The 'Rebellions of 1837' were a pair of
Canadian armed
uprisings that occurred in 1837 and 1838 in response to frustrations in political reform and ethnic conflict. A key shared goal was the allowance of
responsible government.
The rebellions occurred in two Canadian colonies. The
Lower Canada Rebellion was a larger and more sustained conflict by
French Canadian and
English Canadian rebels against the British colonial government. The
Upper Canada Rebellion was an abortive uprising in
Upper Canada against Upper Canada
oligarchy, the
Family Compact.
The rebellion in Lower Canada began first, in November of 1837, and was led by
Robert Nelson and
Louis-Joseph Papineau. This probably inspired the much shorter rebellion in Upper Canada led by
William Lyon Mackenzie in December.
Although both uprisings were eventually crushed, more moderate reformers like the political partners
Robert Baldwin and
Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine gained more credibility as an alternative voice to the radicals. They proved to be influential when the
British government sent
Lord Durham to investigate the cause of the troubles. Among the recommendations in
his report was the establishment of responsible government for the colonies, which meant that a key objective of the rebellions was achieved because of the incident despite the defeat.
In Popular Culture
The
2001 movie
15 février 1839 by the Québec film maker
Pierre Falardeau depicts the last days of the patriotes who were hanged on February 15, 1839.
The Mac-Paps in the Spanish Civil War
In 1937, exactly one century after the Rebellion, William Mackenzie and Louis-Joseph Papineau were to give their name to the
Mackenzie-Papineau Battalion or the Mac-Paps, a battalion of officially unrecognised Canadian volunteers who fought on the Republican side in Spain during the
Spanish Civil War.
See also
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Battle of the Windmill
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History of Canada
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The Kahnawake Iroquois and the Rebellions of 1837-38
External links
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Chronology and quotes
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The 1837-1838 Rebellion in Lower Canada, Images from the McCord Museum's collections, accessdate 2006-12-10