Quick Facts
Born:
September 13, 1799, Wimbledon, Surrey, England
Died:
September 19, 1841, Kingston, Canada West (aged 42)

Charles Poulett Thomson, Baron Sydenham (born September 13, 1799, Wimbledon, Surrey, England—died September 19, 1841, Kingston, Canada West) was a merchant and statesman who, as British governor general of Canada in 1839–41, helped to develop that country’s basic institutions of government.

The son of a merchant, Thomson joined the St. Petersburg office of his father’s firm at age 16. He was member of Parliament for Dover, Kent, in 1826–30 and took up the cause of free trade and financial reform. From 1830 to 1839 he represented Manchester in Parliament. In 1830 he became vice president of the Board of Trade, treasurer of the navy, and a member of the Privy Council. He made improvements in customs duties in 1832 and in 1834 became president of the Board of Trade, at which post he continued to work for international commercial reforms.

In 1839 Thomson became governor-general of Canada. By adroit diplomacy he secured passage in 1840 of the British parliamentary act that resulted in the union of Upper and Lower Canada (now Ontario and Quebec) the following year. He then proceeded to introduce municipal institutions in Upper Canada and to encourage public works. He also established the basic structure for responsible, or cabinet, government in the united province of Canada. He was raised to the peerage in 1840, but the title lapsed when he died childless.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Also known as:
Rebellions of 1837–38

Rebellions of 1837, rebellions mounted in 1837–38 in each colony of Upper and Lower Canada against the British Crown and the political status quo. The revolt in Lower Canada was the more serious and violent of the two. However, both events inspired the pivotal Durham Report, which in turn led to the union of the two colonies and the arrival of responsible government—critical events on the road to Canadian nationhood.

Rebellion in Lower Canada

The Rebellion in Lower Canada was led by Louis-Joseph Papineau and his Patriotes, as well as more moderate French Canadian nationalists, who together dominated the elected Legislative Assembly. Since the 1820s they had peacefully opposed the authority of the Roman Catholic Church and challenged the powers of the British governor and his unelected advisers, demanding control over the way revenues raised in the colony were spent.

Their political demands, which included democratic pleas for responsible government, were rejected in London. This, coupled with economic depression for French Canadian farmers in the 1830s, plus rising tensions with the largely urban Anglophone minority, led to protest rallies across the colony and eventual calls by the more radical Patriotes for armed insurrection.

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Canada: The rebellions of 1837–38

There were two outbursts of violence, the first in November 1837, in a series of skirmishes and battles between Patriote rebels and trained British regulars as well as Anglophone volunteers. The defeat of the disorganized rebels was followed by widespread Anglophone looting and burning of French Canadian settlements. Papineau and other rebel leaders fled to the United States.

With the help of American volunteers, a second rebellion was launched in November 1838, but it too was poorly organized and quickly put down, followed by further looting and devastation in the countryside. The two uprisings left 325 people dead, all of them rebels except for 27 British soldiers. Nearly 100 rebels were also captured. After the second uprising failed, Papineau departed the US for exile in Paris.

Rebellion in Upper Canada

The insurgency in Lower Canada inspired Anglophone radicals in the neighbouring colony to take their own action against the Crown, although theirs would be a smaller, less deadly revolt.

The Rebellion in Upper Canada was led by William Lyon Mackenzie, a Scottish-born newspaper publisher and politician who was a fierce critic of the Family Compact, an elite clique of officials and businessmen who dominated the running of the colony and its system of patronage. Mackenzie and his followers also opposed a system of land grants that favoured settlers from Britain, as opposed to those with ties to the United States—many of whom were also denied political rights.

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After years of failed efforts at peaceful change, Mackenzie in 1837 convinced his most radical followers to try to seize control of the government and declare the colony a republic. About 1,000 men, mostly farmers of American origin, gathered for four days in December at Montgomery’s Tavern on Yonge Street in Toronto. On December 5, several hundred poorly armed and organized rebels marched south on Yonge Street and exchanged gunfire with a smaller group of loyalist militia. The bulk of the rebel force fled in a state of confusion once the firing started. Three days later the full rebel group was dispersed by loyalists from the tavern. There was a small, second confrontation soon afterwards in Brantford, but again the insurgents were dispersed.

Mackenzie and other rebel leaders fled to the US, where, with the help of American volunteers, various rebel groups launched raids against Upper Canada, keeping the border in a state of turmoil for nearly a year.

The insurgency fizzled after 1838. Mackenzie spent years in exile in New York, before returning to Canada following a government pardon in 1849. Others weren’t so lucky. Although only three men—two rebels and one loyalist—were killed in the early stages of the rebellion, many captured rebels were executed by the government.

Causes and consequences

Historians have disagreed about how much popular support each rebellion received and to what degree the uprisings were necessary. One argument is that they were the inevitable result of undemocratic, unworkable colonial systems, and an imperial government in London that was out of touch and unsympathetic to reform. Another view is that the insurgencies amounted to pointless bloodletting, which may have even slowed the pace of reform.

One fact is clear: the rebellions prompted the appointment of John George Lambton, 1st earl of Durham and the writing of the Durham Report, which recommended the two colonies be united as one. The Province of Canada came into being in 1841, and this in turn led to the introduction of responsible government.

Although the rebel leaders were thwarted in their goals, Papineau and Mackenzie each found a place in history as unlikely folk heroes who fought bravely, if not carefully, for democratic ideals. Their failure paved the way for more moderate reformists, such as Louis-Hippolyte LaFontaine in Canada East (formerly Lower Canada) and Robert Baldwin in Canada West (formerly Upper Canada), who would work together across language lines to bring democratic reform and self-government to the newly united Canada.

P.A. Buckner Richard Foot

An earlier version of this entry was published by The Canadian Encyclopedia .