarcely be met in a country with 328 A PREMATURE SYSTEM so little reserve capital. Contraction, on the other hand, would leave the banks with a large amount of expensive government notes on hand, or the equivalent in bullion or low interest bearing securi- ties, and with little opportunity for temporary in- vestment such as was readily to be had in England. The same conditions would require the government to keep on hand a much larger amount of bullion than Lord Sydenham had estimated, and would materially curtail the advantage to the government from its note issue. In fact, under the conditions of Canadian trade and banking at that time. Lord Sydenham's measure would have meant a very considerable addition to the expense of Canadian domestic exchange, with the inevitable curtailment of legitimate business, and without corresponding gain to the provincial treasury. That the Canadian banking system was not above reproach was evident from the all but universal suspension of specie pay- ment by the Canadian banks during the financial crisis which preceded Lord Sydenham's arrival. And yet the freedom which the banks enjoyed of expanding and contracting their note issue, to suit the demands of trade, was one of the most important economic factors in the Canadian machinery of exchange, and consequently very essential to Canadian prosperity and expansion. Thus, though absolutely sound in theory. Lord Sydenham's scheme was scarcely suited to Cana- dian conditions in 1841. 829 LORD SYDENHAM The general principles embodied in Lord Syden- ham's plan were accepted by Mr. Hincks, Mr. W. H. Merritt, and other Liberals, but failed to com- mand a majority in the House, owing to the con- junction of the usual opposition with a number of representatives connected with the mercantile and banking interests who found their privileges threat- ened. Some thirty years later, it fell to the lot of Mr. Hincks, then Sir Francis Hincks, to in- corporate the central feature of Lord Sydenham's bank of issue into our financial system, in the shape of the government issue of Dominion notes accom- panied by a partial restriction of bank note issue. It is not possible even to enumerate here the unusual number of important measures which were passed during the first session of the legislature, and in so many of which Lord Sydenham took a very special interest. SdO CHAPTER XXI THE CLOSE OF A SESSION AND A LIFE ONE of the most important functions which Lord Sydenham had to perform, partly in consequence of the union of the provinces and part- ly in consequence of the new system of responsible government which was being introduced, was the reorganization of the government departments. On July 18th he reported to Lord John Russell the reorganization which he had effected, making as few changes as possible consistently with the secur- ing of efficient service, and the requirement that the heads of executive departments should have seats in the legislature. Thus, as already stated, he had appointed Messrs. S. B. Harrison and D. Daly as joint secretaries for the province, the former for the west and the latter for the east. " To these gentlemen will be entrusted the con- duct of the whole internal management of the Pro- vince, which at one time belonged to the Provincial Secretaries of Upper and Lower Canada respec- tively, but which for many years past had been absorbed by the personal, or as he M^as termed the * Civil ' Secretary of the Lieutenant-Governors. It is evident that the officer who is, and always must be, the confidential servant of the Governor, and whose tenure of office should therefore terminate 331 LORD SYDENHAM with the Governor's, can never on his first arrival, and scarcely indeed at any time, possess that intim- ate local knowledge which is necessary to carry on a correspondence of this nature. This difficulty will be met by appointing two gentlemen, residents in the Province, and the tenures of whose offices will not end with the Governor but be on the same footing as any other officer in the Province. " To the Personal Secretary of the Governor, whom I should propose to call the Private Secre- tary, will be entrusted the duty of assisting the Governor in the conduct of the correspondence with the Secretary of State, the Lieutenant-Gover- nors, the British Minister at Washington and all Foreign Authorities or Individuals, as well as such general questions as pertain to both Provinces. This officer, as I have stated, being the confiden- tial Servant of the Governor, must change with him." Mr. R. G. Tucker was appointed provincial registrar, to attend to '* matters of registry, affixing the great seal, and recording instruments." Mr. J. H. Dunn was retained as receiver-general, but his functions and responsibilities were to be curtailed and an improved system of inspection and audit of public moneys introduced. *' I have not yet been able to select a gentleman to fill permanently the important office of In- spector-General of Public Accounts. It will be necessary that that officer should be a member 332 THE FIRST MINISTER OF FINANCE of the House of Assembly, and that he should be a man not only well acquainted with accounts and competent to superintend the routine business of his office, but also capable of proposing the prin- cipal financial arrangements from time to time necessary, and of explaining and vindicating those arrangements in the House of Assembly." To this position, now known as minister of finance, it was generally understood Lord Sydenham had intended to appoint Mr. Hincks, of whose financial ability he had formed a very high opinion, and justly so, as his subsequent career was to demonstrate. Mr. Hincks was already making a well-deserved re- putation as chairman of the select committee on currency and banking. Lord Sydenham's reputed intention was carried out shortly afterwards by his successor. Sir Charles Bagot. When this change should be accomplished, Mr. Carey, who was then inspector-general, would become the deputy of the department. The position of commissioner of Crown lands was filled by Mr. Davidson, who had held a similar position in Lower Canada. For the position of surveyor-general, Lord Sydenham had selected Mr. Parke, member of the assembly for the county of Middlesex and a strong Reformer. The Board of Works which had been estabUshed in Lower Canada by an ordinance of the Special Council, was extended to the whole province by one of Lord Sydenham's special measures, and Mr. Killaly was continued as president. 