{"id":31,"date":"2023-01-20T15:22:20","date_gmt":"2023-01-20T20:22:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/chapter\/one-college-or-several-1838-1847\/"},"modified":"2023-03-28T13:55:53","modified_gmt":"2023-03-28T17:55:53","slug":"one-college-or-several-1838-1847","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/chapter\/one-college-or-several-1838-1847\/","title":{"raw":"One College or Several? 1838-1847","rendered":"One College or Several? 1838-1847"},"content":{"raw":"<strong>Joseph Howe and radical politics. The 1838 Pictou Academy Bill. Failure to appoint Edmund Crawley. Thomas McCulloch comes and Dalhousie College opens, 1838. The rivals, Queen's College and Dalhousie, 1840. The Reform party and \"One College.\" McCulloch's death, 1843. Dalhousie becomes moribound.<\/strong>\r\n\r\nLittle of radical politics had been seen in Nova Scotia until 1827 when the Pictou <em>Colonial Patriot<\/em> first appeared, with Jotham Blanchard as its editor and Thomas McCulloch contributing editorials. Joseph Howe at first disagreed with both, but the more he read, the more he came to their point of view. Howe expressed himself differently, with more patience and tolerance, not being as pugnacious as Blanchard or McCulloch, and still basically a moderate. His Halifax <em>Novascotian<\/em> was growing steadily in circulation and influence simply because it surpassed the others in useful information. Howe was the first editor in Nova Scotia to take seriously the reporting of Assembly debates. What the <em>Acadian Recorder<\/em> and other Halifax papers did was to offer small, irregular summaries. Howe began reporting debates in 1828, doing it all himself, and increasing the range and comprehensiveness of the reports as their popularity grew. They were a remarkable education for everyone who read the <em>Novascotian<\/em>, or had it read to them. Not least was it an education for the editor himself. Nor did Howe confine himself to that. His press published T.C. Haliburton\u2019s <em>History of Nova Scotia<\/em> in 1829, and <em>The Clockmaker<\/em> was serialized in the <em>Novascotian<\/em> in 1835. The latter was so popular that Howe put it out as a book in 1836. This is what D.C. Harvey referred to in a famous <em>Dalhousie Review<\/em> article in 1933, as \u201cThe Intellectual Awakening of Nova Scotia.\u201d[footnote]J. Murray Beck, Politics of Nova Scotia, Vol. 1, 1710-1896 (Tantallon 1985), p. 103: J. Murray Beck, Joseph Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848 (Kingston and Montreal 1982), pp. 102-3; D.C. Harvey, <a href=\"http:\/\/hdl.handle.net\/10222\/62186\">\u201cThe Intellectual Awakening of Nova Scotia,\u201d Dalhousie Review 13, no. 1 (April 1933), pp. 1-22<\/a>.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThat, of course, comprehended politics as well. There had always been friction between the Assembly and the Council, inevitable in any two-chamber government. But it was only after the election of 1836 that it became more serious. When the Assembly met in 1837 there was for the first time a number of reform-minded members, dissatisfied with the way political institutions in Nova Scotia had been working. How big that group was depended on the issue and the men, but the division on Howe\u2019s Twelve Resolutions of 1837, which severely criticized the working of the Council (in both its modes), was twenty-six to twenty. That forced Lord Glenelg to order the complete separation of the Council into its two functions, legislative and executive. The Assembly had won a major victory.\r\n\r\nThe Dalhousie College victory followed the next year. Most Reformers were behind that move too. Two men were the moving spirits: S.G.W. Archibald, the Speaker of the House, and his son, Charles Dickson Archibald. At sixty years, Archibald senior was suave, handsome, well-mannered, and spoke with great ease and authority. He was a Seceder Presbyterian, a man of convictions who deployed them without cant or aggression. He had long supported Pictou Academy, as he had opposed the exclusiveness of King\u2019s, but he was well capable of judging Thomas McCulloch\u2019s weaknesses as well as strengths. Archibald in later years grew too conservative for Howe and his Reform friends, but they always got along well and Howe liked him to the end.<a id=\"reffn_2\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_2\"><\/a>[footnote]See J. Murray Beck, \u201cS.G.W. Archibald,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vii: 21-5.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nHis son, Charles Dickson, was born in 1802, the eldest of fifteen children in what was a singularly happy marriage. Charles sat for Truro from 1826 to 1830 when his father was Speaker of the Assembly. The young man married an English heiress in 1832 and moved to England four years later. But he was back and forth to Nova Scotia a good deal, and he may have been as influential as his father in devising the ingenious idea of bringing McCulloch\u2019s restless energies to the service of Dalhousie College.\r\n\r\nMcCulloch was now feeling his sixty-two years. Although he had lived most of his adult life in Pictou, the triumph of his Kirk enemies within Pictou Academy, an institution he had founded, nurtured, and bled for, was hard and bitter. Pictou, he told his Glasgow friend, James Mitchell, in November 1834, \u201chas very little appearance of being much longer the place for me.\u201d A year later, S.G.W. Archibald was trying to nudge him in the direction of Dalhousie College; still McCulloch clung to Pictou. Halifax was to him a hotbed of toryism; if he went there, he would be, he said, \u201ca presbyterian among church [Anglican] bigots and a Seceder among Kirk [Presbyterian] bigots\u201d; hardly very enviable. At this stage in his life he had no great ambitions left; in 1818 it would have been different, being principal or president of Dalhousie College, but of course that would not have happened under Lord Dalhousie.<a id=\"reffn_3\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_3\"><\/a>[footnote]Letter from McCulloch to Mitchell, 6 Nov. 1834, from Pictou, and 23 Nov. 1835, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives; Letter from McCulloch to John Mitchell (the father of James) June 1838, from Pictou, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThe Archibalds, father and son, knew that story. Though S.G.W. Archibald was educated in the United States, Charles was a product of Pictou Academy and admired McCulloch for his talent, pluck, and perseverance amid privations. McCulloch\u2019s situation now was worse than in former years, though at no time within Charles Archibald\u2019s recollection had \u201cyour worldly circumstances rendered you an object of envy.\u201d What animated young Archibald and his father was not charity but respect: \u201cWithout flattery I can say that the course of Lectures on Chemistry which you were delivering when I left Halifax [for England] nearly six years ago [February 1830], would bear comparison with any I have ever attended.\u201d[footnote]Letter from C.D. Archibald to McCulloch, 18 Nov. 1837, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThe bill to effect the change in McCulloch\u2019s circumstances was called \u201cAn Act to Alter and Amend the Act to regulate and support Pictou Academy.\u201d The old act of 1832 gave \u00a3400 to Pictou Academy, with \u00a3250 of it specified as salary to McCulloch. The new act split the \u00a3400, leaving \u00a3200 to the academy, and the other \u00a3200 going to the Dalhousie Board of Governors to pay McCulloch as principal. The bill created a considerable stir in the Nova Scotia legislature. It went through first and second reading on 21 March 1838 without a word of opposition. It went through Committee of the Whole in the same way. Then the opposition struck. The Anglicans were led by J.B. Uniacke, and the Roman Catholics by Lawrence Doyle, both of whom noisily denounced the bill; it was being smuggled through the House, they said. Speaker Archibald remarked he had no objection to having the bill sent again to Committee of the Whole if certain members wanted their objections heard. Meantime, a seven-year-old libel against McCulloch was published and sent to members of both houses. The opposition included the Anglicans, the Roman Catholics, who had never forgiven McCulloch for his anti-Catholic diatribes of thirty years earlier, and most, if not all, of the Kirk men. Young Archibald went to work on the Baptists. They were assured privately that they would have their man, the Reverend Edmund A. Crawley, as the Dalhousie professor of classics. There was no express agreement or contract but, as Charles Archibald said, \u201cthere certainly was an implied contract and coalition entered into with that party [the Baptists].\u201d Archibald\u2019s letter to McCulloch reveals much about the pressures for and against the Dalhousie College idea:\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">We find the Church of England, the Kirk and the Roman Catholics leagued together to defeat this Measure and why? - purely because it contemplates a little honour and moderate provision for you - Against such an alliance your friends and party cannot stand and it is not only in reference to this matter, but to an immense variety of other subjects that I consider a good understanding between the leading Sects of Dissenters to be highly politic and indeed indispensable. Should you come to preside over Dalhousie College you must endeavour as far as possible to plan all denominations on an equal footing, but in the circumstances of the Country and in the nature of things, it must become essentially a Dissenting Institution - and it is not one of the least advantages which I foresee that its Establishment will unite the Presbyterians of your Church and the Baptists and the Methodists. I do not wonder that the Bishop has always opposed the opening of this College, for it requires no great prescience to enable one to predict that it will concentrate into one focus the scattered Bands which singly he has hitherto been able to put down.[footnote]Letter from C.D. Archibald to McCulloch, 21 Mar. 1838, private, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives.[\/footnote]<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nIn the end the Pictou-Dalhousie bill passed the Assembly by twenty-six votes to seventeen, a surprisingly large majority. \u201cThis is a queer world,\u201d wrote Thomas Dickson, the MLA for Pictou, \u201cand I verily believe that some of both branches of the Legislature are some of the queerest people in it.\u201d[footnote]Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1838, 16 Mar., p. 350; Letter from Dickson to McCulloch, 5 Apr. 1838, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 141, Nova Scotia Archives. Dickson was the brother-in-law of S.G.W. Archibald. See Allan C. Dunlop, \u201cThomas Dickson,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, viii: 222.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nIt was just as queer in the Legislative Council. Its basic instinct was to postpone the whole bill; the Kirk men canvassed for that idea, but they were fought off. Pros and cons were heard at the bar of the Legislative Council. The Reverend D.A. Fraser, a staunch Kirk man, said the bill had been produced in secret and had he known of it sooner he could have got thousands of signatures against it. That led the Seceder minister Hugh Ross to remark that if the reverend gentleman brought forth a petition to remove George\u2019s Island from Halifax to Pictou he could have got signatures for it! The treasurer of Dalhousie, Charles Wallace, bearded James Tobin, a member of the Legislature Council, over breakfast on 10 April to try to get him to oppose the bill - anything to keep that Seceder McCulloch out of Dalhousie, even if it meant not opening it. Notwithstanding all that, the bill emerged unchanged on 10 April and became law a week later.[footnote]Letters from Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 28 Mar., 10 Apr. 1838, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 140, Nova Scotia Archives; Novascotian, 12 Apr. 1838, reporting on the Legislative Council for 27 Mar.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nAs this was being accomplished the Reverend Edmund Crawley was already writing McCulloch with suggestions for the proper curriculum in a college of three professors, in particular about classics, to which professorship he considered himself already appointed. Crawley had graduated from King\u2019s in 1820, became a lawyer, and in 1827 helped to lead the split from St. Paul\u2019s Anglican Church to found Granville Street Baptist Church. He then went to the United States to study for the Baptist ministry, graduating eventually from Brown University. He was able, knowledgeable, energetic, high-handed, and he carried with him no small estimate of his own capacity. His application for a professorship went to the Dalhousie board before the bill had even come up in the Assembly. Crawley was more importunate than greedy. He offered to serve as professor of classics with little or no salary, if that would help. But he wanted, indeed it seemed that he required, the appointment. He saw Charles Wallace a couple of days before the appointments were to be made and received from him flattering assurances and best wishes for his success.<a id=\"reffn_8\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_8\"><\/a>[footnote]Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives, E.A. Crawley, \u201cAn Outline suggesting some principles and regulations for putting Dalhousie College into active operation,\u201d n.d. [c. 20 Apr. 1838]. The date is made clear from McCulloch\u2019s letter to Charles Archibald of 24 Apr. 1838. See also Barry Moody, \u201cEdmund Ahern Crawley,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography xi: 214-15; Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 21 Mar. 1838, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives. Crawley\u2019s discussion with Charles Wallace is referred to in Crawley\u2019s interview before the Assembly, 13 Feb. 1839, in the debates for that day, reported in Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nMcCulloch was surprisingly patient with all of Crawley\u2019s importunities. He knew how much the passage of the Pictou-Dalhousie Act had depended upon Crawley and his influence with the Baptists. Still, McCulloch said, Crawley was premature, and his allusions to the importance of Latin and Greek at the University of New Brunswick and at King\u2019s magnified the role of classics too much. Nova Scotian opinion was not ready for it, nor was McCulloch. There is much good sense in McCulloch, and nowhere does it show better than in his long letter to Charles Archibald on this point:\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">[T]hat boys should in Halifax or elsewhere spend six or seven years upon Latin and Greek and then four more in College partially occupied with the same language is a waste of human life adapted neither to the circumstances nor the prosperity of Nova Scotia ... If Dalhousie College acquires usefulness and eminence it will not be by an imitation of Oxford but as an institution of science and practical intelligence.<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nAny fourth professor, McCulloch said, should be a natural scientist, teaching geology, mineralogy, zoology, botany; whatever the province produced naturally should have an echo in the splendour of Dalhousie science. McCulloch added a postscript about the nomination of the professors. He did not care who was nominated, but \u201cI mentioned to your father I view the nomination of the existing candidates as a business which should be carefully weighed.\u201d<a id=\"reffn_9\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_9\"><\/a>[footnote]Letter from McCulloch to Charles Archibald, 24 Apr. 1838, from Pictou, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThe Dalhousie College Board of Governors met on 6 August 1838. It was not that difficult to arrange; it was now down to a rump of three - the lieutenant-governor, the treasurer of the province, and the Speaker of the House. Lord Dalhousie had died earlier in the year, at Dalhousie Castle, blind and decrepit; the bishop was away, and that spring the chief justice had retired from the board. Sir Colin Campbell and Charles Wallace were not happy with McCulloch, forced upon them by the Assembly; they fudged his appointment, saying he was \u201cfor the present appointed President.\u201d McCulloch would teach moral philosophy, logic, and rhetoric, and would be paid \u00a3400 a year plus student fees, \u00a3200 coming from the Assembly and \u00a3200 from Dalhousie\u2019s funds.[footnote]On McCulloch\u2019s appointment there is a singular touch of animus in the board minutes. Deleted at the request of the lieutenant-governor was the statement that \u201cthe Revd. Thomas MacCulloch ... is hereby appointed President.\u201d Substituted was \u201cthe Revd. Dr. T. MacCulloch who for the present is appointed President.\u201d See Board of Governors Minutes, 9 Mar., 6 Aug., 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives; Letter from Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 10 Apr. 1838, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 140, Nova Scotia Archives.[\/footnote]\u00a0Public advertising was authorized for the two other professorships, which were to be in classical languages, and mathematics and natural philosophy. There were seven applicants, of whom the most important were Crawley (Baptist) and Alexander Romans (Kirk) for classics; James McIntosh (Kirk) and Thomas Twining (Church of England) for mathematics.\r\n\r\nThe Kirk was bitter about the McCulloch appointment. It published a remonstrance stating that appointing McCulloch would be \u201can act of injury, injustice and insult to every well educated man in the province.\u201d It had also learned, with astonishment it said, that appointments to the college professorships might be contrary to the intentions of Lord Dalhousie, which were to have Dalhousie College in the style of Edinburgh University. That style was, the Kirk robustly asserted, that all professors be members of the Kirk of Scotland!\r\n\r\nWhat the Kirk claimed had been true once; but it was a rule long fallen by the wayside, as recent appointments to Edinburgh indicated. And, of course, it had never been a consideration in Lord Dalhousie\u2019s mind, as his search for a principal through an Anglican professor at Cambridge showed. But by August 1838 Lord Dalhousie was dead, and the genial but obtuse old Highland soldier who ruled at Government House in Halifax was persuaded by Charles Wallace and his Kirk friends that the iniquity of appointing a Seceder as president of Dalhousie was bad enough without compounding it by appointing a Baptist as professor. Thus when the time for decision came, at the board meeting of 15 September 1838, the lieutenant-governor and Wallace proposed, and carried, first, for the professorship of mathematics and natural philosophy, the Reverend James McIntosh, a Kirk man, of talent sufficient to justify the appointment; and second, for the professorship of classics the Reverend Alexander Romans, a Kirk man, against the greater claims and more substantial candidacy of Edmund Crawley. Speaker Archibald opposed this, speaking as bluntly as he could. But he had been unwell since April, and may not have been as effective as usual. In any case he was simply outvoted.[footnote]Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 550, Nova Scotia Archives; Memorial of Synod of Nova Scotia, 11 Aug. 1838. The Pictou Observer and Eastern Advertiser, 11 Sept. 1838, a Kirk supporter, had a strong anti-McCulloch editorial; Board of Governors Minutes, 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThe Baptists were furious and felt betrayed. At the head of their fury was Crawley himself. He hit the newspapers twelve days later with a series of articles on the history of his arrangements with Dalhousie College, ringing the changes about his and the Baptists\u2019 betrayal.[footnote]Novascotian, 27 Sept. 1838, \u201cDalhousie College - No. 1.\u201d There followed three others, one a week, up to 18 Oct. 1838.[\/footnote]\u00a0Members of the Assembly, and the Archibalds, were taken aback by the blatant disregard of their promises of six months before. Certainly an articulate group of the Assembly were dismayed, and in the session of 1839 would give that strange Dalhousie board its comeuppance. The Baptists would have even sterner resolves.\r\n\r\nThomas McCulloch was not happy either with Dalhousie\u2019s refusal to appoint Crawley. Crawley would no doubt have been a difficult, even intractable, colleague, but McCulloch wished to make friends for Dalhousie and not make enemies when it could well have been avoided. He left Pictou for Halifax in mid-October, his friends from various Pictou congregations accompanying him on his journey as far as Truro. He was rather pleased with himself, despite the row over the two professorships. He did not mind rows: he had lived, thrived, on them. His own appointment to Dalhousie had occasioned a fearsome one. God had at last given him, as he put it, \u201cto possess the gate of my enemies.