John A (64 page)

Read John A Online

Authors: Richard J. Gwyn

BOOK: John A
12.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

RICHARD GWYN
is an award-winning author and political columnist, well known to readers of the
Toronto Star
and to TV and radio audiences. He is the author of two highly praised biographies,
The Unlikely Revolutionary
on Newfoundland premier Joey Smallwood and
The Northern Magus
on Pierre Elliot Trudeau. His most recent book,
Nationalism Without Walls: The Unbearable Lightness of Being Canadian,
was selected by
The Literary Review of Canada
as one of the 100 most important books published in Canada.

 

VINTAGE CANADA EDITION
, 2008

Copyright © 2007 R & A Gwyn Associates Ltd.

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.

Published in Canada by Vintage Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto, in 2008. Originally published in hardcover in Canada by Random House Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto, in 2007.

Distributed by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.

Vintage Canada and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House of Canada Limited.

www.randomhouse.ca

LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION

Gwyn, Richard, 1934–
John A.: the man who made us: the life and times of John A. Macdonald / Richard Gwyn.

Includes bibliographical references.
Contents: v. 1. 1815–1867.

eISBN: 978-0-307-37135-5

1. Macdonald, John A. ( John Alexander), 1815–1891. 2. Canada—History—19th century. 3. Canada—Politics and government—19th century. 4. Prime ministers—Canada—Biography. I. Title.

FC
516.
M
29
G
89 2008     971.05'1092     C2008-900315-2

v1.0

 

FOOTNOTES

*1
Hugh Macdonald recorded the birthdates of all his children in the 1820 edition of his memorandum book.
Return to text.

*2
A small town, then and now, Dornoch has one claim to fame as the site of the last judicial execution for witchcraft in Britain: in 1727, a court ruled that a Janet Horne had turned her daughter into a pony.
Return to text.

†3
E.B. Biggar's
Anecdotal Life of Sir John Macdonald
, hurried into print in 1891, the year of his death, is the source of most of the best-known anecdotes about him. The first biography of Macdonald,
The Life and Times of the Right Honourable Sir John A. Macdonald
, published as early as 1883, was written by J.E. Collins, an expatriate Newfoundlander. By a curious coincidence, Collins also wrote the first biography of Louis Riel as well as a bodice-ripper of a novel,
Annette, the Metis Spy: A Heroine of the N.W. Rebellion
. He died in New York, of drink, in 1892.
Return to text.

*4
Immigrants were then commonly referred to as “emigrants,” because the significant point was that they were leaving Britain rather than that they were coming to Canada.
Return to text.

*5
While Simcoe's legislation ended the slave system, it did not immediately end slavery: owners of existing slaves were allowed to hang on to their “property,” although almost all were released within a few years. By gaining legal equality, blacks in Canada did not in any way gain social and economic equality.
Return to text.

*6
To minimize the cost of feeding their passengers, some captains were known to supply them on the first day with large helpings of porridge and molasses, making them so sick that, thereafter, they seldom demanded their full rations.
Return to text.

*7
The real hero of this feat wasn't so much Sydenham as a stagecoach operator in Toronto (York), William Weller, who organized the relays of horses needed to maintain an average speed of fifteen miles an hour. For his contributions, Weller received four hundred dollars and a gold watch.
Return to text.

*8
The source is Fingard's study “The Winter's Tale: The Seasonal Contours of Pre-Industrial Poverty in British North America, 1815–1860.”
Return to text.

*9
In the absence of any zoning regulations, grand houses, shacks, stores and grog shops all jostled against one another.
Return to text.

*10
This plot was purchased by John A. Macdonald in 1850. The remains of Hugh Macdonald, who had been buried in the old “Lower” Burial Ground, were brought there, but not, apparently, the remains of James Macdonald.
Return to text.

*11
In 1830 there were only two universities in British North America—Dalhousie and McGill. Sending Macdonald to either of them would have been quite beyond the family's financial capacity.
Return to text.

†12
Macdonald, who closely followed news from Britain, would also have been aware that Disraeli eventually commanded advances of an amazing £10,000, more even than Dickens or Trollope—a reflection, naturally, more of his appeal as a celebrity than of his skill as a novelist.
Return to text.

*13
The stone mill, little changed, still stands in Glenora, Prince Edward County.
Return to text.

