CCHA Historical Studies, 72 (2006), 71-94
“…you can beat us in the House of Assembly but you
can’t beat us in the street”: The
Symbolic Value of Charlettown’s Orange Lodge Riot[1]
Ryan O’CONNOR
While Canadians are accustomed to life in a
secularized society, such was not always the case. As historians have
established, in the nineteenth century, adherence to Christianity was the norm.
This fact is articulated by W.L. Morton, who notes that “religion – not wealth,
and not politics – was the chief concern, the main ideal occupation of
Canadians.”[2]
Although the hegemony of Christianity in
nineteenth-century Canada had positive effects, such as common cultural values
for the population, it also had its downside. Chief among these was
denominational conflict. Despite worshipping the same God, and obeying the same
commandments, the various denominations differed in their interpretations and
practices. The clearest divide in this regard was between Protestants and Roman
Catholics. Although Protestant Canada was made up of a wide array of
worshippers who maintained distinct identities, its adherents tended to unite
against their papist adversaries. The ensuing misunderstandings and prejudices
resulted in a preponderance of clashes between the two groups throughout
British North America during the nineteenth century.
Such violence long bypassed Prince Edward Island.
While the neighbouring colonies had all suffered through similar experiences,
the diminutive colony of 94,021 entered the 1870s relatively unscathed by such
eruptions.[3]
This absence of denominational violence is especially intriguing given the
colony’s religious makeup: fifty-five per cent Protestant, forty-five per cent
Roman Catholic.[4]
Such an evenly matched population, one might suspect, would lend itself to the
violence endemic elsewhere. However, notes historian Ian Ross Robertson, the
“surprising circumstances for a colony so evenly divided was the dearth of
religious hostilities.”[5]
Such a peaceful co-existence would not last. On 12
July 1877 the Island’s record of religious non-violence came to a dramatic end
when the Charlottetown headquarters of the Loyal Orange Order, its members just
returned from a day of recreation, bore the brunt of an angry mob. Why did this
unfortunate action occur? Why, thirty years after the peak of Orange-Green
conflict in British North America did such an event transpire in Charlottetown?
As this study reveals, the incident in question is fraught with symbolism that
reflects the realities of the religio-political discourse that had come to
dominate life on Prince Edward Island over the previous twenty-one years. When
bitter debate over the place of religion in the education system began to split
the Island community along denominational lines in the mid-1850s, the Roman
Catholic minority inevitably found themselves on the losing end. Alienated and
suspected of Romanist plots, they were blocked from holding power in
government, and were unable to implement their desired policies. As tensions
mounted, frustrated members of the Roman Catholic population came to view the
Orange Order as a symbol of their opposition, culminating in the 12 July 1877
attack of the Order’s Charlottetown contingent.
Although the 1877 riot was a significant event in the
history of Prince Edward Island, it has long been overlooked. A survey of
relevant literature reveals only four items that discuss the riot. The first
published was Reverend John C. Macmillan’s History of the Catholic Church in
Prince Edward Island from 1835 to 1891.[6]
While it provides useful insight into the Church’s response to the violence,
this partisan account of the riot contradicts contemporary testimony. Andrew
Robb’s “Rioting in 19th Century P.E.I.,” summarizes the events of 12
July 1877 in three paragraphs.[7]
Likewise, Boyde Beck’s light-hearted Prince Edward Island: An Unauthorized History
handles the event in a similarly superficial manner.[8]
Anecdotal rather than academic, these works explain what happened on the day in
question, but fail to provide insight into why the riot occurred. More
significantly the leading academic text on nineteenth-century Prince Edward
Island, the Francis W.P. Bolger edited Canada’s Smallest Province, does
not mention the Orange Order’s existence. Nonetheless, the book does help shed
light on the religio-politico tensions that dominated Island society between
1856-1877, especially as they impacted local elections. However, coverage of
“the elemental animosity [that emerged] between [the] Protestant and Catholic”[9]
population is largely a backdrop to the book’s central focus – Prince Edward
Island’s entry into Canada in 1873.[10]
The riot at the Orange lodge is not mentioned in an academic text until Brendan
O’Grady’s Exiles and Islanders: The Irish Settlers of Prince Edward Island
was released in 2004. Handling the event in three pages, O’Grady connects the
event to the tensions between Irish Catholics and the Orange Order elsewhere,
but does not establish a local context that explains why the riot occurred.[11]
Given the lack of coverage of the Orange Order in
Prince Edward Island histories, an examination of studies specific to the
organization is warranted. One of the leading studies on the Order in central
Canada is Gregory Kealey’s “The Orange Order in Toronto: religious riot and the
working class.”[12]
Primarily focussed on the Order’s class composition in the late nineteenth
century, it also provides some insight into the city’s religious conflict. As
Kealey notes, riots were rooted in symbolism during this period. The two riots
that occurred in the relatively calm 1870s were the result of Irish Catholics
overstepping “informal limits” that the Orangemen deemed “could not be allowed
to pass unchallenged.”[13]
In the first example, the boundary was violated when a prominent Fenian leader
was invited to speak at a St. Patrick’s Day gathering, while the other was
infringed when papal symbols were featured during a Sunday street procession.
As Kealey indicates, St. Patrick’s Day speakers were acceptable, as were
marches featuring green regalia and Hibernian slogans. However, employing a
revolutionary speaker in the former instance, and promoting their Roman
Catholic allegiance in the latter, was considered a symbolic affront to
Toronto’s Protestant hegemony.[14]
In Scott See’s Riots in New Brunswick: Orange
Nativism and Social Violence in the 1840s,[15]
the author provides a contrasting interpretation of Orange-Green riots.
Economic factors, according to See, were the primary cause of these
disturbances, which occurred with regularity in the colony during the 1840s.
During this decade, New Brunswick’s economy was experiencing a recession. This
coincided with the large-scale immigration of Irish Roman Catholics who were
escaping famine in their homeland. Fearing these immigrants would lower wages
and steal what jobs were available, the “Orange Order embarked on a
comprehensive vigilante campaign against Irish-Catholics.”[16]
An important consideration when examining the context
of the Charlottetown riot is the ethno-religious composition of Prince Edward
Island. The Island’s population was composed of four major ethnic groups. The
French, at approximately ten per cent of the 1881 population of 108,891, were
Catholics. The English, at twenty per cent, mostly belonged to the Methodist
and Anglican Churches. The largest group, the Scots, comprised forty-five per
cent of the population. Of these, the majority were Presbyterian, while the
remainder were Roman Catholic. The most relevant group to this study, however,
were the Irish. The second largest ethnic group, with twenty-three per cent of
the total population, an estimated ninety per cent of the province’s Irish were
Roman Catholic.[17]
It is also important to establish what the Orange
Order was. Originally formed as a Protestant paramilitary organization, they
emerged from a climate of religious violence that riddled Ireland during the
late eighteenth century. Named after King William of Orange, the Dutch prince
who solidified Protestant control of Great Britain in 1690, the Order rapidly
spread throughout much of the English-speaking world. Shortly after its 1795
founding, Orange lodges were located across Ireland, England, and the British
colonies.[18]
British North America proved conducive to the growth
of Orangeism. Introduced by British soldiers garrisoned in the colonies, the
first lodge was officially opened in 1818. Buoyed by a heavy influx of Irish
Protestant immigrants,[19]
within twenty years there were close to three hundred lodges in British North
America. While these lodges retained the key tenets of Orangeism, a loyalty to
the British Crown and Protestantism, different social, economic, and religious
conditions meant that the British North American Order developed into an
indigenous institution. Rather than focussing on religious warfare, as was the
case in the British Isles, the British North American Order emphasized
fraternity and immigrant aid. Brian Clarke notes that from its humble origins,
by the 1850s the order had become “…a mainstream association devoted to
maintaining Protestant hegemony in the United Canadas and upholding the colony’s
British character.”[20]
Orangeism had a slow start on Prince Edward Island.
