Everything about The Rebellion Losses Bill totally explained
The
Rebellion Losses Bill was a controversial
law enacted by the
legislature of the
Province of Canada in 1849. Its passage and subsequent assent by the
Governor General,
James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin makes the bill a landmark piece of legislation in
Canadian political history. The bill was enacted to compensate
Lower Canadians who lost property during the
Rebellions of 1837 and was modeled on similar measures which provided compensation in
Upper Canada. Those who had participated in the Rebellion were to be compensated with taxpayer's money except for those who had been tried and convicted of
sedition. These provisions angered some of
Montreal's English-speaking citizens and provoked two days of violent disturbances known as the
Montreal Riots. It culminated in the destruction of the Parliament building on April 25th which until then was in
Montreal.
The rebellions of 1837-38 and the subsequent reprisals by forces loyal to the
British crown had devastated much of Lower Canada. The British responded by sending
Lord Durham to
British North America to appraise the situation and in 1839, Durham submitted a report titled
Report on the Affairs of British North America (1839) calling for the union of the Canadas,
responsible government for the British North American colonies, and measures to encourage the assimilation of
French-Canadians.
Upper and Lower Canada were united in 1840 and by 1848, a
governor general was in place who would - in theory - ensure a system of responsible government where the
governor would yield to the will of the
legislature and
cabinet.
In 1846 a report was approved in principle that estimated Lower Canada's rebellion losses at £100,000 (in the currency of the day). In February 1849
Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine, co-leader with
Robert Baldwin of Canada's Reform government, introduced a bill in the legislature, then sitting in Montreal, that would compensate those who could prove their losses and hadn't been convicted of sedition. Lafontaine felt that compensation would help to heal the rift that had been opened in the aftermath of the rebellion, thus containing the influence of more radical French-Canadian nationalists such as
Louis-Joseph Papineau.
The
Tories' opposition to the bill was fierce. Since some rebels (at least those who had escaped conviction or exile) would be able to claim compensation for losses, the Tories claimed the bill was in fact a reward to traitors. They were also upset at the perceived loss of political power to
French-Canadians. The fact that the bill was introduced during a severe economic depression certainly didn't help to ease the tensions.
Despite the Tories' opposition, the bill was passed by the Reform-dominated legislature and submitted to Lord Elgin for assent. Responsible government still being a new concept in Canada, some of the outraged English-Canadians demanded that Elgin refuse assent. The governor had his own serious misgivings about the bill and therefore many Tory supporters were confident that the governor would reject the "advice" of the legislature and cabinet.
However, Elgin's commitment to responsible government outweighed his objections to the bill, and the Rebellion Losses Bill was signed into law on
April 25,
1849. Montreal's English population was incensed. Elgin's carriage was pelted with stones and rotten eggs, and by the evening a
riot had developed which would last for two days and involve thousands of people. By the time the rioting had ended, mobs had caused thousands of dollars in damage and razed the Montreal Parliament building.
The controversy around the bill also contributed to the rise of an
American annexationist movement, who published the
Montreal Annexation Manifesto on
October 11,
1849.
Despite the violent opposition, Lord Elgin's actions were supported by a majority of Canadians and by the
Liberal government in
London. Responsible government had survived its first major test and would go on to be entrenched into Canada's political infrastructure.
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