\u201d His pride was gratified to see his foes so humbled.\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Lord Dalhousie who for the sake of his college hated me built it for me [.] Our Bishop in the expectation of making it his own was I believe the principal means of preventing it from going into operation till I had need of it. The Kirk clergy his tools effected the destruction of the [Pictou] Academy ... Government placed me at what I may fairly term the head of the education of the province. This I neither coveted nor sought...<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nPerhaps best of all, his Kirk enemies had not prospered. The most determined of them, the Reverend Kenneth MacKenzie, was dead, \u201ca fearful monument to an ill spent life. In Pictou it is a common remark that no man who opposed the [Pictou] Academy ever prospered in his deed.\u201d There was some little Schadenfreude in all of this; perhaps McCulloch\u2019s essential greatness can be allowed that very human, and not very Christian, weakness. There was a residual toughness about him; he would not be suborned.\r\n\r\nHe had no great enthusiam for Halifax. But it was the metropolitan centre of the province, things went on there that had to be taken cognizance of, and a college there was going to be important. He had even less respect for Halifax after reading in the Pictou papers about a two-day Halifax riot in August in the streets and houses a couple of blocks up the hill from Dalhousie College. A discharged sailor claimed he had been robbed by prostitutes in one of the houses on the Hill, so his friends, and soldiers, sacked houses on upper Duke Street. It was no secret that they were going to finish their work the following night, and this time locals joined in. Most of these were what the Halifax <em>Times<\/em> described as \u201cthe lowest characters,\u201d but more respectable onlookers were delighted to see the terrible nuisance of those houses being got rid of, even by a mob out of control. It took old Sir Colin Campbell himself, who in brisk, military fashion, ordered the streets cleared. The riot confirmed ancient prejudices at King\u2019s, that Halifax was a wicked place, where young men, in acquiring the best of knowledge, could imbibe the worst of it.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_88\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"301\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-88\" src=\"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdal\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/29\/2023\/01\/Thomas-McCulloch.jpg\" alt=\"Pastel drawing of Thomas McCulloch\" width=\"301\" height=\"441\" \/> Dr. Thomas McCulloch in the 1840s, a pastel drawing by Sir Daniel MacNee, now in the Atlantic School of Theology. \u201cHe carried the whole college on the strength of his power and reputation.\u201d[\/caption]\r\n\r\n<strong>The College Opens\r\n<\/strong>Dalhousie College opened on 1 November with a dozen students and more expected. McCulloch thought some of the rooms as big as a palace. And three professors in arts was at that time regarded as a more than adequate complement for a provincial college. There was little equipment and no library, but McCulloch was confident that Dalhousie must eventually be \u201cthe leading seminary of the province.\u201d[footnote]Letter from McCulloch to John Mitchell, 26 May 1839, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives.[\/footnote]<strong>\r\n<\/strong>\r\n\r\nHe was still a prodigious teacher, his mind clear and vigorous. He was a stickler for grammar but he especially abhorred wordiness. Any word not absolutely necessary to convey meaning weakened the sentence. George Patterson recalled \u201chow mercilessly his big pencil went through our superfluous adjectives!\u201d The students thought he carried it too far, that his own style was bare and devoid of ornament, rather the way he was. But he trained minds to exact thinking, and to correct, if rugged, writing. His philosophy was developed from the Scottish common-sense school and especially from Thomas Reid, the critic of Hume. Physically, however, McCulloch was showing his years; his movements lacked vigour, and his eyes often had a worn and weary look. But his indomitable will remained. Sick or well, he was at class, sometimes to totter home to Argyle Street to bed. He carried the whole college on the strength of his power and reputation. It was not easy, for his two subordinate professors, Romans and McIntosh, were not strong academically and were worse in the classroom. McIntosh too easily found time to indulge in Halifax social life and the drinking that went with it.\r\n\r\nThe students who came from the country, especially the half-dozen or so who had followed McCulloch from Pictou, were hard-working and diligent. Some from Halifax were too, but there was a proportion of Halifax youths more bent on amusement. Since the lowest age was fourteen, that meant a good deal of high spirits and low cunning had to be suppressed, diverted, transformed, perhaps something of all of those. Romans and McIntosh could not manage this group; McCulloch could. Students were rather in awe of McCulloch, and he repaid their attention and progress with abundant interest. Even the unruly calmed down, except once, recalled by a student, when someone rebelled against him in class. McCulloch \u201cbowed his head, if I mistake not, let fall a tear, at all events said in tones in which the expression of pain overcame anger, \u2018This is the first time I have been so insulted ... in a class-room in my life.\u2019 \u201d Everyone felt the weight of that reproof, perhaps even the miscreant.<a id=\"reffn_14\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_14\"><\/a>[footnote]The source of this and the preceding paragraph is G.G. Patterson, The History of Dalhousie College and University (Halifax 1887), pp. 32-6. The writer he quotes from was \u201can old Dalhousian\u201d; and Patterson\u2019s father, the Reverend George Patterson fits perfectly, being both at Pictou Academy and Dalhousie College in exactly those years. After the History came out, some further reflections occurred to George Patterson, Sr., and these were duly published in the <a href=\"http:\/\/hdl.handle.net\/10222\/28220\">Dalhousie Gazette, 2 Dec. 1887<\/a>, pp. 32-3, as a letter from the son. See also Allan Dunlop, \u201cGeorge Patterson,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, XII: 828-9.[\/footnote]\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\r\n\r\nThe official Dalhousie timetable for the autumn of 1838 was as follows:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li>Latin, 8-9 AM, Prof. Romans<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Greek, 10-11 AM, Prof. Romans<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Greek &amp; Latin, 12 noon to 1 PM Prof. Romans<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Algebra, 10-11 AM Prof. McIntosh<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Logic, 11-12 AM, Dr. McCulloch<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Rhetoric, 1-2 PM, Dr. McCulloch<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Mathematics, 8-9 AM, Prof. McIntosh<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Moral Philosophy, 10-11, AM Dr. McCulloch<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Natural Philosophy 12 noon to 1 PM, Prof. McIntosh<\/li>\r\n<\/ol>\r\n<\/div>\r\nThe Dalhousie terms were set on the Scottish style, having one term from October to April inclusive. King\u2019s followed the Oxford system, spreading their work more evenly over the year. The Scottish system suited the country boys, who worked on farms from May to September, but city parents found it intolerable to have their sons idle all that time. Some families sent their sons to Dalhousie in the winter and in the summer to new and popular lectures at St. Mary\u2019s school.\r\n\r\nThe enraged Baptist constituency lost no time. In the autumn of 1838 Crawley followed up his Dalhousie College articles in the <em>Novascotian<\/em> with three on Horton Academy and hopes for its college expansion. In November the Baptist Education Society met in Wolfville to discuss what they would do. The Baptists now agreed to found a college and a petition went to the legislature to grant a charter. Crawley\u2019s personal animus gave voice and leadership to a movement in the Baptist community that was already burgeoning.<a id=\"reffn_15\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_15\"><\/a>[footnote]See W.B. Hamilton, \u201cEducation, Politics and Reform in Nova Scotia 1800-1848\u201d (PH.D. thesis, University of Western Ontario 1970), pp. 265-6.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThe Assembly opened in mid-January of 1839, recent events at Dalhousie and at Wolfville in the forefront of their deliberations. It immediately appointed a three-man committee of Joseph Howe, William Young, and Lawrence Doyle to ask the lieutenant-governor for documents, proceedings, accounts of Dalhousie College. How had the incredible events of 15 September 1838 actually come about? Doyle spoke for the astonishment most MLAS felt at references by the lieutenant-governor and others to Lord Dalhousie\u2019s alleged legacy of Presbyterian exclusiveness. It had always been understood, said Doyle, that Dalhousie College was to be altogether unrestricted, open to anyone. If that were not so, then the sooner the House insisted on getting its \u00a35,000 back the better.\r\n\r\nJoseph Howe was more specific. Had he known what would happen in September (he was overseas in Britain from May to October), had he believed that anyone \u201cwould be mad enough to endeavour to make Dalhousie College a Sectarian Institution,\u201d he would have opposed the Pictou-Dalhousie Act of 1838, even though it had wakened Dalhousie from \u201cits death-like sleep.\u201d Certainly Dalhousie College must not continue in its present form.\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Rather than see it established for the exclusive benefit of any church he would prefer that a party of artificiers should be brought down from the barracks, and should be directed to mine it, and blow the structure into the air ... The effect of these narrow views was, to keep classes of Christians - which should respect each other, and live in charity - in a state bordering on enmity, harrassed [sic] by conflicting and angry feelings.<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nWilliam Young said much the same, moderately as was his wont, judging the September appointments \u201cmost unwise and impolitic.\u201d There must not be, he said, four or five colleges in the province - if so, their degrees would become a laughing stock.<a id=\"reffn_16\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_16\"><\/a>[footnote]Novascotian, 31 Jan. 1839, reporting Assembly debates for 18 Jan. 1839.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nSpeaker Archibald reported on Dalhousie\u2019s funds. The accounting had been complicated by Michael Wallace\u2019s death in 1831, and by Lord Dalhousie\u2019s, and by the fact that the agents in London, empowered to receive dividends, had failed. Still, about two-thirds of the income on capital could be reclaimed by affidavit, some \u00a3786 sterling. That was done in the nick of time. And the money would meet the costs of current repairs.[footnote]Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839, reporting debates for 13 Feb.; also Board of Governors Minutes, 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives. Details are set out in Appendix 30, Nova Scotia, Assembly, Journals 1839, pp. 55ff.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nOn 9 February 1839, the Bill for the Incorporation of Queen\u2019s College (the first name chosen for Acadia) was given first reading, and on 15 February Howe presented the bill to amend the Dalhousie College Act. The two bills now proceeded roughly in tandem. On the second reading of the Queen\u2019s College Bill Crawley appeared at the bar of the House. He said much that clarified the events of September last. Two or three days after the Dalhousie appointments had been made, Sir Colin Campbell asked to see Crawley. In that interview, Crawley asked the governor if it were not true that his (Crawley\u2019s) failure to get the professorship of classics was due to Crawley\u2019s religion, not his competence? In other words, if he\u2019d been a Presbyterian, would he have got the job? \u201cHis Excellency hesitated, but after a while said, Certainly - that such was the fact.\u201d\r\n\r\nThen Treasurer Charles Wallace was called to the bar, and his testimony went directly against that of Crawley:\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Mr. Howe - Do I understand Mr. Wallace to say that Mr. Crawley was not rejected because he was a Baptist. Mr. Wallace - Certainly not. Mr. Howe - Do I understand Mr. Wallace aright, that although he had promised Mr. Crawley, the peculiar circumstances under which he was placed with Mr. Romans was a reason sufficiently strong to abrogate those promises. Mr. Wallace - Yes. Mr. Howe remarked that the house would now perceive, why he had been anxious to have this examination. The statements of the gentleman [sic] heard at the bar were directly contradictory.<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nThe following day Crawley was again heard in connection with Queen\u2019s College. Nova Scotians, he said, had waited for fifteen years for Dalhousie College, and what had appeared had simply not justified expectations. Some members of the House hoped that the Queen\u2019s College Bill would not be pressed, that new legislation to clear out the old Dalhousie board and establish a new one would allay inflamed feelings and satisfy the Baptists. J.B. Uniacke (Anglican) made that appeal. Why should there be, he said, several inferior establishments in the province instead of one good one? As for Howe, he was sympathetic to Crawley and his talents, but\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">he would not say, therefore, that another College should be endowed. If it was determined to have a College at Horton, much as he wished to see a College in Halifax, and believed it to be the best site for one, he would say, Down with it, let us get our money from it, and if one sect must have such an establishment, let it be respectable, and let not two inefficient institutions go into operation. In these matters Nova Scotia acted with a degree of profusion that no other country attempted.[footnote]Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839, reporting debates for 13, 14, and 20 Feb. 1839.[\/footnote]<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nThe Queen\u2019s College Bill came out of the Committee of the Whole with a recommendation that it be given the three-months\u2019 hoist. A motion to overturn this recommendation, and thus keep the bill, was defeated. This first attempt to incorporate Queen\u2019s College failed.\r\n\r\nThe Dalhousie College Amendment Bill passed the Assembly that same day but it did not fare so well in the Legislative Council, coming back with amendments that the House could not accept. In a conference between the two houses the Assembly insisted on its point\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">that the object this House had in view in passing that Bill was to place Dalhousie College under the management of a body of Gendemen, selected from the various Religious Denominations in this Province, carefully excluding Clergymen, in order that those jealousies which had marred the usefulness, and arrayed the feelings of portions of the Population, against the interests of other Institutions might, in this case, be avoided, and all classes combined in support of a College offering equal privileges to all; that these amendments made by the Council, which are now the subject of Conference, strike at the vital principle of the Bill, a principle upon the value of which, there exists in the Assembly no difference of opinion.<a id=\"reffn_19\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_19\"><\/a>[footnote]Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1839, 8 Mar., pp. 561-2.[\/footnote]<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nA further snag occurred on a money question in the bill, and the Assembly put forward a new bill with the contentious money clause avoided. It was given third reading in the House but was thrown out on a technicality by the Legislative Council. Thus neither the Queen\u2019s College nor the Dalhousie bill succeeded in 1839. Both were to do so in 1840.\r\n\r\nThe Dalhousie Act of 1840 did what had been intended in 1839; it broke the old Dalhousie trust, as Howe and others had wanted. Abolished was the old board established by Lord Dalhousie and the Act of 1821. The governor general of British North America as member, a holdover from Lord Dalhousie\u2019s days, was deleted as impracticable; the chief justice was dropped; indeed, all ex-officio officers were dropped except the lieutenant-governor and the president of Dalhousie College. Twelve new members across a religious and political spectrum were named. Future vacancies were to be filled by a curious system of selection: the Legislative Council would choose three, from which the Assembly would select two, and from which the Council would nominate one. Two further sections of the 1840 act must be quoted:\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\r\n\r\nv. That the said College shall be deemed and taken to be an University, with all and every the usual privileges of such Institutions, and that the Students in the said College shall have the liberty and faculty of taking the Degrees of Bachelor, Master and Doctor...\r\n\r\nvi. That no Religious Tests or Subscriptions shall be required of the Professors, Scholars, Graduates, Students or Officers of the said College, but that all the privileges and advantages therefo shall be open and free to all and every person and persons whomsoever, without regard to religious persuasion.<a id=\"reffn_20\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_20\"><\/a>[footnote]Nova Scotia Statutes, 3 Vic. cap. 7.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nThe act went through the Assembly without recorded division, but was subject to British approval.\r\n\r\nIn 1840, too, the Queen\u2019s College Bill was accepted by the Assembly, twenty-seven to fifteen. Howe spoke against the college but voted for it, one of several who did. Howe regretted the fact that Queen\u2019s was created at all, deplored \u201cmaking five great roads, where only one should be\u201d; but since Crawley had been rejected by the old Dalhousie board on religious grounds (he plainly concurred with Crawley\u2019s estimate of the reasons), he felt he had no option. But for that circumstance, nothing would have induced Howe to vote for the incorporation of Queen\u2019s College.[footnote]Novascotian, 19 Mar. 1840, reporting Assembly debates for 14 Feb. See also J. Murray Beck, Joseph Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, p. 204.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nIt met with similar reactions in the Legislative Council. As it passed third reading, a protest was entered by Mather Almon and L.M. Wilkins; if the Queen\u2019s College Bill were to become law, they said, \u201cit is reasonably to be anticipated that similar Institutions, connected with other Religious Denominations in this Province, will be required ... and thereby to prevent the ample endowment, from the same source [i.e., public revenue] of some one central and efficient College, perfectly open and unrestricted, and operating equally for the benefit of all classes of the People.\u201d With that appeal to posterity, the Legislative Council passed the Queen\u2019s College Bill.[footnote]Nova Scotia Legislative Council, Journals 1840, 15 Feb., pp. 43-4.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nQueen\u2019s College did not keep its name. Lord John Russell, the colonial secretary, reported that the Queen did not wish her name associated with the college (probably because it was Baptist), and in 1841 it was given the name Acadia College, a happy choice. Russell also objected to the way that future vacancies on the Dalhousie board were to be filled, in particular having nominations and choices given to the popular body. In 1841 that was changed too, giving the power to the lieutenant-governor-in-council.