John A (58 page)

Read John A Online

Authors: Richard J. Gwyn

BOOK: John A
9.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Macdonald, “We must soothe the Orangemen”: letter to Sidney Smith, Oct. 13, 1860, ibid., vol. 2, p. 168.

Macdonald, “politics is a game requiring great coolness”: ibid.

Macdonald, qualified double-majority: Russell,
Constitutional Odyssey,
p. 16.

Globe,
“The disruption of the existing union”: Morton,
The Critical Years,
p. 72.

Macdonald, “I am a sincere unionist”: Johnson,
Macdonald,
p. 225.

“was known to have an amorous disposition”: Roy,
Kingston,
p. 163.

Macdonald, “There is no wisdom below belt”: Waite, “Sir John A. Macdonald: The Man,” p. 151.

“I have never met”: Jameson,
Summer Rambles,
p. 139.

Macdonald, “I forgot to tell you”: letter to Margaret Greene, Nov. 3, 1845, Johnson,
Affectionately,
p. 37.

Pp. 205–206 St. Valentine's Day ball: Macpherson,
Macdonald,
pp. 38–39; and Newman,
Album,
p. 46.

Macdonald and Agnes Bernard in Toronto and Quebec City: Reynolds,
Agnes,
pp. 28–30.

Macdonald, “a warm, personal friend”: letter to Helen Macdonald, Oct. 20, 1858, Johnson,
Affectionately,
p. 90.

Pp. 207–208 Hall, “My loved John”: Dec. 21, 1860, LAC, Macdonald Fonds, vol. 545; and Newman,
Album,
p. 46.

Macdonald, “P. S. You can make love to Polly”: Johnson and Stelmack,
Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald,
vol. 2, p. 402.

Pp. 209–11 Eliza Grimason description: Newman,
Album;
Phenix,
Demons;
and Biggar,
Anecdotal Life,
pp. 238–40.

“the shrine of John A.'s worshippers”: Roy,
Kingston,
p. 193.

“central, emotional dead spot”: Johnson,
Macdonald,
p. 202.

“because women know men”: Willison,
Reminiscences,
p. 178.

“It is not too much to say”: Waite, “Sir John A. Macdonald: The Man,” p. 146.

Pp. 212–13 Head, “If it is difficult for any statesman”: July 16, 1857,
House of Commons Parliamentary Papers,
1857–58, vol. 40, pp. 12–15.

“never so intimate with any Governor-General”: Pope,
Memoirs,
p. 141.

CHAPTER 14: THE SHIELD OF ACHILLES

Macdonald, “quite willing personally”: letter to Watkin, March 27, 1865, Waite,
Confederation Debates,
p. 228.

McGee, “Who reads a Canadian book?”:
Hamilton Gazette,
June 8, 1854.

McGee, description: Slattery,
McGee;
and
Dictionary of Canadian Biography,
vol. IX.

McGee, “I see in the not remote distance”: Slattery,
McGee,
p. 137.

McGee, “one of expedients, a succession of make-shifts”: ibid., p. 82.

Macdonald, “Never did a man throw away a fine career”: letter to Henry Smith, Oct. 28, 1858, Johnson and Stelmack,
Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald,
vol. 2, p. 91.

McGee, “ready and dextrous”: Slattery,
McGee,
p. 93.

Galt description: Skelton,
Galt;
and
Dictionary of Canadian Biography,
vol. XII.

Pp. 219–20 Macdonald, “You call yourself a
Rouge
”: letter to Galt, Nov. 2, 1857, Johnson,
Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald,
vol. 1, p. 457.

Macdonald, “unstable as water”: Van den Otten, “Alexander Galt.”

Cauchon memorandum on the “Red River and Saskatchewan Country”: Zaslow,
Canadian North,
p. 2.

Report on West by Hind: ibid., p. 3

Cartier warning to Bulwer-Lytton: Sweeny,
Cartier,
pp. 120–21.

Early Confederation proposals: Upton, “The Idea of Confederation,” in Morton,
Shield.

Bulwer-Lytton, “the convenience of the present Canadian administration”: Careless,
Brown,
vol. 1, p. 284.

Macdonald,
Address to the Electors:
in Johnson and Stelmack,
Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald,
vol. 2, pp. 345–51.

Macdonald, “As you are situated”: letter to Benjamin, June 4, 1861, ibid., vol. 2, p. 342.

Pp. 230–31 Brown at Reform convention: George Brown, “Reform Convention,” p. 262.

“some joint authority”: ibid., p. 263.

Pp. 232–35 Prince of Wales's tour: Radforth,
Royal Spectacle.

Macdonald, “Our administration is more familiar”: Johnson,
Macdonald,
p. 210.

