John A (65 page)

Read John A Online

Authors: Richard J. Gwyn

BOOK: John A
3.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

*49
Brown condemned the slavers with the vivid phrase “men-stealers,” describing them as “a disgrace not only to Americans but to the whole world.”
Return to text.

*50
“Rep by Pop” was a most persuasive slogan, although what Brown really had in mind was rep by section—namely, that Upper and Lower Canada should have seats in proportion to their respective total populations. As was most curious, throughout the long Rep by Pop debate, little notice was ever taken of the fact that Upper Canada's own constituencies were even more unbalanced, varying as widely as from 4, 100 for Brockville to 80, 000 for Huron-Bruce.
Return to text.

*51
One of the might-have-beens in the development of Canadian intellectual life is Thomas Huxley, the great champion and popularizer of Darwin's theory of evolution, who applied for and almost secured in the mid-1850s the post of professor of natural history at the University of Toronto. The slot was filled, instead, by the brother of Premier Sir Francis Hincks.
Return to text.

*52
Before Confederation and after it for several decades, premiers and prime ministers functioned at the same time as a regular cabinet minister. The practice eventually died out, although John Diefenbaker was both prime minister and minister of external affairs for a time in the years 1957 to 959. A rough contemporary equivalent would be that deputy prime ministers, largely a symbolic title, always hold a departmental portfolio.
Return to text.

*53
Before Drinkwater, R.A. Harrison, later chief justice of Upper Canada, and Hewitt Bernard, later his brother-in-law, functioned as Macdonald's private secretary while also performing other departmental duties.
Return to text.

*54
Sowby's master's thesis, an exceptional one, was written in 1984 for Queen's University.
Return to text.

*55
Langton developed a system of reporting the budget accounts in the 1850s that remained Ottawa's standard system down to the 1970s.
Return to text.

†56
He did not keep
all
copies of his own letters or of incoming ones. At the end of an 1856 letter to Brown Chamberlain of the Montreal
Gazette
in which he had made some frank political observations, Macdonald advised, “I hope you burn my letters. I do yours.” In fact, Chamberlain kept the letter.
Return to text.

†57
Even his bitter opponent, Sir Richard Cartwright, admitted that Macdonald could “generally lay his hand on any document he wanted, even after a long lapse of years.”
Return to text.

*58
Officially, their titles were those of attorneys general for Canada West and Canada East, or for each of the new “sections” within the United Province of Canada, but the old Upper and Lower Canada titles were widely used.
Return to text.

†59
Archy Lanton was an escaped American slave who had made it across the border.
Return to text.

*60
Much of the material for this section is drawn from the research done by historian Donald Smith of the University of Calgary and reported in his long article “John A. Macdonald and Aboriginal Canada,” published in
Historic Kingston
, 2002.
Return to text.

*61
Macdonald was friendly also with John Cuthbertson, the son of a Scottish fur trader who had married a Mohawk woman.
Return to text.

*62
Reiffenstein's actual arrest, in 1869, was the talk of Ottawa, primarily because the police came to his house and arrested him at his own dinner table.
Return to text.

*63
The Legislative Council, of which Taché was a member, was the pre-Confederation equivalent of the Senate.
Return to text.

*64
In Noel,
Patrons, Clients, Brokers: Ontario Society and Politics, 1791–1896
.
Return to text.

*65
As is the case with most early newspaper reports of parliamentary debates, the language of this quotation is curiously stilted, with Macdonald appearing to have spoken in the past tense. No Hansards were published before Confederation.
Return to text.

*66
That Lower Canada's agricultural productivity was at most one-fifth of that of Upper Canada was widely attributed to its antiquated seigneurial system.
Return to text.

*67
The capital by this time rotated between Toronto and Quebec City, Montreal having lost the honour as a result of the burning of its parliament buildings in 1849 by a Conservative-organized mob.
Return to text.

*68
Many years later, when Macdonald was sent a copy of Collins's 1883 biography of him—the first—he didn't bother to read it but “turned,” as he put it in a letter to a friend, to just two sections: one, understandably enough, was the Canadian Pacific Scandal; the other was the “double shuffle.”
Return to text.

*69
Cauchon eventually crossed the floor to join the Liberals, becoming a minister in Alexander Mackenzie's government.
Return to text.

†70
There is a bust of him (in a Roman toga) in the Quebec City legislative building, and in Montreal, besides parks and schools, he is commemorated with an eighty-seven-foot-high statue inscribed with his cry, “Avant tous, je suis Canadien.”
Return to text.

*71
Over succeeding years, a succession of transportation and communications enterprises, all either government agencies or dependent on government support, would locate in Montreal—Canadian National Railways, the National Film Board, Telefilm Canada, Telesat Canada.
Return to text.

*72
His wife, Hortense, was deeply pious. A family friend remarked that she would have been happiest as a nun—provided she was the Mother Superior. After Cartier's death she moved to Cannes with her two daughters, dying there in 1898. One daughter, Hortense, lived on in Cannes until 1940, when she left hurriedly as the Germans approached. She died in London in 1941 at the age of ninety-three.
Return to text.

*73
The rival time span occurred near to the century's close and continued into the next, prompting a new prime minister, Wilfrid Laurier, to predict that the twentieth century would belong to Canada.
Return to text.

*74
From Matthew Arnold's “Dover Beach,” published in 1867.
Return to text.

*75
This near declaration of race war was written not by Brown but by his able and extremist chief editorial writer, George Sheppard.
Return to text.

*76
Macdonald's spelling of “favour” in the American style of “favor” was unusual; he may have picked it up osmotically because he was writing from south of the border.
Return to text.

*77
The tavern, now called the Royal Tavern, still exists, at 344 Princess Street in Kingston.
Return to text.

