My new partner, Mr.
William Rowsell, and Mr. Geo. A. Barber, are entitled to be called the
founders of the St. George's Society of Toronto. Mr. Barber was
appointed secretary at its first meeting in 1835, and was very efficient
in that capacity. But it was the enthusiastic spirit and the galvanic
energy of William Rowsell that raised the society to the high position
it has ever since maintained in
Toronto. Other members, especially George P. Ridout, William Wakefield,
W. B. Phipps, Jos. D. Ridout, W. B. Jarvis, Rev. H. Scadding, and many
more, gave their hearty co-operation then and afterwards. In those early
days, the ministrations of the three national societies of St. George,
St. Andrew, and St. Patrick, were as angels' visits to thousands of poor
emigrants, who landed here in the midst of the horrors of fever and
want. Those poor fellows, who, like my companions on board the Asia,
were sent out by some parochial authority, and found themselves, with
their wives and half a dozen young children, left without a shilling to
buy their first meal, must have been driven to desperation and crime but
for the help extended to them by the three societies.
The earliest authorized report of the Society's proceedings which I can
find, is that for the year 1843-4, and I think I cannot do better than
give the list of the officers and members entire:
ST. GEORGE'S SOCIETY OF TORONTO.
Officers for 1844.
Patron--His Excellency the Right Hon. Sir Charles T. Metcalfe, Bart., K.
G. B., Governor-General of British North America, & President--William
Wakefield. Vice-Presidents--W. B. Jarvis, G. P. Ridout, W. Atkinson.
Chaplain--The Rev. Henry Scadding, M. A. Physician--Robt. Hornby, M. D.
Treasurer--Henry Rowsell. Managing Committee--G. Walton, T. Clarke, J.
D. Ridout, F. Lewis, J. Moore, J. G. Beard, W. H. Boulton. Secretary--W.
Rowsell. Standard Bearers--G. D. Wells, A. Wasnidge, F. W. Coate, T.
Moore.
List of Members, March, 1844.
E. H. Ades, E. S. Alport, Thos. Armstrong, W. Atkinson. Thos. Baines, G.
W. Baker, Jr.; G. A. Barber, F. W. Barron, Robert Barwick, J. G. Beard,
Robt. Beard, Edwin Bell, Matthew Betley, J. C. Bettridge, G. Bilton, T.
W. Birchall, W. H. Boulton, Josh. Bound, W. Bright, Jas. Brown, Jno.
Brown, Thos. Brunskill, E. C. Bull, Jas. Burgess, Mark Burgess, Thos.
Burgess. F. C. Capreol, W. Cayley, Thos. Champion, E. C. Chapman, Jas.
Christie, Edw. Clarke, Jno. Clarke, Thos. Clarke, Thos. Clarkson, D.
Cleal, F. W. Coate, Edw. Cooper, C. N. B. Cozens. Jno. Davis, Nath.
Davis, G. T. Denison, Sen., Robt. B. Denison, Hon. W. H. Draper. Jno.
Eastwood, Jno. Elgie, Thos. Elgie, Jno. Ellis, Christopher Elliott, J.
P. Esten, Jas. Eykelbosch. C. T. Gardner, Jno. Garfield, W. Gooderham,
G. Gurnett. Chas. Hannath, W. Harnett, Josh. Hill, Rich. Hockridge,
Joseph Hodgson, Dr. R. Hornby, G. C. Horwood, J. G. Howard. Æ. Irving,
Jr. Hon. R. S. Jameson, W. B. Jarvis, H. B. Jessopp. Alfred Laing, Jno.
Lee, F. Lewis, Henry Lutwych, C. Lynes, S. G. Lynn. Hon. J. S. Macaulay,
Rich. Machell, J. F. Maddock, Jno. Mead, And. Mercer, Jas. Mirfield,
Sam. Mitchell, Jno. Moore, Thos. Moore, Jas. Moore, Jas. Morris, W.
Morrison, J. G. Mountain, W. Mudford. J. R. Nash. Thos. Pearson, Jno. E.
Pell, W. B. Phipps, Sam. Phillips, Hiram Piper, Jno. Popplewell, Jno.
Powell. M. Raines, J. D. Ridout, G. P. Ridout, Sam. G. Ridout, Ewd.
Robson, H. Rowsell, W. Rowsell, F. Rudyerd. Chas. Sabine, J. H. Savigny,
Hugh Savigny, Geo. Sawdon, Rev. H. Scadding, Jas. Severs, Rich. Sewell,
Hon. Henry Sherwood, Jno. Sleigh, I. A. Smith, L. W. Smith, Thos. Smith
(Newgate Street), Thos. Smith, (Market Square), J. G. Spragge, Jos.