The warrant for the colony’s first lodge, Charlottetown’s Boyne Lodge No. 14,
was issued in 1851. It took eight years before the second lodge, Pinette’s
Thistle Lodge No. 917, was established. This delayed growth can be explained,
at least partially, by the fact that Prince Edward Island did not have a
sizeable Irish Protestant population. By 1866 the Orange Order had overcome
this hurdle and had established thirty-six lodges Island-wide. Their growth, as
the name of the second lodge suggests, was achieved by appealing to the
sizeable Scottish Protestant population.[21]
The events of 12 July 1877 began in a relatively
low-key manner. As part of their annual commemoration of King William of
Orange’s victory at the Boyne, Orangemen from Charlottetown and the surrounding
area arranged for a day of celebrations up the West River. Since this trip
required a steamship, it was decided that the men would first meet at the
capital’s Boyne Lodge, located on Queen Street between Grafton and Kent. At
11:00 AM approximately 150 Orangemen marched in procession to the waterfront,
where they boarded the Southport.
By all accounts the ensuing festivities went smoothly,
as did the Orangemen’s return to Charlottetown at approximately 8:00 pm.
Returning to their lodge for closing remarks, the group once again formed a
marching procession. Queen Street was lined with spectators, who formed “one
dense mass of people” on the block surrounding the hall.[22]
While the majority of the estimated three hundred people in attendance were
present for the march, and as such can be labelled “spectators,” mixed in with
the crowd was a group of agitators. The “rowdies,” estimated at fifty young
men, attempted to obstruct the Orangemen as they returned to their lodge. Able
to push their way through the crowd, the Orangemen rushed indoors, while the
aggressors attempted to incite others on the street.
As it turns out, the agitators had one thing in mind.
Flying above the Orange lodge was the group’s flag, a rectangular cloth one-half
yellow and one-half Union Jack. As the Orangemen made their way inside their
building, a volley of stones were thrown at the lodge amidst calls to lower
their flag. As the windows shattered around them, the Orangemen retaliated by
aiming a series of revolver shots into the crowd, hitting two bystanders. As
this transpired the Orange leaders, Senator Heath Haviland and Dr. John T.
Jenkins, yelled at their brethren to quit firing their weapons. A number of men
on the street ran into a neighbouring yard, and emerged moments later with a
ladder. Intending to scale the hall and bring the flag down, they were halted
by city marshal Thomas Flynn and two other members of the crowd. As the
authorities attempted to instil order to the situation, members of the crowd
continued volleying stones at the building, demanding that the flag come down.
At this point the city’s stipendiary magistrate, Rowan
Fitzgerald, arrived on the scene.[23]
Dismayed by what was unfolding before him, he assumed the role of negotiator.
Aware that the crowd would only disperse once the Order’s flag was lowered, the
Orangemen grudgingly accepted. Sensing triumph as the flag descended, a great
cheer emerged from the street. This incensed the Order, and the flag was promptly
returned to full mast. With intensity once again reaching fever pitch, and
another volley of stones thrown, the authorities pleaded with the involved
parties. Finally, the Orangemen agreed to lower the flag in exchange for an end
of the stone barrage. However, the incident was not quite over. As the flag
made its final descent, members of the crowd seized the symbolic item. This was
met with a flurry of gunshots from inside the lodge, which struck one man above
his left ear. With the flag down, the authorities regained order, and the crowd
dispersed.
With at least three members of the crowd suffering
from bullet wounds, an Orangeman suffering from a stone-inflicted head injury,[24]
a building full of shattered glass, and a wellspring of animosity, it seemed
unlikely that events had reached a conclusion. Amidst rumours that the two
parties would recommence hostilities the next day, the defiant Orangemen
returned to their battered hall the following morning. Fearing further
disturbances, the city police took drastic action. Augmented by approximately
one hundred hastily sworn-in constables,[25]
the city police took to the streets en masse, issuing twenty-eight
warrants from the night before and arresting twelve. As the arrested were
transferred to the local jail under heavy security provided by the constables,
an additional fourteen deputies provided a precautionary night guard at the
lock-up. The remaining constables were assigned to patrol “the [Orange] lodge,
and all places they thought necessary, in order to preserve quiet in the city
during the night.”[26]
In the interest of maintaining peace, the constables were joined by an
additional “body of volunteers,” amounting to another one hundred uniformed and
armed men, who paraded the streets. Such dramatic precautionary measures
apparently quelled any further plans of upheaval, as the night, and the coming
days, passed without incident.
While the religious climate on the Island was unmistakably
tense in the late-1800s, such had not always been the case. Religious relations
may not have been entirely cordial heading into the 1850s, but neither were
they at a breaking point. In general, the population co-existed in a peaceful
manner, unlike the neighbouring British North American colonies, which suffered
frequent interdenominational clashes. In this respect it is noteworthy that
many of Prince Edward Island’s most successful social and service organizations
at mid-century were nondenominational.[27]
Part of the reason Islanders of different faiths had
lived together peacefully is that they had been united in a common fight. In
1767 the British government divided the nascent colony into sixty-seven lots,
which in turn were transferred to a group of minor dignitaries, merchants and
military officials.[28]
Charged with overseeing their land’s development, the primary responsibility of
these absentee landlords was to settle the colony. As such, the Island was
quickly populated with tenant farmers, who resented the fact that they did not
own the land they cultivated. An escheat movement developed by the
eighteenth-century’s end, and by the 1830s the Island’s dominant political
party was dedicated to this cause. Although the escheat movement had faded in
the 1840s after it became clear that the British government would not
cooperate, its ability to unite Protestant and Catholic tenants for a common
good was significant.[29]
Another factor behind the colony’s relatively peaceful
existence is the general sense of progress Islanders felt in the mid-nineteenth
century. Described by Ian Ross Robertson as “a vital, aggressive society, full
of energy and self-confidence,”[30]
the colony was economically successful during the 1850s. Self-sufficient, it
provided a ready supply of food, timber, and sailing ships to Britain, and
following the 1854 Reciprocity Treaty, the United States.[31]
Annual colonial revenue rose from £22,000 in 1850 to £35,000 in 1854; more impressively,
during the same period the public debt shrank from £28,000 to £3,000.[32]
In addition to the positive economic situation,
Islanders were living in a colony that was undergoing considerable political
reform. In 1830 legislation that had prevented Roman Catholic males from voting
and holding office was repealed.[33]
Following this, a push by the Liberals to implement responsible government was
undertaken, with the appropriate legislation gaining royal assent in 1851.
Finally, in 1853 the Franchise Bill was passed, which eliminated existing land
requirements and established universal adult male suffrage.[34]
Before one assumes an overly idyllic view of the
Island, it must be noted that its history was not devoid of violence. Prior to
the introduction of the secret ballot for provincial elections in 1913, voters
were required to state their preference in public.[35]
In the heady days of escheat and electoral reform it was not uncommon for
supporters of either side to attend the election grounds in order to provide a
degree of intimidation. Such tactics often erupted into brawls. The culmination
of these events was a 1 March 1847 by-election in Belfast. Contested by a land
reformer and a former agent for the local absentee proprietor, the event was
overseen by upwards of four hundred onlookers. A riot ensued, in which three
men were killed, and many more injured. This proved the high-water mark of
electoral violence, as legislation designed to reduce physical intimidation at
the polls was passed in 1848. Explaining the root cause of this riot has proven
difficult. The traditional explanation has been that this was a battle between
Scottish Presbyterians and Irish Catholics, although H.T. Holman notes that the
two sides were also split between “landowners and tenants, and Tories and
reformers.”[36]
While Holman fails to pinpoint a precise catalyst, Brendan O’Grady is more
assertive. Although there were various factors at play, he attributes tensions
over land reform as the ultimate springboard to violence.[37]
If the Island was in such positive shape heading into
the 1850s, what had happened to provoke the riot in 1877? Simply stated, the
place of religion in the education system emerged as an issue in 1856, and
ignited a firestorm of controversy that would continue for two decades. As the
politician-journalist Edward Whelan noted in retrospect, at its root was a
“serious and most unaccountable misunderstanding.”[38]
Island Liberals, under the tutelage of Premier George
Coles, were a formidable political force in the early 1850s. Popular because of
the attainment of responsible government and their support for land reform,
they maintained control of the colony, with the exception of two brief lapses,
throughout the decade. In office at the decade’s onset, they won the 1854
election 18-6.
While the Liberals’ fortunes were high, prospects for
the Conservative Party were correspondingly low. Representing the interests of
the colonial elite, they did not benefit from the ongoing democratization
occurring on Prince Edward Island. Desperate to resume power, they eagerly
awaited an issue that they believed could rally support around the party.
Education would become the Conservatives’ issue.
The Liberal’s legislative agenda in the early 1850s
emphasized standardizing the colony’s education system. In 1852 the Free
Education Act was passed to ensure all areas of the Island could attract
qualified schoolteachers.[39]
The following year a school visitor, John M. Stark, was hired. A stern Scotsman
with little patience for substandard achievement, he was not impressed with the
state of education he encountered. As he noted in his second annual report, “I
could scarce have believed that there could have been in any part of the world
so numerous a staff of teachers who so few had even the shadow of a
qualification for their important office.”[40]
Another education reform was the creation of a
provincial Normal School, which was designed to provide uniform teacher
training under the careful guidance of Stark and the government-appointed Board
of Education. Opened in Charlottetown on 1 October 1856, the school visitor
found one major flaw – its secularism. A devout Free Churchman, he feared that
the absence of religion in the curriculum would result in moral depravity among
the students. In order to rectify this, he recommended:
a daily Bible lesson (the first lesson of the day after
opening) in which the truths and facts of Scripture will be brought before the
children’s minds by illustrations and picturing out in words, in language
simple and easy to be understood, from which everything sectarian and
controversial shall be carefully excluded.[41]
Two days later a special meeting was held by the Board
of Education, which upheld a previous decision that only approved books could
be utilized in the Normal School. Since the list of approved books did not
include the Bible, Scripture readings and lessons were effectively prohibited
in the classroom.[42]
When the Roman Catholic Bishop of Charlottetown,
Bernard Donald MacDonald, heard of Stark’s attempt to include religion in the
Normal School, he expressed his opposition. Fearful that the introduction of
religion in the school would propagate the faith of the Protestant majority, he
wrote to Premier Coles, saying, “nothing favourable or unfavourable to any religious
denomination must be inculcated.”[43]
Oblivious to the fact that the matter had already been handled, on 7 November
1856 he also sent a letter to the Board of Education, stating:
This introduction of religious matters into our public
mixed schools is the Rock of Scandal….[I] earnestly beg of the Board to
reconsider the evil tendency of introducing religion in any shape into our
mixed schools….prayers and all religious exercises, as well as the reading of
the Scripture from any version not approved by all, must be discontinued….If
the friends of education wish our mixed schools to prosper, their wish can only
be realized by allowing those schools to be godless, under the present
circumstances of the country. The Catholics, I am bound to say, will be
satisfied with nothing else.[44]
The Premier moved quickly to ease the bishop’s fears,
assuring him that Stark’s recommendation had been soundly rejected. The Board
of Education, meanwhile, ordered Stark to investigate the state of Bible
reading in the Island school system. His report concluded that it was in
decline, and was largely absent in classes of mixed faith.[45]
The 1800s had seen a dramatic rise in evangelical
Protestantism in North America. An interdenominational movement that aimed to
create a Christian society “through the reformation of life and habits,” by
mid-century it had become a culturally dominant force throughout the United
States and much of British North America.[46]
Well-organized and unafraid to exert their political power, these militant
Protestants aimed to remake society in their image. Part of this restructuring
included a rejection of “ritualist” religion, and the inculcation of Biblical
values wherever possible.
While evangelicals were not as culturally dominant in
Prince Edward Island as in the neighbouring colonies of Nova Scotia and New
Brunswick, the movement was nonetheless a powerful force. When Stark’s report
was released, indicating a decline in the Bible’s public school presence, the
evangelicals were appalled. A copy of the Bishop’s letter to the Board of
Education was obtained by a group of concerned ministers, who in turn
interpreted the letter as proof the Catholic Church was behind the Bible’s
decline.[47]
In this, they conveniently overlooked the fact that the letter was drafted
after the Board upheld its existing religious policy, as well as the fact that
the seven-member Board consisted of five Protestants.[48]
Outrage among the Protestant population was swift and
severe. On 13 February 1857 an overflow audience gathered at the city’s
Temperance Hall for what would become known as the First Great Protestant
Meeting. Reportedly “the largest [public meeting]…ever convened in this town,”[49]
it was led by ten clergymen, representing the Presbyterian, Anglican, Wesleyan,
and Bible Christian denominations. Speaker after speaker deplored the idea of
education devoid of religious guidance; likewise, it was decided that the group
would petition the government in the upcoming session for the establishment of
obligatory Scripture readings in the public schools.[50]
When the colonial legislature reconvened on 26
February, it quickly became obvious that the Bible controversy would be the
focus. It also became clear how the politicians would divide on the issue.
While the Liberal government, featuring strong support from the Roman Catholic
population, was hesitant to change its position, the Conservatives, under
Edward Palmer, had now found an issue it felt would galvanize the population.
Palmer stated his belief that for “education to be useful and safe to the
people, [it] should be based upon the christian religion.”[51]
The Liberals stuck to their position, arguing that compulsory Scripture
readings in the schools would cause Catholics to “withdraw from them, and thus
nearly one-half of the people of the Island will be deprived of the privilege
of having their children educated.”[52]
With this, the battle lines were clear. On one side stood the colony’s Roman
Catholic population and the Liberal Party; on the other stood the militant
Protestants and the Conservative Party.
The inflammatory rhetoric soon escalated. The recently
founded Protector and Christian Witness ran articles stating that “We
love peace, but we love the Bible more.”[53]
To this was added the paranoid claim that Catholics, moderate Protestants, and
the Liberal Party “have conspired to rob the lovers of the Bible in this Island
of one of our most valued rights.”[54]
The tone worsened as 1858, an election year, approached.[55]
Leaders of the Protestant faction, by now known as the Protestant Combination,
published a list of “Questions to be put to Candidates for Seats in the ensuing
General Assembly of this Island.” As these questions clearly illustrate, the
Protestants had expanded their campaign from one advocating mandatory Bible
readings into one also including anti-Catholic rhetoric. Not only did they
expect candidates to vow never to fund Catholic institutions, but they also
demanded an acknowledgement of:
the necessity for the great Reformation from Popery in
the sixteenth century…of the existence of a wide spread combination of Popish agents
for the re-subjugation of the British Empire to the priestly domination of
Rome…[and resistance to] all Romish aggressions on the rights of others…[56]
Three weeks later the Second Great Protestant Meeting
was held in Charlottetown, where a resolution was passed pledging that those in
attendance would use their “utmost influence to return [only] sound Protestant
and Bible-loving men at the ensuing General Election.”[57]
Such sentiments were further echoed in the Protector and Christian Witness
when it stated that “Let the only question be between Protestantism and
Romanism.”[58]
When the ballots were counted, the Liberals emerged
with a 16-14 victory. This government proved unstable and brief. One member was
declared ineligible to hold office due to a failure to meet property
requirements; consequently, the party found itself unable to name a speaker and
maintain a majority.[59]
After hitting a stalemate the legislature was dissolved. In the ensuing
election, contested on the same issues, the Conservatives emerged with a
convincing 18-12 victory.
Given a clear mandate from the voters, the
Conservatives prepared to address the Bible issue. However, while the rhetoric
bandied about during the campaign had been quite extreme, the legislation that
ensued was surprisingly moderate. Passed in early 1860, the “Bible Clause” stated
that teachers in all publicly funded schools were required to begin each day
with the reading of Scripture. There would be no interpretation of the reading,
and attendance was optional. This proved an acceptable compromise for the
majority of Islanders. According to Ian Ross Robertson:
[it] gave the Protestants the satisfaction of knowing
that they could claim the legal right to have the Scriptures read in the
classroom, yet guarded against controversial interpretations and commentaries,
thus keeping the Catholics in the public schools.[60]
Despite the moderate settlement, the damage had
already been inflicted. The Island population had been effectively divided
along religious lines. This was evident, not only in the all-Protestant
Conservative government, but also in the social life of its citizenry.
