Hunters' Lodges

Main article: Patriot War
Patriot War

Battle of the Windmill
Date7 December 1837 - 4 December 1838
LocationUpper Canada (present day Ontario)
Result Anglo-American victory
Territorial
changes
Total defeat of the Rebels and the Hunters' Lodges, unification of Upper and Lower Canada into the Province of Canada.
Belligerents
 United Kingdom
United Kingdom Upper Canada
United States United States
Hunters' Lodges
Republic of Canada
Commanders and leaders
George Browne
Henry Dundas
James FitzGibbon
Allan MacNab
Sheriff William Jarvis
Robert Nelson
Cyrille-Hector-Octave Côté
William Lyon Mackenzie
Charles Duncombe
Donald McLeod
Nils von Schoultz 
Samuel Lount  

The Hunters' Lodge was the last of a series of secret organizations formed in 1838 in the United States in the Rebellions in the Canadas. The organization arose in Vermont among Lower Canadian refugees (the eastern division or Frères chasseurs) and spread westward under the influence of Dr Charles Duncombe and Donald McLeod, leaders of the short lived Canadian Refugee Relief Association, and Scotland native William Lyon Mackenzie, drawing in support from many different areas in North America and Europe. They also absorbed Henry S. Handy's 'Secret Order of the Sons of Liberty' in Detroit, into a Grand lodge in Cleveland.

Lodge organization

The Hunters Lodges were modelled on masonic lodges, and adopted similar secret signs, hierarchical orders, and rituals. The four degrees of the Lodge were: Snowshoe, Beaver, Grand Hunter and Patriot Hunter. Soldiers without rank were of the first degree, commissioned officers of the second, field officers of the third, and the highest ranking commissioned officers of the fourth degree.[1]

They also utilized a secret code, sometimes printed in newspapers like the Buffalonian, to communicate orders.[2]

Lodges existed across Vermont, western New York, Ohio and Michigan with particularly active sites being Watertown, Oswego, Salina (now Syracuse), Rochester, Buffalo, Cleveland, and Detroit.

Convention & the Republic of Canada

In September 1838, 70 delegates from the western Hunters' Lodges attended a secret, week-long “Patriot Congress” in Cleveland, Ohio. They appointed a provisional Canadian republican government that included:

  1. President A.D. Smith, “chief justice of the peace at Cleveland”
  2. Vice-President Colonel Nathan Williams, “a wholesale grocer” in Cleveland
  3. Secretary of the Treasury Judge John Grant Jr, Oswego
  4. Secretary of War Donald McLeod
  5. Commander-in-chief of the “Patriot Army of the West,” Lucius V. Bierce, “an attorney at Akron.”
  6. Commodore of the Patriot Navy on Lake Erie, Gilman Appleby, former Captain of the Caroline
  7. Commodore of the Patriot Navy on Lake Ontario, Bill Johnston[3]

To fund the war, they formed a joint stock bank, the Republican Bank of Canada, with Secretary of the Treasury John Grant, Jr. as President. They printed bills with pictures of Rebellion martyrs Samuel Lount and James Morreau on them. The official newspaper of the organization was the Bald Eagle published in Cleveland by Samuel Underhill.

Politics

The leadership of the Patriot movement appear to have belonged to the small Equal Rights Party (known more popularly as the Locofocos).[4] This small party emerged in 1836 in New York with a platform emphasizing radical republicanism, an end to the "moneyed aristocracy", and "Free Banking". The Republican Bank of Canada was formed on this basis. Dr Charles Duncombe was the author of Duncombe’s free banking: an essay on banking, currency, finance, exchanges, and political economy (Cleveland, Ohio, 1841); and Memorial to Congress upon the subject of Republican free banking (Cleveland, Ohio, 1841).

See also

Notes

  1. Kinchen, Oscar (1956). The Rise and Fall of the Patriot Hunters. New York: Bookman Associates. pp. 55–58.
  2. "Documents: The Hunters Lodges of 1838". New York History 19 (1): 67–70. 1938.
  3. Kinchen, Oscar (1956). The Rise and Fall of the Patriot Hunters. New York: Bookman Assoc. pp. 38–9.
  4. Bonthius, Andrew (2003). "The Patriot War of 1837-38: Locofocoism with a Gun?". Labour/Le Travail 52: 9–43. doi:10.2307/25149383.
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