Charles Poulett Thomson, 1st Baron Sydenham

Charles Poulett Thomson, 1st Baron Sydenham
The Right Honourable
The Lord Sydenham
PC
Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada
In office
1839–1841
Monarch Victoria
Preceded by Sir George Arthur
Succeeded by John Clitherow
Governor General of the Province of Canada
In office
1839–1841
Monarch Victoria
Preceded by The Earl of Durham
Succeeded by Sir Charles Bagot
President of the Board of Trade
In office
5 June – 14 November 1834
Monarch William IV
Prime Minister The Earl Grey
The Viscount Melbourne
Preceded by The Lord Auckland
Succeeded by Alexander Baring
In office
8 April 1835 – 29 August 1839
Monarch William IV
Victoria
Prime Minister The Viscount Melbourne
Preceded by Alexander Baring
Succeeded by Henry Labouchere
Personal details
Born 13 September 1799 (1799-09-13)
Waverley Abbey, Farnham, Surrey
Died 19 September 1841(1841-09-19) (aged 42)
Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Nationality British
Political party Whig
Alma mater None

Charles Poulett Thomson, 1st Baron Sydenham PC (13 September 1799 – 19 September 1841) was a British politician and the first Governor of the united Province of Canada.

Contents

Background

Born at Waverley Abbey, near Farnham, Surrey, Thomson was the son of John Buncombe Poulett Thomson, a London merchant, by his wife Charlotte, daughter of John Jacob. His father was the head of J. Thomson, T. Bonar and Company, a successful trading firm that had dealings with Russia. After attending private schools until age 16, Thomson entered the family firm at Saint Petersburg. In 1817 he came home due to poor health and embarked on a prolonged tour of southern Europe. He returned to Russia in 1821 and over the next three years travelled extensively in eastern Europe. He established permanent residence in London in 1824 but frequently visited the Continent, especially Paris.

Political career

Thomson was returned to the House of Commons for Dover in 1826. In 1830 he joined Lord Grey's ministry as Vice-President of the Board of Trade and Treasurer of the Navy, an office he held until 1834. He was then President of the Board of Trade under Lord Melbourne in 1834 and again between 1835 and 1839. A free-trader and an expert in financial matters he was elected MP for Manchester in 1832, a seat which he occupied until 1839. He was continuously occupied with negotiations affecting international commerce until 1839, when he accepted the Governorship of Canada.

Canada

Sydenham succeeded Lord Durham as Governor of Canada in 1839. He was responsible for implementing the Union Act in 1840, uniting Upper Canada and Lower Canada as the Province of Canada and moving the seat of government to Kingston. Later that year, he was raised to the peerage as Baron Sydenham, of Sydenham in the County of Kent and of Toronto in Canada. Upper Canadians were given a choice in the matter of union, which they accepted; Lower Canada had no say, and as a result many French Canadians were opposed to both the union and Sydenham himself. Sydenham was just as anti-French as Durham had been, and he encouraged British immigration to make the French Canadian population less significant. French Canadians referred to him as le poulet, "the chicken." Realizing he had almost no support in Lower Canada (at this time Canada East), he reorganized ridings to give the English population more votes, and in areas where that was infeasible, he allowed English mobs to beat up French candidates. Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine was one such candidate who suffered from Sydenham's influence; Lafontaine eventually left Canada East to work with Robert Baldwin in creating a fairer union for both sides.

Sydenham also settled the Protestant land dispute in Upper Canada (at this time Canada West), which the Family Compact had interpreted to refer only to the Anglican Church. Sydenham declared that half of the land set aside for Protestant churches would be shared between Anglicans and Presbyterians, and the other half would be shared between the other Protestant denominations. Sydenham wanted to make Canada more financially independent, so that there would less danger of annexation by the United States. He had been working on this policy throughout the 1830s, when he was President of the Board of Trade in Britain, though he had little time to implement any economic reforms once he had arrived in Canada. After less than two years as Governor-General, Sydenham died in 1841.

Legacy

Sydenham Public School, Kingston, Ontario which has operated as an educational facility since its construction in 1853 as the Kingston County Grammar School, was renamed in the 1890s for Lord Sydenham, governor general of British North America from 1839 to 1841. [1]

References

Bibliography

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Joseph Butterworth
Edward Bootle-Wilbraham
Member of Parliament for Dover
1826 – 1832
With: Edward Bootle-Wilbraham to 1828
William Henry Trant 1828–1830
Sir John Reid, Bt 1830–1831
Robert Henry Stanhope 1831–1832
Sir John Reid, Bt from 1832
Succeeded by
John Halcomb
Sir John Reid, Bt
New constituency Member of Parliament for Manchester
1832–1839
With: Mark Philips
Succeeded by
Mark Philips
Robert Hyde Greg
Political offices
Preceded by
Thomas Courtenay
Vice-President of the Board of Trade
1830–1834
Succeeded by
Viscount Lowther
Preceded by
Thomas Frankland Lewis
Treasurer of the Navy
1830–1834
Preceded by
The Lord Auckland
President of the Board of Trade
1834
Succeeded by
Alexander Baring
Preceded by
Alexander Baring
President of the Board of Trade
1835–1839
Succeeded by
Henry Labouchere
Preceded by
Sir George Arthur
Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada
1839–1841
Succeeded by
John Clitherow
Preceded by
The Earl of Durham
Governor General of the Province of Canada
1839–1841
Succeeded by
Sir Charles Bagot
Academic offices
Preceded by
Sir George Arthur
Chancellor of King's College
1841
Succeeded by
Sir Charles Bagot
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baron Sydenham
1840–1841
Extinct

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