WILMOT AS A DELEGATE TO THE COLONIAL OFFICE
Mr. Wilmot took a very active part
in the proceedings of the legislature during the session
of 1836, and was the moving spirit in the committee
of the whole to inquire into the state of the province
during that session. The result was the passing
by large majorities of a series of twenty-six resolutions
condemning the management of the Crown lands office,
the composition of the executive council and also of
the legislative council, and declaring that the control
of the casual and territorial revenues should be placed
in the hands of the legislature. These resolutions
were made the basis of an address to His Majesty,
which was to be carried to England by a deputation
of two members of the House of Assembly. This
address relates at length the principal facts of the
management of the Crown lands and the reasons of the
House of Assembly for dissatisfaction therewith.
Mr. Wilmot, in recognition of the active part he had
taken in this business, was appointed a member of
the delegation, the other member being William Crane
of Westmorland, a gentleman of experience, wealth
and standing in the province. This appointment
was the highest compliment that could possibly have
been paid to Wilmot’s capacity, for the negotiation
then to be conducted with the colonial office was
of the most important and delicate character, and
one which vitally affected the interests of the province.
The colonial secretary at that time
was Lord Glenelg, a statesman whose character has
been drawn by Sir Henry Taylor, who was then a clerk
in the colonial office. “Amiable and excellent
as he was,” says Taylor, “a more incompetent
man could not have been found to fill an office requiring
activity and ready judgment. A dart flung at him
by Lord Brougham in 1838 points to his notorious defect
as a minister called upon to deal with a crisis.
The then crisis was that of the Canadian Rebellion.”
“It is indeed,” said Lord Brougham, “a
most alarming and frightful state of things, and I
am sure must have given my noble friend many a sleepless
day.” It was probably because of Lord Glenelg’s
habit of procrastination that the delegates had to
remain in London for four months before they were
able to bring their business to a conclusion.
They arrived there about the middle of June, and it
was well on in October before they were able to leave.
The result of their work was that an arrangement was
made satisfactory both to the British government and
to the delegates representing the House of Assembly,
by which the casual and territorial revenues were
to be transferred to the province, in consideration
of the legislature undertaking to provide for a civil
list of L14,500 currency annually, for the payment
of certain salaries chargeable to that fund.
A draft of a Civil List Bill was prepared and agreed
to by the lords of the treasury, and the understanding
was that this bill should be passed by the legislature,
and receive the assent of the lieutenant-governor,
when it would immediately become operative.
The first clause of this bill transferred
the proceeds of the territorial and casual revenues,
and of all woods, mines and royalties which had been
collected and were then in hand, or which should thereafter
be collected, to the provincial treasurer, who was
authorized to receive them for the use of the province,
while the Act remained in force. The second clause
charged the revenues with the payment of L14,500 for
a civil list. The third clause enacted that all
the surplus over and above the sum of L14,500 currency,
should remain in the treasury of the province until
appropriated or disposed of by an Act or Acts of the
general assembly. The fourth clause gave the
lieutenant-governor, with the advice of his executive
council, power to expend such sums as they might deem
necessary for the prudent management, protection and
collection of the said revenues, a detailed account
of which was to be laid before the legislature within
fourteen days of the commencement of each session,
with all vouchers for the same. It was also enacted
that all grants or sales of Crown lands should be
void, unless the land had been sold at public auction
after due notice in the Royal Gazette.
By this arrangement the House of Assembly had obtained
the boon for which it had so long been contending,
but there was still one more obstacle to be overcome, the
opposition of the lieutenant-governor, Sir Archibald
Campbell, who had entered into a plot with some of
the enemies of freedom in the province for the purpose
of thwarting, not only the wishes of the House of
Assembly, but also the intentions of the home government.
As soon as Sir Archibald Campbell was apprised of
the intention of His Majesty’s advisers in England
to transfer the casual and territorial revenues to
the provincial legislature, he commenced a correspondence
with the colonial office, pointing out what he deemed
to be imperfections in the scheme which they had prepared
for the management of the public lands. He pretended
to have discovered that there was some error in the
calculation of the lords of the treasury with regard
to the sum to be paid in lieu of the civil list, and
that the amount of L14,500 currency would not be sufficient
to defray all the expenditures chargeable on the civil
list.
