Jacob Mountain

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The Right Reverend
Jacob Mountain
1st Anglican Bishop of Quebec
In office
1793–1825
Succeeded by Hon. Charles Stewart
Member of the Legislative Council of Upper Canada
In office
1793–1825
Member of the Legislative Council of Lower Canada
In office
1793–1825
Personal details
Born (1749-12-01)December 1, 1749
Thwaite Hall, Norfolk
Died June 16, 1825(1825-06-16) (aged 75)
Marchmont House, Quebec
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Mildred Wale Kentish
Alma mater Caius College, Cambridge
Religion Church of England

Jacob Mountain (December 1, 1749 – June 16, 1825) was an Englishman who was appointed the first Anglican Bishop of Quebec. He was appointed to both the Legislative Council of Lower Canada and the Legislative Council of Upper Canada.

Biography

The third son of Jacob Mountain (1710–1752), of Thwaite Hall, Norfolk, and his third wife, Ann, daughter of Jehoshaphat Postle of Colney Hall, near Wymondham, chairman of the Norfolk Agricultural Association.

Jacob Mountain junior was born at Thwaite Hall on 1 December 1749.[1] He was educated at various Norfolk schools, including Scarning, where he was a pupil of the classicist Robert Potter (1721–1804), and at Caius College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA in 1774 and MA 1777.[2] In 1779 he was elected a fellow of his college, and, after holding the living of St. Andrew's, Norwich, was presented to the vicarages of Holbeach, Lincolnshire, and Buckden, Huntingdonshire, which he held together. On 1 June 1788, he was installed as Castor prebendary in Lincoln Cathedral. These preferments he owed to the friendship of William Pitt the Younger, who also, on the recommendation of George Pretyman Tomline, gave him the appointment of first Anglican bishop of Quebec.[3]

He was consecrated at Lambeth Palace on the 7th of July 1793, and at the same time was awarded the honorary degree of D.D. (jure dignitatis). At that time there were only nine clergymen of the Church of England in Canada—at his death there were 61. For 30 years Mountain promoted missions and the erection of churches in all populous places, which he visited regularly, into old age. [3] He also built the Anglican Cathedral of the Holy Trinity in Quebec City.

Jacob Mountain died at Marchmont House, Quebec, 16 June 1825 and was buried under the chancel of the Holy Trinity Anglican Cathedral, which also contains a monument to his memory.[3]

Works

Jacob Mountain published Poetical Reveries, 1777, besides sermons and charges.[3]

Family

Coat of Arms of Jacob Mountain

In 1783, Jacob Mountain married Elizabeth Mildred Wale Kentish (d. 1836), daughter and co-heiress of John Kentish of Little Bardfield Hall, near Braintree, Essex. The Mountains lived at Marchmont House, Quebec City, where he died, and they were the parents of six surviving children.[3]

  • Rev. Jacob Henry Brooke Mountain (1788–1872) DD of The Heath, Hertfordshire. His first wife, Frances Mingay Brooke, was the daughter and co-heiress of the Rev. William Brooke of Swainsthorpe Hall, Norfolk. His second wife, also named Frances, was the widow of Frederick Polhill (1798–1848) MP, of Howbury Park, Bedfordshire.
  • The Rt. Rev. George Jehoshaphat Mountain, third Anglican bishop of Quebec, first principal of McGill University and the founder of Bishop's University. In 1814 at Quebec City, he married Mary Hume Thomson (1789–1861), daughter of Commissary-General William Thomson of Quebec, and the aunt of Jasper Hume Nicolls, of Lennoxville, Quebec.
  • Rev. George Robert Mountain (1791–1846), formerly of the 75th Regiment and afterwards rector of Havant, Hampshire. He married Katherine Hinchliff, of Mitcham, Surrey.
  • Elizabeth Sarah Mountain (1793–1843), married Col. Frederick Arabin RA, of Moyglare, Co. West Meath, Ireland.
  • Colonel Armine Simcoe Henry Mountain (1797–1854) CB, adjutant-general to the forces in India and China, and aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria. His first wife was Jane O'Beirne (d. 1838), granddaughter of Thomas O'Beirne, bishop of Meath. His second wife, Charlotte, was the daughter of Major-Gen. Thomas Dundas of Fingask (1750–1794), of Carron Hall, nephew of James Maitland, 7th Earl of Lauderdale. Armine's widow remarried Sir John Henry Lefroy.
  • Charlotte Mary Milnes Mountain (1801–1860), died unmarried at her brother's house in Havant.

Coat of Arms

The arms of Jacob Mountain which were granted by the English Kings of Arms on 3 August 1793. He bore "Ermine on a chevron Azure between three lions rampant guardant Sable each supporting between the fore-paws an escallop erect Gules a mitre on each side a cross crosslet fitchy Argent."

References

Notes

  1. T.R. Millman, Jacob Mountain: A Study in Church and State, Univ. of Toronto Studies, 1947
  2. "Mountain, Jacob (MNTN769J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge. ; Dictionary of Canadian Biography. . Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Boase 1894.
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Boase, George Clement (1894). "Mountain, Jacob". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography 39. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 

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