Richard John Uniacke

Richard John Uniacke

Richard John Uniacke by Robert Field
Born (1753-11-22)November 22, 1753
Castletown, Republic of Ireland
Died October 11, 1830(1830-10-11) (aged 76)
Mount Uniacke, Nova Scotia

Richard John Uniacke (November 22, 1753 October 11, 1830) was an abolitionist, lawyer, politician, member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly and Attorney General of Nova Scotia. He devoted 49 years to public service in Nova Scotia. He fought in the American Revolution and later sought to emancipate Catholics and Black Nova Scotians who were slaves in Nova Scotia. He is buried in the crypt of St. Paul's Church. His substantial estate (c. 1813) is preserved as the Uniacke Estate Museum Park at Mount Uniacke.

Ireland

Born in Castletown, Ballintotis, Castlemartyr, Co. Cork, Ireland, County Cork, Ireland, located just four kilometres from the family estate of Mountuniacke, created by his grandfather, Captain James Uniacke.[1] Richard attended school at Lismore, County Waterford. At the age of sixteen he came under the influence of a Catholic priest and as this was abhorrent to his Protestant family, his father had him sent to Dublin where he was articled with the law firm of Thomas Garde. In Dublin Richard became fascinated with the movement for greater Irish political autonomy and he eventually joined with the Irish nationalists. This caused a rupture in the relationship with his father and being cut off from his allowance. Refusing to return home, Richard being penniless, prematurely abandoned his studies and decided to seek his fortune in Nova Scotia. (Uniacke would later return to Ireland to finish his law studies at King's Inns, Dublin.)[2]

Nova Scotia

American Independence

Uniacke

In 1776, Uniacke joined the American rebels in the Battle of Fort Cumberland, despite the loyalty of his father-in-law Delesdernier. Under the leadership of Jonathan Eddy, American Rebels terrorized the local population who remained loyal to the British. Uniacke participated in some of these actions and while trying to commandeer supplies heading for the Fort he was captured.

Shortly thereafter he was sent a prisoner to Halifax. As a rebel Uniacke faced being charged with treason and if found guilty, hung. It is likely due to his family connections, the fact several military officers in Halifax had been stationed with several of his brothers, and the fact he provided evidence for the crown that led to his release. Uniacke, since the time of the Eddy Rebellion, had developed an animosity for the New England Planters, once stating they were " a race of the most lawless profligate and wicked monsters that exist on the face of the earth".[3]

Seven years later, after the American Revolution, Uniacke became a member of the House of Assembly for over twenty years (1783, 1785-1793; 1797-1805). In 1808 he was appointed to the Nova Scotia Council.

Catholic emancipation

Uniacke took up the cause of religious reform in Protestant-dominanted Nova Scotia. In 1783 he redrafted a bill passed by the Nova Scotia House of Assembly to repeal the law passed in 1758 that had proscribed Catholics. The bill had been struck down by the British government. Uniacke's redraft was confirmed thus allowing Catholics to own land, build churches and hire priests. In 1786 Uniacke was one of the founding members of the Charitable Irish Society of Halifax; established to assist needy Irish regardless of whether they were Protestant or Catholic. In subsequent years Uniacke put forward additional amendments to laws which allowed Catholics to establish schools and to vote in elections. His efforts to bring about complete emancipation of Catholics continued until success was achieved through the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829.

Abolition of Slavery

While many blacks who arrived in Nova Scotia during the American Revolution were free, others were not.[4] Black slaves also arrived in Nova Scotia as the property of White American Loyalists. In 1772, prior to the American Revolution, Britain outlawed the slave trade in the British Isles followed by the Knight v. Wedderburn decision in Scotland in 1778. This decision, in turn, influenced the colony of Nova Scotia. Led by Uniacke, in 1787, 1789 and again on January 11, 1808 the Nova Scotian legislature refused to legalize slavery.[5][6][7] Uniacke defeated the efforts of James De Lancey (loyalist) to have slavery legally recognized in Nova Scotia. (The Slave Trade Act outlawed the slave trade in the British Empire in 1807 and the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 outlawed slavery altogether.)

Immigration

Richard John Uniacke Monument by John Gibson, Via Fontanella Studio, Roma, c. 1830, St. Paul's Church (Halifax)

In his role as Attorney General, to continue Nova Scotia's economic growth, Uniacke worked to increase the number of immigrants coming to the colony. In part immigration had been hindered by the cancellation of free land grants. In 1806 Uniacke pushed for a renewal of the granting of land to settlers. Furthermore, he moved to escheat large tracts of land, from holders whose only intent was to speculate on the lands they held, feeling this had further slowed the influx of new settlers. By 1820 he had escheated 100,000 acres. These lands then became available to the government which allowed them to provide new land grants to the many immigrants that landed in the Province after the Napoleonic wars. From 75,000 people in 1815, Nova Scotia's population reached 200,000 in 1838.[8]

Education

Uniacke was also instrumental in the establishment in 1789 of King's College (see also King's Collegiate School) at Windsor, and he sat, despite being a non-Anglican, on its board.