Sir Archibald Campbell, soon after
the opening of the session of the legislature, in
December 1836, requested the House of Assembly to add
a suspending clause to any Civil List Bill they might
pass, so that he might forward it to the home government
for their approval. As this was entirely contrary
to the understanding which had been reached between
Messrs. Wilmot and Crane and the colonial secretary, it
being understood that the bill if passed in the form
agreed upon would be immediately assented to by the
lieutenant-governor, the House of Assembly
very naturally refused to comply with Sir Archibald’s
wishes. He, however, held firm in his resolution,
and the Civil List Bill which had been agreed to by
the home authorities, after being passed by both Houses,
did not receive his assent. At the close of the
session, while the matter was under discussion, at
the instigation of the lieutenant-governor one of
the executive council, Solicitor-General Street, was
sent on a secret mission to Downing Street. The
object of this mission was to make such representations
to the home authorities as would induce them to delay
giving their assent to the Civil List Bill. The
truth of the matter seems to have been that Sir Archibald
Campbell and his advisers in New Brunswick thought
if they could only gain time the Liberal government
of England which had granted such favourable terms
to the province might be defeated, and a Tory government
come into power which would speedily undo all that
their predecessors had done, and refuse to grant any
concessions to the legislature of New Brunswick.
There was great excitement in the province in consequence
of the action of the lieutenant-governor, and this
excitement was fairly voiced in the House of Assembly,
where an address was prepared representing the condition
of affairs to His Majesty, and detailing the manner
in which the lieutenant-governor had sought to thwart
the intentions of the imperial government. This
address was passed by a vote of twenty-seven to two,
the only members of the House who ventured to stand
with the man who occupied Government House being John
Ambrose Street and William End.
Messrs. Crane and Wilmot were again
appointed a deputation to proceed to England with
the address of the House of Assembly, and took their
departure two days after it was passed, amidst great
popular demonstrations by the citizens of Fredericton.
The legislature was prorogued on March 1st, on which
day the House of Assembly again requested the lieutenant-governor
to pass the Civil List Bill, pointing out that under
the arrangements made with the colonial office it was
his duty to do so, but their request fell upon deaf
ears. In the speech proroguing the legislature,
Sir Archibald Campbell stated that he had withheld
his assent from this bill because a suspending clause
had not been appended to it. These were the last
words that this obstinate governor was destined to
speak before a New Brunswick legislature. Finding
that all his hopes of impeding the progress of the
province in the direction of political liberty were
in vain, he tendered his resignation to save himself
from being removed, as he would have been, for his
direct disobedience to the commands of his superiors
in England. Sir John Harvey, another soldier, but
a man of a very different spirit, was appointed to
succeed him as lieutenant-governor. The Civil
List Bill was again passed at a special session of
the legislature and received the assent of the governor,
becoming law on July 17th, 1837. From that time
to the present, the province of New Brunswick has
controlled the revenues which it derives from its Crown
lands and similar sources, and, whether wisely expended
or not, the people of this province have at least
the satisfaction of knowing that the money is appropriated
by their own representatives, and by a government
which is responsible to them for its actions.
The death of King William IV took
place during the summer of 1837, and brought about
another general election. Mr. Wilmot again stood
for the county of York and was returned at the head
of the poll. This was only a proper recognition
of his eminent services to the province in the legislature
and as a delegate to England. At this election,
Charles Fisher, a young lawyer, was also returned
for the county of York. Mr. Fisher, although
not so fluent a speaker as Wilmot, was second to no
man in the legislature in devotion to Liberal principles,
and he proved a most valuable lieutenant in the battle
for responsible government which now began. The
contest for the control of the Crown lands of the
province had been won, but a still more difficult task
remained for the friends of constitutional principles
to accomplish, the making of the executive
responsible to the people. The members of the
House of Assembly had been almost unanimous in demanding
the control of the Crown lands, but, when it came
to applying the principles of responsible government
to the affairs of the province generally, there were
many deserters from the ranks of those who had called
themselves Reformers. This was partly due to
the principles of responsible government not being
well understood even by some members of the legislature,
and partly to the fact that the question did not touch
the self-interest of the members in the same manner
as the mismanagement of the Crown lands department
had done.
