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So, in 1791, the British Parliament enacted the Constitutional Act, which
split Quebec into two provinces - Upper and Lower Canada. Each of
these was to be governed by a legislative council appointed for life
(this has since become the Senate) and a legislative assembly elected
by the people (now the House of Commons).
Soon after, the Province's first Governor,
John Graves Simcoe, established administrative districts and ordered
that townships be surveyed and laid out between the Trent river
(30 miles east of Cobourg) and the Humber river (just west of York,
now Toronto). With this change, "Loyalist"
settlers came to Cobourg in increasing numbers.
The consensus amongst historians seems to be that the first
settler in Cobourg was Eliud Nickerson who
built a cabin near King and Division Streets in 1798. [See The
Poplars]. Eliud
was a descendent of William Nickerson who emigrated from England
in 1637 to settle in Chatham on Cape Cod. Eliud's father was
Nathaniel and his mother Annice and he was born
in 1760 at Danbury, Connecticut.
He married Mary Margaret Fritz and arrived in Ontario
via Belle Isle New Brunswick. The settlement he founded was first
called Buckville, after Elijah Buck, who settled there in 1808
and opened a tavern. Later, the settlement was named Amherst,
after Baron Amherst. Even later, the settlement was called Hamilton,
after the township. It was also nicknamed Hardscrabble.
More.
In the early 1800's many more Loyalists arrived and
although the term Loyalist was (and still is) used to
describe those still loyal to the crown, it now included other
groups such as disbanded British troops. In addition, there were
frontier settlers from the American republic with no particular
political orientation searching for better land. Many Cobourg residents
participated in the war of 1812 (e.g. Ruttan) and one building
in Cobourg -
the Barracks - is
thought to date from that time.
On April 8, 1819, the settlement was renamed Cobourg to honour
the marriage of Princess Charlotte Augusta, Princess of Wales,
daughter of George IV, and Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saafield.
(They got the spelling wrong!)
By 1827 there were about 40 houses, 2 inns, 4 stores, several
distilleries, a grist mill and a population of 350. See the story
of James Calcutt who
arrived in 1832 for a better idea of this period. In 1829, parliament
approved construction of a harbour at Cobourg to be built by a "Joint
Stock Company". This started with the construction of two
piers - one from the end of Division street and the other started
just west of Third street. Ships could dock there starting in 1832.
On July 1st, 1837. Cobourg was officially incorporated as a
town - making July 1st of double significance to Cobourg. This
was 10 days after Queen Victoria became monarch but 33 days before
the news reached Cobourg!
Starting in 1832, there was massive immigration from the U.K.
and the area rapidly developed into a thriving centre of administration,
education and commerce with a population by mid-century of nearly
5,000. By 1850, ambitious civic leaders were entertaining
thoughts that Cobourg, if its flourishing harbour were linked by
a railway to the markets in Peterborough, might overtake the larger
centres of Toronto and Kingston in size and influence. |