Military service

Throughout the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars, the threat of invasion was an every looming specter. To counter the threat Nova Scotia maintained a militia. In 1793 Uniacke was second-in-command of the Second Battalion of the militia and in 1794 was promoted to Lieutenant-colonel of the Eighth Battalion.

Murders

Both Uniacke and his son were charged with separate murders and both were acquitted. Jonathan Sterns accused Uniacke of being biased against Loyalists in the courts. Uniacke beat Jonathan Sterns so "savagely" that he died. Uniake was acquitted. Sterns was Sampson Salter Blowers protégé who afterward challenged Uniacke to a dual, which Uniacke accepted but then contacted the police.[9][10] [11] In 1819, Uniacke's son Richard John Uniacke, Jr. killed his opponent in a duel. He was tried for murder and acquitted.

Confederation

Uniacke was the first public figure to advocate for the Confederation of Canada, 51 years before it became a reality. He wanted to save the colonies from republicanism and atheism of the United States. As a result, Uniacke advocated unions of the Maritime colonies and of the Canadas, beginning in 1806 when he presented a memoir on British North America at the Colonial Office.[12] In 1826 Uniacke brought his “Observations on the British colonies in North America with a proposal for the confederation of the whole under one government” to the Colonial Office. The “Observations” read in parts like the British North America Act of 40 years later.[13]

Family

In 1774 he travelled from Ireland to the West Indies and then arrived in Philadelphia. In Philadelphia, he was recruited by Moses Delesdernier to settle the Hopewell Township in Nova Scotia (present-day Hopewell Cape, New Brunswick). The following spring both moved to Hopewell. On May 3, 1775 Uniake married Delesderneir's daughter Martha Maria, then aged 12. They would have eleven children before her death in 1803.[14] In 1808 he married Eliza Newton, who bore him a son in 1809.[15]

His son James Boyle Uniacke was a lawyer and the first Premier of Nova Scotia. Another son, Richard John Uniacke, Jr. was a lawyer, Attorney General of the colony of Cape Breton, judge, and political figure who represented Cape Breton County (after Cape Breton was re-incorporated into Nova Scotia) in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1820 to 1830.

His son Norman Fitzgerald Uniacke studied law in Nova Scotia and in 1798 furthered his law studies in London, entering the law at Lincoln's Inn; the second Nova Scotian to do so. In 1808 he was appointed the Attorney General of Lower Canada, was elevated to the Lower Canada Bench in 1825, and served in the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada, in later years he joined Nova Scotia's Legislative Council. Norman, as well as his father, were sympathetic to the French Canadians, and from his position on the Bench shielded the captive rebels of the Lower Canada Rebellion from the full brunt of the "bloodhounds of prosecution".[16]

His youngest son Andrew practiced law in the family firm. Crofton Uniacke practiced law in the family firm, in 1808 was appointed Receiver of Quit Rents, and in 1817 assumed the judgeship of the retiring Justice Croke, only to resign the position in 1819 when he moved to England where he practiced law. Uniacke's son Robert Fitzgerald, did not follow his brothers into the law; instead, with his father's blessing, he took a path into the church, becoming minister at St. George's Church, Halifax.

Legacy

Uniacke House, Uniacke Estate Museum Park, in Mount Uniacke Nova Scotia

His substantial estate (c. 1813) is preserved as the Uniacke Estate Museum Park at Mount Uniacke.[17]

See also

References

Endnotes

  1. Brian Cuthbertson. The Old Attorney General: A Biography of Richard John Uniacke 175-1830. Nimbus Publishing Limited, Halifax, 1980. p. 2.
  2. Brian Cuthbertson. p. 7-11.
  3. Brian Cuthbertson. p. 10.
  4. Slavery in the Maritime Provinces
  5. Bridglal Pachai & Henry Bishop. Historic Black Nova Scotia. 2006. p. 8
  6. John Grant. Black Refugees. p. 31
  7. Brian Cuthbertson. p. 4.
  8. Brian Cuthbertson. p. 70-71.
  9. http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio.php?id_nbr=3255
  10. The Diary and Letters of His Excellency Thomas Hutchinson, Volume 1 By Thomas Hutchinsonp. 342
  11. Cuthbertson, p. 26, 36
  12. Canadian Biography Online
  13. Canadian Biography Online
  14. Brian Cuthbertson. p. 44.
  15. Brian Cuthbertson. p. 50.
  16. Brian Cuthbertson. p. 110.
  17. The Canadian Encyclopedia

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.