Citizen,
“Ottawa appeared lovely and anxious as a bride”: Radforth,
Royal Spectacle,
p. 48.

Orangemen sing, “Water, water, holy water”: ibid., p. 184.

New York Times,
“a rational population”: ibid., p. 198.

Prince a “heart smasher”: ibid., p. 332.

(fn) Prince of Wales, “Ah, it looks very well from the water”: Cartwright,
Reminiscences,
p. 30.

“the biggest liar in all Canada”: Thompson,
Reminiscences,
p. 251.

“I am a sincere unionist”: Macdonald, speech in London, Nov. 12, 1860,
Address to the Electors,
Appendix A, pp. 3–6.

“It had called the attention of the world”: ibid., Appendix A, pp. 28–35.

“It has been said that I and my Upper Canadian colleagues”: ibid., Appendix A, pp. 23–25.

Macdonald, “wearisome beyond description”: letter to James Gowan, March 12, 1861, Johnson and Stelmack,
Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald,
vol. 2, pp. 311–12.

Macdonald, “violent Tories who are fools enough”: Johnson,
Macdonald,
p. 222.

CHAPTER 15: CANADA'S FIRST ANTI-AMERICAN

“The fratricidal conflict”: Macdonald,
Address to the Electors,
in Johnson and Stelmack,
Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald,
vol. 2, p. 351.

Macdonald on Lincoln as “a beast”: letter to Judge Gowan, Nov. 27, 1864, LAC, MG27 1E17.

“a huge bird chiseled in stone”: Winks,
Civil War,
pp. 24–28.

(fn) Lyons, “a rough westerner of the lowest origin”: Morton,
Union,
p. 88.

Russell, “a sudden declaration of war”: Winks,
Civil War,
p. 56.

(fn) “if the North thought fit at this time”: Smith,
My Memory of Gladstone
(London: T.F. Unwin, 1904), pp. 43–44.

“Secession first he would put down”: Winks,
Civil War,
p. 50.

Macdonald, “If they [Americans] are to be severed in two”: speech in House, April 19, 1861; Pope,
Memoirs,
pp. 242–43.

Macdonald, “will return to Canada sadder and wiser men”: letter to McMicken, Feb. 15, 1865, LAC, Macdonald Fonds, vol. 587.

Macdonald silences Conservatives cheering Southern victory: Cartwright,
Reminiscences,
p. 24.

The
Trent
crisis: Winks,
Civil War,
pp. 71–77.

Lincoln, “one war at a time”: ibid., p. 77.

World,
“The simple fact is, Canada hates us”: ibid., p. 99 (fn).

Snowshoes called “creepers” Bourne,
Balance of Power,
p. 224.

Macdonald, “The day was hot”: Pope,
Day,
p. 9.

Pp. 249 Macdonald, “There is no chance of there being”: Johnson,
Macdonald,
p. 232.

Herald,
“overrun the Province in three weeks”: Slattery,
McGee,
p. 156.

Macdonald, “He is evidently an able man”: letter to Margaret Greene, Nov. 20, 1845, Johnson,
Affectionately,
p. 42.

Macdonald, “By the election of the President”: Wise and Brown,
Canada Views,
p. 100.

Macdonald, “I do not think there is anything in the world”: letter to James Gowan, June 27, 1871, Macdonald Fonds, vol. 589, pp. 972–75.

Macdonald, “It has been said that the United States is a failure”: Martin,
Foundations,
p. 298.

McGee, “It is not the figures [of soldiers] which give the worst view”: Wise and Brown,
Canada Views,
p. 109.

Jefferson to “liberate” Canada: Hyam,
Britain's Century,
p. 180.

(fn) Taché, “the last cannon which is shot”:
Dictionary of Canadian Biography,
vol. IX.

American settlers as “Aliens”: Errington,
The Lion, the Eagle,
pp. 166–87.

McGee, “they coveted Florida”: Wise and Brown,
Canada Views,
p. 109.

Church,
“For four years”: ibid., p. 48.

Bethune, “the extravagant wanderings”: ibid., p. 49.

Davin, “where there is nothing to differentiate”: Berger,
Sense of Power,
p. 157.

“a seeming contradiction”: Wise and Brown,
Canada Views,
p. 94.

“have always found it very hard to believe”: Cartwright,
Reminiscences,
p. 60.

“an active force of 50,000”: Creighton,
Politician,
p. 330.

Macdonald, “I am at last free”: letter to Margaret Williamson, May 23, 1862, Johnson,
Affectionately,
pp. 96–97.

“has had one of his old attacks”:
Globe,
May 15, 1862.

(fn)
Globe,
“in a state of wild excitement”: Martin, “Bottle,” p. 166.

Monck, “nominally by illness” Batt,
Monck,
p. 50.

Macdonald, “slap your chops”: Swainson,
Macdonald,
p. 54.

