10th Parliament of Upper Canada
Parliament for Upper Canada 1829–1830
The 10th Parliament of Upper Canada was opened 8 January 1829. Elections in Upper Canada had been held in July 1828. All sessions were held at York, Upper Canada. This parliament was dissolved 8 September 1830 on the announcement of the death of King George IV.
The House of Assembly of the 10th Parliament of Upper Canada had two sessions 8 January 1829 to 6 March 1830:[1]
Both the House and Parliament sat at the old York Court House on King Street.
Sessions[1] | Start | End |
---|---|---|
1st | 8 January 1829 | 20 March 1829 |
2nd | 8 January 1830 | 6 March 1830 |
Riding | Member |
---|---|
Carleton | Thomas Mabon Radenhurst |
Dundas | Peter Shaver |
Dundas | George Brouse |
Durham | John David Smith |
Durham | Charles Fothergill |
Essex | John Alexander Wilkinson |
Essex | François Baby |
Frontenac | Hugh Christopher Thomson |
Frontenac | Thomas Dalton |
Glengarry | Alexander Fraser |
Glengarry | Alexander McMartin |
Grenville | George Longley |
Grenville | Rufus C. Henderson |
Halton | George Rolph |
Halton | Caleb Hopkins |
Hastings | Joseph N. Lockwood |
Hastings | James Hunter Samson |
Kent | William Bent Berczy |
Kingston | Donald Bethune |
Lanark | William Morris |
Leeds | John Kilborn |
Leeds | William Buell |
Lennox & Addington | Marshall Spring Bidwell – Speaker 1829–1830 |
Lennox & Addington | Peter Perry |
1st & 2nd Lincoln County | William Terry |
1st & 2nd Lincoln | William Woodruff |
3rd Lincoln | John Johnston Lefferty |
4th Lincoln | Robert Randal |
Middlesex | John Matthews |
Middlesex | John Rolph |
Niagara (town) | Robert Dickson |
Norfolk | Duncan McCall |
Norfolk | William Warren Baldwin |
Northumberland | James Lyons |
Northumberland | Benjamin Ewing |
Oxford | Thomas Hornor |
Oxford | Finley Malcolm |
Prescott & Russell | Donald Macdonell |
Prince Edward | James Wilson |
Prince Edward | Paul Peterson |
Simcoe | John Cawthra |
Stormont | Archibald McLean |
Stormont | Ambrose Blacklock |
Wentworth | George Hamilton |
Wentworth | John Willson |
York (town) | John Beverley Robinson[2] |
Robert Baldwin | |
York | Jesse Ketchum |
York | William Lyon Mackenzie |
See also
- Legislative Council of Upper Canada
- Executive Council of Upper Canada
- Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada
- Lieutenant Governors of Upper Canada, 1791–1841
- Historical federal electoral districts of Canada
- List of Ontario provincial electoral districts
References
- ^ a b Archives of Ontario [1] Archived 11 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ became Chief Justice for the province in July 1829 and was replaced by Robert Baldwin.
Further reading
- Handbook of Upper Canadian Chronology, Frederick H. Armstrong, Toronto : Dundurn Press, 1985. ISBN 0-919670-92-X
- v
- t
- e
Parliaments of Upper Canada
- 1st Parliament (1792–1796)
- 2nd Parliament (1797–1800)
- 3rd Parliament (1801–1804)
- 4th Parliament (1805–1808)
- 5th Parliament (1809–1812)
- 6th Parliament (1812–1816)
- 7th Parliament (1817–1820)
- 8th Parliament (1821–1824)
- 9th Parliament (1825–1828)
- 10th Parliament (1829–1830)
- 11th Parliament (1831–1834)
- 12th Parliament (1835–1836)
- 13th Parliament (1836–1840)