888 LORD SYDENHAM " In the Executive Council I have made con- siderable changes. Your Lordship is aw^are that a very large portion of the business of that body has consisted in advising the Governor on apphcations or claims for land and cases of that description, or in reporting on the accounts of several public offices or Departments. I have for these services constituted a committee to be presided over by a President, to whom a salary of £1000 a year should be assigned, and I have conferred that appointment on the Hon. R. B. Sullivan, who was for several years presiding councillor of the Executive Council of Upper Canada. Mr. SulUvan, having also for some time held the office of Commissioner of Crown Lands in that Province, is peculiarly fitted for this situation. " I have appointed to the Executive Council no one but the principal officers of the Government, who are responsible both to the Governor and the public for their Acts, and to them I continue the small salary of £100 a year which they have re- ceived since the first institution of that body in Canada." Colonel Fitzgibbon was appointed clerk of the legislative council, and Mr. W. B. Lindsay to the same position in the assembly, with Mr. F. S. Jarvis as usher of the black rod, and Mr. G. C. Chisholm as sergeant-at-arms. " By these arrangements the business of the Province will, I feel satisfied, be efficiently as well 334 A RESPONSIBLE CABINET as economically performed, and above all, that re- sponsibility, of the want of which I took occasion early to state the evil consequences, will be estab- lished in the different departments. " For the satisfactory conduct of public affairs, it has appeared to me absolutely necessary, that, on the one hand, the Governor should be able to rely upon the zeal and attention of the Heads of De- partments, not merely to act under his immediate directions upon every minute point, but also to feel themselves really responsible for the conduct of their different offices — and on the other, that by their being members of one or other House of Parlia- ment, the public should possess a wholesome con- trol over their acts, and a security should be obtained for the general administration of affairs being in accordance with the wishes of the Legisla- ture. " At present all the Heads of Departments are members of the Assembly with the exception of the President of the Committee of Council, who is in the Legislative Council. " The four law-officers, the two Secretaries, the Receiver-General, the President of the Board of Works, and the Inspector-General, whom I pro- pose shortly to appoint, will also be of that body. In future I should not consider it absolutely neces- sary that all these offices should be thus held, but at the same time it will in my opinion be desirable that a considerable proportion should be thus filled, 885 LORD SYDENHAM and if the gentlemen who may hold them cannot obtain seats there, they must give place to those who can." Though Lord Sydenham was continually occu- pied with the internal problems of Canada and the other British North American colonies, yet he had frequently to deal with many scarcely less im- portant matters affecting the relations of Canada with the United States and the mother country. He conducted an extensive correspondence with reference to the disputed territory on the Maine boundary. This problem had reached a very critical stage owing to the extension of settlement into the region in dispute, and Lord Sydenham had occasion for all his decision of character and diplomatic tact in bringing this thorny question to a stage which made possible the settlement arrived at by Lord Ashburton the following year. He had also to take part in the negotiations for an extradition treaty with the United States, the draft of which was prepared while he was in office. This, too, was incorporated in the Ashburton Treaty. Trade relations between the colonies and the mother country also occupied his attention, and here his experience as president of the Board of Trade was of great value. As might be inferred from his policy in that office, his influence was used in favour of giving to the Canadian parlia- ment a freer hand and more initiative in dealing with Canadian commercial interests, subject only 336 EXHAUSTED STRENGTH to the maintenance of a policy in harmony with that of the mother country. This latter was amply provided for, as he maintained, by the imperial right to disallow objectionable colonial measures. When we remember that Lord Sydenham's con- stitution was far from robust and that he was subject to periodic attacks of gout, we can under- stand how severely he had been taxing his strength by his constant application to the exceptionally important duties of his office at this critical stage in Canadian history. The rapidity with which he passed from one great problem to another left him no time in which to recuperate his strength. As a natural consequence, just before the opening of the first session of the united legislature, he was pros- trated by an unusually severe attack which for a time threatened his life and compelled him to post- pone for a week or two the opening of the session. Writing on May 25th, he says: "At last I can write to you with my own hand I was ill in bed, and utterly unable either to write or dictate. Not gout merely, but fever, and horrible prostration both of mind and body. In fact I have been done by the work and the chmate united, and God knows whether I shall see the other side of the Atlantic again I " Though he recovered sufficiently to permit him to take up with irrepressible deter- mination and activity the problems in which he was so completely absorbed, yet it was plain that he would not be able to stand the strain much 337 LORD SYDENHAM longer. On learning of his severe illness Lord John Russell, writing on July 6th, expressed great con- cern and gave him authority to return to Britain, as soon as the exigencies of the public service would permit, on leave of absence for six months. Before this reached him, however. Lord Sydenham found it necessary, on July 21st, to send in his formal resignation, to take effect as soon as the session was over. In a private letter to I^ord John Russell he says : "I shall of course stay here till every- thing to be done this session is well through and I have been enabled after its close to do what is required in setting any new laws or institutions in operation. Nothing, therefore, can now prevent or mar the most complete success, and Canada must henceforward go on well, unless it is most terribly mismanaged." As the session wore on and he saw his great plans for bringing order out of chaos in Canada coming to a triumphant realization, his spirits rose in spite of his physical ailments. In his private letters to intimate friends he exhibits almost a boyish jubilation of spirit over his great success, where almost everyone familiar with the deep- rooted and far-reaching difficulties which at first confronted him were inclined to despair of a per- manent solution. On August 28th, writing to his brother, he says: "My success has been triumphant, more so than I ever expected or had ventured to hope. 1 shall leave, I trust, a field which my 338 HIS WORK FINISHED successor, whoever he be, cannot mismanage. With a most difficult opening, almost a minority, with passions at boiling heat, and prejudices such as I never saw, to contend with, I have brought the Assembly by degrees into perfect order, ready to follow wherever I may lead; have carried all my measures, avoided or beaten off all disputed topics, and have got a ministry with an avowed and recog- nized majority, capable of doing what they think right, and not to be upset by my successor." Refer- ring to the work of the session he continues : " I have now accomplished all I set much value on; for whether the rest be done now or some sessions hence, matters little. The five great works I aimed at have been got through : the estabHshment of a board of works with ample powers ; the admission of aliens ; a new system of county courts ; the regu- lation of the public lands ceded by the Crown under the Union Act; and lastly, this District Council Bill." Then, as he felt the