Under a thoroughly constitutional
system of government the initiation of money grants
would have been in the hands of the executive, but
in 1837 not a single member of the executive council
had a seat in the House of Assembly. Three of
the five members of the executive council were also
members of the legislative council, but the two others
had no seat in either House, a fact which shows on
what lax principles the executive was constructed.
The initiation of money grants being in the House of
Assembly, any private member had it in his power to
move an appropriation of money for any object that
he pleased. In this way a system of “log
rolling” was inaugurated in the legislature,
which resulted in extravagant expenditures and the
appropriation of money for objects which, under a
better system, would not have received it. It
was impossible to put any check upon the expenditure
or to keep it within the income under such an arrangement,
and one of the first efforts of the Reformers was
therefore directed to the removal of this abuse.
Unfortunately this was, of all the proposed reforms
in the constitution, the one most difficult to carry,
and it was not accomplished until after Wilmot had
retired from public life.
One of the subjects which engaged
the attention of Mr. Wilmot, at an early period of
his legislative career, was the charter of King’s
College. This charter had been obtained in 1828
from His Majesty, King George IV, and the legislature
had granted the college an endowment of eleven hundred
pounds currency a year, in addition to ten hundred
pounds sterling granted by the king out of the casual
and territorial revenues of the province. The
aim of the charter was to make the college a Church
of England institution exclusively, for it provided
that the bishop of the diocese should be the visitor
of the college, and that the president should always
be a clergyman in holy orders of the United Church
of England and Ireland. No religious test was
required of students matriculating or taking degrees
in arts, but the council of the college, which was
the governing body, was to be composed of members of
the Church of England, who, previous to their appointment,
had subscribed to the thirty-nine articles. The
professors, to the number of seven, who were members
of the Church of England, were to be members of the
council, so that, although no religious test was required
of them, it was reasonably certain that none but persons
of that denomination would be appointed to professorships.
These terms were much complained of, and surely it
was absurd to place a provincial college under the
control of a single denomination which could not claim
more than one-third of the population of the province
as belonging to its communion. It is stated in
Fullom’s Life of Sir Howard Douglas, who
was lieutenant-governor of the province at the time,
that the charter would have been much less liberal
than it was if it had not been for his efforts.
The Bishop of Nova Scotia and the Bishop of London
desired to confine it entirely to students belonging
to the Church of England, and to make subscription
to the thirty-nine articles a condition precedent
to the granting of degrees in arts. On the other
hand, Attorney-General Peters in 1845, when the amendments
to the charter were discussed in the legislative council,
stated that the charter as originally drafted and sent
to England was much more liberal in its provisions
than when finally passed, but that in 1828, to the
surprise of Sir Howard Douglas, the then existing
charter came out copied from one obtained by Dr. Strachan
for Upper Canada. If this statement was correct,
it affords a singular illustration of the injury that
the bigotry of one man can cause to future generations.
If King’s College had treated all denominations
on equal terms, all would have resorted to it for
higher education. As it was, it became the college
of only a section of the people, the different denominations
established colleges of their own, and when finally
the connection between the Church of England and King’s
College was severed and it became the University of
New Brunswick, the denominational colleges had become
so well established that it could hardly compete with
them on equal terms.
During the session of 1838 Mr. Wilmot,
as chairman, submitted to the legislature the report
of the select committee which had been appointed to
take into consideration the state of the college.
In this report it was proposed to make certain alterations
in the charter for the purpose of rendering it more
acceptable to those who were not in the communion
of the Church of England. In 1839 he introduced
a bill in the House of Assembly embracing these amendments.
The principal changes were to make the lieutenant-governor
visitor of the college instead of the bishop, to repeal
the section which provided that the president of the
college must be a member of the Church of England,
and to make persons of every denomination eligible
for members of the college council. The professorship
of theology was still retained, and students in that
course were still required to subscribe to the thirty-nine
articles, while services were held in the college
morning and evening according to the rites of the
Church of England. These changes were certainly
of a very moderate character, but they were stoutly
resisted by the college authorities and their friends.
