cases of public delinquency, impeachment, high crimes, and misdemeanors, as affording men in power protection for misrule and arbitrary conduct. Such are the principal causes of dissatisfaction at present creating discontent in Upper Canada; and if we are therefore to form conclusions according to all colonial experience, a great change must be effected in the government of this already most important, and destined to be most powerful country. To deny the legislative assembly any longer the originating of money bills, and the application of the revenue they raise, is too absolute for any honest English subject to entertain. Nor is it likely that his Majesty's government will withhold those rights from the people of Upper Canada, on their representing their real grievances in a firm, but always temperate and respectful spirit. CHAP. II. PARTITION OF CANADA. - POLICY OF THE MEASURE. - CIVIL DIVISIONS. - DISTRICTS.-COUNTIES. - TOWNSHIPS. - CLERGY AND CROWN RESERVES. THE partition of Canada, in 1791, was by many considered exceedingly impolitic, as the countries through which the St. Lawrence flows seem naturally formed for one general constitution and government, having Montreal for its metropolis. The chief, if not only inconvenience, that has been experienced in consequence of the division of Canada into two provinces, is the difficulty of appropriating the share, pro rata, of the impost duties levied in the lower provinces on goods consumed in Upper Canada; the trade of which flows in and out of the river St. Lawrence. I have already, in alluding to the partition of the province, remarked, that the language, laws, religion, tenures, habits, and feelings of the inhabitants of Lower Canada were adapted to a constitution limiting the province to its present boundaries, and requiring particular provisions, such as are granted by the parliamentary act of 1791; and that Upper Canada, by the same statute, received a constitution agreeably to the ideas and habits of its inhabitants. The long line of American boundary, along the St. Lawrence and the lakes on the south and west; and the river Ottawa on the north and north-east form, also, strongly delineated natural boundaries, sepa rating Upper Canada from the United States and from the Lower Province. No satisfactory arrangement for reuniting both provinces under one representative constitution seems practicable. Upper Canada was divided, in 1792, into the eastern, midland, home, and western districts, bounded by the same limits as those named by Lord Dorchester, in 1778, Lunenburg, Mecklenburg, Nassau, and Hesse. Governor Simcoe divided these into counties and townships, which have, however, since that time undergone several modifications as to boundaries and name. According to the Imperial Act of 1791, the province of Upper Canada is bounded by the St. Lawrence and the great lakes on the south and west, and by the Ottawa and the seigniory of New Longueil on the north-east and east; by the Hudson Bay territory on the north, and indefinitely on the west by the Indian countries. Neither the northern nor western boundaries are well defined, but generally considered as including the countries watered by the streams falling into the Ottawa from the west, and into Lakes Tomiscaming, Huron, and Superior, from the north and northwest, and comprising altogether a superficial surface of about 140,000 square miles, or the vast number of 89,600,000 acres. Of this region, the greater portion, if not all north of Lake Tomiscaming, and of Lakes Huron and Superior, may be considered a hunting country, and, with few exceptions, unfit for agriculture. Of the extensive territory south of Lake Tomiscaming, and bounded by the Ottawa, the St. Lawrence, and by Lakes Ontario, Erie, Sinclair, Huron, and the Georgian Bay, about 22,120,000 acres have been laid out in townships and reservations. About 3,100,000 is reserved for the clergy, and the same quantity for the crown. The surveyed townships, 316 in number, comprise about or nearly 18,960,000 acres, of which the clergy of the church of England have reservations equal to 2,588,000 acres *, and the crown, 2,588,000 acres, A great part of the latter has been sold to the Canada Company. About 7,850,000 acres have been granted to settlers in free and common soccage; and about 4,934,000, not, however, the best lands, still remain for the government to grant within the surveyed townships. The Huron tract, granted to the Canada Company, comprises more than 1,000,000 acres. The Indian reserves, about 2,263,000 acres, nearly all waste. The clergy reserves for the Six Nations, about 132,000; and about 860,000 more are reserved by and for the crown. The present civil divisions of Upper Canada are eleven districts, divided into twenty-seven counties, eight ridings, and into townships and grants, viz.: The EASTERN, containing the counties of Glengarry, * In alluding to the provision made for the Church of England, I do so on the sacred principle of truth; and, with the sincere desire that the Church of England may, in its Christian spirit, flourish in the colonies. But I am convinced that giving more support, or more power, to one religion than to another, in a country where persons of a different persuasion predominate, will end in the downfall of the church it was intended to maintain. For example, the following resolution of the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada, in 1830:-"Resolved, That there is, in the minds of the people of this province, a strong and settled aversion to a dominant church connected with the government, and connected with that government in a claim to a monopoly of the clergy reserves, and to the enjoyment of peculiar privileges, to the exclusion and prejudice of various denominations of Christians in this province." Stormont, and Dundas. OTTAWA, containing Prescott and Russell. JOHNSTOWN, containing Grenville and Leeds. BATHURST, containing Carleton and Lanark. MIDLAND, containing Frontenac, Lenox and Addington, Hastings, and Prince Edward. NEWCASTLE, containing Northumberland and Dur ham. HOME, containing Simcoe and York; the latter divided into four Ridings. GORE, containing Halton and Wentworth. NIAGARA, containing Haldimand and Lincoln; the latter divided into four Ridings. London, containing Norfolk, Oxford, and Mid dlesex. WESTERN, containing Kent and Essex. |