pressure of his strenuous existence for the past two years relax- ing, he realized something of the joy of successful struggle. " The worst of it is that I am afraid I shall never be good for quiet purposes hereafter; for I actually breathe, eat, drink, and sleep on nothing but government and politics, and my day is a lost one when I do not find that I have advanced some of these objects materially. That, in fact, is the secret of my success. The people know that I am ready at all hours and times to do busi- 339 LORD SYDENHAM ness, and that what I have once undertaken I will carry through ; so they follow my star." On August 18th Lord John Russell replied to his letter containing his resignation. The letter closes thus: "I avail myself of the opportunity of this day's mail to inform your Lordship that the Queen has been pleased to accept your resignation. Her Majesty has further commanded me to express to your Lordship her intention to confer on you the Order of the Grand Cross of the Bath, as a proof of Her Majesty's gracious appreciation of your services." By the end of August he felt that his la- bours were nearly over. In a private letter to Lord John Russell, on the 28th of that month, the day on which Lord John and the Mel- bourne ministry went out of office, he closes as follows: "The parhament will, I hope, be in a state to prorogue in a fortnight or three weeks at farthest, and then it will take me nearly as much longer to wind up, as I am determined to leave nothing unsettled which I can do. But at the end of that time, the middle of October, I trust that I shall hear the guns pealing from the rock of Quebec; and a most deUghtful sound it will be to me." But that sound he was destined never to hear and a longer and deeper rest awaited him than that beyond the sea. A few days after writing this letter, on September 4th, he was thrown from his horse, which stumbled while 340 LAST LETTERS ascending a slight hill near his residence. His right leg was broken and badly lacerated. For a time it was thought that he might recover, but his constitution was too much impaired to withstand the strain. He still insisted, however, on devoting personal attention to the arrange- ments for the closing of the session and the sub- sequent continuation of the executive work of the government. On September 11th he sent his last official and private letters to Lord John Russell. They were in acknowledgment of the letters accepting his resignation and announcing the additional honour conferred upon him. In the official despatch he says : " I have to request your Lordship to lay at the foot of the throne, the expression of my feelings of deep gratitude to the Queen for the signification of Her Majesty's approval of my humble services, and my thanks for the dis- tinguished mark of favour which it is Her Ma- jesty's intention to confer upon me." In the pri- vate letter he writes: "I am much obliged to you for the red riband, and a great deal more for the kind manner in which you recommended it." The official despatch continues: "The business before the parliament is almost entirely completed, and I expect to prorogue both Houses on Wed- nesday next, the 15th instant, thus bringing to a close a session which, for the importance of the measures adopted as well as its general effigct, 341 LORD SYDENHAM affords me matter for the greatest satisfaction." He then refers to his accident, but still with the hope of returning to Britain that autumn. A few days later he developed alarming symptons and it was deemed expedient to arrange for the closing of the session by a deputy. General Clitherow, the senior military officer in Kingston, was chosen to officiate at the closing duties of the session, which took place on the eighteenth. Inflammation, aggravated by gout and ending ultimately in lockjaw, afflicted the dying governor with increasing spasms of torture. Yet in the intervals of his suffisrings he continued, with char- acteristic fortitude, to devote himself to his duties, public and private. Within forty-eight hours of his death he completed the speech with which he had expected to close the legislature. In this last message to the Canadian people, through their representatives, made public after his death, he expressed the spirit which had animated the whole course of his administration. He closed thus : — " While I cannot look back on the two last years without feelings of the deepest emotion, my anticipations for the future are full of hope and confidence. In the manner in which the present session has been conducted, and in the results which it has produced, I feel the fullest assurance that the anxiety of the Queen and the Imperial ParUament for the welfare of Canada will not be disappointed, — that the constitution which they 842 A PARTING COUNSEL FOR CANADA have bestowed upon this country will be productive of peace, of happiness, and prosperity. To me it must ever be a source of the highest gratification that in the accomplishment of these great meas- ures I have been permitted to bear a part. It now remains for you to carry out in your homes the good work you have so well begun ; to obliterate past dissensions; to co-operate in giving effect to the new institutions ; and to inculcate that spirit of enterprise and contentment which is essential to the well-being of a community. "May Almighty God prosper your labours, and pour down upon this province all those blessings which in my heart I am desirous that it should enjoy." Referring in his last moments to his friend and fellow-minister, Lord John Russell, who, as colonial secretary, had given him such whole-hearted en- couragement and support, he said, "He was the noblest man it was ever my good fortune to know." On Saturday evening he enquired if the legisla- ture were prorogued, and on learning that it was, he said, "Then all is right." As the peaceful Sunday morning of September 19th broke into the sufferer's room he was released from his agony. His death sealed the first session of the parliament of United Canada, and occurred exactly one year and eleven months from the day on which at Quebec he first set foot on Canadian soil. When Lord Sydenham found that his life's work 848 LORD SYDENHAM must close in Canada, he desired that here, too, his body should remain. It was accordingly arranged that he should be buried in a vault beneath the central aisle of St. George's Cathedral, Kingston. There, on September 4th, with the military accom- paniments of a garrison city, and all the funeral pomp pertaining to his rank and official position, the body of Lord Sydenham was laid to rest. Among the clergymen who took the chief part in the services were the Venerable Archdeacon. Stuart, brother of the chief-justice on whom Lord Syd- enham so often relied, and the Rev. Richard Cartwright, then assistant minister of St. George's. Reflecting on the brief but crowded career of the governor and the sad circumstances of his death, many of those who were present on the occasion were deeply affected by the stately yet pathetic ceremony, which, as was said at the time, left " an impression which, even in future years, will never be forgotten." Even nature furnished an appropriate setting ; for it was one of those mystically beautiful Canadian autumn days, when the soft haze and subdued sunlight, shorn of its heating rays, infuse receptive minds with a subtle and prophetic melan- choly, which is apt to reveal for a moment the present and future in the face of the great historic scroll of time, whereon appear only the things that matter, while the pettiness of life, its personal bitterness and the eager grasp of selfishness, vanish, self-devoured. 