“The cleverest man of the lot”: Martin, “Bottle,” p. 167.

Macpherson, “I called at your office twice”: letter of 1839, Teatero, “Dead and Alive,” thesis, p. 226.

“particularly true for the period of his widowerhood”: Pope,
Day,
p. 166. Pp. 264–65 “leading a very dissipated life”: Cartwright,
Reminiscences,
p. 32.

Kingston's 136 taverns: Martin, “Bottle,” p. 165.

“Professional men were not ashamed”: Moodie,
Life in the Clearings,
p. 45.

Meredith, “Captain Sparks was hopelessly drunk”: Gwyn,
Private Capital,
p. 189.

Lady Monck, “such drunkenness”: Batt,
Monck,
pp. 84–85.

“One-half of all the crime”: Burnet, “Changing Naval Standards.” in Horn and Sabourin,
Studies in Canadian Social History.

Kimberley, “He should have been in the good old times”: Creighton,
Old Chieftain,
pp. 158–59.

Macdonald, “Yes, but the people would prefer John A. drunk” and “Mr. Chairman, I don't know how it is”: Biggar,
Anecdotal Life,
pp. 193–94.

Northcote, “People do not attribute his drinking”: April 29, 1870, Morton,
Manitoba,
p. 98.

Pp. 268–69, Macdonald, “we have shown that we do not wish to cling”: Creighton,
Politician,
p. 335.

CHAPTER 16: THE WILL TO SURVIVE

Brown, “Already I long to be back with you”: Careless, “Mother of Confederation,” p. 79.

Anne Brown, studies in Germany: ibid., p. 58.

Mowat, “the softer side of his nature”: Careless,
Brown,
vol. 2, p. 186.

Anne Brown, “You must never speak of settling down here”: ibid., vol. 2, p. 188.

Brydges, “omnibus arrangement”: Creighton,
Politician,
p. 349.

Brown, “grimalkin”:
Globe,
April 30, 1863.

Macdonald, McGee, “A drunken man is a terrible curse”: Slattery,
McGee,
p. 207.

McGee, “the fortunate genius”: ibid., p. 230.

Times,
“numerous enough to irritate”: Martin,
Britain and Confederation,
p. 185.

Macdonald, “It is stated [by some opponents of Confederation]”: Browne,
Documents on Confederation,
pp. 95–96.

Macdonald, “We must, therefore, become important”: ibid.

Britain's share of world trade: Hyam,
Britain's Imperial Century,
p. 99.

Disraeli, “a millstone around our necks”: Alice Stewart, “Imperial Policy,” thesis, p. 160.

Disraeli, “power and influence we should exercise”: ibid.

Edinburgh Review,
“productive of heavy expense”: Slattery,
McGee,
p. 58.

Taylor, “a sort of
damnosa hereditas
”: Waite, “Cardwell and Confederation,” p. 27.

Melbourne, “the final separation of these colonies”: Martin,
Britain and Confederation,
p. 166.

(fn) Cobden, “looked more English”: Morton,
Union,
p. 2.

Pp. 281 Peel, “the tenure by which we hold [them]”: Martin,
Britain and Confederation,
p. 167.

Russell, “the loss of a great portion of our Colonies”: ibid.

Palmerston, “it would lower us greatly”: ibid.

Macdonald, “to raise revenue in [its] own fashion”: Johnson,
Macdonald,
p. 234.

Macdonald, “a matter of the gravest importance”: memorandum to Head, March 6, 1861, Johnson and Stelmack,
Letters of Sir John A. Macdonald,
vol. 2, pp. 306–307.

Cardwell, “lynx-eyed logicians”: Waite,
Cardwell,
pp. 20–21.

State of Colonial Office: Farr,
Colonial Office,
pp. 33–34.

Times,
“Who is Minister, at Quebec City”: Martin,
Britain and Confederation,
p. 147.

Gordon, “a last resort”: ibid., p. 138.

Times,
“a wealthier and more completely English”: ibid.

Trollope, “Not one man in a thousand”: Porter,
Imperialists,
p. 110.

“felt himself like a cat in a strange garret”: ibid., p. 251.

Brown, “after all I have seen”: Careless,
Brown,
vol. 2, p. 75.

Newcastle, “Do not remain under such an error”: Martin,
Britain and Confederation,
p. 65.

Laurier, “armed with an eggshell”: ibid., p. 64.

(fn) Newcastle, “The injury to our own trade”: ibid., p. 67.

Other books

Unclaimed Heart by Kim Wilkins
Bible of the Dead by Tom Knox
The River of Dancing Gods by Jack L. Chalker
Young and Violent by Packer, Vin
Stone Kissed by Keri Stevens
Under the Same Sky by Genevieve Graham
On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan