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Number 61, Fall / Winter 2007
Bliss Carman
and Book Design in the 1890s
Margaret Lock
More Dingbats, Ornaments
and Fanciful Initials
Tim Inkster
A Rogue's Gallery
of the Canadian Book
and Printing Arts
featuring William Lyon Mackenzie
Includes a letterpress
keepsake of a poem
by Bliss Carman
printed by Nicholas Kennedy
at Trip Print Press
in Toronto
Other Rogues
in the series
Will Rueter
Stan Bevington
Margaret and Fred Lock
Jan and Crispin Elsted
George A Walker
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A Rogue's Gallery
of the Canadian Book and Printing Arts
William Lyon Mackenzie

William Lyon Mackenzie was born at Dundee, Scotland, in 1795.
He emigrated to York (Toronto) in 1820 and later relocated to Queenston
where his distaste for the worst abuses of the Family Compact
led him to abandon various lucrative mercantile pursuits
in favour of the riskier business of publishing, and politics.
On Tuesday, 18 May 1824, the first issue of The Colonial Advocate and Journal of Agriculture,
Manufacture and Commerce was published. The newspaper included agricultural advice, poems, anecdotes,
classified advertising, current events and, most important, Mackenzie's own provocative rhetoric,
which did not sit well
with the politicians of the day. At the time of the Advocate's first appearance, work had just begun
at Queenston on a monument to the victorious General Isaac Brock. During a ceremony
for the laying of the cornerstone,
a bottle containing a copy of the Colonial Advocate was placed in the foundation stone.
Sir Peregrine Maitland, Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada,
subsequently ordered construction on the monument stopped, and a large quantity of the newly erected
masonry uplifted, in order to remove what he called a `colonial rag'.
On 18 November 1824, Mackenzie moved back to York, where his newspaper courted
a potentially larger circulation. It also attracted the unwelcome notice of
fifteen young men from the privileged class who raided the printing office disguised
(poorly) as natives, damaged the printing press, and threw several cases of monotype
into Lake Ontario in 1826.
In 1828 Mackenzie was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada, from which
he was expelled on six occasions for libel, each time being re-elected.
In 1837 he led the ill-considered and spectacularly ineffectual Upper Canada Rebellion
against Sir Francis Bond Head and the Family Compact. His `rebellion' was quickly snuffed out.
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