Last August, a longstanding, worthy
project came to completion in the Eastern Townships (l'Estrie) of
Quebec. Interested parties gathered to re-consecrate the last resting
place of a Canadian hero, Sir John Johnson, Bt, UE. The Société
de restauration du patrimoine Johnson
had
every right to feel proud of their accomplishment.
Formed
by members of the Sir John
Johnson Centennial Branch of the United Empire Loyalists Association
of Canada (UELAC) and Société
d'histoire du Haut-Richelieu, with the cooperation of Quebec's
Ministère de la Culture et des Communications (MCCQ) and
archaeologists, the Société
had restored the long derelict burial place.
Why was this necessary?
Sir John died in 1830; he and other family
members were buried at Mount Johnson (now known as Mont
Saint-Grégoire)
near the rural residence he favoured in his last years. The location
is east of Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu. This 1940s photo taken by the 6th Baronet shows how the
stone vault became forgotten and deteriorated as the Johnson property
changed hands; nature and local farming took its course. Vandalism
ensured that the inscribed stones were scattered. It seems bizarre,
but the site was so rundown in the 1950s it was bulldozed into a pit
in the belief that it was no more than a pile of old rubble.
Years
later it was difficult to identify the original site but bones were
recovered among the stones, thanks to the dedicated persistence of
the Société,
a team of archaeologists, and many individuals.
The nineteenth-century painting likely helped in the reconstruction
process. Details of the restoration story can be seen on the Sir John Johnson Centennial Branch website.
Painting of the vault by Henry Richard
Bunnett, 1885; McCord Museum, Montreal
|
Among
the surviving inscriptions were:
Sir
John Johnson, second baronet, born in 1742 at Fort Johnson, New York,
died in Montreal on January 4, 1830 in his 88th year;
Lady
Mary "Polly" Johnson nee Watts, wife of Sir John Johnson,
died on August 7, 1815.
Sir
John's gravestone had been found earlier and is mounted at the
Mississquoi Museum, Stanbridge East, Quebec. Researchers used
newspaper notices among other records to estimate there were at least
a half-dozen burials in the old vault.
Sir John Johnson in the 1790s, McCord Museum, Montreal |
Briefly,
John Johnson was born in 1741, son of Mohawk Valley entrepreneur and
colonial Superintendent of Northern Indians William Johnson (later
Sir William, 1st Baronet of New York) and Catherine Weissenberg. Sir
John was knighted by King George III during an extended visit to the
British Isles 1765-1767, then succeeded to the baronetcy on his
father's death.
Gavin Watt's 2006 edition is available from Global Genealogy |
He
is best known as the Loyalist leader who, as the American
Revolutionary War began, escaped to Quebec to form the King's Royal
Regiment of New York in 1776. The KRRNY (aka Royal Yorkers) was the foremost Loyalist Corps in the Northern Command throughout the conflict.
Sir
John was also esteemed for his commitment to native allies as
Inspector General of the Six Nations and later, as head of the Indian
Department. Post-war, Sir John acquired extensive real estate in
Lower and Upper Canada with several homes finer than that at Mount
Johnson ― including his
Montreal residence and manor homes at St. Andrews, Quebec, and
Williamstown, Ontario (the former burned; the latter is preserved as
a museum). Much more detail is in the Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
In
a solemn service the excavated remains were carried in two funeral
urns to their restored resting place accompanied by members of the
recreated King's Royal Yorkers among other dignitaries. It's
unfortunate that media coverage of the event is hard to come by; see the Sir John Johnson Centennial Branch Fall
2014 Newsletter
for photographs and more of the re-consecration.
An
important figure in eighteenth-century Canadian history gets some
overdue respect.
©
2015
Brenda Dougall Merriman
1 comment:
Great article. Tks, Brenda. For other details of the struggle to restore and the family history, look to the website of the SJJC Branch UELAC (http://www.uelac.org/SirJohnJohnson/index.php)
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