Organizations that had once thrived by attracting Protestants and Catholics,
such as the Mechanic’s Institute, were now in decline. This coincided with the establishment
of denominational groups such as the Protestant Young Men’s Christian
Association, and the Catholic Young Men’s Literary Institute.[61]
Likewise, the spectre of religious violence reared its ugly head during this
period. On 12 July 1857, a crowd of Roman Catholics harassed a Bible Christian
minister named Cephas Barker while he was “street preaching.” One year later,
when the Conservatives held a “Queen’s County Indignation Meeting,” it nearly
erupted into large-scale violence when a group of Irish Catholics decided to
attend and vigorously uphold their beliefs.[62]
Thus, while controversy surrounding the Bible’s place in the education system
had been solved, it was but the first stage in an ongoing polemic that would
ultimately lead to the 1877 riot.
Just as the preceding controversy began innocently
enough, so too did the next incident. On 1 May 1860 the colonial legislature
heard the third reading of a bill to create Prince of Wales College, a
non-denominational public institution. Noting that the school would receive
substantial government funding, a Catholic Liberal named Francis Kelly
requested that the diocesan-funded St. Dunstan’s College receive an annual
grant of ₤300. Although this suggestion was hastily defeated by a margin
of 12-4, the matter would not fade away.[63]
As the election of 1863 approached, the Liberals would renew the issue as the
central plank in their platform.
The ensuing controversy can in large part be traced to
new leadership in the Island Catholic Church. On 30 December 1859, Bishop
Donald Macdonald passed away. A demure man who generally shied away from political
involvement, his replacement, Peter McIntyre, would prove his antithesis.
Strong headed and unwilling to compromise his beliefs,[64]
McIntyre was representative of the new breed of Catholic bishops who dominated
the region in this period. Whereas earlier bishops, such as Macdonald, were
content with the attainment of political equality, McIntyre and his
contemporaries aimed to create a distinctly “Catholic social order with
institutions that paralleled but did not connect with those of the larger
society.”[65] Knowing that the Liberals were heavily
reliant on Catholic support, the bishop was not afraid to push the party to
advance such aims.
The paranoia that began in 1856 continued to escalate
for three years. William Henry Pope, editor of The Islander and
colonial secretary, ran a series of articles proclaiming that “ANY GOVERNMENT
OTHER THAN AN EXCLUSIVELY PROTESTANT ONE, MUST OF NECESSITY BE VIRTUALLY A
ROMAN CATHOLIC ONE.”[66]
The editor of the Protestant and Evangelical Witness turned to attacking
Catholic theology, stating, “We are prepared, when the proper time comes, to
show that the fundamental principles of your church are false.”[67]
This sparked a public feud with St. Dunstan’s rector, Father Angus McDonald,
which was played out over the course of three months in the local press.
As the scheduled election of January 1863 neared, both
sides sought to rally public support for their cause. The Presbyterians, led by
Reverend George Sutherland, printed one thousand copies of a pamphlet that
asked rhetorically “What, stript [sic] of all prejudice from birth or
education, is Popery?” It answered:
[T]hey are wholly opposed to the teachings of the Word
of God. If the Bible is true, they are not….Popery, while professing to
educate, fetters, enfeebles, and destroys….We presume not to dictate for whom
you are to vote; but….let the day of trial see you ranged in undivided ranks in
favor of a free, independent, and unfettered Protestant Government.[68]
With the major issue on the minds of voters being the
public endowment of St. Dunstan’s College, the electorate headed to the polls
on 21 January 1863. Once again a stratified population returned the
Conservatives by an 18-12 margin. Another all-Protestant government was formed.
Not surprisingly, the issue of public funding for St. Dunstan’s College was
dropped for the foreseeable future.
Two major issues emerged following the 1863 election
that relegated the religious controversies to the background. First, the
question of Confederation with the neighbouring British North American colonies
arose in 1864. Although steadfastly opposed, due in large part to its economic
buoyancy and satisfaction with the recently won power of responsible
government, the Confederation debate occupied much of the small colony’s
attention.[69]
Second, the land question re-emerged in 1864 with the formation of the Prince
Edward Island Tenant League. Fashioned after the Irish Tenant League, it
pressured landlords to sell their lands by withholding rents.[70]
Between these two issues, the previous political alliances were dropped, and
new ones assumed. As such, in 1867 the anti-Confederate, pro-land reform
Liberal Party returned to office with a 19-11 victory.
Bishop McIntyre revived the issue of funding the
diocese’s schools in 1868. Noting that approximately five hundred students were
being taught in St. Dunstan’s and three recently established convent schools,
with “no aid from the Public School Fund of the Colony,”[71]
he claimed they were deserving. Uninterested in reviving religious debate, the
Liberal Party rejected the bishop’s idea, even though its Roman Catholic
members were supportive. Sensing an opportunity to garner popular support, the
Conservative Party made a surprising move and aligned itself with the bishop.[72]
Protestant groups outright condemned the idea of state
funding for Catholic institutions. At their annual meeting, the Wesleyan Church
stated sectarian churches would “inflict upon the country deplorable
evils…[including] the propagation of [doctrinal] error.” Such changes to the
education system would gain their support “under no guise, however specious.”[73]
Likewise, the Presbyterian Church appointed a committee to research the issue.
In an open letter to the colony’s Presbyterians, they sought to:
remind the whole body of Protestants in the Colony,
that…they should feel that their duty at the approaching election requires them
to give their suffrages only to men whose established principles will be a sure
pledge that by no partial or unjust measures any denomination of Christians shall
receive educational advantages or support at the expense of their fellow
subjects.[74]
As the election of 18 July 1870 approached, it
featured a new series of alliances. The Conservative Party, which had formed
governments in 1859 and 1863 based on anti-Catholic sentiments, was now allied
with the bishop in his quest for sectarian school funding. The Liberal Party,
whose previous association with the Catholic Church meant it still ran a slate
of Catholic candidates, was now in alliance with the Protestant majority. The
Liberals won the election 24-6; however, dissent was brewing within the party.
At meetings held 18-19 August, the ten Catholic members issued an ultimatum:
either a grant to Catholic schools would be legislated, or they would resign.
When the Protestant Liberals could not agree to such terms, the Catholics left,
forming a coalition government with the Conservatives. This newfound alliance
was conditional: they would wait to address the school question until after the
next election.[75]
Having set the issue aside for three years, the issue
of funding Catholic schools would arise one final time. Island politicians had
recently changed their attitude towards Canadian Confederation, and in 1873
were in final negotiations with the Canadian government in Ottawa.[76]
Section 93 of the British North American Act, the legislation that created
Canada, guaranteed funding for denominational schools in any province that
entered Confederation with such arrangements already in place. Well aware of
the opportunity this presented, McIntyre made a concerted effort to gain the
appropriate legislation.[77]
That he failed to do so before the Island’s 1 July 1873 entry was a major
disappointment; nonetheless, once the issue was revived he was loath to relent
on it.
