Neilson collection : Addenda

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Document Record

Title
Neilson collection : Addenda
Collection Neilson : Addenda
Identifier
lac_mikan_124330
184273
MG 24 B 1
R6446-5-2-E
R6446-5-2-F
Papers
Canadian culture
Politics and politicians
Media and communications
oocihm.lac_mikan_124330
Document source
Library and Archives Canada / Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
Language
English
Description
John Neilson (1775 - 1848) was a Scots-Quebecer editor of the newspaper The Quebec Gazette/La Gazette de Québec and a politician. He emigrated from Scotland in 1790 to join his brother Samuel Neilson, who had succeeded their uncle William Brown as proprietor of the Quebec Gazette. John Neilson became proprietor in 1797 and then gradually came to assume a number of public offices and responsibilities. He was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada in a partial election in 1818, and he was re-elected until 1830 and supported the Parti canadien. In 1823, he accompanied Louis-Joseph Papineau to London to lobby against the Union project in the name of the majority of the MPs in the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada. Again, in 1828 he was part of a delegation sent to London to present his party's demands for reform. In 1830, he took his distance from the Parti patriote, which he considered to be too radical. In 1837, he was named to the Executive Council and Legislative Council. He was a member of the Special Council that administered Lower Canada after the Lower Canada Rebellion. He opposed the Union of the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada after its enactment. In 1841, he was elected to the first Parliament of the Province of Canada in the riding of Quebec County. He was elected speaker, but in 1844 was appointed to the Legislative Council.
This collection consists of items dated 1813 to 1913.
URL
https://heritage.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.lac_mikan_124330