John Saunders (judge)
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The Hon. John Saunders (D.C.L.) (June 1, 1754 - May 24, 1834) was a British soldier, lawyer, and Chief Justice of the colonial Province of New Brunswick.
Born to landed gentry in Princess Anne County, Virginia, Thirteen Colonies, North America, during the American Revolutionary War he remained loyal to Britain. At the outbreak of the war, Saunders raised a troop of Dragoons at his own expense. Merged into the Queen's Rangers, he rose to the rank of Captain and served under John Graves Simcoe. In 1782, Saunders went to England to study law and entered the Middle Temple. In 1787, he was called to the English Bar and in 1790 was appointed a Judge of the Supreme Court of New Brunswick.
Making his home in Fredericton, in 1790 he married Arianna Chalmers (1768-1845), the daughter of the wealthy Loyalist, Lt. Col. James Chalmers (1727-1806). Like other soldiers of the Queen's Rangers, Saunders was entitled to Crown grants of land in the Queensbury / Southampton, New Brunswick area, a then unsettled forestry about fifty miles west of Fredericton on the Saint John River. While enlisted men received land parcels with restrictive covenants of between one to two hundred acres, Saunders, as part of the elite and Surveyor General of the Province, was given more than six thousand acres without any restrictions. At Pokiok, he built an estate known as the Barony, a symbol of his aristocratic status.
John Saunders was appointed to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick and on May 3, 1793 was appointed the province's first Provincial Treasurer and Surveyor General. In 1822, Saunders was elevated to Chief Justice of New Brunswick, a position he held for the rest of his life.
John Saunders died in 1834 at Fredericton and was buried in the city's Old Burying Grounds.
Preceded by Jonathan Bliss |
Chief Justice of New Brunswick 1822-1834 |
Succeeded by Ward Chipman |