Online Encyclopedia

GUY CARLETON DORCHESTER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 422 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GUY CARLETON DORCHESTER  , 1st BARON (1724-1808),
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British general and
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administrator, was born at
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Strabane, Co . Tyrone, Ireland, on the 3rd of September 1724 . He served with distinction on the continent under the duke of Cumberland, and in 1759 in
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America as quartermaster-general, under his friend Wolfe . He was wounded at the capture of
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Quebec, and promoted to the rank of brigadier-general . In 1766 he was appointed governor-general of
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Canada, which position he held till 1778 . His justice and kindliness greatly endeared him to the recently conquered French-Canadians, and did much to hold them neutral during the War of
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American Independence . He ordered the first codification of the
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civil law of the province, and was largely responsible for the passing of the Quebec Act . On the American invasion of Canada in 1775 he was compelled to abandon
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Montreal and narrowly escaped capture, but defended Quebec (q.v.) with skill and success . In
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October of the same
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year he destroyed the American flotilla on Lake Champlain . In 1777 he was superseded in his command of the military forces by Major-General John Burgoyne, and asked to be recalled . He returned, however, to America in May 1782 as
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commander-in-chief, remaining till November 1783 . In 1786 he was again sent to Canada as governor-general and commander of the forces, with the title of Baron Dorchester .

Many important reforms marked his

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rule; he administered the country with tact and moderation, and kept it loyal to the British
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crown amid the ferment caused by the French Revolution, and by the attempts of American emissaries to arouse discontent . In 1791 the province was divided into Upper and
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Lower Canada by the Constitutional Act . Of this division Carleton disapproved, as he did also of a provision tending to create in the new colony an hereditary aristocracy . In 1796 he insisted on retiring, and returned to England . He died on the loth of November 18o8 . He married in 1772 a daughter of the 2nd
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earl of Effingham, and had nine children, being succeeded in the title by his grandson Arthur . On the
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death in 1897 of the 4th baron (another grandson) the title became
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extinct, but was revived in 1899 for his cousin and co-heiress Henrietta Anne as Baroness Dorchester . J . C . Dent's
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Canadian Portrait Gallery (
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Toronto, 188o) gives a sketch of Lord Dorchester's Canadian career . His
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life by A . G .

Bradley is included in the Makers of Canada series (Toronto) . Most of his letters and state papers, which are indispensable for a know-ledge of the period, are in the archives department at
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Ottawa, and are calendared in Brymner's Reports on Canadian Archives (Ottawa, 1885, seq.) . _ (W . L .

End of Article: GUY CARLETON DORCHESTER
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