344 CHAPTER XXII SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION THE close of the first session of the united legislature, which coincided with Lord Syd- enham's death, permitted the people of Canada for the first time since his arrival, indeed, for the first time since the political crisis which here and there had flamed into actual rebellion, to take stock of their situation, to realize what they had escaped, and to appreciate in some measure the new future which was opening out before them. In the verit- able revolution which had been accomplished, Lord Durham and Lord Sydenham were naturally the chief figures. The Report of Lord Durham had furnished an analysis of the accumulated evils which beset the country. The clear and rapid insight of Lord Sydenham not only realized the truth of the analysis but completed it in many essential details, while his experienced statesmanship grappled with the task of effecting the actual revolution in colonial policy and constitutional practice, which was indispensable to the political and economic salvation of the country. The result of the reflection which followed Lord Sydenham's death was greatly to enhance his reputation. The great services which he had ren- dered the country were frankly acknowledged in 345 LORD SYDENHAM many quarters where, during at least the first half of his administration, he had met with bitter opposition or carping criticism. Of the scores of tributes paid to his personal qualities and political achievements, we may make selection from those of two representative Canadians, who, while deeply interested in the welfare of the country and closely in touch with all that transpired, were not person- ally immersed in the practical politics of the pro- vince. The first is taken from a letter of Dr. Eger- ton Ryerson, printed in the Christian Guardian : — ** It is not easy to determine which is the most worthy of admiration, the comprehensiveness and grandeur of Lord Sydenham's plans," the skill with which he overcame the obstacles that opposed their accomplishment, or the quenchless ardour and ceaseless industry with which he pursued them. To lay the foundations of public liberty, and, at the same time, to strengthen the prerogative — to pro- mote vast public improvements, and not increase the public burdens — to provide a comprehensive system of education upon Christian principles, without interference with religious scruples — to promote the influence and security of the govern- ment by teaching the people to govern themselves — to destroy party faction by promoting the general good— to invest a bankrupt country with both credit and resources, are conceptions and achievements which render Lord Sydenham the first benefactor of Canada, and place him in the 346 CANADIAN TRIBUTES first rank of statesmen. His Lordship found a country divided, he left it united ; he found it pros- trate and paralytic, he left it erect and vigorous ; he found it mantled with despair, he left it bloom- ing with hope. Lord Sydenham has done more in two years to strengthen and consohdate British power in Canada by his matchless industry and truly liberal conservative policy, than had been done during the ten previous years by the increase of a standing army and the erection of military fortifications. His Lordship has solved the difficult problem, that a people may be colonists and yet be free ; and, in the solution of that problem, he has gained a triumph less imposing but not less sub- lime, and scarcely less important, than the victory of Waterloo ; he has saved millions to England, and secured the affections of Canada " To lay the foundation of a government adapted to the social state and character of a population thus depressed, divided, and subdivided ; to provide for it the efficient administration of all its depart- ments ; to create mutual confidence, and induce united action among leading men of all parties, without sacrifice of principle on the part of any, was a task difficult and hazardous to the last degree, and for even attempting which Lord Sydenham has been frequently ridiculed by persons of reputed knowledge and experience." The second extract is from an article by Joseph Howe in his paper the Nova Scotian : — 847 LORD SYDENHAM "In order to understand the value of the ser- vice which Lord Sydenham has rendered to Her Majesty and to British America, it is necessary to recall for a moment the state of things which his Lordship had to encounter. Did he succeed to political inheritance, so wisely husbanded, and so fairly established, that even bad management could scarcely lessen its value or disturb the security of the possession ? Did he take the helm of state when the vessel was tight and sound, with perfect instruments, a fair wind, a clear sky, and a crew well disciplined and well disposed ? Was not the estate wasted by years of bad management, until the tenants were at war with the landlord or with each other, and even the title of the property was dragged into angry controversy ? Was not the ship tempest tossed, shattered, and almost unseaworthy with ignorant vacillation or eccentric severity on deck and mutiny below, without an instrument that could be relied upon, or a blue spot in the heavens to admit of an observation ? The state of Canada when Lord Sydenham assumed the govern- ment might well have appalled any man not desirous to wreck his reputation. A long course of maladministration, or, rather, of administration often well meant but based upon no principle which the people could understand or respect, had prepared the way for open insurrection, and aroused foreign interference in both provinces, to be followed by the suspension of the constitution and the establish- 348 REALIZED DURHAM'S IDEAS ment of despotism in one, and in the other by a state of things which, perhaps, was a great deal worse ; the forms of civil government being re- tained, but affording rather shelter from which a fragment of the population might insult and annoy the remainder than any real protection to the people. Lord Durham's mission, although of im- mense value, because it laid bare the real causes which convulsed Canada and shadowed forth the remedies, had been so brief, so disastrous, so un- productive of practical results within the country itself, that, however invaluable that volume in which the experience and principle of his Lordship and his able coadjutors was embodied might have been — and no man estimates the Report more highly than we do — still, until reduced to practice, it was but a book, a theory, the value of which the enemies of colonial freedom might altogether deny, and which its fondest admirers might well be ex- cused for doubting until experience had demon- strated the applicability of the new principles to the exigencies of colonial society. The task of consummating the union which Lord Durham had pronounced to be indispensable, of grappling with those evils which he had fully exposed, and of applying the principles of representative govern- ment indicated in his Report, devolved upon