\r\n\r\nThe creation of Acadia College so quickly, so resolutely, was remarkable; it showed what could be done within a strong religious constituency, driven by determination, anger, and self-sacrifice. It showed, indeed, what Dalhousie did not have: substantial and committed public support from a closely knit section of the province, in this case the Annapolis Valley, whose farms had been started only seventy years before by New England dissenters, mainly from Connecticut and Rhode Island. On the other hand, there was a clear sense among a minority in both the Assembly and the Legislative Council that this development was unfortunate, that it was the result of a concatentation of circumstances that might well have been avoided had there been better management, or even a little plain common sense, in the two critical members of that Dalhousie rump board. Rarely in history are there clear points of departure; rarely can one say this, or that, came from such and such an event. But this one is unmistakable: the Dalhousie board\u2019s refusal to appoint Edmund Crawley as professor of classics in September 1838. It had distinct and momentous consequences for university education in Nova Scotia. Within five months of that refusal, the Queen\u2019s College Bill was before the Assembly, failing in 1839 by only two votes, and passing the following year. Even in 1839 it was already late; the only person who could have averted that progress was Crawley, and he would have none of it.\r\n\r\nCrawley\u2019s determination and outrage carried with it suspicion that perhaps he was glad the way things had turned out. He would have been bound to accept the office of professor of classics at Dalhousie College had it been offered, and he made a fine display of indignation when he did not get it; but was he sincere? Herbert Huntingdon, the MLA for Yarmouth, alleged in 1849 he was not. Huntingdon\u2019s furious accusation created a sensation in the Assembly, and was denied by Tory leader J.W. Johnston as a gross lie, but Huntingdon reiterated that Crawley and the Baptists were secretly delighted when he was excluded from Dalhousie in 1838.[footnote]Novascotian, 16 Apr. 1849, reporting Assembly debates for 26 Feb. The account in the Halifax British Colonist suggests that Huntingdon was in a furious rage: \u201cHe doubled his fist, and shook it, at his arm\u2019s length, in the direction where the Gentlemen he alluded to [Crawley] stood among the spectators below the bar.\u201d British Colonist, 3 Mar. 1849 reporting debates of 26 Feb. Huntingdon had also a falling out with Howe that same session. See A.A. MacKenzie, \u201cHerbert Huntingdon,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, viii: 415-18.[\/footnote] In 1841 St. Mary\u2019s College - Roman Catholic - was granted a charter by the legislature. All four of Nova Scotia\u2019s little colleges were thus under way - King\u2019s, Dalhousie, Acadia, and St. Mary\u2019s. Despite appearances, however, the Assembly did not accept this as a fait accompli; in 1842, 1843, and after, there were major efforts to revert to, and establish, \u201cOne Good College.\u201d\r\n\r\nIn 1842 the issue arose over how the newly created colleges of Acadia and St. Mary\u2019s were to be funded. King\u2019s had long had a permanent annual grant of \u00a3444. One awful weekend in March of 1842 the funding question oscillated precariously back and forth, impelled by bad temper and shifts on both sides. Eventually the House gave \u00a3444 to Acadia and St. Mary\u2019s, \u00a3400 to Dalhousie. The grants would be for three years, except Dalhousie\u2019s, which was for two. All were to begin on 1 January 1843.[footnote]This story can be traced in Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1842, 5-8 Mar., pp. 300-12; Howe comments on it later in the Novascotian, 24 Nov. 1842. See J. Murray Beck, Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, pp. 249-50.[\/footnote]<a id=\"reffn_24\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_24\"><\/a>\r\n\r\nThe question of funding was a difficult and anguished one, and the Baptists did not make it easier for themselves, by pushing hard for what they wanted. They had a case: they had dug into their own pockets to help create Acadia, and it was now doing well enough to need, and to ask for, a capital grant for more space. In their view, Dalhousie College had done nothing for itself; there it sat on the Grand Parade, but what had built it was Castine money and a legislative loan. King\u2019s was not much better, though at least it made exertions on its own behalf. But the Assembly was not at all certain it was right to have created Acadia. Many who had opposed it in the first place now rolled their eyes, and said, \u201cAh! did I not tell you that they [the Baptists] would harrass [sic] you every year for money? You wouldn\u2019t believe it - now are you satisfied?\u201d[footnote]This is from G.W. McLelan\u2019s speech in Mason Hall, Halifax, 25 Sept. 1843, reported in the Novascotian, 16 Oct. 1843.[\/footnote]\u00a0Howe, who had supported the Acadia charter, was not pleased either. That mattered; since October 1840 Howe had been on the Executive Council and Speaker of the House since February 1841. The Baptists thought Howe\u2019s principle of not favouring any denomination, of making all colleges equal, loaded the dice against Acadia. It was, as Murray Beck pointed out, a question of different conclusions drawn from different premises. The Baptists were anything but even-handed; they turned on Howe and others in April and May 1842 in their powerful weekly, the <em>Christian Messenger<\/em>. They threatened Howe and Young, both new members of the Executive Council, with dire consequences if they had the temerity to oppose a capital grant to Acadia College. By the end of 1842 Howe was beginning to wonder if Acadia was not in league with his Tory rivals. That meant increased strain in the relations between Howe and J.W. Johnston, the Baptist Tory who was attorney general.\r\n\r\nSince October 1840 Nova Scotia had had a coalition Executive Council put together by the magic wand of the governor general, Charles Poulett Thomson, who came down from Quebec to work it out with Lord Falkland, the new lieutenant-governor. The Executive Council was made into a combination of Tories and Reformers, with a Tory preponderance. Working under that arrangement was not going to be easy, with the college question at the boiling point and the attorney general an active Baptist.\r\n\r\nThe college question thus came before the Assembly in 1843 compounded and exacerbated by utterances in the newspapers, and by some intemperateness on both sides. The <em>Novascotian<\/em> put it in the context of the whole educational system of Nova Scotia: of a population of two hundred and fifty thousand, probably thirty thousand children were growing up without the basic rudiments of education, and here was the legislature squandering \u00a31,800 a year on four colleges. And the worst of it was that everyone knew the Methodists and Presbyterians were waiting, thinking in due course that they, too, would get their slice of the cake. Richard Nugent, the Catholic editor of the <em>Novascotian<\/em>, became more annoyed the more he thought about it:\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">We must confess ourselves astonished at the credulity or infatuation of our Countrymen, and lament the mistaken policy of our public men which gave rise to the present deplorable state of the Educational affairs of the Province... What is to be done? Shall we go on, ad infinitum creating College after College...? Or, shall we pause here, and enquire, seriously, - where the evil will end?[footnote]Novascotian, 20 Feb. 1843.[\/footnote]<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nThat certainly stirred up a row. The Assembly opened a debate two days later to consider the whole question of colleges. Tory J.J. Marshall argued that it was impossible to support a general college and suppress the others. The best policy was to wait until such a college were asked for. For the present, two-thirds of Nova Scotia would be against it. Howe replied that in 1842 all the colleges were put on the same level, and all were satisfied but Acadia. The Baptists had made the table groan with petitions for more money, and now the Methodists and Presbyterians were getting restless. What did Nova Scotia need with so many colleges? Switzerland had one college for every four hundred thousand people. From Committee of the Whole came the following: \u201cResolved, that the policy, heretofore pursued, of chartering and endowing Collegiate Institutions, of a Sectarian or Denominational Character is unsound, and ought to be abandoned.\u201d Attempts were made to stop that decisive declaration. Fairbanks of Queen\u2019s County, a Tory, agreed with Marshall; he proposed that however desirable it might be to have one college free of sectarian control, yet \u201cexperience has shown the impracticability of uniting the various denominations of Christians in such a manner, and that a different Policy having been forced upon the House, and hitherto recognized and adopted ... it would be unwise and unjust to prostrate those Institutions.\u201d That was defeated, and the main motion carried. A committee of Howe, William Annand, Huntingdon, and others was charged with drafting a bill that would establish the One College principle once and for all. The Baptists sought vainly to be heard. A motion \u201cfounding one General College upon the ruin of all others ... unless sanctioned by the cordial feelings and wishes of the population, cannot be effected\u201d received the three-months\u2019 hoist. That was after midnight on 27 March 1843, and the debate finally adjourned at 1:30am.<a id=\"reffn_27\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_27\"><\/a>[footnote]Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1843, 22 Feb. to 27 Mar., pp. 421-513. The debate of 20 Mar. is reported extensively (though even at that much condensed) in the Novascotian, 17 Apr. 1843.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nIt was a wrenching debate, with little charity and no quarter given. The Baptists were disposed to rail at anyone who got in their way, who might choose to advocate establishing common schools as against, as the <em>Novascotian<\/em> bluntly put it, \u201ca set of worthless denominational Colleges with half-read Professors.\u201d The legislature was becoming a battleground of friends and supporters of each. The more the Baptists rose in their wrath, the more Howe became aroused. Some Baptists, he said, were worse than Roman Catholics when it came to persecution. Indeed, if we had to have a pope, he went on, he would rather have one in Rome than in Wolfville; and one who would look the part, in gorgeous and solemn robes, not a Baptist one in black coat and tights.<a id=\"reffn_28\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_28\"><\/a>[footnote]Novascotian, 20 Mar. 1843, editorial; ibid., 17 Apr. 1843, reporting debates for 20 Mar.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThe debate ended because the committee could not agree on where that single college would be, so that, finally, nothing was done. The Legislative Council had accepted none of it; the grants passed in 1842 were still intact; they would expire in another two and a half years, in Dalhousie\u2019s case in one and a half. The question would now go to a broader forum.\r\n\r\n<strong>\"One College\" in the Election of 1843<\/strong>\r\nThe discussion about One College went on that summer and fall of 1843 in the newspapers and ultimately on the hustings. On Wednesday, 25 September 1843 a large meeting was held in Mason\u2019s Hall, Halifax to discuss establishing one \u201cliberal and respectable Provincial College.\u201d G.R. Young had visited McGill during the summer, and concluded that it was important to consider having a medical school in Halifax. It was not an impossible dream, he said. Let each sect train its own clergy, by all means, but let general education, classics, mathematics, law, medicine, be taught at one good central college. The Nova Scotian denominational colleges were already costing \u00a35,000 to \u00a36,000 a year; it was a system that went \u201cagainst the spirit of the age.\u201d\r\n\r\nHowe, too, pointed out the advantages of size, substance, and the power that went with them. King\u2019s, he said, although it had been in existence for half a century, was nothing. A degree from King\u2019s had no weight at all; outside of Nova Scotia it was worth no more than the parchment it was written on. It was time, he said, to call a halt to building up these feudal, sectarian, power centres. Why, they \u201cwere like feudal castles in the olden time, each the rallying point of a party whose only object was to strengthen their own position ... and levy contributions on the public.\u201d Howe particularly deplored the spectacle of \u201cthese peripatetic, writing, wrangling, grasping Professors\u201d riding over the countryside, stirring up trouble. No old Baptist, not even Henry Alline, said Howe, stirred up so much strife as arrogant professors of philosophy and religion had done in the past six years. Edmund Crawley, lean, tall, dressed in black, had been seen in so many places around the province that he was called \u201cGalloping Tongs.\u201d[footnote]Novascotian, 9 Oct. 1843.[\/footnote]\u00a0There were a number of resolutions put before the Mason\u2019s Hall meeting, but the most important one, which went forward with others to the Assembly, was as follows:\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Resolved, therefore, that this meeting earnestly suggest a concentration of the energy and means of the true friends of Education, both in the Capital and the Country to oppose a system which is intended to lead to the erection and support of five or six weak and inefficient Institutions under the name of Colleges, and to encourage the Legislature to endow one Central College, which from the number of its professors, the branches of varied learning taught, its Library and Museum, will enable the Youth of Nova Scotia to receive a liberal education at home, instead of being sent, as under the present and contemplated Sectarian system, to be educated abroad.<a id=\"reffn_30\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_30\"><\/a>[footnote]Novascotian, 2 Oct. 1843.[\/footnote]<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\nPublic meetings in a similar vein went on into October. One of the biggest was Onslow, on Monday, 9 October. The Novascotian counted 113 wagons, gigs, and saddle horses tied up outside the Presbyterian meeting house to hear speakers on the One College question. There was another at Stewiacke that same day, and at Londonderry a fortnight later. The debates raged on and went straight into the general election, called at the end of October.[footnote]Novascotian, 16 Oct. 1843, reporting the Onslow meeting; Novascotian, 6 Nov. 1843, reporting Stewiacke meeting.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThe election call was mainly Lord Falkand\u2019s doing, for he now despaired of being able to carry any government measures through the Assembly, That election was also where the One College movement flagged and failed. Where the issue surfaced, as it did in a number of central constituencies, the arguments used by the <em>Christian Messenger<\/em> came home to roost - that is, if Howe and the Reformers won, Acadia College would get nothing from the Assembly but the odd crumb, and the new Roman Catholic college of St. Mary\u2019s would fare no better. King\u2019s would get the same treatment. It was in some ways a battle of the periphery against the capital, and the capital lost; where the college question intruded, the Reformers and the One College principle lost ground. In the election that November the Reformers lost their majority in the Assembly to the Tories, who now had a majority of one. Eight of the new Tory seats were in the Baptist belt, from Annapolis through Kings into Colchester. After the appointment to the Council of J.W. Johnston\u2019s brother-in-law, Mather Almon, in December, Howe resigned from the Council, and the coalition regime was at an end.[footnote]Christian Messenger (Halifax), 21 July, 6 Oct. 1843; J. Murray Beck, Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, pp. 259, 265. See also Beck\u2019s Politics, vol. 1: 123.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n<strong>The Last Years of McCulloch's Dalhousie<\/strong>\r\nDalhousie College carried on valiantly, even hopefully. In December 1842 it struck a code of rules to govern the college. The terms were changed to accommodate local tastes and exigencies. The BA was now laid down as three years of two terms each, the terms beginning in the fourth Tuesday of January to 1 July, and from 1 September to 15 December. The admission age was set at a minimum of fourteen years. Students were to wear caps and gowns, after the King\u2019s College fashion. Dalhousie College was to be conducted on the principle that \u201centire liberality in point of Religion\u201d was compatible with cultivating \u201csentiments of piety and virtue.\u201d The professorships were to be open to \u201cany religious denomination\u201d; there were to be no religious tests; and \u201call the awards and honours of the Institution will be open to all classes without distinction.\u201d Internal governance of the college was vested in the professors collectively.[footnote]Board of Governors Minutes, 31 Dec. 1842, pp. 40-7, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThese rules were drawn up by a committee of the new seventeen-member Board of Governors that had been appointed in May 1842 pursuant to the new 1841 act. It was rather large and clumsy, but certainly more representative than the rump of three hitherto existing. The new board reduced salaries. The president\u2019s would be \u00a3300 as of 1 January 1844. Romans, whose appointment in 1838 had created so much of the trouble in the first place, had not worked out well. He was retired as of 31 December 1842, with six months\u2019 pay. McIntosh would take over classics as well as the mathematics he already taught with an increase in salary to \u00a3200. A professor of modern languages (mainly French, Italian, and Spanish) would be added at \u00a3150.[footnote]Board of Governors Minutes, 12 Nov. 1842, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives; the new board is listed in full in Patterson, The History of Dalhousie College and University, p. 38. It met for the first time on 5 July 1842.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_89\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"926\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-89\" src=\"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdal\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/29\/2023\/01\/dal-1840.jpg\" alt=\"Engraving of Grand Parade, 1840.\" width=\"926\" height=\"519\" \/> Meeting of the Halifax Tandem Club, on the Grand Parade in front of Dalhousie College, about 1840. A coloured version of this engraving was presented to Dalhousie in 1950.[\/caption]\r\n\r\nThe new board also wanted to establish clear title to the Grand Parade. The new Halifax City Council had passed a resolution stating that the railing on the upper, Argyle Street side of the Parade was a hazard and should be fixed. Dalhousie had thought it was the city\u2019s responsibility, but the city demurred, so Dalhousie undertook to get the work done. The military still had occasional parades there, which got in the way of lectures from time to time, but the board thought it would not interfere with this ancient use, at least for the present. The attorney general was asked about the title to the Parade; J.W. Johnston\u2019s report is not extant, but it must have given the governors pause, for they agreed to ask for a new grant of the \u201ccollege lands.\u201d[footnote]Board of Governors Minutes, 8 Mar., 28 Apr. 1843, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nIn early August 1843 Lorenzo Lacoste, the new professor of modern languages, arrived from New York. He was the most promising candidate, the board evidently finding his New York references satisfactory. He was a quiet man, well liked in his Halifax boarding house, unobtrusive, of regular habits, his books and clothes in good order. On 22 August he came home in mid-afternoon, walked in the garden with the owner for half an hour, then went out after dinner. He did not return. He was found at first light by a North-West Arm farmer, who discovered Lacoste floating in the water, his throat cut, evidently self-inflicted. One or two witnesses at the inquest testified that they had seen him acting strangely. The coroner\u2019s jury concluded that he had committed suicide while \u201cinsane and distracted.\u201d The cause was probably some private agony that Lacoste found too hard to bear. It might have been Dalhousie College itself, although Lord Falkland said that Lacoste was pleased with his situation. Lord Falkland also asked his London friend, rather laconically, that since Lacoste had committed suicide, could another professor of modern languages be recommended?[footnote]Coroner\u2019s report is dated 23 Aug. 1843, RG 41, vol. 19 (1843) no. 8, Nova Scotia Archives. This material has been brought to my attention by Professor John Barnstead, Department of Russian, Dalhousie University, to whom I am most grateful; Board of Governors Correspondence, Lord Falkland to P. Rolandi, London, 29 Sept. 1843, UA-1, Box 27, Folder 7, Dalhousie University Archives. Peter Rolandi was a foreign book specialist in London.