Despite a failure to gain funding, Bishop McIntyre
continued to raise the level of his demands. Whereas he once aimed to acquire
funding for St. Dunstan’s College, which was followed by attempts to also gain
funding for the diocese’s convent school, in a pastoral letter dated 22
December 1873 he revealed that he felt a fully separate school system was
necessary. As his letter notes:
The Education Law as it stands at present is virtually
Protestant, and unjust to Catholics. We must battle against this injustice if
we prize the eternal welfare of our children….it is not a few short hours
devoted once in the week to religious instruction, which can give to the
youthful mind that religious form capable of modelling the actions of a
life-time. Religious instruction, to be effectual in after life, must in youth
be continuous. It must not be confined to a day or an hour. It must go on from
morning to night, and from week to week. It must permeate the incidents of
every day’s routine, and be inhaled, so to speak, with the very atmosphere of
the Schoolroom.[78]
According to McIntyre’s outlook, any area where
two-thirds of the children were Roman Catholic warranted a church-run, but
publicly funded, school.[79]
To show support for his cause, a petition was circulated that reiterated
Catholic dissatisfaction with the current school system. Over nine thousand
would sign this petition.[80]
The bishop’s manoeuvres did not go unopposed by his
opponents. On 9 March 1874 fifty-one Protestant ministers published their
“Appeal To The Protestants of Prince Edward Island.” Denying the bishop’s
allegations that public schools favoured Protestantism, the ministers’ appeal
also stated that Protestants:
must, when called upon to exercise their franchise,
sink all past and party feelings, and recognize but two parties vis. [sic]
the true Protestant, who values and maintains Protestant rights on the one
side, and on the other the real Roman Catholic and the venal time-server
forming a party ever ready to sacrifice our interests, and subject ourselves
and our children to such tribute as the dictates of Roman Bishops may impose.[81] Likewise, the
day after the bishop’s petition was submitted to the provincial legislature, it
was met by a counter-petition. Signed by forty Protestant clergymen, this
petition reiterated that they opposed publicly funded denominational schools.[82]
Debate continued into 1876. By this point in time
controversy regarding religious education had plagued the Island for twenty
years. Determined to settle the matter of public funding for religious schools
conclusively in the upcoming election, Premier Louis Davies made it clear that
there would be “no side issues.”[83]
As such, the existing party structure dissolved and new alliances were formed.
Davies, believing that sectarianism “might make the people obedient to the
pastors…[but it] would reduce their intelligence to a much lower level than it
was at present,”[84]
led the Free School Party. James Pope, the younger brother of William Henry,
led the Denominationalists.
With the mutual acceptance that this would be the last
election contested on the issue of religious education, the stakes were high.
As polling day, 17 August 1876 neared, the tension became clear. At an
all-party forum on 28 July, 1,500 crowded into the Charlottetown Skating Rink
to hear the local candidates. The meeting began with a forty-minute speech from
Frederick Brecken, a Denominationalist. When Free Schooler Heath Haviland
attempted to speak next he was “howled down” by the crowd. Premier Davies tried
to regain order, but was inaudible above the noise generated by the followers
of Brecken and Pope. Frustrated, Davies and Haviland left the building, accompanied
by their supporters.[85]
Brecken and James Pope remained, with the latter outlining his position:
I am in favour, in the towns of this Province, of
utilizing the private schools…and of paying for the Secular Education therein
given, a per capita allowance equal to the amount which the State would be
called upon to pay for those pupils if educated in the Free Schools.[86]
The rowdy behaviour displayed at the all-party forum
re-emerged on election day. When it was announced that the Free Schoolers had
won 19-11, Davies attempted a speech in front of a crowd gathered at a
Charlottetown poll. He was met with a volley of stones, which forced the
Premier and his friends to flee the scene. This disturbance continued well into
the night, before the authorities restored order.[87]
Despite this, Davies charted forward and enshrined the non-sectarian nature of
education in 1877 School Act, effectively ending two decades of conflict.
While it is tempting to look at an event in isolation,
the wider context of history must be taken into account. Taking such into
consideration reveals that the rise in anti-Catholic sentiments seen on Prince
Edward Island was not an anomaly; rather, it was part of a rise in such
activity worldwide. Great Britain was
undergoing a dramatic rise in Protestant-Catholic anxiety during this period.
Fiercely protective of their Protestant heritage, the general population of
England was taken aback by a series of developments in the early nineteenth
century that suggested Roman Catholicism was growing within the country. These
developments included the high-profile conversion of John Henry Newman, a
prominent theologian at Oxford University,[88]
and the parliament-approved restoration of Great Britain’s Roman Catholic
hierarchy in 1850. Increased paranoia about “papal aggression” caused the
Protestant churches to begin working closely together against their common enemy.[89]
This resulted in the 1846 founding of the Evangelical Alliance, a powerful
voluntary association that would spread to the United States in 1867.[90]
North America also proved a hotbed of anti-Catholicism
during the mid-1800s. Many feared that the heavy influx of famine Irish
Catholics immigrants in the 1840s was the opening stage of a papal plot to
conquer the world. In the United States, the American Party, better known as
the “Know Nothings,” gained considerable popularity based in part on their
anti-Catholic platform. In British North America, the influx of Irish Catholics
at mid-century had resulted in a rash of anti-Green riots. The raised tensions
of militant Protestants was articulated by Robert Murray, a Nova Scotian who
announced at the sixth general conference of the American Evangelical Alliance
that the Canadian Catholic Church was “so strong as to occasion anxiety to the
friends of liberty and education.”[91]
One outside event that particularly galvanized
Islanders, given its close proximity, was the New Brunswick School Question.
The psychological impact of this affair on the disputants in Prince Edward
Island was pronounced. The colony’s Protestants viewed it as proof that Roman
Catholics were willing to engage in violence in their quest for “sectarian
privilege.” The Roman Catholics, on the other hand, saw it as another example
of the Protestant majority seeking to stamp out their interests.[92]
As the preceding establishes, the religious climate on
Prince Edward Island was charged with tension in the period preceding the 12
July 1877 riot. However, it fails to explain why the Charlottetown Orange lodge
was attacked on the night in question. In order to ascertain the assailants’
rationale, we must examine the Order’s significance and place in public affairs
on the Island.
As noted earlier, the Orange Order had grown slowly on
Prince Edward Island. Despite the Order’s humble beginnings, it nonetheless had
quickly garnered the attention of the colonial administration. Aware of the
Orange Order’s reputation for engaging in conflict elsewhere, the Island
government feared that the organization would foster violence if given an
opportunity to take root. As such, in 1852 Lieutenant-Governor Alexander Bannerman
had issued the following proclamation, aimed specifically at the Orange Order:
‘every Society or Association the members whereof take
any oath or engagement not required or authorized by Law,’ and ‘every Society
or Association the Members whereof, or any of them, take and subscribe or
assent to any engagement of Secrecy, Test, or Declaration not required by
Law’…are subject to transportation or imprisonment.[93]
This legislation, which was not legally binding,
failed to destroy the Order on Prince Edward Island. Although the Order did not
expand to a second lodge for eight years, Orangeism took on a new significance
as religious controversy flared in the late 1850s. Believing that Catholics
were blocking their access to the Bible, concerned Protestants flocked to the
Order. Portrayed as the vanguard of Protestantism, by 1866 there were
thirty-six lodges across the Island.[94]
In 1863, with twenty-two lodges, the rapidly growing
Order had sought legal incorporation to “enable its members to better manage
their pecuniary affairs.”[95]
In an era of major political turmoil, the debate that accompanied this
legislation “set a new and probably unequalled standard for acrimony.”[96]
The debate split the legislature along party lines. The Conservatives, closely
allied with the Orangemen, argued in favour of the bill, while the Liberals
took a steadfast position against. Incensed that a party deriving much of its
support from Catholics was blocking the Order’s interests, Conservative
politicians evoked images of papal treachery throughout European history.[97]
The Conservative leader William Henry Pope asked why the Order should be
blocked from incorporating if “even the Romish Bishop in this city” had been
permitted to do so.[98]
From here the debate degenerated into accusations of sexual immorality. Pope
made references to “lecherous old Popish priests,” to which George Coles
responded: “It was a well known fact that Orangemen upon the Island would not,
and did not hesitate to seduce Catholic girls, and afterwards refused to marry
them.”[99]
The Orange Order Incorporation Act of 1863 was
introduced on St. Patrick’s Day, a clear sign of contempt for the Irish
Catholic population that vigorously opposed the measure. Passed along straight
party lines, the bill gained royal assent from Lieutenant Governor George
Dundas. Nonetheless, it would not proceed as planned. A petition signed by
11,500 of the Order’s opponents seeking its disallowance was sent to the
Colonial Secretary of State, the Duke of Newcastle. An ardent opponent of the
Order, the Duke obliged. He wrote in his letter to Dundas:
I deeply regret that the Legislature of Prince Edward
Island should have given its sanction to a class of institutions which all
experience has shown to be calculated (if not actually intended) to embitter
religious and political differences, and which must be detrimental to the best
interests of any Colony in which they exist.”[100]
While the Orange Order took this defeat as further
proof that the Roman Catholic minority sought to dominate society, it served to
rally Protestant support behind the organization. In the ensuing year the
number of lodges operating on the Island rose from twenty-two to twenty-nine.[101]
During this time the Order also increased its already considerable influence
within the Conservative party. This can be seen in the address given by the
Island Grand Master, Sir J.B. Cooper, who proclaimed that Orangemen must concern
themselves with “securing good working majorities in favour of the CONSERVATIVE
PARTY.”[102]
Cooper also discussed the Order’s influence over the political party, noting
that:
If the Conservative Government, as at present
constituted, does not please you, insist upon its reconstruction as a condition
precedent to your support, and your wishes, I have not the slightest doubt,
will be promptly complied with.[103]
A powerful lobby group, the Orange Order would exert
its opposition to plans of the Roman Catholic community with regularity. When
the subject of funding St. Dunstan’s College was debated at length in the
1860s, the Order was among its harshest critics. Describing it as “our Island
Maynooth,” they feared:
the endowment from the public chest of a sectarian
institution expressly designed for the training of Romish priests, the
overthrow and destruction of our noble Colonial institution, Prince of Wales’
College, and the perversion of the Protestant youth.[104]
Likewise, they were in total opposition when the bishop shifted his aim towards
achieving a fully separate Catholic education system.[105]
From 1856 to 1877 the Island was beset with
politico-religious conflict during which the Roman Catholic minority repeatedly
failed to have its interests acted upon. Despite spirited Catholic protests,
legislation was passed in 1860 that made Scripture readings a mandatory part of
a schoolteacher’s job. In the ensuing years, despite the Catholic population’s
repeated efforts, the government failed to legislate funding for sectarian
schools. This effort died in 1876 when Premier Davies enshrined the
non-sectarian nature of the school system in the Prince Edward Island Education
Act.
