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Robert C. Baldwin''

Robert Baldwin
'Robert Baldwin' (May 12,
1804 – December 9,
1858) was born at York (now
Toronto). He, along with his political partner
Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine, lead the first
responsible ministry in Canada, regarded by some as the first truly Canadian government.
[1]
His father,
William Warren Baldwin (d.
1844), moved to
Upper Canada from
Ireland in
1798; though a man of wealth and good family and a devoted member of the
Church of England, he opposed the religious and political oligarchy which was then at the head of Canadian affairs, and brought up his son in the same principles. Robert Baldwin was called to the Bar in
1825 , and soon entered into partnership with
John Rolph.
[2] In
1829 he was elected a member of the
Parliament of Upper Canada for the town of
York, but was defeated in the following year and retired for a time into private life. During the next six years, he so constantly advocated a responsible executive as the one cure for the political and economic evils of the time that he was known as "the man of one idea." In
1836 he was called by Sir
Francis Bond Head (
1793 –
1875), the lieutenant-governor, to the
Executive Council, but finding himself without influence, and compelled to countenance measures to which he was opposed, he resigned within a month. Though a moderate reformer, he strongly disapproved of the
rebellion of
1837 –
1838.
He joined the executive council under Charles Poulett Thomson (later Lord Sydenham) in 1840 and on the union of the two Canadas (
1841) he was a member of its first executive council under
Lord Sydenham, but soon resigned on the question of
responsible government. In
1842 he formed the first Liberal administration, in connection with Lafontaine, who suggested an equal partnership. Baldwin, however, refused and took the position of Deputy Premier under Lafontaine.
[3] However, he resigned the next year, after a quarrel with the governor-general, Sir
Charles Metcalfe, on a question of patronage, in which he felt that of responsible government to be involved. At the general election which followed, the governor-general was sustained by a narrow majority, but in
1848 the Liberals were again returned to power, and he and Lafontaine formed their second administration under
Lord Elgin and carried numerous important reforms, including the freeing from sectarian control of the
University of Toronto and the introduction into Upper Canada of an important municipal system.
Internal dissensions soon began to appear in the Liberal party, and in
1851 Baldwin resigned. The special struggle leading to his resignation was an attempt to abolish the court of chancery of Upper Canada, whose constitution was due to a measure introduced by Baldwin in
1849. The attempt, though defeated, had been supported by a majority of the representatives from Upper Canada, and Baldwin's fastidious conscience took it as a vote of want confidence. A deeper reason was his inability to approve of the advanced views of the Radicals, or "Clear Grits," as they came to be called. On seeking re-election in York, he declined to give any pledge on the burning question of the Clergy Reserves and was defeated. In
1853 the Liberal-Conservative party, formed in
1854 by a coalition, attempted to bring him out as a candidate for the upper house, which was at this date elective, but though he had broken with the advanced reformers, he could not approve of the tactics of their opponents, and refused to stand. He died on the 9th of December
1858 in
Spadina. Even those who most strongly opposed his measures admitted the purity and unselfishness of his motives. After the concession of responsible government, he devoted himself to bringing about a good understanding between the
English and
French-speaking inhabitants of
Canada, and his memory is held as dear among the French Canadians as in his native province of
Ontario.
The Baldwin family was a prominent one. Robert Baldwin coutned among his cousins such influential Upper Canadians as the Anglican bishop
Maurice Scollard Baldwin, Toronto mayor
Robert Baldwin Sullivan and the Irish-Catholic leader
Connell James Baldwin. Robert Baldwin is the grandfather of
Frederick Walker Baldwin a distinguished Canadian engineer, politician, and football player who worked with Alexander Graham Bell. Robert Baldwin is also the grandfather of
Robert Baldwin Ross a Canadian literary figure, who was fictionalized as the protagonist in Timothy Findley's famous book, The Wars.
Footnotes
1. Saul, John Ralston. Reflections of a Siamese Twin: Canada at the End of the Twentieth Century (Penguin books, 1997), 65-66
2. Michael S. Cross and Robert Lochiel Fraser, "Robert Baldwin in ''EDictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
3. Saul, 335
See also
★
LaFontaine-Baldwin Symposium
★ See J. C. Dent, ''Canadian Portrait Gallery'' (
1880). His life, by the Hon. Geo. W. Ross, is included in ''The Makers of Canada series'' (
Toronto).
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
For more information see:
'The Baldwins and The Great Experiment' by R.M and J. Baldwin, Longmans Canada Ltd, 1969
AND
'My Dear Friend' ''Letters of Louis Hippolyte LaFontaine & Robert Baldwin'', edited by Yolande Stewart, Plum Hollow books, 1978.
AND
"The Life of Robert Baldwin" by George E. Wilson, Ryerson Press: Toronto, 1933
AND
"Baldwin LaFontaine Hincks: Responsible Government" by S. Leacock, Toronto, Monrang and Co., 1907.