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See also: Canadian educational reformer, was See also: born in See also: Edinburgh on the 5th of See also: January 1816, the son of Archibald See also: Wilson, a
See also: wine-See also: merchant, and See also: Janet Aitken
.
After studying at the High School and the University of Edinburgh, he spent the next ten years in journalism and in other forms of See also: literary See also: work (See also: London 1837–1842, Edinburgh 1842–1847)
.
In 1845 he became secretary to the Scottish Society of Antiquaries, and in 1848 published Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden See also: Time, of which the chief value lies in the numerous illustrations, done by himself
.
In 1851 appeared his most important work, Prehistoric See also: Annals of Scotland, which placed him in the front See also: rank of archaeologists
.
In 183 he became professor of See also: History and See also: English Literature in the University of See also: Toronto, where his See also: practical ability and energy soon made him the most important member of the staff
.
While writing extensively on the archaeology and anthropology of See also: Canada, and giving an impetus to the study, he produced nothing of lasting importance
.
His See also: main work See also: lay in asserting the claims of the University of Toronto, and of University See also: College, the teaching See also: body in connexion with it, against the See also: sect arias See also: universities of the province which denounced the provincial university as godless, and against the private medical See also: schools in Toronto
.
Largely owing to Wilson's energy • in fighting for what he called " the maintenance of a See also: national See also: system of university See also: education in opposition to sectarian or denominational colleges," the provincial university gained the chief position in the intellectual See also: life of See also: Ontario
.
Two of the sectarian universities, the Methodist and the See also: Anglican, have now become See also: united to the provincial university, but the Baptist and the Presbyterian (see See also: KINGSTON) still retain a vigorous existence
.
He was equally successful in his struggle against the See also: rival medical schools in Toronto, the chief of which is now incorporated with Toronto university
.
In his efforts to escape the control of See also: local politicians he was less successful, and in some cases appointments to the provincial university were made for See also: political rather than for See also: academic reasons
.
Though seeing that in a See also: young and democratic country the Scotch-See also: American See also: model must be followed rather than the English, and though resisting attempts to follow the practice of See also: Oxford or Cambridge, Wilson was a believer in the merits of a modified See also: form of the residential system
.
He was one of the first in Canada to cast aside the classical tradition, and as early as 186o had the courage to say: " It is just because . . .See also: German and French are now the keys of so much See also: modern philosophy and science that all wise University reformers are learning to give to modern See also: languages the place they justly claim in a liberal education." In 1881 he was made president of Toronto university; and in 1885 president of the literature section of the Canadian Royal Society; in 1888 he was knighted; and in 1891 given the freedom of the city of Edinburgh
.
He died at Toronto on the 6th of See also: August 1892
.
Record of See also: Historical Publications See also: relating to Canada, edited by G
.
M
.
Wrong, vol. v
.
(Toronto and London, 1901), pp
.
199-217, gives a See also: good sketch of his career, and a bibliography of his numerous See also: works
.
(W
.
L
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