The one victory that the Roman Catholics could boast
of would turn sour. Having successfully petitioned the Duke of Newcastle to
disallow the Orange Incorporation Act of 1863, this manoeuvre galvanized the
Protestant community and led to a rapid expansion of Order lodges. A powerful
lobby group that represented all that the papists were not, the Orange Order
were an obvious target for Catholic aggression.
The timing of the Charlottetown lodge’s attack is also
significant. The centrepiece of the Orange calendar, 12 July marks the annual
commemoration of King William’s seventeenth-century victory over Catholic
forces at the Boyne. This event represents a claim of Protestant supremacy
wherever it is celebrated. Charlottetown’s Catholics would have greeted this
annual event with disdain; however, there is no record of violence in the city
on this day prior to 1877. Having recently lost the conclusive battle for
sectarian education, the culmination of twenty years of public conflict, it
appears that by 1877 members of the Charlottetown Catholic community could no
longer take reminders of their subjugation without action. That one of the
riot’s instigators, Nicholas Collins, was quoted as saying “Damn you, you can
beat us in the House of Assembly, but you can’t beat us in the street,”[106]
testifies to this connection between political frustration and public action.
The singular aim of the Catholic mob provides
considerable insight into their motives. Their goal was not to injure the
Orangemen, which explains why they did not attack the men as they marched
through the streets. Rather, the crowd waited until their adversaries were
inside the lodge before they commenced pelting them with stones. The mob’s aim,
as testimony shows, was to force the Orangemen to lower their flag. When this
was accomplished, they dispersed. Given that the riot was the breaking point of
tensions between the two groups, it may seem anticlimactic for the Catholic mob
to have focussed its attention on something as specific and material as a flag.
However, the importance of the Orange flag should not be underestimated.
As Eric Hobsbawn points out, a flag is an important symbol
that proclaims a group’s identity.[107]
The Orange flag, flying above their lodge, represented the supremacy of the
Order in Island life. For the embittered Roman Catholic population, what better
way was there to show their rejection of this than to force the Orange Order’s
flag down on their most celebrated day? For those involved in the flag’s
descent, it was their opportunity to usurp the Order’s power, albeit briefly,
as retribution for years of Protestant domination.
How does the 1877 riot fit within the grander historiography of
Orange-Green riots in British North America? In one sense it is an anomaly.
Whereas elsewhere the vast majority of such incidents were sparked by the
aggression of Orangemen, members of the local Roman Catholic population
instigated this event. However, it is in understanding the riot’s root cause
that this study is most useful. The evidence clearly supports Gregory Kealey’s
observation that such instances were often symbolic events. Whether it be the
Irish Catholics’ overstepping informal boundaries afforded them by the
Protestant majority, as seen in Kealey’s “The Orange Order in Toronto,” or the
articulation of long-suppressed frustration by Catholics in Charlottetown, such
events have a meaning greater than the immediate actions suggest.
[1] I would like to express my appreciation to Professor Marguerite Van Die, under whose guidance this paper was originally written, and Professor Edward MacDonald, who provided valuable advice in the early stages. As well, I would like to thank George O’Connor and the anonymous reviewers for reading the various drafts of this paper and providing many helpful comments.
[2] “Victorian Canada,” in The Shield of Achilles: Aspects of Canada in the Victorian Age, ed. W.L. Morton (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1968), 314.
[3] Census of the Population, and other Statistical Returns of Prince Edward Island, Taken in the Year 1871 (Charlottetown: Reilly & Co., 1871), 7.
[4] Ibid. According to 1871 census figures, the largest single denomination was the Roman Catholics, with 40,442 adherents. The next two groups were the Presbyterian Church “of lower Provinces,” with 18,603, and the Kirk of Scotland, with 10,976. There were 8,361 Methodists, 7,220 Anglicans, 2,709 Bible Christians, 77 Universalists, 8 Quakers, and 931 of “Other Denominations.”
[5] Ian Ross Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island From 1856 to 1860,” Acadiensis (Spring 1976), 4.
[6] John C. Macmillan, History of the Catholic Church in Prince Edward Island from 1835 to 1891 (Quebec: L’Evenement Printing Co., 1913), 315-318.
[7] Andrew Robb, “Rioting in 19th Century P.E.I.,” Canadian Frontier (Annual, 1978), 32.
[8] Boyde Beck, Prince Edward Island: An Unauthorized History (Charlottetown: Acorn Press, 1996), 117-120.
[9] W.S. MacNutt, “Political Advance and Social Reform, 1842-1861,” in Canada’s Smallest Province, ed. Francis W.P. Bolger (Charlottetown: The Prince Edward Island 1973 Centennial Commission, 1973), 130.
[10] Ian Ross Robertson’s “Religion, Politics, and Education in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1877,” (MA thesis, McGill University, 1968) discusses the tensions that Bolger did not address. It also notes the emergence of the Orange Order on Prince Edward Island; however, it does not address the focus of this paper, the 1877 riot. The author would like to acknowledge that his contextual understanding of the politico-religious situation on Prince Edward Island during the 1850s-1870s is largely attributable to Robertson’s authoritative thesis, as well as the journal articles that emerged from his research.
[11] Brendan O’Grady, Exiles and Islanders: The Irish Settlers of Prince Edward Island (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2004), 240-242.
[12] Gregory Kealey, Toronto Workers Respond to Industrial Capitalism, 1867-1892 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1980. “The Orange Order in Toronto” is the seventh chapter in Kealey’s book.
[13] Ibid., 119.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Scott See, Riots in New Brunswick: Orange Nativism and Social Violence in the 1840s (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1993).
[16] Ibid., 84.
[17] Census of Canada, 1880-81 (Ottawa: MacLean, Roger & Co., 1882), 206-209; Andrew Hill Clark, Three Centuries and the Island: A Historical Geography of Settlement and Agriculture in Prince Edward Island, Canada (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1959), 207; O’Grady, Exiles and Islanders, 232.
