Samuel Lount
{{Short description|Canadian politician (1791–1838)}}
{{About|the Canadian politician and rebel|the film|Samuel Lount (film)}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2024}}
{{Campaignbox Upper Canada Rebellion}}
File:Sam Lount plaque.jpg, Ontario]]
File:Sam Lount bas relief.jpg's Memorial to Lount at Mackenzie House, Toronto]]
File:Sharon Temple.jpg located in Sharon, Ontario]]
Samuel Lount (September 24, 1791 – April 12, 1838) was a blacksmith, farmer, magistrate and member of the Legislative Assembly in the province of Upper Canada for Simcoe County from 1834 to 1836. He was an organizer of the failed Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837, for which he was hanged as a traitor. His execution made him a martyr to the Upper Canadian Reform movement.{{cite web|last=Lount|first=Samuel|title=Dictionary of Canadian Biography|url=http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=3510}}
Early life
Lount was born in Catawissa, Pennsylvania, United States, in 1791. He was the first son of English immigrant Gabriel Lount (1759–1827), who arrived in Philadelphia in 1773 as an indentured servant, served in the Pennsylvania Militia 1777–1778, then moved to Cape May, New Jersey, about 1782. Samuel's mother Philadelphia Hughes (1765 – c. 1827), was of an early Cape May Presbyterian founding family, the granddaughter of Revolutionary-era Patriot James Whilldin and a direct descendant of Mayflower passengers John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley. The Lounts and the extended Hughes family emigrated from Cape May to Catawissa, Northumberland, Pennsylvania, about 1790, then to Whitchurch Township in Upper Canada in 1811. Gabriel Lount and his sons Samuel, Gabriel and George became surveyors and extensive land-owners in Upper Canada. Gabriel Lount served as a Member of Parliament from Upper Canada, as did his son Samuel.
Lount never appears to have been a Quaker, or a member of the closely related Children of Peace in nearby Sharon.{{cite book|last=Schrauwers|first=Albert|title=Awaiting the Millennium: The Children of Peace and the Village of Hope 1812-1889|year=1993|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto|pages=160}} He was trapped in Pennsylvania during the War of 1812, and returned to Whitchurch only in 1815. That year, he married Elizabeth Soules, with whom he had seven children. He briefly kept a tavern in Newmarket while doing work as a surveyor, but spent most of his adult life as a blacksmith in Holland Landing. Lount was also on the Committee of Management for the company that built the first steamboat on Lake Simcoe, The Colborne. In much of his business, he worked as an agent of his youngest brother, George Lount, a prominent Newmarket merchant; their partnership ended in 1836.{{cite journal|journal=Colonial Advocate|date=21 March 1836}}
Political activity
Samuel Lount first became politically active after the expulsion of William Lyon Mackenzie, the elected Reform representative for York County from the Provincial Assembly by the "Family Compact." The "Upper Canada Central Political Union" was formed on January 21, 1833 in Toronto to organize petitions to the Crown on Mackenzie's behalf. The Simcoe County branch was organized by Samuel Lount in Holland Landing, and the Fourth Riding of York branch was organized by Sam Hughes, an elder of the Children of Peace in Sharon.{{cite book|last=Schrauwers|first=Albert|title=Union is Strength: W.L. Mackenzie, the Children of Peace, and the Emergence of Joint Stock Democracy in Upper Canada|year=2009|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto|pages=130}}
In 1834, he was elected to the 12th Parliament of Upper Canada representing Simcoe County. In the Legislature, he sat on the committee to incorporate Canada's first farmers' co-operative, the "Farmers Storehouse Company", managed by Samuel Hughes (Quaker).{{cite book|last=Schrauwers|first=Albert|title=Union is Strength: W.L. Mackenzie, the Children of Peace, and the Emergence of Joint Stock Democracy in Upper Canada|year=2009|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto|pages=118}}
Lount, like many reformers, was defeated in the election of 1836 but claimed widespread electoral fraud and intimidation. Charles Duncombe, who was another leader of the Rebellion, carried a Reform petition on the electoral irregularities in Lount's case to London but was refused an audience by the British Colonial Office.{{cite book|last=Schrauwers|first=Albert|title=Union is Strength: W.L. Mackenzie, the Children of Peace, and the Emergence of Joint Stock Democracy in Upper Canada|year=2009|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto|pages=188}}
1837 Rebellion
File:Graves of Samuel Lount (1791–1838) and Peter Matthews (1796–1838) at Toronto Necropolis 1.jpg
{{Main|Upper Canada Rebellion}}
In July 1837, just after the death of King William IV, William Lyon Mackenzie began organizing a "constitutional convention." Delegates would be selected by Reform associations around the province, who would meet to defend Upper Canada's constitution. The Family Compact refused to call an election after the death of the king, as the constitution required. At a meeting held in Newmarket in August, Samuel Lount, Sam Hughes, Nelson Gorham, Silas Fletcher, Jeremiah Graham and John McIntosh were selected as delegates. All but Hughes and McIntosh were among the primary organizers of the rebel farmers who were to march on the city of Toronto on December 7, 1837.{{cite book|last=Schrauwers|first=Albert|title=Union is Strength: W.L. Mackenzie, the Children of Peace, and the Emergence of Joint Stock Democracy in Upper Canada|year=2009|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto|pages=195–198}} Lount organized the volunteers from the Children of Peace community in Sharon to join a planned march on Toronto and joined the rebel group gathered at Montgomery's Tavern.