*78
In his day, Bulwer-Lytton was far better known as a popular writer—as of the romantic novel
The Last Days of Pompeii
—than as a politician. Today, he's best known as the inspiration for the annual Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest for bad writing, which takes off from his famous opening line, “It was a dark and stormy night.” This association is a bit unfair, given that Bulwer-Lytton also minted the aphorism that writers love to quote, “The pen is mightier than the sword.”
Return to text.

*79
The most unorthodox version of confederation, submitted to the legislature of Upper Canada in 1825 and advocating a loose federation, was by Robert Gourlay, who turned out to have written it while in a lunatic asylum in England. Gourlay was an engaging eccentric and an agrarian radical. His most considerable accomplishment was, at the age of eighty, to contest a riding in Upper Canada and to marry his twenty-eight-year-old housekeeper. However, he lost both.
Return to text.

*80
Creighton's case for Macdonald as an early champion of Confederation rests primarily on a speech he gave in the House in April 1861 calling for “an immense confederation of free men, the greatest confederacy of civilized and intelligent men that has ever had an existence on the face of the globe.” All those golden phrases, though, were simply Macdonald at his “buncombe” best.
Return to text.

*81
The imbalance wasn't simply one of political representation in proportion to population. About three-quarters of all Canada's tax revenues came from the Upper Canada “section.”
Return to text.

*82
In his
Royal Spectacle: The 1860 Visit of the Prince of Wales to Canada and the United States
, from which much of the material in this section is drawn, Ian Radforth observes that one problem for the tour's organizers was that the towns and cities of then underdeveloped Canada lacked any of the “grand avenues and parade grounds” so necessary for ceremonial spectacles.
Return to text.

*83
Newcastle thus became the first colonial secretary to visit the most important of the colonies he was responsible for, and the only one to do so during the nineteenth century.
Return to text.

*84
Years later, the Prince of Wales encountered a Canadian MP in London who answered the prince's inquiry by saying that he came from Kingston. “Ah,” replied Edward in a deft reference to his aborted visit, “it looks very well from the water.” Later still, on Queen Victoria's death in 1901, he succeeded to the throne as Edward VII. Throughout his life, he remained exceptionally close to a great many ladies.
Return to text.

*85
The unofficial official British view of Lincoln was even wider of the mark. Lord Lyons, the ambassador (minister) in Washington, informed London that Lincoln was “a rough westerner of the lowest origin and little education.”
Return to text.

†86
Seward had formed this view as a result of an extensive trip he made in 1857 across the British North American colonies, even north to Labrador.
Return to text.

*87
The evidence is questionable. In a book published in 1904, Goldwin Smith claimed that Gladstone had written to him during the war proposing that “if the North thought fit at this time to let the South go, it might in time be indemnified by…Canada.” Smith said that he had later destroyed Gladstone's letter because it might “prove embarrassing.”
Return to text.

*88
More than half of these Canadian volunteers were Canadiens. Mass migration from Quebec to the United States during the nineteenth century dates from the Civil War years, in large part because of the classic “pull” factor in migration—those who've already gone to or already know a new country always attract others to follow them.
Return to text.

*89
Great Eastern
raced across the Atlantic in a new record of eight days and six hours, going full speed through icefields—as would, less successfully, another “world's largest ship” a half-century later.
Return to text.

*90
Not until 1887, in a conversation with his friend Judge Gowan, did Macdonald disclose for the first time his front-line experience, or, more accurately, his near to the front-line adventure. His company was placed safely behind the artillery that levelled the tavern and killed eleven of the hapless rebels.
Return to text.

*91
The most powerful expression of Canadien sentiment about Americans was Premier Taché's famous prediction that “the last cannon which is shot on this continent in defence of Great Britain will be fired by the hand of a French-Canadian.”
Return to text.

*92
Polk's name still lingers among Canadians as the author of the slogan “Fifty-Four Forty or Fight,” meaning that the border should be pushed way up north from the forty-ninth parallel.
Return to text.

*93
In 1793 Governor Simcoe prohibited the importation of slaves into Canada. Existing owners were allowed to retain their slaves, but most were freed not long afterwards.
Return to text.

*94
There was a small reverse flow, mostly of Northern draft dodgers, or “skeedadlers” as they were called, but most of them returned home once the Civil War was over, as did most of the runaway slaves. Late in the century, after the Midwest was filled up, American farmers moved north in search of land, particularly in Alberta.
Return to text.

*95
A further defence problem revealed by the
Trent
crisis was that the telegraph line from Halifax to Montreal was being tapped by the Americans.
Return to text.

*96
The
Globe
's first reference to Macdonald's habit, in February 1856, was in the correct, coded form of describing him as speaking in the legislature “in a state of wild excitement.”
Return to text.

*97
Even the term “alcoholic,” applied to a person, didn't exist then. It was not coined until 1891, the year of Macdonald's death.
Return to text.

*98
The first to make this observation was Frank Underhill. In a paper he presented to the Canadian Historical Association in 1927, Underhill, in the terminology of those less-evolved times, described Anne Brown as “perhaps the real father of Confederation.”
Return to text.

*99
In counterpoint to whatever credit Britain gained by its abolition of slavery in the Empire in 1833, it incurred the off-setting discredit of initiating the Opium Wars at about the same time, employing the Royal Navy to blast open China's ports to the opium trade.
Return to text.

Other books

This Is Your Life by Susie Martyn
The Winner's Kiss by Marie Rutkoski
Flick by Tarttelin,Abigail
5 Murder by Syllabub by Kathleen Delaney
Satanic Bible by LaVey, Anton Szandor
The Lockwood Concern by John O'Hara
Dear Mr. You by Mary -Louise Parker
Circle of Shadows by Imogen Robertson
SpaceCorp by Ejner Fulsang