They put forward the plea that the legislature had
no right to alter a royal charter, that to do so was
an interference with the royal prerogative, and that
the direst consequence would ensue if the constitution
of the college was changed. According to their
view, a royal charter once granted, the king himself,
even with the assistance of both branches of the legislature,
could not amend it. The college authorities also
denied that they were under the control of the legislature
in any way, or responsible to it for their management
of the institution, although they were living on money
voted by the legislature for its support.
Wilmot’s bill passed the House
of Assembly, but was defeated in the legislative council.
A similar bill was introduced by him in 1840, but
postponed in consequence of a communication from the
college council which seemed to show an inclination
to yield something to the demands of the public.
But a fatal objection to these modifications being
accepted was the insistence of the college council
that the bishop of the diocese, or in his absence
the archdeacon, should be a member of that body.
Representatives of the Presbyterians, Methodists and
Baptists pointed out in a memorial to the lieutenant-governor
that the exclusive character of the council would
still remain, as that body would be composed wholly
of members of the Church of England. Lord John
Russell, the colonial secretary, to whom the matter
had been referred, suggested that the college should
surrender its charter and that a new one should be
prepared embracing the proposed changes, but the college
council took no steps to carry these suggestions into
effect. This being the case, at Wilmot’s
instance the House of Assembly proposed an address
to the queen setting forth the facts of the case and
asking Her Majesty to assent to a bill, a draft of
which was enclosed, which the House of Assembly was
prepared to pass.
At the session of 1842 Wilmot again
introduced the King’s College Bill, and it was
passed by the House, but again rejected by the legislative
council. Early in the session of 1843, the lieutenant-governor
communicated to the House by message two despatches
from Downing Street on the subject of the college.
One of these was from Lord John Russell, and the other
from his successor, Lord Stanley. Lord John laid
down the doctrine that “it is a principle of
undoubted validity that a grant of franchise by the
Crown is irrevocable and unalterable by a further
exercise of the royal authority unless the power of
revocation and change be embodied and reserved in
the original grant, or unless the grantees make a
voluntary surrender of their franchises.”
Lord John had evidently forgotten his English history,
or he would have known that English kings on many
occasions had revoked charters granted by themselves
or their predecessors. Lord John desired the college
to surrender its charter and accept a new one, but
Lord Stanley and the law officers of the Crown whom
he had consulted held a different view, and thought
that a new charter could be granted to supersede the
old. Both colonial secretaries were desirous
that the changes in the constitution of the college
should be effected by a new royal charter. But
this did not suit the views of the House of Assembly,
and after another college bill had been defeated in
the House and rejected by the council, on March 20th,
1843, the following resolution, which was moved by
Mr. Wilmot, was passed by the House without a division:
“WHEREAS, The assembly, during
several years past, have endeavoured, without success,
to effect certain reasonable modifications in the
charter of King’s College; and whereas those
modifications as contained in the bill which has been
rejected by the legislative council, during the present
session, have been loudly and repeatedly called for
by numerous petitions from nearly every county in
the province, while no petition has ever been presented
against those modifications; and whereas it is in
vain to expect the amount of public benefit from the
institution which its munificent endowment from the
provincial revenue should ensure; therefore,
“Resolved, That this
House have learned with much regret and disappointment
that a majority of the legislative council have rejected
the said bill during the present session; and further
“Resolved, That this
House should persevere in their endeavours to amend
the said charter by legislative enactment, and not
resort to an address to the throne for a new charter;
and that this House will steadfastly adhere to the
principle that all the educational establishments
of the province, which are endowed from the colonial
revenues, whether incorporated by royal charter or
otherwise, should be at all times subject to the supervision
of the local legislature.”
This resolution embodied a great principle
to which the House of Assembly was determined to adhere,
and which was very soon carried out. In 1844
the college amendment bill was again rejected by the
council, but this was the last effort of that reactionary
body to defeat the wishes of the people. At the
session of 1845, the college bill was again introduced
by Mr. Wilmot, and this time it passed both Houses.
But like many important bills of that day it was reserved
for Her Majesty’s pleasure and although passed
in March, 1845, it was not until December, 1846, that
it received the royal assent and became law.