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nAt that time McCulloch was in western Nova Scotia gathering minerals and other specimens for his natural history collection. He had sold his first one in the 1820s and was building a second. His summer collecting time was shortened now, Dalhousie opening on the first Monday in September. McCulloch avoided the polemics of his old days in Pictou; he went about his business without apparent rancour, even amid the bitter debates of 1842 and 1843 about One College. He said nothing against the Baptists; he had preached more than once at Granville Street Baptist Church. He told a friend he was getting like an old mare he remembered in Truro: she hated to move so much that the only way to persuade her to do so was to stick a pin in her shoulder; when the pain of the pin was worse than the pain of progression, then would the mare move.[footnote]Letter from Thomas McCulloch to Rev. John Campbell, at St. Mary\u2019s, 4 July 1841, vol. 553, Thomas McCulloch Papers, Nova Scotia Archives. McCulloch was using the metaphor to apply to letter writing; I have extended the metaphor, I hope not unwisely.[\/footnote]\u00a0He had gone to Scotland in the summer of 1842 to see old correspondents and friends for the first time since 1825-6. As often happens with returning emigres, he discovered soon enough that the river is never the same twice, that the world he had known had changed beyond his comfortable accommodation with it. Scotland was no longer home. He was glad to come back to Halifax, bringing with him his young niece to marry his son William.\r\n\r\nDalhousie College opened on Monday, 4 September. McCulloch was taken ill the Friday before. He went to his classes on opening day but came home exhausted. Dr. Grigor of the Dalhousie board was called the next day, and thought McCulloch had symptoms of typhus. He slowly got weaker, and died on the Saturday evening of 9 September, as the five o\u2019clock gun from the Citadel sounded. His son, holding him, felt his \u201cfather\u2019s last breath pass gently over my hand.\u201d[footnote]William McCulloch, The Life of Thomas McCulloch, D.D. Pictou [ed. by T.W. and J.W. McCulloch] (Truro, NS 1920), pp. 192-3.[\/footnote]<a id=\"reffn_38\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_38\"><\/a>\r\n\r\nMcMulloch\u2019s dying was more peaceful than most of his living. His energy, confidence, ability, combined to make him formidable; as the <em>Acadian Recorder<\/em> put it, he was \u201cgifted with masterly wit and reasoning powers of the highest order; few writers were able to cope with him.\u201d That gets precisely at his eristic style; his was not a tender soul, and his integrity made compromise difficult. Mercy was a Christian virtue he recognized rather than practised. The real power of his mind is felt in his <em>Stepsure Letters<\/em>, that ironic, often sardonic comment on men, women, and manners in Nova Scotia. It is also seen in his students. The best epitaph came from one, many years afterward: \u201cI didn\u2019t know his greatness until I heard the professors at the University of Edinburgh.\u201d[footnote]The student was George Patterson, in A History of the County of Pictou, Nova Scotia (Montreal 1877), pp. 330-1. The Stepsure Letters were first published in the Acadian Recorder in 1821-2, reprinted in 1862, and in more recent years by J.A. Irving and D.G. Lochhead ([Toronto] 1960).[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nDalhousie College recognized the necessity of appointing a successor as soon as one could be found. They would need at least \u00a3300 annual income to do so. They agreed to appeal to the city, each member of the board taking on one of the six wards, to induce the inhabitants to \u201ccontribute liberally towards its [Dalhousie College\u2019s] support.\u201d It was not successful; the 1840s were a difficult and narrow time financially, and everyone seemed pinched by it. By the end of 1843 Dalhousie College seemed to be unravelling at the edges. It was lacking that strong coherence that McCulloch\u2019s presence, his mind, his range, his reputation, had given the college. Then Professor McIntosh applied for and got leave to return to Scotland, ostensibly on business, in reality to look for another post. He was also asked to look for a new president in Scotland. Ultimately McIntosh pushed his demands for leave too far, and was allowed to resign. He had been replaced with McCulloch\u2019s son Thomas, much less decisive than his father, and by no means presidential material.<a id=\"reffn_40\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_40\"><\/a>[footnote]Board of Governors Minutes, 22 Sept., 30 Dec. 1843, 27 Mar. 1844, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.[\/footnote]\u00a0At the time of McCulloch\u2019s death the college was living close to the bone, its financial stability precarious. Ere long something had to happen: the grants given by the Assembly in 1842 would terminate for Dalhousie on 1 January 1845. The One College principle had been decided in March 1843 by seven votes, but it had never received legislative approval and it had been a lively issue all that year and into the November general election. The House left it alone in 1844; it was divisive enough without opening it up gratuitously.\r\n\r\nBy 1845, however, the House could not avoid dealing with the question. The Reformers who had provided the basic support for One College, who had carried it in 1843, now found themselves at a disadvantage. They had lost control of the Assembly. College grants were renewed in 1845, at about two-thirds their former level, but with no grant at all to Dalhousie. Joseph Howe tried to stop all the grants by an amendment condemning sectarian colleges, but it was defeated decisively. Votes of money to Acadia, St. Mary\u2019s, Pictou Academy, and to Sackville Academy in New Brunswick (the future Methodist college of Mount Allison), were passed mostly by solid majorities. Attempts by Huntingdon to rescind them the next day failed narrowly; the rescinding of the permanent grant to King\u2019s failed by one vote.[footnote]Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1845, 31 Mar., 1 Apr., pp. 321-6.[\/footnote]<a id=\"reffn_41\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_41\"><\/a>\r\n\r\nThe Dalhousie Board of Governors now had little choice. Their 1845 assets were \u00a39,342.11s.1d. sterling, in 3 per cent Consols in London, yielding an annual income of \u00a3280 sterling. They had, since 5 April 1845, the British Post Office paying \u00a3100 sterling annual rent for the lower corner at Duke and Barrington. The Mechanics Institute occupying the west wing had had it rent free since 1833, as did the Infant School. Thus Dalhousie\u2019s gross annual income was now \u00a3380 sterling, (\u00a3450 Halifax currency). Salaries took up \u00a3650. This was not the arithmetic of success. With the legislative grant ended on 31 December 1844, with McCulloch dead, there was little hope of carrying on. It had not in fact been doing well. It had no library. Its scientific apparatus was valued at \u00a3100. It had perhaps sixteen students. The other colleges looked better than Dalhousie: Acadia had twenty-seven students, St. Mary\u2019s forty to eighty, depending on how they were counted; King\u2019s had twenty-two. All had libraries, St. Mary\u2019s reporting fifteen hundred books, Acadia, five hundred. So the Dalhousie board\u2019s resolution of 3 June 1845 was sensible, timely, and devastating: \u201cThat in consequence of the discontinuance of the Provincial Grant it is expedient to shut up the college for the present and not to fill up the vacancies in the professorships. And that it is advisable to let the Funds of the Institution to accumulate.\u201d[footnote]Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1845, Appendix 12, pp. 43-6; Board of Governors Minutes, 13 June 1845, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThus did the 1838 opening of Dalhousie College come, ingloriously, to an end. G.R. Young, William Young, Huntingdon, and Howe had tried to buttress Dalhousie. All had failed. What lay behind that failure was Dalhousie\u2019s liberal and unsectarian character. It had no constituency. As Gaius Lewis, Liberal MLA for Cumberland put it, \u201cit seemed [that it was] not owned by any.\u201d What he meant by that was painfully obvious: the others - King\u2019s, Acadia, St. Mary\u2019s, and now Mount Allison in New Brunswick - were \u201cowned,\u201d by Anglicans, Baptists, Catholics, and Methodists, respectively. As for the Presbyterians, they had never \u201cowned\u201d Dalhousie, had never professed to, though the first appointments of 1838 had given that impression. By 1847 Dalhousie College was a community centre and a government office building, its college state neatly summed up in a report to the Assembly that year:\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Professors. - None\r\nStudents attending Lectures. - None<\/div><\/blockquote>\r\n&nbsp;","rendered":"<p><strong>Joseph Howe and radical politics. The 1838 Pictou Academy Bill. Failure to appoint Edmund Crawley. Thomas McCulloch comes and Dalhousie College opens, 1838. The rivals, Queen&#8217;s College and Dalhousie, 1840. The Reform party and &#8220;One College.&#8221; McCulloch&#8217;s death, 1843. Dalhousie becomes moribound.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Little of radical politics had been seen in Nova Scotia until 1827 when the Pictou <em>Colonial Patriot<\/em> first appeared, with Jotham Blanchard as its editor and Thomas McCulloch contributing editorials. Joseph Howe at first disagreed with both, but the more he read, the more he came to their point of view. Howe expressed himself differently, with more patience and tolerance, not being as pugnacious as Blanchard or McCulloch, and still basically a moderate. His Halifax <em>Novascotian<\/em> was growing steadily in circulation and influence simply because it surpassed the others in useful information. Howe was the first editor in Nova Scotia to take seriously the reporting of Assembly debates. What the <em>Acadian Recorder<\/em> and other Halifax papers did was to offer small, irregular summaries. Howe began reporting debates in 1828, doing it all himself, and increasing the range and comprehensiveness of the reports as their popularity grew. They were a remarkable education for everyone who read the <em>Novascotian<\/em>, or had it read to them. Not least was it an education for the editor himself. Nor did Howe confine himself to that. His press published T.C. Haliburton\u2019s <em>History of Nova Scotia<\/em> in 1829, and <em>The Clockmaker<\/em> was serialized in the <em>Novascotian<\/em> in 1835. The latter was so popular that Howe put it out as a book in 1836. This is what D.C. Harvey referred to in a famous <em>Dalhousie Review<\/em> article in 1933, as \u201cThe Intellectual Awakening of Nova Scotia.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"J. Murray Beck, Politics of Nova Scotia, Vol. 1, 1710-1896 (Tantallon 1985), p. 103: J. Murray Beck, Joseph Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848 (Kingston and Montreal 1982), pp. 102-3; D.C. Harvey, \u201cThe Intellectual Awakening of Nova Scotia,\u201d Dalhousie Review 13, no. 1 (April 1933), pp. 1-22.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-1\" href=\"#footnote-31-1\" aria-label=\"Footnote 1\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[1]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>That, of course, comprehended politics as well. There had always been friction between the Assembly and the Council, inevitable in any two-chamber government. But it was only after the election of 1836 that it became more serious. When the Assembly met in 1837 there was for the first time a number of reform-minded members, dissatisfied with the way political institutions in Nova Scotia had been working. How big that group was depended on the issue and the men, but the division on Howe\u2019s Twelve Resolutions of 1837, which severely criticized the working of the Council (in both its modes), was twenty-six to twenty. That forced Lord Glenelg to order the complete separation of the Council into its two functions, legislative and executive. The Assembly had won a major victory.<\/p>\n<p>The Dalhousie College victory followed the next year. Most Reformers were behind that move too. Two men were the moving spirits: S.G.W. Archibald, the Speaker of the House, and his son, Charles Dickson Archibald. At sixty years, Archibald senior was suave, handsome, well-mannered, and spoke with great ease and authority. He was a Seceder Presbyterian, a man of convictions who deployed them without cant or aggression. He had long supported Pictou Academy, as he had opposed the exclusiveness of King\u2019s, but he was well capable of judging Thomas McCulloch\u2019s weaknesses as well as strengths. Archibald in later years grew too conservative for Howe and his Reform friends, but they always got along well and Howe liked him to the end.<a id=\"reffn_2\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_2\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"See J. Murray Beck, \u201cS.G.W. Archibald,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vii: 21-5.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-2\" href=\"#footnote-31-2\" aria-label=\"Footnote 2\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[2]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>His son, Charles Dickson, was born in 1802, the eldest of fifteen children in what was a singularly happy marriage. Charles sat for Truro from 1826 to 1830 when his father was Speaker of the Assembly. The young man married an English heiress in 1832 and moved to England four years later. But he was back and forth to Nova Scotia a good deal, and he may have been as influential as his father in devising the ingenious idea of bringing McCulloch\u2019s restless energies to the service of Dalhousie College.<\/p>\n<p>McCulloch was now feeling his sixty-two years. Although he had lived most of his adult life in Pictou, the triumph of his Kirk enemies within Pictou Academy, an institution he had founded, nurtured, and bled for, was hard and bitter. Pictou, he told his Glasgow friend, James Mitchell, in November 1834, \u201chas very little appearance of being much longer the place for me.\u201d A year later, S.G.W. Archibald was trying to nudge him in the direction of Dalhousie College; still McCulloch clung to Pictou. Halifax was to him a hotbed of toryism; if he went there, he would be, he said, \u201ca presbyterian among church [Anglican] bigots and a Seceder among Kirk [Presbyterian] bigots\u201d; hardly very enviable. At this stage in his life he had no great ambitions left; in 1818 it would have been different, being principal or president of Dalhousie College, but of course that would not have happened under Lord Dalhousie.<a id=\"reffn_3\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_3\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Letter from McCulloch to Mitchell, 6 Nov. 1834, from Pictou, and 23 Nov. 1835, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives; Letter from McCulloch to John Mitchell (the father of James) June 1838, from Pictou, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-3\" href=\"#footnote-31-3\" aria-label=\"Footnote 3\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[3]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Archibalds, father and son, knew that story. Though S.G.W. Archibald was educated in the United States, Charles was a product of Pictou Academy and admired McCulloch for his talent, pluck, and perseverance amid privations. McCulloch\u2019s situation now was worse than in former years, though at no time within Charles Archibald\u2019s recollection had \u201cyour worldly circumstances rendered you an object of envy.\u201d What animated young Archibald and his father was not charity but respect: \u201cWithout flattery I can say that the course of Lectures on Chemistry which you were delivering when I left Halifax [for England] nearly six years ago [February 1830], would bear comparison with any I have ever attended.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Letter from C.D. Archibald to McCulloch, 18 Nov. 1837, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-4\" href=\"#footnote-31-4\" aria-label=\"Footnote 4\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[4]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The bill to effect the change in McCulloch\u2019s circumstances was called \u201cAn Act to Alter and Amend the Act to regulate and support Pictou Academy.\u201d The old act of 1832 gave \u00a3400 to Pictou Academy, with \u00a3250 of it specified as salary to McCulloch. The new act split the \u00a3400, leaving \u00a3200 to the academy, and the other \u00a3200 going to the Dalhousie Board of Governors to pay McCulloch as principal. The bill created a considerable stir in the Nova Scotia legislature. It went through first and second reading on 21 March 1838 without a word of opposition. It went through Committee of the Whole in the same way. Then the opposition struck. The Anglicans were led by J.B. Uniacke, and the Roman Catholics by Lawrence Doyle, both of whom noisily denounced the bill; it was being smuggled through the House, they said. Speaker Archibald remarked he had no objection to having the bill sent again to Committee of the Whole if certain members wanted their objections heard. Meantime, a seven-year-old libel against McCulloch was published and sent to members of both houses. The opposition included the Anglicans, the Roman Catholics, who had never forgiven McCulloch for his anti-Catholic diatribes of thirty years earlier, and most, if not all, of the Kirk men. Young Archibald went to work on the Baptists. They were assured privately that they would have their man, the Reverend Edmund A. Crawley, as the Dalhousie professor of classics. There was no express agreement or contract but, as Charles Archibald said, \u201cthere certainly was an implied contract and coalition entered into with that party [the Baptists].\u201d Archibald\u2019s letter to McCulloch reveals much about the pressures for and against the Dalhousie College idea:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">We find the Church of England, the Kirk and the Roman Catholics leagued together to defeat this Measure and why? &#8211; purely because it contemplates a little honour and moderate provision for you &#8211; Against such an alliance your friends and party cannot stand and it is not only in reference to this matter, but to an immense variety of other subjects that I consider a good understanding between the leading Sects of Dissenters to be highly politic and indeed indispensable. Should you come to preside over Dalhousie College you must endeavour as far as possible to plan all denominations on an equal footing, but in the circumstances of the Country and in the nature of things, it must become essentially a Dissenting Institution &#8211; and it is not one of the least advantages which I foresee that its Establishment will unite the Presbyterians of your Church and the Baptists and the Methodists. I do not wonder that the Bishop has always opposed the opening of this College, for it requires no great prescience to enable one to predict that it will concentrate into one focus the scattered Bands which singly he has hitherto been able to put down.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Letter from C.D. Archibald to McCulloch, 21 Mar. 1838, private, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-5\" href=\"#footnote-31-5\" aria-label=\"Footnote 5\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[5]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>In the end the Pictou-Dalhousie bill passed the Assembly by twenty-six votes to seventeen, a surprisingly large majority. \u201cThis is a queer world,\u201d wrote Thomas Dickson, the MLA for Pictou, \u201cand I verily believe that some of both branches of the Legislature are some of the queerest people in it.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1838, 16 Mar., p. 350; Letter from Dickson to McCulloch, 5 Apr. 1838, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 141, Nova Scotia Archives. Dickson was the brother-in-law of S.G.W. Archibald. See Allan C. Dunlop, \u201cThomas Dickson,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, viii: 222.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-6\" href=\"#footnote-31-6\" aria-label=\"Footnote 6\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[6]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>It was just as queer in the Legislative Council. Its basic instinct was to postpone the whole bill; the Kirk men canvassed for that idea, but they were fought off. Pros and cons were heard at the bar of the Legislative Council. The Reverend D.A. Fraser, a staunch Kirk man, said the bill had been produced in secret and had he known of it sooner he could have got thousands of signatures against it. That led the Seceder minister Hugh Ross to remark that if the reverend gentleman brought forth a petition to remove George\u2019s Island from Halifax to Pictou he could have got signatures for it! The treasurer of Dalhousie, Charles Wallace, bearded James Tobin, a member of the Legislature Council, over breakfast on 10 April to try to get him to oppose the bill &#8211; anything to keep that Seceder McCulloch out of Dalhousie, even if it meant not opening it. Notwithstanding all that, the bill emerged unchanged on 10 April and became law a week later.