[18] Cecil Houston and William Smyth, The Sash Canada Wore: A Historical Geography of the Orange Order in Canada (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1980), 8-20.
[19] The Irish were the largest immigrant group to British North America during the nineteenth century. While it is often thought that the majority of these immigrants were Roman Catholics who fled the famine between 1845 and 1850, Cecil Houston and William Smyth have established that the majority of Irish immigrants were part of a wave of 450,000 that arrived during the previous thirty years. These Irish were primarily of the Protestant faith. Houston and Smyth, Irish Emigration and Canadian Settlement: Patterns, Links, and Letters (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1990), 4, 8, 21.
[20] Brian P. Clarke, Piety and Nationalism: Lay Voluntary Associations and the Creation of an Irish-Catholic Community in Toronto, 1850-1895 (Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1993), 154. By 1864 the Order would have an estimated 200,000 members across British North America, including such high-profile individuals as Sir John A. Macdonald. Likewise, they assumed considerable political control of the colonies. This was most pronounced in the municipality of Toronto, where twenty-one of the twenty-four mayors that served office between 1845 and 1900 were members. Houston and Smyth, The Sash Canada Wore, 86, 156-157.
[21] Grand Provincial Orange Lodge of Prince Edward Island, “Report of the Sixth Annual Session of the Provincial Grand Lodge” (Charlottetown: 1866), 38. [Prince Edward Island Provincial Archives, Accession No. 2420]; Houston and Smyth, The Sash Canada Wore, 76.
[22] “The 12th of July,” The Examiner, 13 July 1877, 3. The reconstruction of the events of 12 July 1877is taken from coverage found in The Examiner, The Herald, and The Presbyterian and Evangelical Protestant Union.
[23] The job of stipendiary magistrate was created in 1875. Primarily designed to function as an impartial supervisor of the Charlottetown police court, Fitzgerald “was also empowered to direct and discipline the police force.” His priority in this respect was combating “public drunkenness and rowdiness.” See Greg Marquis, “Enforcing the Law: The Charlottetown Police Force,” in Gaslights, Epidemics, and Vagabond Cows: Charlottetown in the Victorian Era,” eds. Douglas Baldwin and Thomas Spira (Charlottetown: Ragweed Press, 1988), 92.
[24] According to contemporary accounts, two of the gunshot victims, “a man named Lafferty and a boy named Higgins,” were innocent bystanders. Although one was struck above the temple, and the other in his left arm, both were reportedly “slightly wounded.” The man shot in the final flurry, Patrick Brenan, was hit above his left ear. The injured Orangeman was John Moore. “The 12th of July,” The Examiner, 13 July 1877, 3.
[25] The Charlottetown police department was established in 1855 in conjunction with the municipality’s incorporation. Originally consisting of six permanent constables, it is possible that the force was slightly larger in 1877. To save costs, however, the majority of the work was fulfilled by seasonally employed night watchmen and deputized constables. Marquis, 89-91.
[26] “In The City Yesterday,” The Examiner, 14 July 1877, 2.
[27] These organizations included the Mechanic’s Institute, which sponsored community lectures and educational initiatives, and the Benevolent Irish Society, which was established in 1825 to aid the colony’s Irish immigrants. Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1860,” 22; Robertson, “Party Politics and Religious Controversialism in Prince Edward Island from 1860 to 1863,” 55; O’Grady, Exiles and Islanders, 177-179.
[28] Francis W.P. Bolger, “The Beginnings of Independence, 1767-1787,” in Canada’s Smallest Province, 38.
[29] Bolger, “The Demise of Quit Rents and Escheat, 1824-1842,” in Ibid., 99, 114. For more information on the Island’s sense of achievement and prosperity during this period, see David Weale and Harry Baglole, The Island and Confederation: The End of an Era (Charlottetown: Williams & Crue, 1973), 79-98.
[30] Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1860,” 3.
[31] MacNutt, “Political Advance and Social Reform, 1842-1861,” in Canada’s Smallest Province, 136.
[32] Ibid., 128.
[33] Journal of the House of Assembly, 1830 (Charlottetown: George T. Haszard, 1830), 5.
[34] MacNutt, “Political Advance and Social Reform, 1842-1861,” in Canada’s Smallest Province, 114, 118, 124, 126. The Island featured a bicameral legislature until 1892, at which point its two houses were abolished and the current Legislative Assembly was created. Frank MacKinnon, The Government of Prince Edward Island (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1951), 210-214.
[35] MacKinnon, 218.
[36] Holman, “The Belfast Riot,” Island Magazine (Fall-Winter 1983), 7.
[37] O’Grady, 203-230.
[38] Debates and Proceedings of the House of Assembly, 1857 (Charlottetown: Herald Office, 1857), 61.
[39] See “Report of the Visitor of Schools” in Journal of the House of Assembly, 1858 (Charlottetown: George T. Haszard, 1858), Appendix T.
[40] Quoted in Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1860,” 4.
[41] Robert Blake Irving, Normal School Soiree: Report of the Speeches and Proceedings at the Inauguration of the Normal School (Charlottetown: Whelan, 1956), 27.
[42] Ibid., 18. The Board of Education did not oppose the inclusion of religion in the classroom, per se. Rather, there was a clear line drawn between religious education in a school dominated by a particular denomination, which was acceptable, and religious education in a mixed classroom, which was not. Since the Normal School attracted both Protestants and Roman Catholics, it was generally felt that it should remain devoid of religious lessons.
[43] Letter reprinted in Macmillan, 123-125.
[44] Quoted in Ian Ross Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1860,” 7.
[45] Ibid., 7-8.
[46] T.W. Acheson, “Evangelicals and Public Life in Southern New Brunswick, 1830-1880,” in Religion and Public Life in Canada: Historical and Comparative Perspectives, ed. Marguerite Van Die (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001), 50; T.W. Acheson, “The 1840s: Decade of Tribulation,” in The Atlantic Region to Confederation, eds. Phillip Buckner and John Reid (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1994), 317-318.
[47] A copy of the letter was supplied by Reverend David Fitzgerald, an Anglican minister who was born and educated in Ireland. He was also a member of the Board of Education. Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856-1860,” 8.
[48] Ibid., 9.
[49] “Public Meeting,” The Islander, 20 February 1857, 4.
[50] Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1860,” 10.
[51] Debates and Proceedings of the House of Assembly, 1857, 58; Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1860,” 12.
[52] Ibid., 55.
[53] “Mr. Barker’s Testimonial,” Protector and Christian Witness, 29 April 1857, 3.
[54] Ibid.
[55] According to Robertson, the “Bible Debate of 1858 had been more heated than that of the previous year, for the ‘Biblicians’ believed that the tide was beginning to run in their favour.” Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1860,” 16.
[56] “Questions to be put to Candidates for Seats in the ensuing General Assembly of this Island,” Protector and Christian Witness, 27 January 1858, 3.
[57] “The Great Protestant Meeting,” Ibid., 24 February 1858, 2.
[58] “The Coming Election,” Ibid., 5 May 1858, 2.
[59] While property requirements were eliminated for voters in 1853, they remained in place for elected officials. John Ramsay did not have the £50 worth of freehold or leasehold land required of members, and as such was ineligible to take a seat in the legislature. “Mr. Ramsay’s Qualification,” The Islander, 18 March 1859, 2. The legislature had expanded from twenty-four to thirty seats earlier that year.
[60] Robertson, “The Bible Question in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1860,” 22, 24.
[61] Established by Father Thomas Phelan in October 1856, the Catholic Young Men’s Literary Institute’s “object was to band together the Catholic young men of the town, and promote amongst them a love of good literature.” Macmillan, 106-107. This apparently included anti-Protestant rhetoric, as displayed by a guest lecturer’s portrayal of the English Reformation’s leaders as “evil doers.” “Catholic Young Men’s Literary Institute,” The Examiner, 26 December 1859, 3. The local Young Men’s Christian Association, likewise, engaged in highly sectarian rhetoric. Led by the Reverend David Fitzgerald and George Sutherland, it was deemed too ultra-Protestant for some of its clientele. As such, in 1860 the Young Men’s Literary and Scientific Association was formed. This upstart organization, unwilling to take an extreme sectarian position, failed to take root amidst the prevailing politico-religious climate. Robertson, “Party Politics and Religious Controversialism in Prince Edward Island from 1860 to 1863,” 56. For contemporary commentary on the Mechanic’s Institute and its decline, see The Examiner, 26 December 1859, 2.
