OCR
CHAPTER XLIV. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, BROCKVILLE. THE BUELL FAMILY. Among the United Empire Loyalists who sought refuge in Canada were the original pioneers of the shanty was built upon the site of Brockville, down to the present time, the descendants have been intimately associated with the control of public affairs, not only in the town, but also throughout the county. William Buell, Sr., was of English descent, both upon his father and mother’s side. He was the son of Timothy Buell and his wife, Mercy Peters, and was born at Hebron, in the then English Colony of Connecticut, on the sth of October, 1751. His mother was a descendant of the Rev. Dr. Samuel Peters, who at the commencement of the American Revolution was Bishop of Connecticut, and wrote a history of that colony, which has recently been republished under the editorship of his greatgrandson, S. Jarvis McCormick, Esq. When the war broke out, Mr. Buell remained loyal to the British Crown, and as soon as was practicable made his way through the wilderness to Montreal, where he received an ensign s commission in the “ King’s Rangers,” subsequently becoming lieutenant. His service extended over a period of seven years, and during a portion of the time he acted as quarter-master. He was frequently detailed to carry important despatches from the authorities in Canada to the British commander at New York,and on many occasions met with hairthe insurgents, but succeeded in effecting his escape, and was also present at the surrender of General Burgoyne. On the roth of March, 1782, he was married at St. Johns, Lower Canada, to Martha Norton, whose father was an U. E. Loyalist who had removed to Canada from Farmington, Connecticut. A family of nine children was the result of this union. Of these children, William Buell, the younger, represented the County of Leeds in the Parliament of Upper Canada for several years. He was a Lieutenant-Colonel of the Militia, and for about twenty-five years publisher and proprietor of the Brockville RECORDER. Andrew Norton Buell, the second son, studied law, and, while a student, wrote the /frsf editorial which appeared in the Brockville RECORDER. He was for several years Treasurer of the Counties of Leeds and Grenville, and a’short time Registrar of the Court of Chancery, Clerk of the Crown and Pleas in the Court of Common Pleas, and subsequently for about twenty-five years Master and Accountant of the Court of Chancery. Phoebe Buell,adaughter, married Stephen Richards, Sr. Their eldest son, William Buell Richards, represented the County of Leeds in the Parliament of Canada, became Attorney-General, Chief Justice of the Upper Canada Court of Queen’s Bench, and afterwards Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and Deputy Governor of the Dominion, being knighted by his sovereign. His brother, the Hon. Stephen Richards, is a distinguished lawyer, and was at one time a member of the Executive Council for the Province of Ontario, and also Provincial Secretary and Commissioner of Crown Lands. Another brother, the Hon. Albert Norton Richards was the representative of South Leeds in the Parliament of Canada, and also in the House of Commons for the Dominion, Solicitor-General of the Sandfield McDonald administration, and Attorney-General for Manitoba. He is at the present time Lieutenant Governor of the Province of British Columbia.— Sarah Richards, a daughter of Stephen Richards, Sr., married John Sippel, Esq., a Civil Engineer, for many years in charge of the enlargement of the Lachine Canal and other important government works. After the termination of the Revolutionary War, Mr. Buell, Sr., was placed upon the half-pay list, and retired from military service. In 1785, accompanied by his wife, he removed to Upper Canada, settling upon the present site of the Town of Brockville, then a wilderness. He received a grant from the Crown of the land upon which the central portion of the town was subsequently built, where he settled, and erected the first house. About the year 1800, Mr. Buell, after a contest with Reuben Sherwood, a Provincial Land Surveyor, was elected a member of the House of Assembly for Upper Canada, for a term of four years. Mr. Buell donated to the Counties the land upon which the Court House was built, and also the sites for the Presbyterian, Baptist, first Methodist, and Roman Catholic Churches. His first wife died on the 7th of December, 1823, in the 61st year of her age. About the fourth year after her death, Mr. Buell married Mrs. Margaret Bernard. One daughter was the fruit of this mardent of Brockville. Mr. Buell was upright and honest, and very kind to the poor. He was generous in his character, liberal in his politics, and highly respected. He died at Brockville on the 8th day of August, 1832, in the 81st year of his age. His remains, and those