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Upper Canada, Governor Simcoe orders a small town to be laid out at the site of Fort Rouillé and names it York.
1795 | |
William Lyon Mackenzie (maternal grandfather) is born in Dundee, Scotland. | |
| 1805 |
| In Upper Canada, Mennonites from Pennsylvania purchase land and establish the German-speaking settlement of Berlin. |
| 1809 |
| Louis-Joseph Papineau is first elected to the Assembly of Lower Canada; he emerges as the leader of a group of young nationalists known first as the Parti Canadien and later as the Parti Patriote |
1814 | |
John King (paternal grandfather) is born at Tyric in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. | |
1820 | |
William Lyon Mackenzie arrives in Upper Canada. | |
1824 | |
The Colonial Advocate, published by William Lyon Mackenzie, is the leading voice of the Reform movement; Mackenzie moves to York. | |
1828 | |
Mackenzie is elected to the Upper Canada House of Assembly; he will be expelled for his attacks on the ruling Family Compact and be re-elected repeatedly. | |
| 1832 |
| the headquarters of the Law Society of Upper Canada, is completed; it will later be expanded to house law courts and the Osgoode Hall Law School. |
1834 | 1834 |
Mackenzie is elected the first mayor of Toronto. | In Upper Canada, York is incorporated as the city of Toronto. |
| In Lower Canada, Papineau campaigns to force the British government to grant independence to French Canadians. |
| 1835 |
| Sir Francis Bond Head becomes Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada. |
1836 | |
Mackenzie fails to win re-election to the House of Assembly. | |
1837 | 1837 |
Embittered by his electoral defeat, Mackenzie leads a poorly conceived revolt; he escapes to the United States (U.S.). | Queen Victoria assumes the throne of Great Britain and the Empire. |
| Rebellions in Upper and Lower Canada; Papineau flees to the U.S. |
1838 | 1838 |
ohn King participates in the Battle of the Windmill. expanded to house law courts and the Osgoode Hall Law School. | In November, British troops and local Canadian militia prevent the invasion of Upper Canada by American troops and Canadian rebels in the Battle of the Windmill near Fort Wellington. |
| 1841 |
| The Act of Union unites Upper and Lower Canada as equals; together Canada West and Canada East, as they are now called, form the Province of Canada. |
1843 | |
John King (father) is born. | |
Isabel Grace Mackenzie (mother) is born in New York State, where her mother and siblings have joined her father in exile. | |
| 1845 |
| Having been granted amnesty, Papineau returns to Canada East from exile in France. |
| 1848 |
| otato famines in Ireland and a series of European rebellions send waves of immigrants to North America. |
1849 | |
Mackenzie is pardoned and returns to Canada; he is elected to the Legislative Assembly and continues to work as a journalist. | |
| 1858 |
| Ottawa is chosen as the capital of the Province of Canada. |
1861 | |
Mackenzie dies in Toronto | |
| 1867 |
| Canadian Confederation unites Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick; John A. Macdonald becomes the first prime minister and is knighted by Queen Victoria. |
| 1871 |
| apineau dies in Montebello, Quebec. |
| English historian and journalist Goldwin Smith arrives in Toronto. |
1872 | 1872 |
John King marries Isabel Mackenzie on December 12; they will reside in Berlin, Ontario. | Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant is elected president of the U.S. for a second term in spite of public scandals during his administration. |
1873 | 1873 |
Isabel “Bella” Christina Grace King (sister) is born. | Having added three provinces (Manitoba, British Columbia, and Prince Edward Island) to Confederation, Sir John A. Macdonald’s government is forced to resign over a scandal involving the funding of the proposed transcontinental railway. |
1874 | 1874 |
William “Willie” Lyon Mackenzie King is born in Berlin, Ontario to John and Isabel King on December 17. | In Britain, Winston Churchill (future statesman) is born. |
| In Quebec, Wilfrid Laurier is elected to the House of Commons for the first time. |
1876 | |
Janet “Jennie” Lindsey King (sister) is born. | |
1878 | 1878 |
Dougall Macdougall “Max” King (brother) is born. | Macdonald returns triumphantly to power in Ottawa and remains prime minister for the rest of his life. |
| 1880 |
1882 | William Ewart Gladstone becomes prime minister of Great Britain |
Willie King attends a meeting where Sir John A. Macdonald is speaking. | |
| 1883 |
| Arnold Toynbee, a British economist and humanitarian, dies at the age of 31. |
| 1885 |
| The Canadian Pacific Railway is completed. |
| Former U.S. president Ulysses S. Grant dies. |
1886 | |
The King family rents and moves into Woodside, a large house on 5.66 wooded hectares. | |
1888 | 1888 |
King has taken on more responsibilities and even looks after his father’s business. | American Jane Addams visits Toynbee Hall, a settlement house in London, before returning to Chicago and establishing a similar facility at Hull-House a year later. |
| 1889 |
| In Canada, the Royal Commission on the Relations of Labour and Capital describes the new system of worker exploitation or the “sweat shop system.” |
1891 | 1891 |
King moves to Toronto and enrolls at the University of Toronto (U of T) in political science – a relatively new area of study – and economics. | Canada and the Canadian Question by Goldwin Smith is published; the book advocates union with the U.S. |
| Sir John A. Macdonald dies in Ottawa. |
1893 | 1893 |
King is awarded the Blake Scholarship and is voted president of his class; on September 6, he begins to keep a journal and will do so for the rest of his life. | The Earl of Aberdeen becomes Canada’s Governor General; Ishbel, Lady Aberdeen, becomes the first president of the National Council of Women. |
1894 | |
King sits at the bed of a dying child; he has conducted religious services and read to the patients at the Sick Children’s Hospital in Toronto ever since he came to the city; like his hero, Gladstone, he tries to help the underprivileged. | |
1895 | |
Protesting U of T hiring policies, King addresses a large crowd of students; he graduates with a Bachelor of Arts, but the U of T refuses to give him a scholarship to study for his master’s degree; the University of Chicago (U of C) offers him a scholarship, but family financial difficulties prevent him from accepting it; he decides to work as a tutor and a journalist for a year and study law in the evenings. | |
1896 | 1896 |
King receives a Bachelor of Laws degree from U of T. | Liberal Wilfrid Laurier becomes the first French-speaking Roman Catholic prime minister of Canada; he appoints Clifford Sifton minister of the interior with instructions to encourage immigration to the organized North-West Territories; he appoints William Mulock as postmaster general. |
Mrs. Menden, a fortuneteller, accurately prophesies King’s future; the U of C again offers him a scholarship to study political economy; he moves to Chicago and briefly moves into Hull-House, where he works as a volunteer. | |
1897 | 1897 |
With the encouragement of Postmaster General William Mulock, a family friend, King studies the sweat shop system; he writes his thesis on the International Typographical Union and receives his Master of Arts from U of T. | While he is in London attending a colonial conference, Canadian prime minister Wilfrid Laurier is knighted by Queen Victoria. |
| Ishbel, Lady Aberdeen, founds the Victorian Order of Nurses in Canada. |
1898 | 1898 |
King goes to Harvard University and receives a master’s degree. | William Gladstone, former British Liberal prime minister and social reformer, dies. |
Having met nurse Mathilde Grosset the previous year while recovering from typhoid fever, King contemplates marriage; his family reminds him that his “first duty is to those at home;” he recovers from his love affair while holidaying in Rhode Island where he tutors the sons of a wealthy family and meets Julia Grant, the granddaughter of Ulysses S. Grant. | The Earl of Minto becomes Canada’s Governor General. |
1899 | |
King
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