Lord Sydenham ; and it is rare that a statesman so firm, so sagacious and indefatigable follows in the wake of a projector so bold." 849 LORD SYDENHAM Some of the most important of Lord Sydenham's despatches, so far as published by the British govern- ment, did not appear in Canada until after his death. From these it was frequently learned for the first time what a broad and statesmanhke view he con- stantly took of Canadian affairs, and how on several occasions he remonstrated against amendments and interferences on the part of the British parliament, especially in matters which affected the French- Canadians, but for the practical consequences of which their leaders constantly held him responsible. It is true that in practically all matters of an ad- ministrative character, where the decision lay with the colonial office, Lord John Russell manifested the most complete confidence in Lord Sydenham's judgment, gave him a singularly free hand, and un- compromisingly defended his policy in parliament. Yet there were measures such as the Clergy Re- serves Act and the Union Act itself, which were required to run the whole gauntlet of parliament, including the House of Lords. With the narrow and precarious majority which the government com- manded, it was sometimes impossible to prevent the introduction of certain features and the omis- sion of others which were contrary to the recom- mendations of Lord Sydenham, and which aggra- vated the difficulties of his administration in Can- ada. That these variations were not more numerous or more troublesome, was undoubtedly due to the wisdom and moderation of Sir Robert Peel, leader 350 STATESMANLIKE DESPATCHES of the Opposition in the Commons. Within a couple of years the comphment was returned by Lord John Russell when, as leader of the Opposition, he sheltered from criticism Sydenham's successor, Sir Charles Bagot, in continuing to follow out a Canadian line of policy. The impression produced by some of Lord Syden- ham's despatches which were made public after his death, may be gathered from the following extracts from an editorial in the Kingston Chronicle and Gazette, a paper representative of the old Tory ideals and opposed at the outset to the governor's programme of reform : — '* If any testimony were wanting to prove Lord Sydenham's great talents for governing, or to stamp the seal of certainty upon the consummate ability which he exhibited in declaring and defending his policy, it is amply afforded by the despatch to Lord John Russell which we publish in this day's Chronicle, It is, beyond comparison, the most able despatch which has ever yet emanated from a Canadian governor. Those even who do not approve of the new system of municipal government, or others who approve with timid fears and uncertain faith, cannot fail to be strongly impressed with the fearless sincerity with which Lord Sydenham presses forward in his great work, turning neither to the right hand nor to the left ; and no one can read the paragraph beginning with — ' Owing to this, duties the most unfit' etc. — without admitting the comprehensive 851 LORD SYDENHAM grasp of observation which, like the glance of the eagle, surveys the whole field, yet detects the minutest object of interest." The despatch here re- ferred to was that in which Lord Sydenham remon- strated at the changes which had been made in the Union Act during its passage through the British parliament, and which Lord John Russell in reply declared his inability to prevent. Lord Sydenham's remarkable success in Canada was undoubtedly due to the singular fitness of his personal qualities, training and experience for the exceptional task which was required of him at so critical a stage in Canadian history. He came to Canada with a wide knowledge of men and affairs. While no visionary, he was a courageous reformer, a sane and practical radical. His courage, his sanity, and his progressiveness are abundantly evidenced by the fact that, while many of the reforms which he advocated in Britain were regarded as ruinous or absurd, all were accomplished within the next thirty years. So also the radical changes which he introduced into Canadian constitutional practice and administrative government, and for which he was so bitterly denounced by his ablest Canadian critics, are now regarded as the very palladium of our liberties and the inspiration of our national life. He was well aware, on his departure from Britain, that he had no light task before him in Canada; yet it was only in the course of his first successful efforts to grapple with the Canadian problems that 352 CONDITIONS OF SUCCESS he realized how much greater the difficulties were than he had imagined. However, he had come to Canada expecting to find here or nowhere an ade- quate field for the realization of his ambitions for further success in the public service. Moreover, his ties with Britain were, for the time, completely broken. His political enemies had taken much pleasure in burning his bridges behind him, and only in Canada could they be rebuilt. A man of less varied resources and self-reliance might have suc- cumbed to the infection of despair which saturated the country. So completely, however, did Lord Sydenham throw himself into the task before him, so sure was he of the potential greatness of the country's future, that no diagnosis of the past or present could damp his ardour or shake his faith in the successful outcome of his efforts. Indeed, the very thoroughness and accuracy of his analysis of the existing condition of the country enabled him to determine with confidence what must be the remedy and how it must be applied. The very diffi- culties which the Canadian problems presented and his successes in meeting them, account for the fasci- nation which Canada had for him and the enthu- siasm with which he devoted his every faculty to her service. Lord Sydenham saw the necessity for inducing the people to forego the bitter antagonisms of the past, for rousing them from the sullen deadlock in which they held each other paralyzed, and in which, 353 LORD SYDENHAM not the spirit of political partyism, but of deadly feud had engendered a malevolent contest on the part of the opposing factions to forego the realiza- tion of their own ideals if only they could prevent their opponents from making progress in theirs. But, to draw the people of Canada out of their narrow antagonisms, they must be made to feel direct responsibility for their own destiny. They must no longer be merely fault-finding spectators of attempts to govern their provinces by a power from without, or an oligarchy from within. They must be invited to attack their own problems, taking only counsel, not commands, from without, thereby learning wisdom and caution from their failures, and acquiring hope and inspiration from their successes. In a word, they must have respon- sible government, but they must realize that it can alone be maintained by a responsible people. To lead the people of Canada out of the wilder- ness, it was essential that Lord Sydenham should gain their confidence. This his experience and com- bination of personal qualities enabled him to secure in a remarkable degree. His assurance and self- confidence awakened interest and inspired hope, while his sound j udgment and the fortunate results which followed the adoption of his counsels, rapid- ly