
audiobook
In the turbulent aftermath of the 1837 rebellion, a new lieutenant‑governor stepped onto the scene of Upper Canada. Arriving just after Sir Francis Bond Head’s departure, Sir George Arthur brought a military mind and a reputation forged in distant penal colonies. The book follows his brief, intense tenure—just over a year—during which he aligned with the conservative Family Compact and opposed the rising reform movement. Through contemporary letters and dispatches, readers see how his hard‑line stance, including the refusal to commute the sentences of rebel leaders Lount and Matthews, deepened political divisions.
Arthur’s earlier postings in British Honduras and Van Diemen’s Land shaped a governing style that prized order over compassion, a trait that both impressed and alienated his contemporaries. The narrative examines his attempts to impose “energetic measures” against what he labeled treason, while also revealing his struggle to understand a colony of free settlers. By the time the Act of Union loomed, his authority was eclipsed by the arrival of Lord Durham and later Lord Sydenham, signaling the end of the military‑led lieutenant‑governorship. The work leaves listeners with a nuanced portrait of a man caught between imperial duty and an evolving Canadian political identity.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (71K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Al Haines
Release date
2020-09-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1888–1963
A leading historian of British Columbia and early Canada, he spent decades teaching at the University of British Columbia and helping shape how the province’s past was studied. His books and essays focused on exploration, colonial government, and the growth of the Pacific Northwest.
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