Robert Fleming Gourlay
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Robert Fleming Gourlay (March 24, 1778 – August 1, 1863) was a writer, moderate reformer and agriculturalist.
Gourlay was born in Craigrothie, Fifeshire, Scotland in 1778. He received an Master of Arts degree from the University of St. Andrews and studied agriculture at the University of Edinburgh. He managed one of his father's farms from 1800 to 1809 and leased a farm from the Duke of Somerset from 1809 to 1817. Gourlay's sympathies lay with the poor farmer, who he saw as being exploited by landlords and the system of government. In 1809, he published a pamphlet proposing a radical reshaping of the system of government in Britain. He submitted a proposal to the British House of Commons that land be acquired and redistributed to the poor. Gourlay adopted the middle name Fleming in honour of his mother who died in 1827.
In 1817, his wife inherited some land in the Niagara District of Upper Canada and he travelled there, expecting to return by the fall. While there, he decided to gather some statistical information on Upper Canada. This list was based on the questions used by Sir John Sinclair in Scotland, the last question being "What, in your opinion, regards the improvement of your township in particular, or the province in general; and what would most contribute to the same?". This last question came to be viewed with great suspicion by the provincial authorities. The list of questions was sent to all townships in the province.
Gourlay later questioned the decision of Lieutenant Governor Francis Gore in banning the granting of land to Americans. This ban made it more difficult for landowners in the region to sell their land. Reverend John Strachan, seeing Gourlay as a trouble-maker, attempted to prevent the return of responses to Gourlay's questions from the townships. In May and June of 1818, Gourlay began holding meetings across the province, proposing a direct appeal to the government in England. In the eastern part of the province, he encountered much resistance from the ruling elite, members of the Family Compact and was assaulted several times. Gourlay was accused of seditious libel, but was later cleared of these charges. In July 1818, a convention was held at York with representatives from 14 districts; it was decided to present a petition to the new Lieutenant Governor Sir Peregrine Maitland. However, Maitland was able to convince the Legislative Assembly to pass legislation banning seditious meetings and he refused to accept the petition. In December, Isaac Swayze swore out a complaint against Gourlay under the Sedition Act of 1804, even though this legislation was never intended to apply to British subjects. When Gourlay refused to leave the province, he was jailed. He was later tried and banished to New York state.
He returned to England and published his Statistical account of Upper Canada in 1822. Although Gourlay had been crushed by the colonial authorities, he had helped bring to the surface some concerns about the administration of Upper Canada. He ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the British parliament. Although he can be said to have sowed the seeds of discontent that led to the Upper Canada Rebellion, he was loyal to Britain and viewed William Lyon Mackenzie as a traitor. In 1856, he returned to his property in Canada and ran unsuccessfully for a seat in Oxford in Canada West. He returned to Edinburgh, Scotland and died there in 1863. He remained convinced of the rightness of his cause to the end.