When the rebellion fell apart, Lount attempted to flee to the United States, but was arrested and accused of treason. Despite a petition signed by 35,000 Upper Canadians demanding clemency, Lount was hanged on April 12, 1838, in the courtyard of the King Street Gaol at King and Toronto Streets in Toronto. Joseph Sheard was the foreman for the jail and was expected to share in the work of building the scaffold. However, he refused, saying, 'I'll not put a hand to it,' said he; 'Lount and Matthews have done nothing that I might not have done myself, and I'll never help build a gallows to hang them."{{cite web|last1=Peppiatt|first1=Liam|title=Chapter 34: The Jails of the County|url=http://www.landmarksoftoronto.com/the-jails-of-the-county|website=Robertson's Landmarks of Toronto Revisited}} Peter Matthews, another public-spirited farmer who participated in the rebellion, was executed alongside him.{{cite book|last=Healey|first=Robynne Rogers|title=From Quaker to Upper Canadian: Faith And Community Among Yonge Street Friends, 1801-1850|year=2006|publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press|location=Kingston-Montreal|pages=165}} They were buried together at Toronto Necropolis.
Lount had intervened to try to get medical aid for loyalist Lieutenant Colonel Robert Moodie and had stopped Mackenzie from burning the house of sheriff William Botsford Jarvis. However, the Executive Council of the province had felt that they needed to set an example.
Lount's last words were recorded: "Be of good courage boys, I am not ashamed of anything I've done, I trust in God, and I'm going to die like a man."Old Toronto: A selection of excerpts from Landmarks of Toronto, by John Ross Robertson, E.C. Kyte (editor), Macmillan, Toronto, 1954, p. 133. These words are replicated on a historical plaque near the site of the jail where he was executed.
Legacy
- Lount Lake, Ontario, north of Kenora (at 50.170888, -94.307458)
- Lount Lake, Ontario, east of Kenora (at 49.840974, -94.312918)
- Lount Street, Toronto
- Lount Street, Barrie, Ontario
- Samuel Lount Road (Holland Landing)
- Lount & Matthews Commemoration, an annual event marking their patriotism, held on or near the April 12 anniversary of their deaths[http://activehistory.ca/2013/04/lount-and-matthews-commemoration-salon/ Lount and Matthews Commemoration Salon] on ActiveHistory.ca, 2013[http://www.canadashistory.ca/Community/Calendar-of-Events/Events/April/Honouring-Sam-Lount-Peter-Matthews,-Patriots-of-18 Honouring Sam Lount & Peter Matthews, Patriots of 1837] in Canada's History, 2015
- Rebellion Walking Tour, hosted by Mackenzie House in Toronto, on or near the April 12 anniversary of Lount's hanging[http://heritagetoronto.org/event/a-rebellion-walking-tour-at-mackenzie-house/ Rebellion Walking Tour at Mackenzie House] on HeritageToronto.org
- A likeness of Samuel Lount was to appear on banknotes of the Republican Bank of Canada, the financial arm of the Hunters' Lodges.Shaun J. McLaughlin, The Patriot War Along the New York-Upper Canada Border: Raiders and Rebels, The History Press, Charleston, SC, 2012, p. 87. Images of Peter Matthews and James Morreau were also to have appeared on the bank's notes, following their executions for treason.
In popular culture
Samuel Lount, a 1985 film by Laurence Keane and Elvira Mary Lount (a great-great-grandniece of Samuel), starred R. H. Thomson as Lount."A little-known Canadian hero gets his due". Ottawa Citizen, February 11, 1987.
Notes
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External links
- [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=3510 Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online]
- [http://www.ontarioplaques.com/Plaques/Plaque_York03.html Ontario Plaques - Samuel Lount]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20130829200845/http://www.lount.org:2317/lount?m=D&i=26&v=7&t=L Direct Descendants of Samuel Lount]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20130829052827/http://www.lount.org:2317/lount?m=D&i=28&v=100&t=L Extended Descendants of Samuel Lount]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20110107233133/http://www.samuel.lount.org/ Samuel Lount dot org]
{{Members of the Reform Movement (Upper Canada)}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lount, Samuel}}
Category:Members of the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada
Category:People from Columbia County, Pennsylvania
Category:American emigrants to pre-Confederation Ontario
Category:Upper Canada Rebellion people
Category:Executed Canadian people
Category:American people executed abroad
Category:People executed for treason against the United Kingdom
Category:Executed people from Pennsylvania
Category:People executed in British North America by hanging
Category:People executed by Upper Canada
Category:19th-century executions of American people
Category:Immigrants to Upper Canada