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Contents |
| IN THIS ISSUE |
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| August in History |
| Political Cartoon |
| Editor in Chief |
| Michael Apps |
| Staff |
| Jim Morrison |
| Greg Scott |
I enjoyed your July issue,
which is the first one I received. Keep up the good work.
What is also truly interesting about
1867 is the blend of personalities and characters that
helped to mould this great nation. It would be too long to
go into each their stories and background but below are a
few mentions.
George Brown almost became Canada’s first prime minister.
When Sir John A. Macdonald was forming his first federal
cabinet, he encountered so much trouble he almost
relinquished the job to Brown. Scottish-born, Brown came to
Canada in 1843 at the age of 25 by the way of New York,
where he had published a newspaper. About a year later he
founded, as a weekly, the Globe newspaper, with which his
name became inseparably linked.
In 1851, he entered the Canadian (Quebec and Ontario)
parliament as a member for Kent County. Immediately he
became embroiled in a bitter fight against separate schools.
Eventually he became convinced that Confederation was the
only answer to Canada’s problems and he went as far as to
join his bitter foe, Macdonald, in a coalition to achieve
it. Later he resigned from the coalition but continued to
fight for confederation. It was ironical that soon after
Macdonald had almost passed to Brown the job of being the
country’s first prime minister the Kent electors rejected
Brown in the first federal election in 1867. He stayed
outside Parliament until named to the Senate in 1873. On
March 25, 1880 he was shot by a disgruntled former employee
but lingered near death until he finally died on May 9, the
same year.
When the British exiled a young lawyer named Georges-Etienne
Cartier from Canada after the Papineau-Mackenzie rebellion
in 1837, no one thought that 30 years alter he would be one
of the founders of a new Canadian nation.
Edward Barron Chandler spent much of the time at the Quebec
Confederation Conference in 1864 arguing with Sir John A.
Macdonald over what Chandler thought was threatened loss of
provincial rights. Others continue the same dispute, even
today.
Jean Charles Chapais, one of Canada’s Fathers of
Confederation is frequently ignored by reference and history
books which devote considerable space to the
legal-political-literacy career of his son, Sir Thomas
Chapais.
Canada’s Fathers of Confederation were a turbulent crew.
They spoke frequently and bitterly about each other’s
shortcomings. Therefore, when Confederation became a fact
and many of the fathers were elected to the House of
Commons, the task of keeping these verbal assaults in check
would require patience, skill and courage. The task fell on
James Cockburn, Speaker of the House, a Cobourg Ontario
lawyer who had been himself one of the founding fathers. He
managed to keep such volatile characters as Sir John A.
Macdonald and Thomas D’Arcy McGee in check and at the same
time retain their respect for the seven years he held the
job.
It is because of Sir Alexander Tilloch Galt that Canadians
spend dollars and cents rather than the British-style
pounds, shillings and pence. There were two men called John
Hamilton Gray among the Fathers of Confederation.
John Mercer Johnson had a falling out with his fellow
Fathers of Confederation during the talks which led to the
formation of the Canadian nation. He argued that provincial
legislatures should not have power over county or district
courts. The others disagreed. The result is that the federal
government names the county judges and dictates the criminal
law but the province decides the civil law the court
administers and runs the court.
As a young schoolmaster Jonathan McCully had a pupil by the
name of Charles Tupper. Years later they came together again
as fathers of Confederation for the Canadian nation.
William McDougall’s nickname was “Wandering Willie” and it
summed up his political career in a nutshell.
Peter Mitchell’s political career was always highlighted by
his stubbornness. There was the time Mitchell delayed
approval of the estimate for the Intercolonial Railway until
the railroad paid damages to a widow whose cow had wandered
on to the tracks and been killed by a train. This
stubbornness led him also into a long feud with Sir Leonard
Tilley, a fellow Father of Confederation. Mitchell often
referred to himself as the “third party.”