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Canadian Military Heritage
Table of Contents


CHAPTER 1
The Conquest
CHAPTER 2
The Revolt of Pontiac and the American Invasion
CHAPTER 3
The Coveted Pacific Coast
CHAPTER 4
The Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812
CHAPTER 5
Demobilization
A Time For Defence Cuts
The American Threat
The Great Fortifications
Huge Expenses!
The Great Lakes - Neutral Territory
Annual Review of the Upper Canadian Militia
The Militia of Lower Canada
Demobilization of the French-Canadian Militia
Political Confrontation and Secret Societies
The 1837 Lower Canada Rebellion
Saint-Denis and Saint-Charles
Saint-Eustache
The Horrors of War
The Upper Canada Rebellion
New Preparations
Start of the 1838 Rebellions
Napierville
The Invasion of Upper Canada
The Legacy of the Rebellions
The Aroostook War
Canadian Politics and British Withdrawal
Reorganization of the Militia
The 1855 Volunteers
In the Maritimes
CHAPTER 6
The Royal Navy, Ruler of the Seas
CHAPTER 7
A Decade of Turbulence
APPENDIX A
The British Armed Forces
APPENDIX B
Daily Life of Soldiers and Officers
APPENDIX C
Uniforms and Arms
APPENDIX D
Reference

    
CHAPTER 5 Demobilization

    
    
The Upper Canada Rebellion ( 2 pages )

    
    
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Mackenzie's Radicals Dispersed by Loyal Militia
    
    
    
Loyal militiaman, Frontenac County, Upper Canada, 1837-1838.
Loyal militiaman, Frontenac County, Upper Canada, 1837-1838.
(Click image to enlarge)

When they learned the news of the Lower Canada Rebellion in Upper Canada, the radical reform followers of William Lyon Mackenzie, also called Patriots, decided to overthrow the government and declare a republic.  The timing was particularly good, because there were no regular troops in the capital, Toronto (which in 1834 had dropped the name of York to take an Amerindian name).  On December 5 Mackenzie marched into Toronto and down Yonge Street, with some 800 poorly equipped and undisciplined supporters, when a skirmish with a few Loyalists broke out, leaving two people dead.  The incident led to the general mobilization of the city militia and volunteers, because most citizens did not want revolution.

Two days later some 900 Toronto militiamen equipped with two cannon attacked the 500 or so rebels - hundreds of others had already deserted Mackenzie's camp, for he was a superb speaker but a deplorable soldier - at their gathering point on Yonge Street, the Montgomery Tavern.  The battle was brief and it ended with most of the rough-and-ready revolutionaries bolting at the first cannon shots.  Only two rebels were killed.  Mackenzie managed to escape to the United States but several of his lieutenants were captured.

These events turned the province upside down, because rumours of attacks by rebels were rife.  Groups of Patriots met in the London area, but dispersed without fighting at the approach of a column of loyal volunteers commanded by Colonel Allan Napier MacNab.

    
    
Additional Images
    
    
Battle of Montgomery's Tavern, 7 December 1837.        
Click image to enlarge

    
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  Last Updated: 2004-06-20 Top of Page Important Notices