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Letters from Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 28 Mar., 10 Apr. 1838, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 140, Nova Scotia Archives; Novascotian, 12 Apr. 1838, reporting on the Legislative Council for 27 Mar.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-7\" href=\"#footnote-31-7\" aria-label=\"Footnote 7\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[7]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>As this was being accomplished the Reverend Edmund Crawley was already writing McCulloch with suggestions for the proper curriculum in a college of three professors, in particular about classics, to which professorship he considered himself already appointed. Crawley had graduated from King\u2019s in 1820, became a lawyer, and in 1827 helped to lead the split from St. Paul\u2019s Anglican Church to found Granville Street Baptist Church. He then went to the United States to study for the Baptist ministry, graduating eventually from Brown University. He was able, knowledgeable, energetic, high-handed, and he carried with him no small estimate of his own capacity. His application for a professorship went to the Dalhousie board before the bill had even come up in the Assembly. Crawley was more importunate than greedy. He offered to serve as professor of classics with little or no salary, if that would help. But he wanted, indeed it seemed that he required, the appointment. He saw Charles Wallace a couple of days before the appointments were to be made and received from him flattering assurances and best wishes for his success.<a id=\"reffn_8\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_8\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives, E.A. Crawley, \u201cAn Outline suggesting some principles and regulations for putting Dalhousie College into active operation,\u201d n.d. [c. 20 Apr. 1838]. The date is made clear from McCulloch\u2019s letter to Charles Archibald of 24 Apr. 1838. See also Barry Moody, \u201cEdmund Ahern Crawley,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography xi: 214-15; Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 21 Mar. 1838, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives. Crawley\u2019s discussion with Charles Wallace is referred to in Crawley\u2019s interview before the Assembly, 13 Feb. 1839, in the debates for that day, reported in Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-8\" href=\"#footnote-31-8\" aria-label=\"Footnote 8\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[8]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>McCulloch was surprisingly patient with all of Crawley\u2019s importunities. He knew how much the passage of the Pictou-Dalhousie Act had depended upon Crawley and his influence with the Baptists. Still, McCulloch said, Crawley was premature, and his allusions to the importance of Latin and Greek at the University of New Brunswick and at King\u2019s magnified the role of classics too much. Nova Scotian opinion was not ready for it, nor was McCulloch. There is much good sense in McCulloch, and nowhere does it show better than in his long letter to Charles Archibald on this point:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">[T]hat boys should in Halifax or elsewhere spend six or seven years upon Latin and Greek and then four more in College partially occupied with the same language is a waste of human life adapted neither to the circumstances nor the prosperity of Nova Scotia &#8230; If Dalhousie College acquires usefulness and eminence it will not be by an imitation of Oxford but as an institution of science and practical intelligence.<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Any fourth professor, McCulloch said, should be a natural scientist, teaching geology, mineralogy, zoology, botany; whatever the province produced naturally should have an echo in the splendour of Dalhousie science. McCulloch added a postscript about the nomination of the professors. He did not care who was nominated, but \u201cI mentioned to your father I view the nomination of the existing candidates as a business which should be carefully weighed.\u201d<a id=\"reffn_9\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_9\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Letter from McCulloch to Charles Archibald, 24 Apr. 1838, from Pictou, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-9\" href=\"#footnote-31-9\" aria-label=\"Footnote 9\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[9]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Dalhousie College Board of Governors met on 6 August 1838. It was not that difficult to arrange; it was now down to a rump of three &#8211; the lieutenant-governor, the treasurer of the province, and the Speaker of the House. Lord Dalhousie had died earlier in the year, at Dalhousie Castle, blind and decrepit; the bishop was away, and that spring the chief justice had retired from the board. Sir Colin Campbell and Charles Wallace were not happy with McCulloch, forced upon them by the Assembly; they fudged his appointment, saying he was \u201cfor the present appointed President.\u201d McCulloch would teach moral philosophy, logic, and rhetoric, and would be paid \u00a3400 a year plus student fees, \u00a3200 coming from the Assembly and \u00a3200 from Dalhousie\u2019s funds.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"On McCulloch\u2019s appointment there is a singular touch of animus in the board minutes. Deleted at the request of the lieutenant-governor was the statement that \u201cthe Revd. Thomas MacCulloch ... is hereby appointed President.\u201d Substituted was \u201cthe Revd. Dr. T. MacCulloch who for the present is appointed President.\u201d See Board of Governors Minutes, 9 Mar., 6 Aug., 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives; Letter from Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 10 Apr. 1838, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 140, Nova Scotia Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-10\" href=\"#footnote-31-10\" aria-label=\"Footnote 10\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[10]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0Public advertising was authorized for the two other professorships, which were to be in classical languages, and mathematics and natural philosophy. There were seven applicants, of whom the most important were Crawley (Baptist) and Alexander Romans (Kirk) for classics; James McIntosh (Kirk) and Thomas Twining (Church of England) for mathematics.<\/p>\n<p>The Kirk was bitter about the McCulloch appointment. It published a remonstrance stating that appointing McCulloch would be \u201can act of injury, injustice and insult to every well educated man in the province.\u201d It had also learned, with astonishment it said, that appointments to the college professorships might be contrary to the intentions of Lord Dalhousie, which were to have Dalhousie College in the style of Edinburgh University. That style was, the Kirk robustly asserted, that all professors be members of the Kirk of Scotland!<\/p>\n<p>What the Kirk claimed had been true once; but it was a rule long fallen by the wayside, as recent appointments to Edinburgh indicated. And, of course, it had never been a consideration in Lord Dalhousie\u2019s mind, as his search for a principal through an Anglican professor at Cambridge showed. But by August 1838 Lord Dalhousie was dead, and the genial but obtuse old Highland soldier who ruled at Government House in Halifax was persuaded by Charles Wallace and his Kirk friends that the iniquity of appointing a Seceder as president of Dalhousie was bad enough without compounding it by appointing a Baptist as professor. Thus when the time for decision came, at the board meeting of 15 September 1838, the lieutenant-governor and Wallace proposed, and carried, first, for the professorship of mathematics and natural philosophy, the Reverend James McIntosh, a Kirk man, of talent sufficient to justify the appointment; and second, for the professorship of classics the Reverend Alexander Romans, a Kirk man, against the greater claims and more substantial candidacy of Edmund Crawley. Speaker Archibald opposed this, speaking as bluntly as he could. But he had been unwell since April, and may not have been as effective as usual. In any case he was simply outvoted.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 550, Nova Scotia Archives; Memorial of Synod of Nova Scotia, 11 Aug. 1838. The Pictou Observer and Eastern Advertiser, 11 Sept. 1838, a Kirk supporter, had a strong anti-McCulloch editorial; Board of Governors Minutes, 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-11\" href=\"#footnote-31-11\" aria-label=\"Footnote 11\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[11]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Baptists were furious and felt betrayed. At the head of their fury was Crawley himself. He hit the newspapers twelve days later with a series of articles on the history of his arrangements with Dalhousie College, ringing the changes about his and the Baptists\u2019 betrayal.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 27 Sept. 1838, \u201cDalhousie College - No. 1.\u201d There followed three others, one a week, up to 18 Oct. 1838.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-12\" href=\"#footnote-31-12\" aria-label=\"Footnote 12\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[12]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0Members of the Assembly, and the Archibalds, were taken aback by the blatant disregard of their promises of six months before. Certainly an articulate group of the Assembly were dismayed, and in the session of 1839 would give that strange Dalhousie board its comeuppance. The Baptists would have even sterner resolves.<\/p>\n<p>Thomas McCulloch was not happy either with Dalhousie\u2019s refusal to appoint Crawley. Crawley would no doubt have been a difficult, even intractable, colleague, but McCulloch wished to make friends for Dalhousie and not make enemies when it could well have been avoided. He left Pictou for Halifax in mid-October, his friends from various Pictou congregations accompanying him on his journey as far as Truro. He was rather pleased with himself, despite the row over the two professorships. He did not mind rows: he had lived, thrived, on them. His own appointment to Dalhousie had occasioned a fearsome one. God had at last given him, as he put it, \u201cto possess the gate of my enemies.\u201d His pride was gratified to see his foes so humbled.<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Lord Dalhousie who for the sake of his college hated me built it for me [.] Our Bishop in the expectation of making it his own was I believe the principal means of preventing it from going into operation till I had need of it. The Kirk clergy his tools effected the destruction of the [Pictou] Academy &#8230; Government placed me at what I may fairly term the head of the education of the province. This I neither coveted nor sought&#8230;<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Perhaps best of all, his Kirk enemies had not prospered. The most determined of them, the Reverend Kenneth MacKenzie, was dead, \u201ca fearful monument to an ill spent life. In Pictou it is a common remark that no man who opposed the [Pictou] Academy ever prospered in his deed.\u201d There was some little Schadenfreude in all of this; perhaps McCulloch\u2019s essential greatness can be allowed that very human, and not very Christian, weakness. There was a residual toughness about him; he would not be suborned.<\/p>\n<p>He had no great enthusiam for Halifax. But it was the metropolitan centre of the province, things went on there that had to be taken cognizance of, and a college there was going to be important. He had even less respect for Halifax after reading in the Pictou papers about a two-day Halifax riot in August in the streets and houses a couple of blocks up the hill from Dalhousie College. A discharged sailor claimed he had been robbed by prostitutes in one of the houses on the Hill, so his friends, and soldiers, sacked houses on upper Duke Street. It was no secret that they were going to finish their work the following night, and this time locals joined in. Most of these were what the Halifax <em>Times<\/em> described as \u201cthe lowest characters,\u201d but more respectable onlookers were delighted to see the terrible nuisance of those houses being got rid of, even by a mob out of control. It took old Sir Colin Campbell himself, who in brisk, military fashion, ordered the streets cleared. The riot confirmed ancient prejudices at King\u2019s, that Halifax was a wicked place, where young men, in acquiring the best of knowledge, could imbibe the worst of it.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_88\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-88\" style=\"width: 301px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-88\" src=\"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdal\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/29\/2023\/01\/Thomas-McCulloch.jpg\" alt=\"Pastel drawing of Thomas McCulloch\" width=\"301\" height=\"441\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-88\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Dr. Thomas McCulloch in the 1840s, a pastel drawing by Sir Daniel MacNee, now in the Atlantic School of Theology. \u201cHe carried the whole college on the strength of his power and reputation.\u201d<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p><strong>The College Opens<br \/>\n<\/strong>Dalhousie College opened on 1 November with a dozen students and more expected. McCulloch thought some of the rooms as big as a palace. And three professors in arts was at that time regarded as a more than adequate complement for a provincial college. There was little equipment and no library, but McCulloch was confident that Dalhousie must eventually be \u201cthe leading seminary of the province.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Letter from McCulloch to John Mitchell, 26 May 1839, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-13\" href=\"#footnote-31-13\" aria-label=\"Footnote 13\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[13]<\/sup><\/a><strong><br \/>\n<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>He was still a prodigious teacher, his mind clear and vigorous. He was a stickler for grammar but he especially abhorred wordiness. Any word not absolutely necessary to convey meaning weakened the sentence. George Patterson recalled \u201chow mercilessly his big pencil went through our superfluous adjectives!\u201d The students thought he carried it too far, that his own style was bare and devoid of ornament, rather the way he was. But he trained minds to exact thinking, and to correct, if rugged, writing. His philosophy was developed from the Scottish common-sense school and especially from Thomas Reid, the critic of Hume. Physically, however, McCulloch was showing his years; his movements lacked vigour, and his eyes often had a worn and weary look. But his indomitable will remained. Sick or well, he was at class, sometimes to totter home to Argyle Street to bed. He carried the whole college on the strength of his power and reputation. It was not easy, for his two subordinate professors, Romans and McIntosh, were not strong academically and were worse in the classroom. McIntosh too easily found time to indulge in Halifax social life and the drinking that went with it.<\/p>\n<p>The students who came from the country, especially the half-dozen or so who had followed McCulloch from Pictou, were hard-working and diligent. Some from Halifax were too, but there was a proportion of Halifax youths more bent on amusement. Since the lowest age was fourteen, that meant a good deal of high spirits and low cunning had to be suppressed, diverted, transformed, perhaps something of all of those. Romans and McIntosh could not manage this group; McCulloch could. Students were rather in awe of McCulloch, and he repaid their attention and progress with abundant interest. Even the unruly calmed down, except once, recalled by a student, when someone rebelled against him in class. McCulloch \u201cbowed his head, if I mistake not, let fall a tear, at all events said in tones in which the expression of pain overcame anger, \u2018This is the first time I have been so insulted &#8230; in a class-room in my life.\u2019 \u201d Everyone felt the weight of that reproof, perhaps even the miscreant.<a id=\"reffn_14\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_14\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The source of this and the preceding paragraph is G.G. Patterson, The History of Dalhousie College and University (Halifax 1887), pp. 32-6. The writer he quotes from was \u201can old Dalhousian\u201d; and Patterson\u2019s father, the Reverend George Patterson fits perfectly, being both at Pictou Academy and Dalhousie College in exactly those years. After the History came out, some further reflections occurred to George Patterson, Sr., and these were duly published in the Dalhousie Gazette, 2 Dec. 1887, pp. 32-3, as a letter from the son. See also Allan Dunlop, \u201cGeorge Patterson,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, XII: 828-9.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-14\" href=\"#footnote-31-14\" aria-label=\"Footnote 14\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[14]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\n<p>The official Dalhousie timetable for the autumn of 1838 was as follows:<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Latin, 8-9 AM, Prof. Romans<\/li>\n<li>Greek, 10-11 AM, Prof. Romans<\/li>\n<li>Greek &amp; Latin, 12 noon to 1 PM Prof. Romans<\/li>\n<li>Algebra, 10-11 AM Prof. McIntosh<\/li>\n<li>Logic, 11-12 AM, Dr. McCulloch<\/li>\n<li>Rhetoric, 1-2 PM, Dr. McCulloch<\/li>\n<li>Mathematics, 8-9 AM, Prof. McIntosh<\/li>\n<li>Moral Philosophy, 10-11, AM Dr. McCulloch<\/li>\n<li>Natural Philosophy 12 noon to 1 PM, Prof. McIntosh<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<\/div>\n<p>The Dalhousie terms were set on the Scottish style, having one term from October to April inclusive. King\u2019s followed the Oxford system, spreading their work more evenly over the year. The Scottish system suited the country boys, who worked on farms from May to September, but city parents found it intolerable to have their sons idle all that time. Some families sent their sons to Dalhousie in the winter and in the summer to new and popular lectures at St. Mary\u2019s school.<\/p>\n<p>The enraged Baptist constituency lost no time. In the autumn of 1838 Crawley followed up his Dalhousie College articles in the <em>Novascotian<\/em> with three on Horton Academy and hopes for its college expansion. In November the Baptist Education Society met in Wolfville to discuss what they would do. The Baptists now agreed to found a college and a petition went to the legislature to grant a charter. Crawley\u2019s personal animus gave voice and leadership to a movement in the Baptist community that was already burgeoning.<a id=\"reffn_15\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_15\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"See W.B. Hamilton, \u201cEducation, Politics and Reform in Nova Scotia 1800-1848\u201d (PH.D. thesis, University of Western Ontario 1970), pp. 265-6.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-15\" href=\"#footnote-31-15\" aria-label=\"Footnote 15\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[15]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Assembly opened in mid-January of 1839, recent events at Dalhousie and at Wolfville in the forefront of their deliberations. It immediately appointed a three-man committee of Joseph Howe, William Young, and Lawrence Doyle to ask the lieutenant-governor for documents, proceedings, accounts of Dalhousie College. How had the incredible events of 15 September 1838 actually come about? Doyle spoke for the astonishment most MLAS felt at references by the lieutenant-governor and others to Lord Dalhousie\u2019s alleged legacy of Presbyterian exclusiveness. It had always been understood, said Doyle, that Dalhousie College was to be altogether unrestricted, open to anyone. If that were not so, then the sooner the House insisted on getting its \u00a35,000 back the better.<\/p>\n<p>Joseph Howe was more specific. Had he known what would happen in September (he was overseas in Britain from May to October), had he believed that anyone \u201cwould be mad enough to endeavour to make Dalhousie College a Sectarian Institution,\u201d he would have opposed the Pictou-Dalhousie Act of 1838, even though it had wakened Dalhousie from \u201cits death-like sleep.