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A Proclamation, To such as are desirous to Settle on the Lands of the Crown in the Province of Upper Canada

Book Details

Title:A Proclamation, To such as are desirous to Settle on the Lands of the Crown in the Province of Upper Canada
Author:
Simcoe, John Graves   
(2 of 2 for author by title)
Letter to Sir Joseph A. Banks, written by Lieut.-Governor Simcoe, in 1791, Prior to His Departure from England for the Purpose o
Published:   1792
Publisher:Province of Upper Canada
Tags:Canadiana, non-fiction
Description:

The famous Proclamation of 1792, issued by Simcoe after his arrival at Quebec, but before his arrival in Upper Canada. [Suggest a different description.]

Downloads:26
Pages:Info

Author Bio for Simcoe, John Graves

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John Graves Simcoe, Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada, and military leader of Canada, and one of the true Canadian "Fathers of Confederation".

Excerpt from the Canadian Encyclopedia:

Simcoe, John Graves, army officer, Lt-Gov of Upper Canada (b at Cotterstock, Eng 25 Feb 1752; d at Exeter, Eng 26 Oct 1806). Commander of the Queen's Rangers in the American Revolution, he became in 1791 the first Lt-Gov of Upper Canada, where he arrived in 1792. He began the policy of granting land to American settlers, confident that they would become loyal settlers and aware that they were the main hope for rapid economic growth. He saw the southwestern peninsula as the future centre not only of the province but of trade with the interior of the continent. He founded York [Toronto], intending it to be a temporary capital, and laid the foundation of a road system. He wanted to make the colony an example of the superiority of British institutions, and he appointed lieutenants of counties, introduced a court of king's bench and had slavery declared illegal. He also effectively defeated attempts to set up elected town meetings on the New England model. He proposed municipal councils, urged a university with preparatory schools and sought the full endowment of the Church of England. He had few critics in the province but could not persuade the imperial government to finance his projects or to exempt him from the military authority of Guy Carleton, Lord Dorchester, at Québec. Concerned about defence and in ill health, he left the colony in 1796. He was then governor of Santo Domingo [Dominican Republic] and later commander of the Western District in England. Appointed commander in chief for India in 1806, he died before he could take up the position.

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