extended his influence and insured successful leadership. It requires only a glance at the men who rallied to his support, as his administration advanced, to realize that his leadership attracted 354 CHARACTERISTICS the strongest men of sound judgment and moder- ate views. While Lord Sydenham had uAhmited self-con- fidence, he was the very reverse of arrogant or dic- tatorial. The inevitable attractiveness of personal intercourse with him, so frequently commented upon by both friends and opponents, was due to his tact- ful and sympathetic treatment of men, and his capacity to appreciate their quahties and enhst their interest. Once he had assured himself of the pre- sence of exceptional natural gifts and their capacity for effective public service, he endeavoured, usually with success, to enlist them in the service of the State, allowing them the freest possible scope, thus insuring at once efficiency and enthusiasm in the public servdce. Notwithstanding the intense prejudices of the leaders of the French-Canadians against the policy of the union, with which Lord Sydenham was so completely identified from the opening of the first session when he first came into contact with the majority of the French members, he steadily grew in favour with them. His complete command of the French language, his personal charm of manner, his knowledge of French characteristics and his sym- pathy with them, made rapid inroads upon their initial prejudices. Thus, when his successor. Sir Charles Bagot, arrived in Canada, he was able to report that not only was the whole country in a condition of unparalleled tranquillity, but that 355 LORD SYDENHAM the opposition of the French- Canadians to the union was melting away, as also their devotion to the anti-union leaders who, in their anxiety to demon- strate their zeal, were "more loyal than the King and more cathohc than the Pope." Shortly after- wards, to the alarm of Lord Stanley the colonial secretary, Governor Bagot reported the advisabiUty of admitting several of the French members to the cabinet, and that without any new appeal to the country. It fell to Lord Sydenham's lot to bring to a close the old regime with its absolute racial antagonism and its party division of loyalists and rebels, and to open a new era of responsible government in which it was possible for both races to take their share in the government, and in which both government and opposition were brought within the pale of loyal Canadian citizenship. In accom- plishing this he was required to be at once the last and most powerful of the autocratic governors, and the first and most influential of the diplomatic representatives under responsible government. 356 INDEX INDEX Althorpb, Viscount, 26, 27, 28, 45, 49 Alwington House, residence of gov- ernor-general at Kingston, 294 Alywin, Hon. T. C, French-Can- adian leader, 297 American Revolution and the Que- bec Act, 65 Arthur, Sir George, 109, 114, 123, 125, 126, 142, 144, 145, 151, 153, 156, 163, 220, 221, 253; report on state of Upper Canada, 110; attitude on Canadian issues, 156- 61 Ashburton Treaty, re Maine boun- dary, and extradition of crimi- nals, 336 Assembly, Legislative, introduced, 68, 72; in Lower Canada, 79, 80; control of taxation, 83; of Upper Canada, re Durham Report, 97- 100; discusses reunion, 113, 114, 203-14; in Upper Canada, 201, 217-19 Auckland, Lord, 26, 43 B Badgeley, William, 112 Bagot, Sir Charles, governor-gen- eral in succession to Sydenham, 111, 152, 288 ; followed Syden- ham's policy, 312, 333, 361, 366 Baldwin, Hon. Robert, 126, 174, 187, 283 ; becomes solicitor-gen- eral, 252 ; preparing for elections, 289, 290; proposes change in gov- ernment, 294, 295, 306, 307 ; and the reform party, 296-9, 307; and municipal government, 296, 323, 324 ; breaks with Hincks, 323 Banking, Sydenham's policy on, in Britain, 38, 327 ; in Canada, 39, 327-30 Bathurst, Earl of, and Clergy Re- serves, 240 Bentham, Jeremy, 13 ; assists Syd- enham in Dover election, 14 Bid well, M. S., 125 Bowring, Dr. J. (Sir John), free trader, 13 ; assists Sydenham in Dover election, 14 Britain, trade policy, 11; constitu- tion of, 73, 83, 104, 165, 217 ; to support Canadian finances, 319, 320 Buller, Charles, 98, 99, 112, 122 C Cabinet government, in Canada, 178, 179, 180-9, 229, 249-51, 263, 264, 271, 309-14, 315; lack of, 216-19, 227, 228, 264 ; in Nova Scotia, 260, 261-4 Campbell, Sir Colin, lieutenant- governor of Nova Scotia, 257, 258 Canals, St. Lawrence, 318, 326; 859 LORD SYDENHAM Welland, 318,326; Chambly, 326; Rideau, 318; Trent, 326 Canada, finding a governor for, 67, 68 ; types of governors appointed, 61, 75, 250, 259 ; origin of diffi- culties after the conquest, 61, 68; a British future for, 63, 68, 80, 86,91, 137, 204, 283; introduc- ing English laws, 66, 69, 72; French and English loyalty, 70, 80, 138, 216; racial antagonism, 61, 66-72, 81, 91 ; representative government, 73-5, 174, 175, 271, 277 ; functions of governor, 74-6, 78, 86, 101-03, 109, 221, 222, 260, 262-4, 331; relations to Britain, 74-6, 79, 101-06, 116, 139, 149, 166, 167, 179, 190, 224, 231, 264, 310, 313 ; political deadlock, 80- 6, 91 ; responsible government, 74, 81, 83, 85, 92, 103-05, 121, 125, 126, 138, 139, 143, 156-61, 163-76, 177, 178, 183-7, 189, 201, 223, 227, 230, 249, 305, 309-14, 335; rebellion in, 85, 87, 119; Durham Report on, 61, 85, 89-96, 105, 109-11, 124, 125, 126, 137, 139, 142, 155, 157, 177, 223, 231, 3 4 9; Lieutenant -Governor Arthur's report on, 110, 156; re- union, 112, 113, 115, 119, 120, 122, 123, 138, 142, 154, 157, 158, 191-4, 201, 203-14, 230-2, 271 ; basis of representation, 137, 193, 202, 204, 209, 283-6 ; municipal government, 92, 120, 123, 142, 144, 273-6, 276, 277, 296, 323- 6 ; finances of, 83, 92, 93, 115, 120, 193, 198, 200, 202, 204, 205, 209, 216, 218, 251, 315-20, 360 327 ; public works, 161, 193, 316, 316 317, 326 ; tenure of office, 180-3 ; party government in, 184, 185, 188, 189, 208, 284, 291, 292, 301, 305, 309-11 ; executive gov- ernment in, 216-19, 220-2, 331- 6; united parliament opens, 292; character of first parliament, 301- 08 Canada, Lower, 68, 73, 78, 79, 81, 84-6, 89-91, 95, 111, 112, 117-19, 137, 138, 143, 154, 166, 181, 191, 200, 203, 204; attitude towards union, 233-5, 269 ; political out- look in, 253, 254 ; judicial reform in, 254, 255; municipal govern- ment in, 273, 276 ; representation of, in united legislature, 284-6 ; members from, 303, 304 ; and financial interests, 316, 317 Canada, Upper, 68, 73, 78, 80, 81, 82, 84, 95, 138, 142, 154; Lieu- tenant-Governor A r t h u r's re- port on, 109, 156-61 ; and union, 113, 121, 193, 206; condition of, 200-02, 215-19; last session of legislature, 203-14; Clergy Re- serves, 237-49 ; Sydenham's tour through, 265-9 ; members from, 304 ; and financial interests, 317, 318 Capital of united province, selection of, 113, 114, 232, 268, 280, 281, 292 Carey, James, deputy inspector- general, 333 Carleton, Sir Guy, see Dorchester Cartwright, J. S., opposes union, 207 Cartwright, Rev. R., 344 INDEX Chisholm^ G. C, sergeant-at-arms, 334 Chronicle and Gazette, Kingston, 193, 301; on Sydenham's appoint- ment, 131; on tenure of office, 183; on union measure, 211 ; on Sydenham's despatches, 351 Civil List, provision for, in union measure, 120, 142, 193, 204, 205, 308 Clergy Reserves, 77, 85, 93, 101, 185, 350 ; history and settlement, 237-49, 250 Clitherow, General, closes first ses- sion of united legislature, 342 Colborne, Sir John (Lord Seaton), governor. 