\u201d Certainly Dalhousie College must not continue in its present form.<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Rather than see it established for the exclusive benefit of any church he would prefer that a party of artificiers should be brought down from the barracks, and should be directed to mine it, and blow the structure into the air &#8230; The effect of these narrow views was, to keep classes of Christians &#8211; which should respect each other, and live in charity &#8211; in a state bordering on enmity, harrassed [sic] by conflicting and angry feelings.<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>William Young said much the same, moderately as was his wont, judging the September appointments \u201cmost unwise and impolitic.\u201d There must not be, he said, four or five colleges in the province &#8211; if so, their degrees would become a laughing stock.<a id=\"reffn_16\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_16\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 31 Jan. 1839, reporting Assembly debates for 18 Jan. 1839.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-16\" href=\"#footnote-31-16\" aria-label=\"Footnote 16\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[16]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Speaker Archibald reported on Dalhousie\u2019s funds. The accounting had been complicated by Michael Wallace\u2019s death in 1831, and by Lord Dalhousie\u2019s, and by the fact that the agents in London, empowered to receive dividends, had failed. Still, about two-thirds of the income on capital could be reclaimed by affidavit, some \u00a3786 sterling. That was done in the nick of time. And the money would meet the costs of current repairs.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839, reporting debates for 13 Feb.; also Board of Governors Minutes, 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives. Details are set out in Appendix 30, Nova Scotia, Assembly, Journals 1839, pp. 55ff.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-17\" href=\"#footnote-31-17\" aria-label=\"Footnote 17\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[17]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>On 9 February 1839, the Bill for the Incorporation of Queen\u2019s College (the first name chosen for Acadia) was given first reading, and on 15 February Howe presented the bill to amend the Dalhousie College Act. The two bills now proceeded roughly in tandem. On the second reading of the Queen\u2019s College Bill Crawley appeared at the bar of the House. He said much that clarified the events of September last. Two or three days after the Dalhousie appointments had been made, Sir Colin Campbell asked to see Crawley. In that interview, Crawley asked the governor if it were not true that his (Crawley\u2019s) failure to get the professorship of classics was due to Crawley\u2019s religion, not his competence? In other words, if he\u2019d been a Presbyterian, would he have got the job? \u201cHis Excellency hesitated, but after a while said, Certainly &#8211; that such was the fact.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Then Treasurer Charles Wallace was called to the bar, and his testimony went directly against that of Crawley:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Mr. Howe &#8211; Do I understand Mr. Wallace to say that Mr. Crawley was not rejected because he was a Baptist. Mr. Wallace &#8211; Certainly not. Mr. Howe &#8211; Do I understand Mr. Wallace aright, that although he had promised Mr. Crawley, the peculiar circumstances under which he was placed with Mr. Romans was a reason sufficiently strong to abrogate those promises. Mr. Wallace &#8211; Yes. Mr. Howe remarked that the house would now perceive, why he had been anxious to have this examination. The statements of the gentleman [sic] heard at the bar were directly contradictory.<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>The following day Crawley was again heard in connection with Queen\u2019s College. Nova Scotians, he said, had waited for fifteen years for Dalhousie College, and what had appeared had simply not justified expectations. Some members of the House hoped that the Queen\u2019s College Bill would not be pressed, that new legislation to clear out the old Dalhousie board and establish a new one would allay inflamed feelings and satisfy the Baptists. J.B. Uniacke (Anglican) made that appeal. Why should there be, he said, several inferior establishments in the province instead of one good one? As for Howe, he was sympathetic to Crawley and his talents, but<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">he would not say, therefore, that another College should be endowed. If it was determined to have a College at Horton, much as he wished to see a College in Halifax, and believed it to be the best site for one, he would say, Down with it, let us get our money from it, and if one sect must have such an establishment, let it be respectable, and let not two inefficient institutions go into operation. In these matters Nova Scotia acted with a degree of profusion that no other country attempted.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839, reporting debates for 13, 14, and 20 Feb. 1839.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-18\" href=\"#footnote-31-18\" aria-label=\"Footnote 18\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[18]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>The Queen\u2019s College Bill came out of the Committee of the Whole with a recommendation that it be given the three-months\u2019 hoist. A motion to overturn this recommendation, and thus keep the bill, was defeated. This first attempt to incorporate Queen\u2019s College failed.<\/p>\n<p>The Dalhousie College Amendment Bill passed the Assembly that same day but it did not fare so well in the Legislative Council, coming back with amendments that the House could not accept. In a conference between the two houses the Assembly insisted on its point<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">that the object this House had in view in passing that Bill was to place Dalhousie College under the management of a body of Gendemen, selected from the various Religious Denominations in this Province, carefully excluding Clergymen, in order that those jealousies which had marred the usefulness, and arrayed the feelings of portions of the Population, against the interests of other Institutions might, in this case, be avoided, and all classes combined in support of a College offering equal privileges to all; that these amendments made by the Council, which are now the subject of Conference, strike at the vital principle of the Bill, a principle upon the value of which, there exists in the Assembly no difference of opinion.<a id=\"reffn_19\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_19\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1839, 8 Mar., pp. 561-2.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-19\" href=\"#footnote-31-19\" aria-label=\"Footnote 19\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[19]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>A further snag occurred on a money question in the bill, and the Assembly put forward a new bill with the contentious money clause avoided. It was given third reading in the House but was thrown out on a technicality by the Legislative Council. Thus neither the Queen\u2019s College nor the Dalhousie bill succeeded in 1839. Both were to do so in 1840.<\/p>\n<p>The Dalhousie Act of 1840 did what had been intended in 1839; it broke the old Dalhousie trust, as Howe and others had wanted. Abolished was the old board established by Lord Dalhousie and the Act of 1821. The governor general of British North America as member, a holdover from Lord Dalhousie\u2019s days, was deleted as impracticable; the chief justice was dropped; indeed, all ex-officio officers were dropped except the lieutenant-governor and the president of Dalhousie College. Twelve new members across a religious and political spectrum were named. Future vacancies were to be filled by a curious system of selection: the Legislative Council would choose three, from which the Assembly would select two, and from which the Council would nominate one. Two further sections of the 1840 act must be quoted:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\n<p>v. That the said College shall be deemed and taken to be an University, with all and every the usual privileges of such Institutions, and that the Students in the said College shall have the liberty and faculty of taking the Degrees of Bachelor, Master and Doctor&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>vi. That no Religious Tests or Subscriptions shall be required of the Professors, Scholars, Graduates, Students or Officers of the said College, but that all the privileges and advantages therefo shall be open and free to all and every person and persons whomsoever, without regard to religious persuasion.<a id=\"reffn_20\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_20\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nova Scotia Statutes, 3 Vic. cap. 7.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-20\" href=\"#footnote-31-20\" aria-label=\"Footnote 20\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[20]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>The act went through the Assembly without recorded division, but was subject to British approval.<\/p>\n<p>In 1840, too, the Queen\u2019s College Bill was accepted by the Assembly, twenty-seven to fifteen. Howe spoke against the college but voted for it, one of several who did. Howe regretted the fact that Queen\u2019s was created at all, deplored \u201cmaking five great roads, where only one should be\u201d; but since Crawley had been rejected by the old Dalhousie board on religious grounds (he plainly concurred with Crawley\u2019s estimate of the reasons), he felt he had no option. But for that circumstance, nothing would have induced Howe to vote for the incorporation of Queen\u2019s College.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 19 Mar. 1840, reporting Assembly debates for 14 Feb. See also J. Murray Beck, Joseph Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, p. 204.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-21\" href=\"#footnote-31-21\" aria-label=\"Footnote 21\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[21]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>It met with similar reactions in the Legislative Council. As it passed third reading, a protest was entered by Mather Almon and L.M. Wilkins; if the Queen\u2019s College Bill were to become law, they said, \u201cit is reasonably to be anticipated that similar Institutions, connected with other Religious Denominations in this Province, will be required &#8230; and thereby to prevent the ample endowment, from the same source [i.e., public revenue] of some one central and efficient College, perfectly open and unrestricted, and operating equally for the benefit of all classes of the People.\u201d With that appeal to posterity, the Legislative Council passed the Queen\u2019s College Bill.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nova Scotia Legislative Council, Journals 1840, 15 Feb., pp. 43-4.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-22\" href=\"#footnote-31-22\" aria-label=\"Footnote 22\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[22]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Queen\u2019s College did not keep its name. Lord John Russell, the colonial secretary, reported that the Queen did not wish her name associated with the college (probably because it was Baptist), and in 1841 it was given the name Acadia College, a happy choice. Russell also objected to the way that future vacancies on the Dalhousie board were to be filled, in particular having nominations and choices given to the popular body. In 1841 that was changed too, giving the power to the lieutenant-governor-in-council.<\/p>\n<p>The creation of Acadia College so quickly, so resolutely, was remarkable; it showed what could be done within a strong religious constituency, driven by determination, anger, and self-sacrifice. It showed, indeed, what Dalhousie did not have: substantial and committed public support from a closely knit section of the province, in this case the Annapolis Valley, whose farms had been started only seventy years before by New England dissenters, mainly from Connecticut and Rhode Island. On the other hand, there was a clear sense among a minority in both the Assembly and the Legislative Council that this development was unfortunate, that it was the result of a concatentation of circumstances that might well have been avoided had there been better management, or even a little plain common sense, in the two critical members of that Dalhousie rump board. Rarely in history are there clear points of departure; rarely can one say this, or that, came from such and such an event. But this one is unmistakable: the Dalhousie board\u2019s refusal to appoint Edmund Crawley as professor of classics in September 1838. It had distinct and momentous consequences for university education in Nova Scotia. Within five months of that refusal, the Queen\u2019s College Bill was before the Assembly, failing in 1839 by only two votes, and passing the following year. Even in 1839 it was already late; the only person who could have averted that progress was Crawley, and he would have none of it.<\/p>\n<p>Crawley\u2019s determination and outrage carried with it suspicion that perhaps he was glad the way things had turned out. He would have been bound to accept the office of professor of classics at Dalhousie College had it been offered, and he made a fine display of indignation when he did not get it; but was he sincere? Herbert Huntingdon, the MLA for Yarmouth, alleged in 1849 he was not. Huntingdon\u2019s furious accusation created a sensation in the Assembly, and was denied by Tory leader J.W. Johnston as a gross lie, but Huntingdon reiterated that Crawley and the Baptists were secretly delighted when he was excluded from Dalhousie in 1838.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 16 Apr. 1849, reporting Assembly debates for 26 Feb. The account in the Halifax British Colonist suggests that Huntingdon was in a furious rage: \u201cHe doubled his fist, and shook it, at his arm\u2019s length, in the direction where the Gentlemen he alluded to [Crawley] stood among the spectators below the bar.\u201d British Colonist, 3 Mar. 1849 reporting debates of 26 Feb. Huntingdon had also a falling out with Howe that same session. See A.A. MacKenzie, \u201cHerbert Huntingdon,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, viii: 415-18.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-23\" href=\"#footnote-31-23\" aria-label=\"Footnote 23\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[23]<\/sup><\/a> In 1841 St. Mary\u2019s College &#8211; Roman Catholic &#8211; was granted a charter by the legislature. All four of Nova Scotia\u2019s little colleges were thus under way &#8211; King\u2019s, Dalhousie, Acadia, and St. Mary\u2019s. Despite appearances, however, the Assembly did not accept this as a fait accompli; in 1842, 1843, and after, there were major efforts to revert to, and establish, \u201cOne Good College.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In 1842 the issue arose over how the newly created colleges of Acadia and St. Mary\u2019s were to be funded. King\u2019s had long had a permanent annual grant of \u00a3444. One awful weekend in March of 1842 the funding question oscillated precariously back and forth, impelled by bad temper and shifts on both sides. Eventually the House gave \u00a3444 to Acadia and St. Mary\u2019s, \u00a3400 to Dalhousie. The grants would be for three years, except Dalhousie\u2019s, which was for two. All were to begin on 1 January 1843.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"This story can be traced in Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1842, 5-8 Mar., pp. 300-12; Howe comments on it later in the Novascotian, 24 Nov. 1842. See J. Murray Beck, Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, pp. 249-50.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-24\" href=\"#footnote-31-24\" aria-label=\"Footnote 24\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[24]<\/sup><\/a><a id=\"reffn_24\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_24\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The question of funding was a difficult and anguished one, and the Baptists did not make it easier for themselves, by pushing hard for what they wanted. They had a case: they had dug into their own pockets to help create Acadia, and it was now doing well enough to need, and to ask for, a capital grant for more space. In their view, Dalhousie College had done nothing for itself; there it sat on the Grand Parade, but what had built it was Castine money and a legislative loan. King\u2019s was not much better, though at least it made exertions on its own behalf. But the Assembly was not at all certain it was right to have created Acadia. Many who had opposed it in the first place now rolled their eyes, and said, \u201cAh! did I not tell you that they [the Baptists] would harrass [sic] you every year for money? You wouldn\u2019t believe it &#8211; now are you satisfied?\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"This is from G.W. McLelan\u2019s speech in Mason Hall, Halifax, 25 Sept. 1843, reported in the Novascotian, 16 Oct. 1843.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-25\" href=\"#footnote-31-25\" aria-label=\"Footnote 25\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[25]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0Howe, who had supported the Acadia charter, was not pleased either. That mattered; since October 1840 Howe had been on the Executive Council and Speaker of the House since February 1841. The Baptists thought Howe\u2019s principle of not favouring any denomination, of making all colleges equal, loaded the dice against Acadia. It was, as Murray Beck pointed out, a question of different conclusions drawn from different premises. The Baptists were anything but even-handed; they turned on Howe and others in April and May 1842 in their powerful weekly, the <em>Christian Messenger<\/em>. They threatened Howe and Young, both new members of the Executive Council, with dire consequences if they had the temerity to oppose a capital grant to Acadia College. By the end of 1842 Howe was beginning to wonder if Acadia was not in league with his Tory rivals. That meant increased strain in the relations between Howe and J.W. Johnston, the Baptist Tory who was attorney general.<\/p>\n<p>Since October 1840 Nova Scotia had had a coalition Executive Council put together by the magic wand of the governor general, Charles Poulett Thomson, who came down from Quebec to work it out with Lord Falkland, the new lieutenant-governor. The Executive Council was made into a combination of Tories and Reformers, with a Tory preponderance. Working under that arrangement was not going to be easy, with the college question at the boiling point and the attorney general an active Baptist.<\/p>\n<p>The college question thus came before the Assembly in 1843 compounded and exacerbated by utterances in the newspapers, and by some intemperateness on both sides. The <em>Novascotian<\/em> put it in the context of the whole educational system of Nova Scotia: of a population of two hundred and fifty thousand, probably thirty thousand children were growing up without the basic rudiments of education, and here was the legislature squandering \u00a31,800 a year on four colleges. And the worst of it was that everyone knew the Methodists and Presbyterians were waiting, thinking in due course that they, too, would get their slice of the cake. Richard Nugent, the Catholic editor of the <em>Novascotian<\/em>, became more annoyed the more he thought about it:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">We must confess ourselves astonished at the credulity or infatuation of our Countrymen, and lament the mistaken policy of our public men which gave rise to the present deplorable state of the Educational affairs of the Province&#8230; What is to be done? Shall we go on, ad infinitum creating College after College&#8230;? Or, shall we pause here, and enquire, seriously, &#8211; where the evil will end?<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 20 Feb. 1843.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-26\" href=\"#footnote-31-26\" aria-label=\"Footnote 26\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[26]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>That certainly stirred up a row. The Assembly opened a debate two days later to consider the whole question of colleges. Tory J.J. Marshall argued that it was impossible to support a general college and suppress the others. The best policy was to wait until such a college were asked for. For the present, two-thirds of Nova Scotia would be against it. Howe replied that in 1842 all the colleges were put on the same level, and all were satisfied but Acadia. The Baptists had made the table groan with petitions for more money, and now the Methodists and Presbyterians were getting restless. What did Nova Scotia need with so many colleges? Switzerland had one college for every four hundred thousand people. From Committee of the Whole came the following: \u201cResolved, that the policy, heretofore pursued, of chartering and endowing Collegiate Institutions, of a Sectarian or Denominational Character is unsound, and ought to be abandoned.