(Redirected from Sir John Beverly Robinson):''For his son, a former mayor of
Toronto, see
John Beverley Robinson.''
'Sir John Beverley Robinson, 1st Baronet'
CB, (
July 26 1791 –
January 31 1863) was a lawyer, judge and political figure in
Upper Canada.
Robinson was born in
Berthier,
Lower Canada, in 1791, the son of
Christopher Robinson, a
United Empire Loyalist. In 1792, the family moved to
Kingston in Upper Canada and then York (later renamed
Toronto). After his father's death in 1798, he was sent to live and study in Kingston. In 1803, he moved to
Cornwall, where he lived and studied with the Reverend
John Strachan. He articled in law with
D’Arcy Boulton and later
John Macdonell.
During the
War of 1812, he served with
Isaac Brock and fought at the
Battle of Queenston Heights. On the death of John Macdonell, he became acting attorney general for the province at the age of 21. He prosecuted the case of 18 settlers from
Norfolk County who had committed treason by taking up arms against their neighbours on behalf of the
Americans in a series of trials later referred to as the "
Bloody Assize". When D’Arcy Boulton returned to Canada in 1814, Robinson was given the post of attorney general.
In 1817, he was retained by the
North West Company in their civil case against
Lord Selkirk. When the company decided to press for criminal charges of theft and assault against Selkirk, Robinson prosecuted the case. Although he returned the company's retainer, there were allegations of
conflict of interest.
Robinson also represented the Crown in the case against
Robert Fleming Gourlay, a reformer critical of government policies. Gourlay was eventually banished from the province.
In 1820, he was elected to the
8th Parliament of Upper Canada representing the town of
York. Robinson played an important role in the expulsion of
Barnabas Bidwell, a former member of the
United States Congress who was elected in a by-election in
Lennox &
Addington, from the Legislative Assembly.
Robinson sailed to
England in 1822, seeking to resolve problems with funding in the province. This culminited in the Canada Trade Act of August 1822 which established import duties on goods transported between the United States and Upper Canada, and Upper Canada's share of duties collected. During his time in England, he was also
called to the bar after completing studies at
Lincoln's Inn.
Robinson was the most important member of the
Family Compact, an unofficial clique of Upper Canada's elite, who held the true power in the province. One of the more contentious issues dealt with in the
9th Parliament was the naturalization process for persons who had remained in the United States after 1783 and later came to Canada. Robinson supported a policy dictated by the British Colonial Office which required these people to renounce their American citizenship. He was embarrassed when a new colonial secretary reversed this decision under pressure from those who held opposing views.
In 1827 Robinson had a disagreement with
John Walpole Willis, a puisne judge. Willis took an unusual course of stating in court that Robinson had neglected his duty and that he would feel it necessary "to make a representation on the subject to his majesty's government". Willis also took a strong stand on the question of the legality of the court as then constituted, and this led in June 1828 to Willis being removed from his position by the lieutenant-governor,
Sir Peregrine Maitland.
[1]
In 1829, Robinson became chief justice of the Court of King's Bench and held this post for 34 years. In 1830, he was appointed to the
Legislative Council for the province. In the aftermath of
Upper Canada Rebellion, he pressed for executions of the rebel leaders (to quote: "in his Opinion is was necessary for the ends of Justice, and due to the Loyal Inhabitants of the Province, that some examples should be made in the way of Capital punishments"). Although he opposed the uniting of Upper and Lower Canada, several of his recommendations found their way into the
Union Act of 1840. In 1850, he was made a
Companion of the Bath and a
baronet in 1854.
Robinson died in Toronto in 1863.
References
★
ROBINSON, Sir JOHN BEVERLEY at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
1. Wills, John Walpole