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Information About

John Graves Simcoe





MILITARY CAREER

Simcoe was born in Cotterstock , Northamptonshire , England . In 1770 , after graduating from Eton College and Oxford , he entered the British Army . He obtained a commission in the 35th Regiment Of Foo t, and was sent to Boston to fight in the American Revolution . He purchased a majority in the 40th Regiment Of Foot , but then in 1777 was made Commanding Officer of the 1st American Regiment (the Queen's Rangers) of loyalist volunteers. Simcoe was one of the army's most successful commanders during this war. He achieved the rank of Lieutenant-colonel and was wounded three times before being captured in 1779 . He returned to Britain two years later.


APPOINTMENT AS LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR

The Province of Upper Canada was created under the '' Constitutional Act Of 1791 ''. This law stipulated that the provincial government would consist of the Lieutenant-Governor, an appointed Executive Council and Legislative Council and an elected Legislative Assembly. Simcoe was selected as the Lieutenant-Governor, and made plans to move to Upper Canada with his wife Elizabeth and daughter Sophia, leaving three other daughters behind with their aunt. They left England in September and arrived on November 11 . This was too late in the year to make the trip to Upper Canada and the Simcoes spent the winter in Quebec City . The next spring they moved to Kingston and then Newark (now Niagara-on-the-Lake ).

Simcoe's first priority was to establish a provincial government. The first meeting of the nine-member Legislative Council and sixteen-member Legislative Assembly took place at Newark on September 17 , 1792 .

Simcoe soon realized that Newark made an unsuitable capital because it was right on the US border and subject to attack. He proposed moving the capital to a more defensible position in the middle of Upper Canada's southwestern peninsula between Lake Erie and Lake Huron . He named the new location London and renamed the river as the Thames in anticipation of the change.

The Governor-General, Lord Dorchester , rejected this proposal but accepted Simcoe's second choice of Toronto. Simcoe moved the capital to Toronto in 1793 and renamed the location York after Frederick, Duke Of York , George III 's second son.

Simcoe started to sell strips of Canadian Land to American settlers, in the hopes that they would become Loyalists and aid Canada if there were ever a war between them and the United States .


ACHIEVEMENTS

As a military-minded leader , one of Simcoe's major works after founding York was the construction of several roads connecting York to various larger towns in Upper Canada. The Kingston Road runs along the north shore of Lake Ontario to Kingston about 260 km to the east. The Dundas Road , named after Simcoe's friend Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville , starts on the Lake Ontario shoreline running northwest, but soon bends westward to Its Namesake near Hamilton . Simcoe planned to continue it to London, where he had wanted to form the capital of Upper Canada. His most notable bit of road building remains Yonge Street , running from the shoreline in the middle of York directly north until it reaches Lake Simcoe (then known as Lake Toronto). Built by the newly reformed Queen's Rangers between 1793 and 1796 , the road was extended several times to eventually develop into the world's longest street, at some 1,896 km. Although military in nature, these roads were more influential in trade and settlement, opening wide areas of southern Ontario to easy travel and dramatically increasing settlement rates.

Simcoe's most notable achievement was the limitation of . The act remained in force until 1833 when the Emancipation Act abolished slavery in all British holdings.


LATER CAREER

In July .


LEGACY

The town of , an armoured reconnaissance regiment of the Canadian Forces reserves. A school in St. Catharines , Ontario, Governor Simcoe Secondary School, was also named after him.


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