William Lyon Mackenzie
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rank: | 1st Mayor |
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Term of Office: | 1834 |
Predecessor: | None |
Successor: | Robert Baldwin Sullivan |
Date of Birth: | March 12, 1795 |
Date of Death: | August 28, 1861 |
Place of Birth: | Dundee, Scotland |
Spouse: | Isabel Mackenzie (nee Baxter) |
Profession: | Journalist, Politician |
Political affiliations: | Reform Party/Clear Grits |
William Lyon Mackenzie (March 12, 1795 – August 28, 1861) was a Scottish-Canadian journalist, politician, and leader of an unsuccessful rebellion.
Mackenzie was born in Dundee, Scotland and immigrated to Upper Canada in 1820. From 1824 to 1834 he published the newspaper the Colonial Advocate in York, Upper Canada (now Toronto, Ontario), attacking the upper class clique known as the "Family Compact" which was in control of the government. He used the newspaper as a forum for expressing the ideas of himself and his reform party. In response to this, fifteen young men from wealthy, well-known families of York raided his printing office, damaged his press, and threw cases of type into Lake Ontario in 1826. In 1828 he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada, but was expelled five times for libel, each time being re-elected.
In 1834 he became the first mayor of Toronto. In 1837 he led the Upper Canada Rebellion against Sir Francis Bond Head and the Family Compact, which was quickly put down. Mackenzie escaped to the United States, and set up a provisional Republic of Canada government on Navy Island in the Niagara River. He was later imprisoned in the U.S. for his involvement in the Caroline Affair. An amnesty allowed his return to Canada in 1849, and he was a member of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada from 1851 to 1858.
He died in his house (82 Bond Street) in Toronto in 1861 and is buried in Toronto's Necropolis. The home where he lived his last three years is now a museum.
William Lyon Mackenzie Collegiate Institute, a Toronto high school was named for him. Their mascot is a "Lyon".
Just down the road from the old site of Montgomery's Tavern, now Postal Station K, where Mackenzie launched his rebellion, is Marshall McLuhan Catholic Secondary School. The school's teams are named the "McLuhan Rebels" in honour of Mackenzie and Montgomery's Tavern.
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by none |
Mayor of Toronto 1834 |
Succeeded by Robert Baldwin Sullivan |
Preceded by none - new movement |
Leader of the Reform Party of Upper Canada 1824?–1838 |
Succeeded by Robert Baldwin |