*14
One observation by Smith in
The Wealth of Nations
of more direct interest to Canadians was that Britain should let go its North American colonies, both to escape from the cost of “supporting any part of their civil or military establishments” and, more urgently, from a cause as sure to be lost, in his view, as had the thirteen American colonies.
Return to text.

*15
An excellent article on Macdonald's speech patterns, from which some of this material is drawn, is Ged Martin's piece of splendid title in the
British Journal of Canadian Studies
(2004), “Sir John Eh? Macdonald.”
Return to text.

*16
This house, at 110 Rideau Street, still stands and has been converted into an exquisite small museum about Macdonald by its present owners, Donna Ivey and Norma Kelly. On a wallboard in the attic, the initials “L.M.” have been carved, perhaps standing for Macdonald's sister Louisa, but more probably for his cousin Lowther Macpherson.
Return to text.

*17
A prime source for the material in this section has been the excellent master's thesis “A Dead and Alive Way Never Does,” by William Teatero for Queen's University in 1978.
Return to text.

*18
There was always an edge to Campbell's comments about Macdonald. “He never became in my judgment a good lawyer,” he said, “but was always a dangerous man in the courts.” One cause, despite their long relationship, was very likely Campbell's resentment that Macdonald dropped him from the plum portfolio of minister of justice in 1885.
Return to text.

*19
All these surviving letters, together with an excellent introduction, are contained in Keith Johnson's
Affectionately Yours: The Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald and His Family
.
Return to text.

*20
The authority on Macdonald's business affairs is the historian Keith Johnson, most particularly in his “John A. Macdonald, the Young Non-Politician,” Canadian Historical Association,
Historical Papers
, 1971.
Return to text.

*21
The “all politics is local” aphorism is generally attributed to “Tip” O'Neill, the powerful Democratic House leader in the United States from 1977 to 1987.
Return to text.

*22
The Canadian Commercial Revolution
was published in 1936 by the historian Gilbert Norman Tucker. It was his doctoral thesis.
Return to text.

*23
A few years after Kingston's fall from grace, an English visitor noted that the town had “a rather dreary appearance” and that many streets were “over-run with grass.”
Return to text.

*24
The Maritimes, then quite separate colonies, had both Poor Laws and Poor Houses.
Return to text.

*25
The first legislation in British North America to establish free education was in Prince Edward Island in 1852. Nova Scotia followed in 1864, and Ontario only after Confederation.
Return to text.

*26
No official Hansard record existed during these years. In an inspired project, the Parliamentary Library has assembled a “virtual Hansard” by collating the near-verbatim reports of debates as published in the newspapers of the time on the basis of accounts sent in by shorthand reporters. The post-Confederation series is all but complete; that for the pre-Confederation Legislative Assembly, though, extends only up to 1856. One editorial challenge is that newspapers often gave short shrift or no shrift at all to members of parties they opposed.
Return to text.

†27
His actual name was De Bleury.
Return to text.

*28
This portrait is of the correct period—the 1840s—and comes from the Kingston area. The woman in it has dark eyes, though, rather than the light-blue eyes Isabella was known to have.
Return to text.

*29
The paucity of surviving letters by Isabella is striking because, being frequently away from Macdonald for extended periods, she must have written often to him and to other family members.
Return to text.

*30
Opium was widely available in the mid-nineteenth century and a common ingredient in patent medicines, such as Winslow's Soothing Syrup, Godfrey's Cordial and McMunn's Elixir of Opium, all of which could be bought without a prescription at drugstores. In its most common form, especially favoured by women, it was sold as laudanum.
Return to text.

*31
Macdonald's use of
Shero
poses a tantalizing mystery, perhaps an insolvable one. None of the standard etymology dictionaries consulted by the author cite any uses of the word in the nineteenth century; rather, “shero” is a modern neologism (s-hero) minted by the feminist movement. It seems that Macdonald either invented it as a tease or overheard it, perhaps from his strong-minded and highly intelligent mother.
Return to text.

*32
Stewart, an expatriate Scot, teaches at Michigan State University.
Return to text.