[62] Barker had to be escorted to safety by city officials. “Street Preaching And Disturbance,” The Examiner, 13 July 1857, 3; “The Indignation Meeting,” The Examiner, 30 August 1858, 2.
[63] Robertson, “Party Politics and Religious Controversialism in Prince Edward Island from 1860-1863,” 30-32.
[64] Edward MacDonald, “Peter McIntyre,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, XII (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1990), 638.
[65] Acheson, “The 1840s: Decade of Tribulation,” 318-319.
[66] “To the Protestants of Prince Edward Island,” The Islander, 19 July 1861, 2. Pope’s position is interesting because, although born into the Methodist faith, he was widely regarded as an “infidel” due to his lack of religiosity. Ian Ross Robertson, “William Henry Pope,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, X (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1972), 594.
[67] “To the Rector of St. Dunstan’s,” Protestant and Evangelical Witness, 8 March 1862, 2.
[68] Reprinted in “The Rev. George Sutherland,” The Vindicator, 26 December 1862, 2-3.
[69] See Bolger, “Prince Edward Island Rejects Confederation, 1864-1867,” and “The Coy Maiden Resists, 1867-1872,” in Canada’s Smallest Province, 156-184, and 185-206.
[70] The League’s efforts would be crushed when the Island government called in troops to restore order. Nonetheless, the widespread popularity of the League convinced many landowners that it would be in their best interests to sell their land. See Ian Ross Robertson, The Tenant League of Prince Edward Island, 1864-1867 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996).
[71] “Memorial to Bishop Peter McIntyre,” in Journal of the House of Assembly, 1868 (Charlottetown: Frederick Hughes, 1868), Appendix FF.
[72] The new stance was articulated by John Hamilton Gray at the annual public examination of St. Dunstan’s College. “Public Examination At St. Dunstan’s College,” The Examiner, 13 July 1868, 2.
[73] Quoted in Robertson, “Religion, Politics, and Education in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1877,” 194.
[74] “To the Presbyterians of Prince Edward Island,” The Islander, 10 June 1870, 3.
[75] Bolger, “The Coy Maiden Resists, 1867-1872,” in Canada’s Smallest Province, 200.
[76] While the issue of religious education was set aside, the government’s focus was the creation of a railway that spanned the entire Island. A popular initiative, its construction would effectively bankrupt the Island, forcing the colony to enter Confederation in 1873. Bolger, “Long Courted, Won at Last,” Ibid., 207-211.
[77] Robertson, “Religion, Politics, and Education in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1877,” 213.
[78] Quoted in Ibid., 237-238.
[79] Ibid., 244.
[80] Debates and Proceedings of the Legislative Council, 1875 (Charlottetown: George T. Haszard, 1875), 105-106.
[81] The Examiner, 9 March 1874, 3.
[82] Robertson, “Religion, Politics, and Education in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1877,” 255.
[83] Debates and Proceedings of the House of Assembly, 1876 (Charlottetown: Herald Office, 1876), 211.
[84] Ibid.
[85] “The Monster Meeting In The Skating Rink,” The Patriot, 29 July 1876, 2; “Monster Meeting! Over 1500 Persons Present,” Island Argus, 1 August 1876, 2. According to the Argus, two-thirds of the crowd followed Davies and Haviland when they exited the building.
[86] “Great Meeting At Citizens’ Skating Rink!”, The Examiner, 31 July 1876, 2. The Catholic Tories disagreed with Pope insofar that they “leaned towards a complete separate schools system,” which was in line with the Church’s demands. G. Edward MacDonald, The History of St. Dunstan’s University, 1855-1956 (Charlottetown: Prince Edward Island Museum and Heritage Foundation, 1989), 118.
[87] “The Election,” The Patriot, 19 August 1876, 2.
[88] Jane Garnett, “Religious and intellectual life,” in The Nineteenth Century: The British Isles: 1815-1901, ed. Colin Matthew (Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2000), 218.
[89] Mark Noll, A History of Christianity in the United States and Canada (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1992), 257. When one takes into consideration that the majority of Prince Edward Island’s ministers were born and educated in Great Britain, the environment that emerged in the colony becomes more understandable. Robertson, “Party Politics and Religious Controversialism in Prince Edward Island from 1860-1863,” 57.
[90] Paul A. Crow, “The Ecumenical Movement,” in Encyclopedia of the American Religious Experience: Studies of Traditions and Movements, volume 2, eds. Charles H. Lippy and Peter W. Williams (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1988), 981-982.
[91] Noll, 256-257, 307.
[92] Robertson, “Religion, Politics, and Education in Prince Edward Island from 1856 to 1877,” 266.
[93] “Report of the Sixth Annual Session of the Provincial Grand Lodge,” 11. The Free Masons were exempted from this declaration, which was viewed to be the result of Premier George Coles’ membership in this group.
[94] Ibid., 38. As Houston and Smyth noted in The Sash Canada Wore¸ “The Orange Order did not create that feeling of sectarian bitterness. It was, in itself, a byproduct of it, and the association’s comfortable niche amid the everyday social life of the community indicated that in many Prince Edward Island settlements, as in the rest of Canada, Orangeism was not an unwelcome intrusion.” 78.
[95] “Report of the Sixth Annual Session of the Provincial Grand Lodge,” 13.
[96] Robertson, “Party Politics and Religious Controversialism in Prince Edward Island from 1860-1863,” 50.
[97] References were made in the legislature to England’s Gunpowder Plot of 1605, and France’s St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre of 1572.
[98] Debates and Proceedings of the House of Assembly, 1863 (Charlottetown: Herald Office, 1863), 39, 46, 57.
[99] Ibid., 51, 55-56.
[100] Francis W.P. Bolger, Prince Edward Island and Confederation, 1863-1873 (Charlottetown: St. Dunstan’s University Press, 1964), 13. The Duke of Newcastle’s disdain for the Orange Order was evident in 1860, when he urged the Prince of Wales to cancel his visit to Kingston, Ontario, in order to avoid passing under an arch established by the local Orangemen.
[101] Robertson, “Party Politics and Religious Controversialism in Prince Edward Island from 1860-1863,” 51.
[102] “Report of the Sixth Annual Session of the Provincial Grand Lodge,” 6.
[103] Ibid., 16. When the Conservative Party aligned itself with Bishop McIntyre, the Order was fiercely opposed. This led them to withdraw their support from the party for the duration of the school debate.
[104] Ibid., 7-8. The Orangemen’s description of the situation was inaccurate. While St. Dunstan’s did provide a training ground for many priests in its early years, this was not its explicit purpose. As G. Edward MacDonald notes, “Despite St. Dunstan’s obviously Catholic orientation, they [Protestants] were welcome...Presumably, Protestant students would be exempt from any cathechism [sic] classes, and attendance at Mass. But they could hardly be spared the Catholic viewpoint which permeated secular subjects like history, English, and philosophy.” MacDonald, The History of St. Dunstan’s University, 87.
[105] That an Orange Lodge Incorporation Bill was passed again in 1878, just one year after the Charlottetown riot, indicates the level of power the Order maintained at the time. Again a topic of bitter controversy, this bill was refused royal assent by Lieutenant Governor Robert Hodgson. When a similar bill was passed two years later, Lieutenant Governor Heath Haviland, an Orangeman himself, refused assent on the advice of Conservative Premier W.W. Sullivan. MacKinnon, 154.
[106] “Evidence of Sworn Witnesses,” The Examiner, 18 July 1877, 1.
[107] Eric Hobsbawn, “Introduction: Inventing Traditions,” in The Invention of Tradition, eds. Eric Hobsbawn and Terence Ranger (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1983), 11.