111, 131, 132, 141, 143, 149, 192, 255 Colonial Gazette, London, forecast of Sydenham's policy as governor, 135-40 Commercial Herald, Toronto, on Lord Sydenham, 210 ; on union, 211 Conservatives in Canada, 172, 185, 187, 207, 214 ; and Clergy Re- serves Bill, 247, 248; oppose mun- icipal government, 323 Constitutional Act, 68, 72, 73, 76, 80, 85, 115, 233, 239, 245, 248 ; system of government under, 174- 6 Corn Laws, Sydenham's attacks on, 15, 37, 39-42, 52, 53 Council, Executive, 78, 79, 92; de- fective condition of, 216-19, 220, 221 ; members of, for united pro- vince, 288 ; changes in, made by Sydenham, 334 ; of Nova Scotia, 259, 260 Council, Legislative, 76, 77, 80, 100, 120, 178,219,220; of Upper Can- ada, on union, 113, 115, 209 ; of Nova Scotia, 260 Council, Special, of Lower Canada, 119, 122, 141, 143, 154, 192, 233, 325 ; convened at Montreal, 253 ; measures before, 255, 256, 272, 276-80 Courier, Montreal, on Sydenham's appointment, 133; on his policy, 233 Cuthbert, Hon. James, 183 D Dalhousie, Lord, governor, 141 Daly, Hon. D., 283, 331 Davidson J., Commissioner of Crown Lands, 333 Day, Hon. C. D., 283, 297 Dominion notes, anticipated by Syd- enham, 327, 330 Dorchester, Lord (Sir Guy Carle- ton), 67, 82 Dover, Sydenham elected for, 15; resigns to accept Manchester, 31 Draper, Hon. W. R., solicitor-gen- eral, 206, 213, 246, 283 ; becomes attorney-general, 252 Dunn, Hon. J. H., receiver-general, 198, 283, 289, 332 Durham, Lord, 28, 57, 87, 112, 118, 120, 138, 158, 162, 167, 325, 345, 349; Report on Canada, 61, 85, 89-96, 105, 109, 110, 111, 124, 125, 126, 137, 139, 142, 155, 157, 177, 223, 231, 349; reply to Re- port of, by assembly and council of Upper Canada, 97- 103 861 LORD SYDENHAM ♦'Durham Meetings/' 168, 169 E Eastern Townships, visited by Lord Sydenham, 266 Education in Canada/ 144 Elections for first parliament of United Canada, 287, 288, 289,. 290; rioting connected with, 290, 291 ; results of, 291 Elgin, Lord, governor, 186, 313 Ellice, R., 132 Examiner, Toronto, 107 ; on union, 212; on Clergy Reserves Bill, 247; on French-Canadian and Reform parties, 297 Family Compact, the, 85, 96, 97, 99, 109, 110, 130, 138, 174, 177, 179, 187, 213, 214, 229, 233, 304; introduction of, 77, 78 ; attitude of, on chief issues, 117, 210, 291 Feudal tenures in Lower Canada, 115 Finances, Canadian, 83, 92, 93, 115, 120, 193, 198, 200, 202, 204, 205, 209, 216, 218, 261, 315-20, 327 Fitzgibbon, Colonel, clerk of legis- lative council, 334 Forsythe, J., 112 France, trade relations with, 21, 28, 29,50 Free trade, promoted by Huskisson, 12 ; advocated by Sydenham, 18, 33, 61 862 French-Canadians, 62, 111, 173, 197, 210, 278, 286, 294; racial difficulties, 62, 66-72, 81, 86, 118, 254, 283, 303 ; and loyalty, 70, 80, 193, 208, 209, 269; and union, 94, 117, 191, 202, 204, 206, 287, 304, 305, 356 ; and Lord Syden- ham, 137, 205, 232-5, 255, 284, 288, 289, 290, 350, 355; and Reformers of Upper Canada, 295- 7, 302-05, 307 ; and taxation, 316 ; oppose municipal govern- ment, 323 G Gazette, Montreal, on responsible government, 107; on Sydenham's appointment, 131 ; on union, 194 Gazette, Quebec, 193, 235 ; on ten- ure of office and responsible gov- ernment, 184 ; on union, 194, 212, 287,288 ; on Special Council, 256, 257 Gazette, Sherbrooke, on union, 194 Gladstone, Rt. Hon. W. E., 22, 24, 38 ; defeated by Sydenham at Manchester, 48 Glenelg, Lord, 57, 110 Graham, Sir James, 40, 43 Grey, Earle, 25, 45 H Hagerman, Hon. C, attorney- general, advocates imperial fed- eration, 116 ; opposes union, 207, 208 ; elevated to the bench, 261, 262 INDEX Haldimand, Sir F., governor, 67 Halifax, city, visit of Lord Syden- ham to, 259 Hall, Major George D., military secretary to Lord Sydenham, 152 Hamilton, city, "Durham Meeting" at, 159 Hamilton, Lieutenant-Governor, 67 Harrison, Hon. S. B., 283, 331 ; moves resolution on responsible government, 810 Harvey, Sir John, Lieutenant-Gov- ernor of New Brunswick, visits Sydenham at Halifax, 264 ; wise administration of, 265 Head, Sir F. B., Lieutenant-Gov- ernor of Upper Canada, 109, 157, 287 Herald, Montreal, on union, 194 iHincks, Sir Francis, 107 ; on Clergy Reserves, 247, 249 ; re- lations to Sydenham's adminis- tration, 296-9 ; on municipal government bill, 323 ; breaks with Baldwin, 323 ; favours pro- vincial bank, 330 ; first minister of finance, 333 Holmes, B. , 297 Hope, Lieutenant-Governor, 67 Howe, Joseph, 107, 110 ; leader of Reformers in Nova Scotia, 257 ; tribute to Lord Sydenham, 347- 9 Hume, Joseph, 13 ; on Corn Laws, 39; on Canada, 122 Huskisson, William, 16, 18, 24, 25, 53 ; tariff reformer, 1 2 ; president of Board of Trade, 15 ; on Syden- ham's first speech, 17 Immigration, 202, 232, 315, 316; Lord Sydenham on, 320-2 ; tax proposed, 322 Jackson, Sir Richaro, commander of the forces in Canada, 143, 194 Jar vis, F. S., Usher of the Black Rod, 334 K Kesipt, Sir James, 120 Killaly, President of Board of Works, 333 Kingston, city, as seat of govern- ment, 268, 281, 292; arrangement for accommodation of govern- ment, 292, 293 ; Lord Sydenham buried in, 344 La Fontaine, L. H., 174 Lands, Crown, disposal of, 143 Lindsay, W. B., clerk of assembly, 334 Liverpool, Lord, 11, 15 Loyalists, 67, 87, 96, 110, 194 M McGiLL, Hon. Peter, 112 Mackenzie, W. L., 99, 158 Manchester, Sydenham member for, 2, 30, 31, 48, 148 Melbourne, Lord, 45, 65, 66, 67, 68, 340 863 LORD SYDENHAM Mercury, Quebec, on Sydenham's appointment, 130 Merritt, W. H., favours provincial bank, 330 Metcalfe, Lord, governor, views on Sydenham's policy, 312, 313 Mill, J. S., 13 Moffat, Hon. George, 112 Montreal, city, proposed union of, with Upper Canada, 119 ; civic corporation re-established, 255 ; representation in united legis- lature, 285 Morin, Hon. A. N., letter to Mr. Hincks, 294, 295 Morris, Hon. William, and Clergy Reserves, 239 Municipal institutions, 232, 296 ; need for, 92, 273-5 ; favoured by Lord John Russell, 120, 142, 144, 275, 276; in bill for union of the Canadas, 123, 273-6 ; ordin- ance to establish in Lower Canada, 272, 273, 276, 277 ; bill to estab- lish in Upper Canada, 323-5 Murdoch, T. W. C, civil secretary to Lord Sydenham, 152, 195 312 ; gives results of elections, 291 N Neilson, Hon. J., opposes union, 193, 194, 234, 269, 287, 288; leader of French-Canadian party, 295- 7 ; opposes Sydenham's govern- ment, 309 New Brunswick, 122, 124 ; Lord Sydenham visits, 264, 265 ; and municipal government, 274 Niagara Falls, Lord Sydenham visits, 198, 199 364 Normanby, Marquis of, 67, 58, 169 North American ('olonial Associa- tion, on Sydenham's appoint- ment, 132 Nova Scotia, 122 ; Lord Sydenham visits, 257 ; political condition of, 257-61 ; and municipal govern ment, 274 Nova Scotian, Halifax, 108, 110, 261, 347 O Ogden, Hon. C. R., 283 Opposition, not organized, 309, 310 Orangism in Canadian politics, 287, 290 Papineau, L. J., 99, 158, 166, 303 Parke, Tliomas, surveyor-general, 333 Parliament, first united, opens at Kingston, 292 ; character of, 301- 06 ; close of, 341, 342 Party government in Canada, 184, 185, 188, 189, 268, 284, 291, 292, 301, 305, 309-11 Patriot, Toronto, on tenure of office and responsible government, 184; first impressions of Sydenham, 197 Peel, Rt. Hon. Sir Robert, 16, 24, 38, 46, 56, 122, 148; on union of the Canadas, 231, 285, 286, 350 ; on municipal clauses in the Union Bill, 275, 276; his Bank Act, 327 Pitt, Rt. Hon. William, 11, 22, 68 Political Economy Club, Sydenham attends meetings of, 13 INDEX Porter, G. R., appointed to super- vise statistics of trade, 54 Public \Vorks, 161, 193, 202, 316, 316, 317, 326 Quebec Act, 64, 71, 72, 80, 209; effect on Canada, 62, 66, 85, 91, 233, 234 Quebec, city, 152 ; presents address to Lord Sydenham, 150 ; Com- mittee of Trade presents address, 152 ; resolutions against union, 233-5; in favour of union, 235 ; civic corporation re-established, 255 ; representation in united legislature, 285 R Raikes, Thomas, estimate of Lord Sydenham, 49 Railways, regulation of British, brought under Board of Trade, 53 Rebellion in Canada, 85, 87 Reform party in Canada, 85, 96, 97, 100, 130, 157, 185, 194, 230 ; in first united legislature, 291, 304 ; attitude on chief issues, 117, 173, 213, 214, 246, 247, 296-9; and French-Canadian party, 295-7, 302-05, 307 Registry ordinance of Lower Can- ada, 256, 277-9 Responsible government, 74, 81, 85, 92, 96, 98, 101-07, 117, 123-6, 138, 144, 163-76, 177-9, 183-7, 221, 223, 227, 230, 249, 260, 263, 265, 305, 335 ; Lord Sydenham's grasp of, 83, 104-05, 108, 138, 139, 174, 219, 223-5, 249, 309-14; Lord John Russell on, 108, 121, 139, 143, 163-9, 172, 223 ; Lieu- tenant-Governor Arthur's attitude towards, 156-61 ; misunderstand- ing of, 172, 173, 201, 219; in operation, 309-14 Reunion of the Canadas, see Union of the Canadas Robinson, Hon. J. B., Chief-Justice of Upper Canada, leads opposition to union, 230 Routh, Commissary-General, 195 Russell, Lord John, 18, 46, 55, 66, 127, 129, 135, 141, 159, 177, 189, 267, 271, 275,302, 331, 338, 341, 351, 352 ; becomes colonial sec- retary, 59; on responsible govern- ment, 108, 121, 139, 143, 163-9, 172, 223 ; on future of Canada, 117, 120; on Durham Report, 120 ; introduces resolutions on union, 122 ; despatch on tenure of office, 180-3, 229 ; approves Sydenham's policy, 226, 229, 281, 350 ; on Canadian finances, 319; on emigration, 322 ; Sydenham's estimate of, 343 Ryerson, Rev. E., tribute to Lord Sydenham, 346 S St. Lawrence, navigation, 118, 193, 196, 234, 316, 317, 326 St. Sulpice, Seminary of, ordin< ance to incorporate, 255 Seat of Government, nee Capital 365 LORD SYDENHAM Sherwood, Hon. Henry, opposes un- ion, 207 ; retires from bench, 252 Simcoe, J. G., governor, introduces Family Compact, 78 Smith, Sydney, on British politics, 1 1 ; on Lord John Russell, 66 Speech from 'llirone, in legislature of Upper Canada, 203 ; in united legislature, 319 Stanley, Lord, 43, 275, 312 Star, Cobourg, on union, 211 Strachan, Hon. John, Bishop of Toronto, opposes union, 281 ; on Clergy Reserves Bill, 248, 249 Stuart, Andrew, 112 Stuart, George O., arclideacon, conducts services at Lord Syden- ham's funeral, 344 Stuart, James, Chief-Justice of Lower Canada, 140, 191, 255, 256 Sullivan, Hon. R. B., 228, 283, 334 ; introduces union resolutions in council of Upper Canada, 209 Sydenham, Lord (Charles Edward Poulett Thomson), family and birth, 4 ; education, 5 ; in St. Petersburg, 6, 7; travels in Europe, 6, 7, 39 ; desires diplo- matic career, 6 ; in business in London, 8 ; attracted by free trade movement, 12 ; candidate for Dover, 13 ; elected, 15 ; his liberal views, 3, 15, 18, 31-6, 60, 64 ; attacks the corn laws, 15, 37, 39-42, 62, 63; first speech in par- liament, 17; advocates voting by ballot, and repeal of the usury laws, 18 ; advocates free trade, 18, 33, 40, 51 ; winter in Paris, 366 1829, 20 ; promotes Reform Act, 21 ; moves for reform in taxation, 22, 29, 30 ; on timber duties, 23 ; vice-president of Board of Trade, 25 ; president of Board of Trade, 26, 43 ; aids in revising system of public accounts, 28 ; promotes commercial treaty with France, 28, 29, 39 ; also with Australia, 50; member for Manchester, 2, 30, 32-6, 37, 48; on banking in Britain, 38 ; enters cabinet, 43, 46 ; Gre- ville's sketch of, 43 ; estimates of his ability, by Raikes, 49; by Mel- bourne, 66 ; promotes technical education, 61 ; and international copyright, 51 ; improves regula- tion of railways, 53 ; organizes statistical department, 54 ; as possible Chancellor of the Ex- chequer, 56, 57 ; becomes govern- or-general o f Canada, 67-60 ; comments on his appointment, 60, 129-40 ; instructions as gov- ernor, 141,271, 272; his qualifica- tions, 60, 187, 188, 350, 352; attitude of public towards, 165, 213, 267, 339, 345, 346, 354 ; his grasp of practical responsible government, 83, 104, 105, 108, 138, 139, 174, 219, 223-6, 249, 309-14 ; his special work in Can- ada, 124, 147, 177, 179, 187, 188, 345, 353, 354 ; as prime minister in Canada, 186, 226, 227, 262- 4, 291 ; his personal influence, 210, 211, 237, 269; introduces cab- inet system in Canada, 249-61 ; first visit to Upper Canada, 196, 197 ; opens legislature of Upper INDEX Canada, 203 ; analysis of existing' conditions in Upper Canada, 200- 02, 215-26 ; and Clergy Reserves, 237, 238, 244-9 ; visits Maritime Provinces, 257-65 ; reception in Eastern Townships, 265 ; visits western Canada, 265-9 ; interest in municipal government, 273- 7, 323-5 ; objects to alterations of the Union Bill, 285, 286, 350, 352; proclaims union and sum- mons first united parliament, 282; a peerage, 54, 59, 272 ; Baldwin's proposal, 294, 299, 306, 307 ; analysis of situation after opening of first united parliament, 301-08; on Canadian finances, 317-20 ; on immigration, 320-2 ; on public works, 326 ; on banking in Can- ada, 327-30 ; reorganizes execu- tive departments, 332-6 ; deals with trade and foreign relations, 336 ; great success in his work, 338, 339, 353 ; resigns position of governor-general, 338 ; receives Grand Cross of the Bath, 340; thrown from his horse, 340 ; last message to the Canadian people, 342, 343 ; death and burial, 343, 344 ; characteristics, 55, 59, 134, 135, 148, 151, 269, 355 ; tributes to his ability and success, by Eg- erton Ryerson, 346, 347; by Joseph Howe, 347-9 Tariff reform in Britain, 12 Taxation, Sydenham advocates re- form in, 22 Tliomson, Charles Edward Poulett, see Lord Sydenham Timber duties, 27 ; Sydenham's attitude towards, 23, 130, 134, 136, 152 Tooke, on speculative boom of 1825, 10 Toronto, city, 196 ; addresses to Lord Sydenham, 197, 199, 267 Trade policy of Britain, 11 Tucker, R. G. , provincial registrar, 332 U Union of the Canadas, 95, 112-15, 117, 119, 121, 138, 154, 191-4, 197, 201, 250 ; proposal of 1822, 86, 157; advocated in Durham Report, 94, 138; of all British North American provinces, lid; Lord John Russell's resolutions on, 122 ; bill for, introduced in British House of Commons, 123, 142; passed, 265, 271 ; Lieutenant- Governor Arthur on,157, 158; be- fore assembly of Upper Canada, 20;V14; effort to defeat, 230-2, proclamation of, 282 Union Act, passed, 271 ; effect of, 271 ; object of, 283, 317 ; opposed by French-Canadian party, 287, 288, 305, 317 United States, Maine boundary re- lations, 336 ; Extradition Treaty, 336 W Wellington, Duke ok, 16, 25, 46; enlisted in opposition to union of Canadas, 231 367 CO CO CD O THE UNIVEBSITV o i£ B SAMTa baikara o b *o or CAllfOHNU^o 4JO I « io Aitv««n aHi o. e VDVnvt VXNVS o z 2 a o 3 THE LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNU Santa Barbara / ( 6 5" 6 > 1 < oi O THE Tins BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW. 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