*33
The only serious competitor for the title of “most important” would be the Rowell-Sirois Report of 1940, from the commission established originally to equip the federal government with the tools to cure the Great Depression of the previous decade. When this mission was fulfilled anyway by the economic boom generated by the Second World War, the commission's report was used to justify transferring jurisdictional responsibilities and revenues to the federal government in order to transform Canada into a welfare state.
Return to text.

†34
Durham's use of the word “race” will strike contemporary ears as odd. It was used then to describe people now usually referred to as “ethnic groups.”
Return to text.

*35
Officially, Upper Canada now became Canada West, and Lower Canada became Canada East. In fact, almost everyone continued to refer to the new sections by their old titles, and for simplicity's sake this older terminology to describe today's Ontario and Quebec is used throughout this text. (In fact, the legislature relegalized the use of the old Upper and Lower Canada terms in 1849.)
Return to text.

*36
A parallel exists with the publication in 1965 of George Grant's
Lament for a Nation
, predicting Canada's inevitable absorption by America. In response, English-Canadian nationalists suddenly stood on guard for their country.
Return to text.

*37
The term
ultramontanism
meant “over the mountains” to Rome. The movement began as a reaction, led by Pope Pius IX, to the ascendant liberalism sweeping across Europe; it was defensive but also reformist.
Return to text.

*38
The initiation of the new legislature of the United Province of Canada was accomplished through the swearing in of Sydenham as governor general in Montreal on February 10, 1841. Proclamations in both languages were posted on the main streets, but they were all ripped down overnight.
Return to text.

*39
Lord Elgin was the son of the British ambassador in Athens who spirited away the Elgin Marbles to the British Museum.
Return to text.

*40
In the nineteenth century, the customary term for patronage was the much more descriptive one of “jobbery.” It had, in fact, an honorable intellectual parentage. Adam Smith, in his great
Wealth of Nations
, argued that the loss of the American colonies might have been prevented had only some of their leaders been offered “the great prizes which sometimes come from the wheel of the great state-lottery of British politics.” Perhaps what the Founding Fathers were really after was less liberty than patronage.
Return to text.

*41
Macdonald's patron, Draper, had managed to avoid the firing line ahead of this debacle by getting himself appointed to the bench.
Return to text.

*42
The most approving comment about Britain's adoption of free trade came from across the Atlantic, from Andrew Carnegie, the Scot expatriate now well on his way to fame and fortune in the United States. Trade didn't follow the flag, declared Carnegie; rather, “trade follows the lowest price current. If a dealer in any colony wished to buy Union Jacks he would order them from Britain's worst foe if he could save sixpence.”
Return to text.

*43
William Draper, Conservative leader and premier when Macdonald entered politics, made some attempts to reach out to Canadien members, but he lacked the skills to make it happen.
Return to text.

*44
The first, modern-style, organized political party in Britain can be dated to Gladstone's Liberals of the 1880s.
Return to text.

*45
Laurier actually spoke English with a slight Scots accent, having learned the language in the Lower Canada settlement of New Glasgow—an area originally settled by Scots.
Return to text.

*46
Ged Martin unearthed the François Bourassa story in Roger Le Moine's 1974 book,
Napoléon Bourassa l'homme et l'artiste
. The French novel Macdonald supposedly was reading was
Le Diable boiteux
[The Devil on Two Sticks] by Alain-René Lesage. It's about romantic misadventures involving greybeards marrying young girls, and bankrupt heiresses marrying fortune hunters. It's hard to believe it would be to Macdonald's taste.
Return to text.

*47
Apologists claimed that Hincks had clung to office only to prevent Brown from replacing him with a ministry from which all French Canadians would be excluded. This effort may account for his being rewarded in 1856 with an appointment by the British government as governor of Barbados and the Windward Islands. He later returned to Canada as Macdonald's post-Confederation minister of finance.
Return to text.

*48
Macdonald actually missed the wedding because he was detained in Quebec City on legislature business. He got Louisa to buy his present for the couple: “I wish that Moll should have a good kit, & I wish you to spend £25 for her on such things as you like. Don't say anything to her about it.”
Return to text.

Other books

Refund by Karen E. Bender
The Countess by Catherine Coulter
Heart on a Chain by Cindy C Bennett
By Force of Arms by William C. Dietz
The War Within by Woodward, Bob
Away by Teri Hall
Weight of the Crown by Christina Hollis