(Redirected from Thomas Radenhurst)'Thomas Mabon Radenhurst' (
April 6 1803 -
August 7 1854) was a lawyer and political figure in
Upper Canada.
He was born at Fort St. Johns (
Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu) in
Lower Canada in 1803. His father, an immigrant from
England, died in 1805. He was educated at
John Strachan's school in York (
Toronto) and then studied law with his cousin,
George Ridout in York. He was called to the bar in 1824 and then moved to
Perth, the judicial seat of the
Bathurst District. In 1828, he was elected to the
10th Parliament of Upper Canada representing
Carleton County.
In 1830, he fought a
duel with another Perth lawyer, James Boulton; neither party was seriously injured. In 1833,
Robert Lyon, Radenhurst's student, and
John Wilson, Boulton's student, fought the last fatal duel in Canada; Lyon died on June 13 1833.
He was appointed district court judge in 1841 but declined the appointment because he felt that it did not provide adequate compensation. He served as crown prosecutor for the
Eastern and
Midland Districts. In 1850, he became a
Queen's Counsel.
He died at Perth in 1854.
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''