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BART SIR LOUIS HIPPOLYTE LAFONTAINE

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 71 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BART
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SIR LOUIS HIPPOLYTE LAFONTAINE
  . (1807-1864),
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Canadian statesman and judge, third son of Antoine Menard LaFontaine (1772—1813) and
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Marie-J-Fontaine Bienvenue, was born at Boucherville in the province of
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Quebec on the 4th of
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October 1807 . LaFontaine was educated at the College de
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Montreal under the direction of the Sulpicians, and was called to the bar of the province of
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Lower
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Canada on the 18th of August 1829 . He married firstly Adele, daughter of A . Berthelot of Quebec; and, secondly, Jane, daughter of Charles Morrison, of Berthier, by whom he had two sons . In 1830 he was elected a member of the House of Assembly for the county of Terrebonne, and became an ardent supporter of Louis Joseph Papineau in opposing the administration of the governor-in-chief, which led to the
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rebellion of 1837 . LaFontaine, however, did not approve the violent methods of his leader, and after the hostilities at Saint Denis he presented a petition to Lord Gosford requesting him to summon the assembly and to adopt
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measures to stem the revolutionary course of events in Lower Canada . The rebellion broke out afresh in the autumn of 1838; the constitution of 1791 was suspended; LaFontaine was imprisoned for a brief period; and Papineau, who favoured annexation by the
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United States, was in exile . At this crisis in Lower Canada the French Canadians turned to LaFontaine as their leader, and under his direction maintained their opposition to the
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special council, composed of nominees of the
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crown . In 1839 Lord Sydenham, the governor-general, offered the
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solicitor generalship to LaFontaine, which he refused; and after the Union of 1841 LaFontaine was defeated in the county of Terrebonne through the governor's influence . During the next
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year he obtained a seat in the assembly of the province of Canada, and on the
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death of Sydenham he was called by
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Sir Charles Bagot to form an administration with Robert Baldwin . The
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ministry resigned in November 1843, as a protest against the actions of Lord
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Metcalfe, who had succeeded Bagot .

In 1848 LaFontaine formed a new administration with Baldwin, and remained in

office until 1851, when he retired from public
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life . It was during the ministry of LaFontaine-Baldwin that the Amnesty
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Bill was passed, which occasioned
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grave riots in Montreal,
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personal violence to Lord
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Elgin and the destruction of the parliament buildings . After the death of Sir James Stuart 'in 1853 La-Fontaine was appointed chief justice of Lower Canada and president of the seigneurial court, which settled the vexed question of
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land tenure in Canada; and in 1854 he was created a
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baronet . He died at Montreal on the 26th of
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February 1864 . LaFontaine was well versed in constitutional'
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history and French law; he reasoned closely and presented his conclusions with directness . He was upright in his conduct, sincerely attached to the traditions of his
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race, and laboured conscientiously to establish responsible government in Canada . His
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principal
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works are: L' Analyse de l'ordonnance du conseil special sur
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les bureaux d'hypotheques (Montreal, 1842); Observations sur les questions seigneuriales (Montreal, 1854) ; see La-Fontaine, by A . DeCelles (
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Toronto, 1906) . (A . G .

End of Article: BART SIR LOUIS HIPPOLYTE LAFONTAINE
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