Adolphus Hart

Adolphus Mordecai Hart (April 11, 1814 - March 23, 1879) was a Canadian lawyer and author, son of Ezekiel Hart.

Biography

Adolphus Hart was born in Trois-Rivières to Ezekiel Hart and Frances Lazarus.

He took up the study of law and spent part of his time as a law clerk in the office of the attorney general of Lower Canada, Charles Richard Ogden. He was admitted to the Bar of Lower Canada on May 19, 1836. Along with his uncle Benjamin Hart and Benjamin's son Aaron Philip Hart, Adolphus Hart took part in the movement of the 1830s to obtain equal rights for Jews in Lower Canada, in particular to make it possible for Jews to take the oath as a justice of the peace by omitting the phrase "on the true faith of a Christian". A law of 1832 granting Jews rights and privileges came under question, and the House of Assembly in 1834 formed a special committee to consider this legislation.

While he was still a student, Hart also lodged a complaint in 1836 before the assembly, through Bartholomew Gugy, against the conduct of Judge Edward Bowen. His complaint had some justification but was said to have been presented in such an exaggerated manner that the assembly would not pursue the case. Louis-Michel Viger and Amable Berthelot were authorized to make an inquiry. On March 10, 1836 the committee on grievances found the judge guilty.

Hart's family home was in Trois-Rivières. Louis-Joseph Papineau came there to dinner in 1836, a significant occasion for nearly all the respectable English citizens of the town refused the invitation. Hart established a practice in the aftermath of the disturbances of 1837–38, and he defended several persons associated with them. In 1837, during the trial of "a rebel," he was fined for contempt of court. In 1839 he pleaded for Joseph-Guillaume Barthe, law student and journalist, and Richard Cook, saddler, both of Trois-Rivières, who were arrested for publicizing an address to the exiles of Bermuda.

In the early 1840s Adolphus Hart was living in Montreal and was a member of the Jewish synagogue. In 1846 he appears as an ensign in the 3rd battalion of militia. On December 12, 1844 he had married Constance Hatton Hart, daughter of his uncle Benjamin Hart; they had three daughters and two sons, one of whom, Gerald Ephraim Hart, became known as a historian, bibliophile, and numismatist. Constance Hart was the author of Household receipts or Domestic Cookery by "A Montreal Lady" which had a second edition in 1867.[1][2]

Hart went to the United States in 1850. He was active in the Democratic party in New York, assisting with literature for the gubernatorial campaign of Horatio Seymour in 1854. He also wrote a number of works from 1850 onwards. Among these was a History of the discovery of the valley of the Mississippi (1852), one of the early discussions of this subject.[3] In 1854 came Uncle Tom in Paris: views of slavery outside the cabin.[4] He wrote also, under his own name or pseudonymously, on such topics as paper money and the liquor question. This writing activity was continued after he returned to Canada in 1857 and resumed his legal practice in Montreal.

Adolphus Hart suffered a stroke while pleading a case in court and died a few days later. The entire Montreal bar and most of the bench joined the escort for the body to the station, and the bar observed a month of mourning for him. At his funeral in Trois-Rivières, Alexander Abraham de Sola officiated.

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