Causes of revolt in Upper Canada Flashcards

1
Q

Who was the leader of the moderate and constitutional reformers, and when did this change?

A

Robert Baldwin was the leader but, in 1837, when Baldwin was in London, events were led by William Lyon Mackenzie who wanted full independence for Upper Canada and was, arguably, a radical.

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2
Q

What decade was the arrival of Irish immigrants, and why did this provoke tension?

A

1830s, the Irish immigrants were distrusted, seen as feckless, criminally inclined and diseased.

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3
Q

How were the Irish immigrants assisted? Why was this opposed?

A

By the Ops Township Scheme, which provided temporary shelter and cheap supplies to them.

  • Reformers disliked this because of the lack of consultation with the legislative assembly
  • Family Compact disliked how the immigrants disrupted the status quo.
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4
Q

What years was Sir John Colborne lieutenant governor of Upper Canada, and what did he do?

A

1828-32, he bypassed the legislative assembly by using tax revenues to pay officials salaries.

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5
Q

What was Colbourne’s most controversial action?

A

The allocation of the income of clergy reserves to support the 44 Anglican parishes across the province, in an attempt to further establish the Anglican Church

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6
Q

What years was Sir Francis Head lieutenant governor of Upper Canada, and what did he do?

A

1835-38, he had no previous experience, and he initially appointed moderate reformers into the executive council, but then removed them if they got in his way.

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7
Q

What did Head do during the 1836 election, and why was this surprising?

A

He campaigned against the Reformers, which was unusual because campaigning wasn’t something that lieutenant governors did.

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8
Q

Head’s campaign was successful in removing reformers from the legislative assembly, what did this convince the reformers of?

A

That they had no legal means to influence the government.

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9
Q

How was the 1836 election a victory for Head, after his campaign?

A

it delivered a pro-government majority

- new legislative assembly passed a number of laws to protect their position.

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10
Q

What are some examples of the laws passed to support the position of the new legislative assembly?

A
  • A law extending the legislation (King William IV was very ill, and normally an election would be called within 6 months of the monarch’s death) however, in this case, there’d be no election.
  • A law preventing members of the legislative assembly from serving in the executive council - this was an obvious attempt by the Family Compact to protect their hold on government as future governors would be prevented from appointing Reformers into the higher executive body - thus proving to the Reformers there was no legal means to challenge the government.
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