\u201d Attempts were made to stop that decisive declaration. Fairbanks of Queen\u2019s County, a Tory, agreed with Marshall; he proposed that however desirable it might be to have one college free of sectarian control, yet \u201cexperience has shown the impracticability of uniting the various denominations of Christians in such a manner, and that a different Policy having been forced upon the House, and hitherto recognized and adopted &#8230; it would be unwise and unjust to prostrate those Institutions.\u201d That was defeated, and the main motion carried. A committee of Howe, William Annand, Huntingdon, and others was charged with drafting a bill that would establish the One College principle once and for all. The Baptists sought vainly to be heard. A motion \u201cfounding one General College upon the ruin of all others &#8230; unless sanctioned by the cordial feelings and wishes of the population, cannot be effected\u201d received the three-months\u2019 hoist. That was after midnight on 27 March 1843, and the debate finally adjourned at 1:30am.<a id=\"reffn_27\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_27\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1843, 22 Feb. to 27 Mar., pp. 421-513. The debate of 20 Mar. is reported extensively (though even at that much condensed) in the Novascotian, 17 Apr. 1843.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-27\" href=\"#footnote-31-27\" aria-label=\"Footnote 27\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[27]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>It was a wrenching debate, with little charity and no quarter given. The Baptists were disposed to rail at anyone who got in their way, who might choose to advocate establishing common schools as against, as the <em>Novascotian<\/em> bluntly put it, \u201ca set of worthless denominational Colleges with half-read Professors.\u201d The legislature was becoming a battleground of friends and supporters of each. The more the Baptists rose in their wrath, the more Howe became aroused. Some Baptists, he said, were worse than Roman Catholics when it came to persecution. Indeed, if we had to have a pope, he went on, he would rather have one in Rome than in Wolfville; and one who would look the part, in gorgeous and solemn robes, not a Baptist one in black coat and tights.<a id=\"reffn_28\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_28\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 20 Mar. 1843, editorial; ibid., 17 Apr. 1843, reporting debates for 20 Mar.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-28\" href=\"#footnote-31-28\" aria-label=\"Footnote 28\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[28]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The debate ended because the committee could not agree on where that single college would be, so that, finally, nothing was done. The Legislative Council had accepted none of it; the grants passed in 1842 were still intact; they would expire in another two and a half years, in Dalhousie\u2019s case in one and a half. The question would now go to a broader forum.<\/p>\n<p><strong>&#8220;One College&#8221; in the Election of 1843<\/strong><br \/>\nThe discussion about One College went on that summer and fall of 1843 in the newspapers and ultimately on the hustings. On Wednesday, 25 September 1843 a large meeting was held in Mason\u2019s Hall, Halifax to discuss establishing one \u201cliberal and respectable Provincial College.\u201d G.R. Young had visited McGill during the summer, and concluded that it was important to consider having a medical school in Halifax. It was not an impossible dream, he said. Let each sect train its own clergy, by all means, but let general education, classics, mathematics, law, medicine, be taught at one good central college. The Nova Scotian denominational colleges were already costing \u00a35,000 to \u00a36,000 a year; it was a system that went \u201cagainst the spirit of the age.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Howe, too, pointed out the advantages of size, substance, and the power that went with them. King\u2019s, he said, although it had been in existence for half a century, was nothing. A degree from King\u2019s had no weight at all; outside of Nova Scotia it was worth no more than the parchment it was written on. It was time, he said, to call a halt to building up these feudal, sectarian, power centres. Why, they \u201cwere like feudal castles in the olden time, each the rallying point of a party whose only object was to strengthen their own position &#8230; and levy contributions on the public.\u201d Howe particularly deplored the spectacle of \u201cthese peripatetic, writing, wrangling, grasping Professors\u201d riding over the countryside, stirring up trouble. No old Baptist, not even Henry Alline, said Howe, stirred up so much strife as arrogant professors of philosophy and religion had done in the past six years. Edmund Crawley, lean, tall, dressed in black, had been seen in so many places around the province that he was called \u201cGalloping Tongs.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 9 Oct. 1843.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-29\" href=\"#footnote-31-29\" aria-label=\"Footnote 29\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[29]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0There were a number of resolutions put before the Mason\u2019s Hall meeting, but the most important one, which went forward with others to the Assembly, was as follows:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Resolved, therefore, that this meeting earnestly suggest a concentration of the energy and means of the true friends of Education, both in the Capital and the Country to oppose a system which is intended to lead to the erection and support of five or six weak and inefficient Institutions under the name of Colleges, and to encourage the Legislature to endow one Central College, which from the number of its professors, the branches of varied learning taught, its Library and Museum, will enable the Youth of Nova Scotia to receive a liberal education at home, instead of being sent, as under the present and contemplated Sectarian system, to be educated abroad.<a id=\"reffn_30\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_30\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 2 Oct. 1843.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-30\" href=\"#footnote-31-30\" aria-label=\"Footnote 30\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[30]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Public meetings in a similar vein went on into October. One of the biggest was Onslow, on Monday, 9 October. The Novascotian counted 113 wagons, gigs, and saddle horses tied up outside the Presbyterian meeting house to hear speakers on the One College question. There was another at Stewiacke that same day, and at Londonderry a fortnight later. The debates raged on and went straight into the general election, called at the end of October.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Novascotian, 16 Oct. 1843, reporting the Onslow meeting; Novascotian, 6 Nov. 1843, reporting Stewiacke meeting.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-31\" href=\"#footnote-31-31\" aria-label=\"Footnote 31\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[31]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The election call was mainly Lord Falkand\u2019s doing, for he now despaired of being able to carry any government measures through the Assembly, That election was also where the One College movement flagged and failed. Where the issue surfaced, as it did in a number of central constituencies, the arguments used by the <em>Christian Messenger<\/em> came home to roost &#8211; that is, if Howe and the Reformers won, Acadia College would get nothing from the Assembly but the odd crumb, and the new Roman Catholic college of St. Mary\u2019s would fare no better. King\u2019s would get the same treatment. It was in some ways a battle of the periphery against the capital, and the capital lost; where the college question intruded, the Reformers and the One College principle lost ground. In the election that November the Reformers lost their majority in the Assembly to the Tories, who now had a majority of one. Eight of the new Tory seats were in the Baptist belt, from Annapolis through Kings into Colchester. After the appointment to the Council of J.W. Johnston\u2019s brother-in-law, Mather Almon, in December, Howe resigned from the Council, and the coalition regime was at an end.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Christian Messenger (Halifax), 21 July, 6 Oct. 1843; J. Murray Beck, Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, pp. 259, 265. See also Beck\u2019s Politics, vol. 1: 123.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-32\" href=\"#footnote-31-32\" aria-label=\"Footnote 32\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[32]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p><strong>The Last Years of McCulloch&#8217;s Dalhousie<\/strong><br \/>\nDalhousie College carried on valiantly, even hopefully. In December 1842 it struck a code of rules to govern the college. The terms were changed to accommodate local tastes and exigencies. The BA was now laid down as three years of two terms each, the terms beginning in the fourth Tuesday of January to 1 July, and from 1 September to 15 December. The admission age was set at a minimum of fourteen years. Students were to wear caps and gowns, after the King\u2019s College fashion. Dalhousie College was to be conducted on the principle that \u201centire liberality in point of Religion\u201d was compatible with cultivating \u201csentiments of piety and virtue.\u201d The professorships were to be open to \u201cany religious denomination\u201d; there were to be no religious tests; and \u201call the awards and honours of the Institution will be open to all classes without distinction.\u201d Internal governance of the college was vested in the professors collectively.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Board of Governors Minutes, 31 Dec. 1842, pp. 40-7, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-33\" href=\"#footnote-31-33\" aria-label=\"Footnote 33\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[33]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>These rules were drawn up by a committee of the new seventeen-member Board of Governors that had been appointed in May 1842 pursuant to the new 1841 act. It was rather large and clumsy, but certainly more representative than the rump of three hitherto existing. The new board reduced salaries. The president\u2019s would be \u00a3300 as of 1 January 1844. Romans, whose appointment in 1838 had created so much of the trouble in the first place, had not worked out well. He was retired as of 31 December 1842, with six months\u2019 pay. McIntosh would take over classics as well as the mathematics he already taught with an increase in salary to \u00a3200. A professor of modern languages (mainly French, Italian, and Spanish) would be added at \u00a3150.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Board of Governors Minutes, 12 Nov. 1842, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives; the new board is listed in full in Patterson, The History of Dalhousie College and University, p. 38. It met for the first time on 5 July 1842.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-34\" href=\"#footnote-31-34\" aria-label=\"Footnote 34\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[34]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_89\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-89\" style=\"width: 926px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-89\" src=\"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdal\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/29\/2023\/01\/dal-1840.jpg\" alt=\"Engraving of Grand Parade, 1840.\" width=\"926\" height=\"519\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-89\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Meeting of the Halifax Tandem Club, on the Grand Parade in front of Dalhousie College, about 1840. A coloured version of this engraving was presented to Dalhousie in 1950.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The new board also wanted to establish clear title to the Grand Parade. The new Halifax City Council had passed a resolution stating that the railing on the upper, Argyle Street side of the Parade was a hazard and should be fixed. Dalhousie had thought it was the city\u2019s responsibility, but the city demurred, so Dalhousie undertook to get the work done. The military still had occasional parades there, which got in the way of lectures from time to time, but the board thought it would not interfere with this ancient use, at least for the present. The attorney general was asked about the title to the Parade; J.W. Johnston\u2019s report is not extant, but it must have given the governors pause, for they agreed to ask for a new grant of the \u201ccollege lands.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Board of Governors Minutes, 8 Mar., 28 Apr. 1843, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-35\" href=\"#footnote-31-35\" aria-label=\"Footnote 35\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[35]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In early August 1843 Lorenzo Lacoste, the new professor of modern languages, arrived from New York. He was the most promising candidate, the board evidently finding his New York references satisfactory. He was a quiet man, well liked in his Halifax boarding house, unobtrusive, of regular habits, his books and clothes in good order. On 22 August he came home in mid-afternoon, walked in the garden with the owner for half an hour, then went out after dinner. He did not return. He was found at first light by a North-West Arm farmer, who discovered Lacoste floating in the water, his throat cut, evidently self-inflicted. One or two witnesses at the inquest testified that they had seen him acting strangely. The coroner\u2019s jury concluded that he had committed suicide while \u201cinsane and distracted.\u201d The cause was probably some private agony that Lacoste found too hard to bear. It might have been Dalhousie College itself, although Lord Falkland said that Lacoste was pleased with his situation. Lord Falkland also asked his London friend, rather laconically, that since Lacoste had committed suicide, could another professor of modern languages be recommended?<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Coroner\u2019s report is dated 23 Aug. 1843, RG 41, vol. 19 (1843) no. 8, Nova Scotia Archives. This material has been brought to my attention by Professor John Barnstead, Department of Russian, Dalhousie University, to whom I am most grateful; Board of Governors Correspondence, Lord Falkland to P. Rolandi, London, 29 Sept. 1843, UA-1, Box 27, Folder 7, Dalhousie University Archives. Peter Rolandi was a foreign book specialist in London.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-36\" href=\"#footnote-31-36\" aria-label=\"Footnote 36\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[36]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>At that time McCulloch was in western Nova Scotia gathering minerals and other specimens for his natural history collection. He had sold his first one in the 1820s and was building a second. His summer collecting time was shortened now, Dalhousie opening on the first Monday in September. McCulloch avoided the polemics of his old days in Pictou; he went about his business without apparent rancour, even amid the bitter debates of 1842 and 1843 about One College. He said nothing against the Baptists; he had preached more than once at Granville Street Baptist Church. He told a friend he was getting like an old mare he remembered in Truro: she hated to move so much that the only way to persuade her to do so was to stick a pin in her shoulder; when the pain of the pin was worse than the pain of progression, then would the mare move.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Letter from Thomas McCulloch to Rev. John Campbell, at St. Mary\u2019s, 4 July 1841, vol. 553, Thomas McCulloch Papers, Nova Scotia Archives. McCulloch was using the metaphor to apply to letter writing; I have extended the metaphor, I hope not unwisely.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-37\" href=\"#footnote-31-37\" aria-label=\"Footnote 37\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[37]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0He had gone to Scotland in the summer of 1842 to see old correspondents and friends for the first time since 1825-6. As often happens with returning emigres, he discovered soon enough that the river is never the same twice, that the world he had known had changed beyond his comfortable accommodation with it. Scotland was no longer home. He was glad to come back to Halifax, bringing with him his young niece to marry his son William.<\/p>\n<p>Dalhousie College opened on Monday, 4 September. McCulloch was taken ill the Friday before. He went to his classes on opening day but came home exhausted. Dr. Grigor of the Dalhousie board was called the next day, and thought McCulloch had symptoms of typhus. He slowly got weaker, and died on the Saturday evening of 9 September, as the five o\u2019clock gun from the Citadel sounded. His son, holding him, felt his \u201cfather\u2019s last breath pass gently over my hand.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"William McCulloch, The Life of Thomas McCulloch, D.D. Pictou [ed. by T.W. and J.W. McCulloch] (Truro, NS 1920), pp. 192-3.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-38\" href=\"#footnote-31-38\" aria-label=\"Footnote 38\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[38]<\/sup><\/a><a id=\"reffn_38\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_38\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>McMulloch\u2019s dying was more peaceful than most of his living. His energy, confidence, ability, combined to make him formidable; as the <em>Acadian Recorder<\/em> put it, he was \u201cgifted with masterly wit and reasoning powers of the highest order; few writers were able to cope with him.\u201d That gets precisely at his eristic style; his was not a tender soul, and his integrity made compromise difficult. Mercy was a Christian virtue he recognized rather than practised. The real power of his mind is felt in his <em>Stepsure Letters<\/em>, that ironic, often sardonic comment on men, women, and manners in Nova Scotia. It is also seen in his students. The best epitaph came from one, many years afterward: \u201cI didn\u2019t know his greatness until I heard the professors at the University of Edinburgh.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The student was George Patterson, in A History of the County of Pictou, Nova Scotia (Montreal 1877), pp. 330-1. The Stepsure Letters were first published in the Acadian Recorder in 1821-2, reprinted in 1862, and in more recent years by J.A. Irving and D.G. Lochhead ([Toronto] 1960).\" id=\"return-footnote-31-39\" href=\"#footnote-31-39\" aria-label=\"Footnote 39\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[39]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Dalhousie College recognized the necessity of appointing a successor as soon as one could be found. They would need at least \u00a3300 annual income to do so. They agreed to appeal to the city, each member of the board taking on one of the six wards, to induce the inhabitants to \u201ccontribute liberally towards its [Dalhousie College\u2019s] support.\u201d It was not successful; the 1840s were a difficult and narrow time financially, and everyone seemed pinched by it. By the end of 1843 Dalhousie College seemed to be unravelling at the edges. It was lacking that strong coherence that McCulloch\u2019s presence, his mind, his range, his reputation, had given the college. Then Professor McIntosh applied for and got leave to return to Scotland, ostensibly on business, in reality to look for another post. He was also asked to look for a new president in Scotland. Ultimately McIntosh pushed his demands for leave too far, and was allowed to resign. He had been replaced with McCulloch\u2019s son Thomas, much less decisive than his father, and by no means presidential material.