Spragge, W. Steers, J. Stone. Leonard Thompson, S. Thompson, Rich.
Tinning, Enoch Turner. Wm. Wakefield, Jas. Wallis, Geo. Walton, W.
Walton, Alf. Wasnidge, Hon. Col. Wells, G. D. Wells, Thos. Wheeler, F.
Widder, H. B. Williams, J. Williams, W. Wynn. Thos. Young.
The list of Englishmen thus reproduced, may well raise emotions of love
and regret in us their survivors. Most of them have died full of years,
and rich in the respect of their compatriots of all nations. There are
still living some twenty out of the above one hundred and thirty-seven
members.
The following song, written and set to music by me for the occasion, was
sung by the late Mr. J. D. Humphreys, the well-known Toronto tenor, at
the annual dinner held on the 24th April, 1845:--
THE ROSE OF ENGLAND.
The Rose, the Rose of England,
The gallant and the free!
Of all our flow'rs the fairest,
The Rose, the Rose for me!
Our good old English fashion
What other flow'r can show?
Its smiles of beauty greet its friends,
Its thorns defy the foe!
_Chorus_--The Rose, the Rose of England,
The gallant and the free!
Of all our flow'rs the fairest,
The Rose, the Rose for me!
Though proudly for the Thistle
Each Scottish bosom swell,
The Thistle hath no charms for me
Like the Rose I love so well.
And Erin's native Shamrock,
In lonely wilds that grows,
Its modest leaflet would not strive
To vie with England's Rose.
Chorus--The Rose, the Rose, etc.
Yet Scotia's Thistle bravely
Withstands the rudest blast,
And Erin's cherished Shamrock
Keeps verdant to the last;
And long as British feeling
In British bosoms glows,
Right joyfully we'll honour them,
As they will England's Rose.
Chorus--The Rose, the Rose, etc.
Before closing my reminiscences of the St. George's Society, it may not
be out of place to give some account of its legitimate congener, the
North America St. George's Union. Englishmen in the United States, like
those of Canada, have formed themselves into societies for the relief of
their suffering brethren from the Fatherland, in all their principal
cities. The necessity of frequent correspondence respecting cases of
destitution, naturally led the officers of those societies to feel an
interest in each other's welfare and system of relief, which at length
gave rise to a desire for formal meeting and consultation, and that
finally to the establishment of an organized association.
In 1876, the fourth annual convention of the St. George's Union was for
the first time held in Canada, at the City of Hamilton; in 1878 at
Guelph; in 1880 at Ottawa; and in August, 1883, at Toronto--the
intervening meetings taking place at Philadelphia, Bridgeport and
Washington, U. S., respectively.
To give an idea of what has been done, and of the spirit which actuates
this great representative body of Englishmen, I avail myself of the
opening speech of the President, our fellow-citizen and much esteemed
friend, J. Herbert Mason, Esq., which was delivered at the City Hall
here, on the 29th of August last. After welcoming the delegates from
other cities, he went on to say:--
"Met together to promote objects purely beneficent, for which, in the
interests of humanity, we claim the support of all good citizens, of
whatever flag or origin, we may here give expression to our sentiments
and opinions without reserve, and with confidence that they will be
received with respect, even by those who may not be able to share in the
glorious memories, and vastly more glorious anticipations, with which
we, as Englishmen and the descendants of Englishmen, are animated.
"And in the term Englishmen, I wish to be understood as including all
loyal Irishmen, Scotchmen, and Welshmen. There need be no division among
men of British origin in regard to the objects we are banded together to
promote.
"The city of Toronto is in some respects peculiarly suitable as a place
for holding a convention of representative men of English blood. Its
Indian name, Toronto, signifies a place of meeting. Ninety years ago its
site was selected as that of the future capital of Upper Canada, by
General Simcoe, a Devonshire man, distinguished both as a soldier and a
statesman, who, in the following year, founded the city.
"At that time the shore of our beautiful bay, and nearly the entire
country from the Detroit river to Montreal, was a dense forest, the home
of the wolf, the beaver and the bear. In earlier years the surrounding
country had been inhabited by powerful Indian tribes; but after a
prolonged contest, carried on with the persistence and ferocity which
distinguished them, the dreaded Iroquois from the southern shores of
Lake Ontario had exterminated or driven away the Hurons, their less
warlike kinsmen, and at the time I speak of, the only human beings that
were found here was a single family of the Mississaga Indians. The story
of the contest which ended in the supremacy of the Iroquois Confederacy,
taken from the records of the Jesuit fathers, who shared in the
destruction of their Huron converts, so graphically described by
Parkman, the New England historian, furnishes one of the most
interesting and romantic chapters of American history. In the names and
general appearance of its streets, the style of its habitations, in its
social life, and the characteristics of its people (if the opinions of
tourists and visitors may be accepted), Toronto recals to Englishmen
vivid impressions of home in a greater degree than any other American
city.
