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William
Lyon Mackenzie
(1795-1865)
William
Lyon Mackenzie was born in Dundee, Scotland. After education at
the parish school and working in trade, he migrated to Upper Canada
in 1820. After working as a shopkeeper in a number of communities
he started up the Colonial Advocate, a political journal in York
(Toronto). This was a vehicle for attacks on the Family Compact,
the Tory elite in the colony. In reaction to Mackenzie's broadsides
his printing presses were trashed in the so-called "types
riots" of June 8,1826, carried out by young supporters of
the Compact including students at law in the offices of the Attorney
General. The editor of the Advocate was awarded substantial damages.
He became a popular hero and the leader of the radical wing of
the reform movement in Upper Canada. His rhetoric was powerful
reflecting the influence of American institutions, and of a social
compact theory close to that of John Locke.
In
1826 Mackenzie was elected to the Legislative Assembly for York
and took an active role in its work. He was expelled in 1831 for
libel in breach of the privileges of the house, only to be reelected
five times by constituents, and five times expelled. In 1834 he
caused a stir by publishing a letter of English radical, Joseph
Hume advocating independence for the colony. In 1835 the reformer
was elected Mayor of Toronto and returned to the legislature,
sitting for York County. As a result of that election reformers
had a majority and Mackenzie dominated the house, producing among
other things the Seventh Report of the Committee on Grievances
(1835) which set out the constitutional demands of the more radical
reformers. After the dissolution of the house by Lieutenant Governor
Sir Francis Bond Head, the 1836 electoral loss by the reformers
and British rejection of his demands he became embittered. He
engaged in armed rebellion in 1837, leading an ill-fated march
on Toronto which ended in fiasco. Thereupon he escaped to the
United States, setting up a provisional government on Navy Island.
After being imprisoned by the Americans for breach of their neutrality
laws, he became a journalist.
Permitted
to return to Canada in 1849 under amnesty legislation, he was
again elected to the Assembly, but after an undistinguished second
political career he retired to private life in 1858. Mackenzie
was not an advocate of responsible government. Rather he had wanted
the Legislative Council elected. (See further Frederick Armstrong
and Ronald J. Stagg, Dictionary of Canadian Biography, Vol. 9,
1861-70 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1976), pp. 496-510).
Source:
The Illustrated History of Canada, ed. Craig Brown, (Toronto:
Lester & Orpen, Dennys, 1987) p. 211.
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