<a id=\"reffn_40\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_40\"><\/a><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Board of Governors Minutes, 22 Sept., 30 Dec. 1843, 27 Mar. 1844, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-40\" href=\"#footnote-31-40\" aria-label=\"Footnote 40\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[40]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0At the time of McCulloch\u2019s death the college was living close to the bone, its financial stability precarious. Ere long something had to happen: the grants given by the Assembly in 1842 would terminate for Dalhousie on 1 January 1845. The One College principle had been decided in March 1843 by seven votes, but it had never received legislative approval and it had been a lively issue all that year and into the November general election. The House left it alone in 1844; it was divisive enough without opening it up gratuitously.<\/p>\n<p>By 1845, however, the House could not avoid dealing with the question. The Reformers who had provided the basic support for One College, who had carried it in 1843, now found themselves at a disadvantage. They had lost control of the Assembly. College grants were renewed in 1845, at about two-thirds their former level, but with no grant at all to Dalhousie. Joseph Howe tried to stop all the grants by an amendment condemning sectarian colleges, but it was defeated decisively. Votes of money to Acadia, St. Mary\u2019s, Pictou Academy, and to Sackville Academy in New Brunswick (the future Methodist college of Mount Allison), were passed mostly by solid majorities. Attempts by Huntingdon to rescind them the next day failed narrowly; the rescinding of the permanent grant to King\u2019s failed by one vote.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1845, 31 Mar., 1 Apr., pp. 321-6.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-41\" href=\"#footnote-31-41\" aria-label=\"Footnote 41\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[41]<\/sup><\/a><a id=\"reffn_41\" href=\"https:\/\/dalhousie-libraries-ebooks.gitbooks.io\/the-lives-of-dalhousie-university-volume-one-1818\/content\/chapter-3.html#fn_41\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Dalhousie Board of Governors now had little choice. Their 1845 assets were \u00a39,342.11s.1d. sterling, in 3 per cent Consols in London, yielding an annual income of \u00a3280 sterling. They had, since 5 April 1845, the British Post Office paying \u00a3100 sterling annual rent for the lower corner at Duke and Barrington. The Mechanics Institute occupying the west wing had had it rent free since 1833, as did the Infant School. Thus Dalhousie\u2019s gross annual income was now \u00a3380 sterling, (\u00a3450 Halifax currency). Salaries took up \u00a3650. This was not the arithmetic of success. With the legislative grant ended on 31 December 1844, with McCulloch dead, there was little hope of carrying on. It had not in fact been doing well. It had no library. Its scientific apparatus was valued at \u00a3100. It had perhaps sixteen students. The other colleges looked better than Dalhousie: Acadia had twenty-seven students, St. Mary\u2019s forty to eighty, depending on how they were counted; King\u2019s had twenty-two. All had libraries, St. Mary\u2019s reporting fifteen hundred books, Acadia, five hundred. So the Dalhousie board\u2019s resolution of 3 June 1845 was sensible, timely, and devastating: \u201cThat in consequence of the discontinuance of the Provincial Grant it is expedient to shut up the college for the present and not to fill up the vacancies in the professorships. And that it is advisable to let the Funds of the Institution to accumulate.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1845, Appendix 12, pp. 43-6; Board of Governors Minutes, 13 June 1845, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives.\" id=\"return-footnote-31-42\" href=\"#footnote-31-42\" aria-label=\"Footnote 42\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[42]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Thus did the 1838 opening of Dalhousie College come, ingloriously, to an end. G.R. Young, William Young, Huntingdon, and Howe had tried to buttress Dalhousie. All had failed. What lay behind that failure was Dalhousie\u2019s liberal and unsectarian character. It had no constituency. As Gaius Lewis, Liberal MLA for Cumberland put it, \u201cit seemed [that it was] not owned by any.\u201d What he meant by that was painfully obvious: the others &#8211; King\u2019s, Acadia, St. Mary\u2019s, and now Mount Allison in New Brunswick &#8211; were \u201cowned,\u201d by Anglicans, Baptists, Catholics, and Methodists, respectively. As for the Presbyterians, they had never \u201cowned\u201d Dalhousie, had never professed to, though the first appointments of 1838 had given that impression. By 1847 Dalhousie College was a community centre and a government office building, its college state neatly summed up in a report to the Assembly that year:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Professors. &#8211; None<br \/>\nStudents attending Lectures. &#8211; None<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<hr class=\"before-footnotes clear\" \/><div class=\"footnotes\"><ol><li id=\"footnote-31-1\">J. Murray Beck, Politics of Nova Scotia, Vol. 1, 1710-1896 (Tantallon 1985), p. 103: J. Murray Beck, Joseph Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848 (Kingston and Montreal 1982), pp. 102-3; D.C. Harvey, <a href=\"http:\/\/hdl.handle.net\/10222\/62186\">\u201cThe Intellectual Awakening of Nova Scotia,\u201d Dalhousie Review 13, no. 1 (April 1933), pp. 1-22<\/a>. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-1\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 1\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-2\">See J. Murray Beck, \u201cS.G.W. Archibald,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vii: 21-5. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-2\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 2\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-3\">Letter from McCulloch to Mitchell, 6 Nov. 1834, from Pictou, and 23 Nov. 1835, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives; Letter from McCulloch to John Mitchell (the father of James) June 1838, from Pictou, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-3\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 3\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-4\">Letter from C.D. Archibald to McCulloch, 18 Nov. 1837, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-4\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 4\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-5\">Letter from C.D. Archibald to McCulloch, 21 Mar. 1838, private, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, MGI, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-5\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 5\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-6\">Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1838, 16 Mar., p. 350; Letter from Dickson to McCulloch, 5 Apr. 1838, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 141, Nova Scotia Archives. Dickson was the brother-in-law of S.G.W. Archibald. See Allan C. Dunlop, \u201cThomas Dickson,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, viii: 222. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-6\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 6\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-7\">Letters from Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 28 Mar., 10 Apr. 1838, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 140, Nova Scotia Archives; Novascotian, 12 Apr. 1838, reporting on the Legislative Council for 27 Mar. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-7\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 7\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-8\">Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives, E.A. Crawley, \u201cAn Outline suggesting some principles and regulations for putting Dalhousie College into active operation,\u201d n.d. [c. 20 Apr. 1838]. The date is made clear from McCulloch\u2019s letter to Charles Archibald of 24 Apr. 1838. See also Barry Moody, \u201cEdmund Ahern Crawley,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography xi: 214-15; Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 21 Mar. 1838, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives. Crawley\u2019s discussion with Charles Wallace is referred to in Crawley\u2019s interview before the Assembly, 13 Feb. 1839, in the debates for that day, reported in Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-8\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 8\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-9\">Letter from McCulloch to Charles Archibald, 24 Apr. 1838, from Pictou, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 554, Nova Scotia Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-9\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 9\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-10\">On McCulloch\u2019s appointment there is a singular touch of animus in the board minutes. Deleted at the request of the lieutenant-governor was the statement that \u201cthe Revd. Thomas MacCulloch ... is hereby appointed President.\u201d Substituted was \u201cthe Revd. Dr. T. MacCulloch who for the present is appointed President.\u201d See Board of Governors Minutes, 9 Mar., 6 Aug., 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives; Letter from Charles Archibald to McCulloch, 10 Apr. 1838, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, no. 140, Nova Scotia Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-10\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 10\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-11\">Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 550, Nova Scotia Archives; Memorial of Synod of Nova Scotia, 11 Aug. 1838. The Pictou Observer and Eastern Advertiser, 11 Sept. 1838, a Kirk supporter, had a strong anti-McCulloch editorial; Board of Governors Minutes, 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-11\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 11\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-12\">Novascotian, 27 Sept. 1838, \u201cDalhousie College - No. 1.\u201d There followed three others, one a week, up to 18 Oct. 1838. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-12\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 12\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-13\">Letter from McCulloch to John Mitchell, 26 May 1839, from Halifax, Thomas McCulloch Papers, vol. 553, Nova Scotia Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-13\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 13\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-14\">The source of this and the preceding paragraph is G.G. Patterson, The History of Dalhousie College and University (Halifax 1887), pp. 32-6. The writer he quotes from was \u201can old Dalhousian\u201d; and Patterson\u2019s father, the Reverend George Patterson fits perfectly, being both at Pictou Academy and Dalhousie College in exactly those years. After the History came out, some further reflections occurred to George Patterson, Sr., and these were duly published in the <a href=\"http:\/\/hdl.handle.net\/10222\/28220\">Dalhousie Gazette, 2 Dec. 1887<\/a>, pp. 32-3, as a letter from the son. See also Allan Dunlop, \u201cGeorge Patterson,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, XII: 828-9. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-14\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 14\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-15\">See W.B. Hamilton, \u201cEducation, Politics and Reform in Nova Scotia 1800-1848\u201d (PH.D. thesis, University of Western Ontario 1970), pp. 265-6. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-15\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 15\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-16\">Novascotian, 31 Jan. 1839, reporting Assembly debates for 18 Jan. 1839. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-16\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 16\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-17\">Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839, reporting debates for 13 Feb.; also Board of Governors Minutes, 15 Sept. 1838, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives. Details are set out in Appendix 30, Nova Scotia, Assembly, Journals 1839, pp. 55ff. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-17\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 17\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-18\">Novascotian, 21 Mar. 1839, reporting debates for 13, 14, and 20 Feb. 1839. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-18\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 18\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-19\">Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1839, 8 Mar., pp. 561-2. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-19\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 19\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-20\">Nova Scotia Statutes, 3 Vic. cap. 7. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-20\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 20\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-21\">Novascotian, 19 Mar. 1840, reporting Assembly debates for 14 Feb. See also J. Murray Beck, Joseph Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, p. 204. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-21\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 21\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-22\">Nova Scotia Legislative Council, Journals 1840, 15 Feb., pp. 43-4. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-22\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 22\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-23\">Novascotian, 16 Apr. 1849, reporting Assembly debates for 26 Feb. The account in the Halifax British Colonist suggests that Huntingdon was in a furious rage: \u201cHe doubled his fist, and shook it, at his arm\u2019s length, in the direction where the Gentlemen he alluded to [Crawley] stood among the spectators below the bar.\u201d British Colonist, 3 Mar. 1849 reporting debates of 26 Feb. Huntingdon had also a falling out with Howe that same session. See A.A. MacKenzie, \u201cHerbert Huntingdon,\u201d Dictionary of Canadian Biography, viii: 415-18. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-23\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 23\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-24\">This story can be traced in Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1842, 5-8 Mar., pp. 300-12; Howe comments on it later in the Novascotian, 24 Nov. 1842. See J. Murray Beck, Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, pp. 249-50. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-24\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 24\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-25\">This is from G.W. McLelan\u2019s speech in Mason Hall, Halifax, 25 Sept. 1843, reported in the Novascotian, 16 Oct. 1843. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-25\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 25\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-26\">Novascotian, 20 Feb. 1843. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-26\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 26\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-27\">Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1843, 22 Feb. to 27 Mar., pp. 421-513. The debate of 20 Mar. is reported extensively (though even at that much condensed) in the Novascotian, 17 Apr. 1843. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-27\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 27\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-28\">Novascotian, 20 Mar. 1843, editorial; ibid., 17 Apr. 1843, reporting debates for 20 Mar. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-28\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 28\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-29\">Novascotian, 9 Oct. 1843. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-29\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 29\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-30\">Novascotian, 2 Oct. 1843. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-30\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 30\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-31\">Novascotian, 16 Oct. 1843, reporting the Onslow meeting; Novascotian, 6 Nov. 1843, reporting Stewiacke meeting. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-31\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 31\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-32\">Christian Messenger (Halifax), 21 July, 6 Oct. 1843; J. Murray Beck, Howe: Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, pp. 259, 265. See also Beck\u2019s Politics, vol. 1: 123. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-32\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 32\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-33\">Board of Governors Minutes, 31 Dec. 1842, pp. 40-7, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-33\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 33\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-34\">Board of Governors Minutes, 12 Nov. 1842, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives; the new board is listed in full in Patterson, The History of Dalhousie College and University, p. 38. It met for the first time on 5 July 1842. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-34\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 34\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-35\">Board of Governors Minutes, 8 Mar., 28 Apr. 1843, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-35\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 35\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-36\">Coroner\u2019s report is dated 23 Aug. 1843, RG 41, vol. 19 (1843) no. 8, Nova Scotia Archives. This material has been brought to my attention by Professor John Barnstead, Department of Russian, Dalhousie University, to whom I am most grateful; Board of Governors Correspondence, Lord Falkland to P. Rolandi, London, 29 Sept. 1843, UA-1, Box 27, Folder 7, Dalhousie University Archives. Peter Rolandi was a foreign book specialist in London. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-36\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 36\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-37\">Letter from Thomas McCulloch to Rev. John Campbell, at St. Mary\u2019s, 4 July 1841, vol. 553, Thomas McCulloch Papers, Nova Scotia Archives. McCulloch was using the metaphor to apply to letter writing; I have extended the metaphor, I hope not unwisely. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-37\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 37\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-38\">William McCulloch, The Life of Thomas McCulloch, D.D. Pictou [ed. by T.W. and J.W. McCulloch] (Truro, NS 1920), pp. 192-3. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-38\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 38\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-39\">The student was George Patterson, in A History of the County of Pictou, Nova Scotia (Montreal 1877), pp. 330-1. The Stepsure Letters were first published in the Acadian Recorder in 1821-2, reprinted in 1862, and in more recent years by J.A. Irving and D.G. Lochhead ([Toronto] 1960). <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-39\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 39\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-40\">Board of Governors Minutes, 22 Sept., 30 Dec. 1843, 27 Mar. 1844, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-40\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 40\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-41\">Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1845, 31 Mar., 1 Apr., pp. 321-6. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-41\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 41\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-31-42\">Nova Scotia Assembly, Journals 1845, Appendix 12, pp. 43-6; Board of Governors Minutes, 13 June 1845, UA-1, Box 14, Folder 2, Dalhousie University Archives. <a href=\"#return-footnote-31-42\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 42\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div>","protected":false},"author":5,"menu_order":1,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[],"license":[],"part":21,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/31"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/31\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":269,"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/31\/revisions\/269"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/21"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/31\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=31"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=31"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=31"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/digitaleditions.library.dal.ca\/livesofdalv1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=31"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}