"The opening up of the Canadian North-West, and the increased tendency
of English emigration towards this Continent, instead of, as formerly,
towards those great English communities in the Southern hemisphere,
proportionately increases the responsibility thrown upon their kindred
living here, to see that all reasonable and necessary counsel and
assistance are afforded to them on their arrival. One of the most
suitable agencies for effecting this object is the formation of St.
George's Societies in every city and town where Englishmen exist. To the
friendless immigrant, suddenly placed in a new and unknown world, not
understanding the conditions of success, and, in many cases, suffering
in health from change of climate, the familiar tones, the kindly hand,
and the brotherly sympathy of a fellow-countryman, are most welcome. It
supplies to the stranger help of the right kind when most needed, and is
one of those acts of divine charity which covers a multitude of sins.
One of the chief objects of the St. George's Union is to increase the
number and usefulness, and enlarge the membership of such societies, and
if, under its fostering influence and encouraging example, Englishmen
generally, and their descendants, are aroused to a more faithful
discharge of their duty in this respect, the Union is surely well worth
maintaining. In this connection, and for the information and example of
younger societies, permit me to point out some features of the work of
the St. George's Society of this city. It was organized in 1835, when
the population of the city was only 8,000. In the nearly fifty years of
its existence, it has had enrolled among its chief officers, men of
distinguished position and high moral excellence. It is a notable
circumstance, that at the time of the meeting of this Union in Toronto,
the Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario, whose official residence is here, as
well as the Mayor, the Police Magistrate, the Treasurer, the
Commissioners, the Acting Engineer, and the Chairman of the Free Library
Board of Toronto, are all members of the St. George's Society, and two
of them past-presidents of it. It has a membership of about six hundred,
an annual income of about $2,400, and invested funds to the amount of
nearly $9,000. The office of the Society is open daily, where cases
requiring immediate advice or assistance are promptly attended to by its
indefatigable Secretary, Mr. J. E. Pell. The Committee for General
Relief meets weekly. Every case is investigated and treated on its
merits. Efforts are made to secure employment for those who are able to
work, and all tendencies towards pauperism, or the formation of a pauper
class, are severely discouraged. One feature in the work of this society
I invite special attention to, which is its annual distribution of
'Christmas Cheer' to the English poor. Last Christmas Eve there were
given away 7,500 pounds of excellent beef; 4,400 pounds of bread; 175
pounds of tea, and 650 pounds of sugar. Each member of the society had,
therefore, the satisfaction of knowing when he sat down to his Yule-tide
table, loaded with the good things of this life, and surrounded by the
happy faces of those he loved best, that every one of his needy
fellow-countrymen was, on that day, bountifully supplied with the
necessaries of life."
From the Annual Report of the Committee I gather a few items:
"Reports from nineteen societies (affiliated to the Union) show the
following results:--
Membership (excluding honorary members) 3,247
Receipts during the year $19,618
Expended for charity during the year (excluding
private donations) 12,003
Value of investments, furniture and fixtures 96,568
"The Society of St. George, of London, England, has intimate relations
with the Union. The General Committee embraces such eminent names as
those of the Duke of Manchester, Lord Alfred Churchill, Sir Philip
Cunliffe Owen; Messrs. Beresford-Hope and Puleston, of the House of
Commons; Blanchard Jerrold and Hyde Clarke, while death has removed from
the Committee Messrs. W. Hepworth Dixon and Walter Besant. St. George's
Day has been publicly celebrated ever since the institution of the
Society in 1879. A new history of the titular saint, by the Rev. Dr.
Barons, has been promoted by the Society, and by its efforts appropriate
mortuary honours were paid to Colonel Chester, the Anglo-American
antiquarian, who died while prosecuting in England his researches
concerning the genealogy of the Pilgrim Fathers. Through the industry
and zeal of the chairman of the Executive Committee there has been much
revival of interest, at home and abroad, respecting England's patron
saint and the ancient celebrations of his legendary natal day."
After the official business of the convention had been disposed of, the
American and Canadian visitors were hospitably entertained, on Wednesday
the 30th, at "Ermeleigh," the private residence of the President, on
Jarvis street; on Thursday afternoon at Government House, as guests of
the Lieutenant-Governor and Mrs. Robinson; and in the evening at the
Queen's Hotel, where a handsome entertainment was provided. |