Manuscript Collection MS COLL 343 - Simcoe Family fonds

Identity area

Reference code

CA OTUTF MS COLL 343

Title

Simcoe Family fonds

Date(s)

  • 1655 - 1931 (Creation)

Level of description

Manuscript Collection

Extent and medium

36 boxes (4.55 m)
110 maps

Context area

Name of creator

(1752 - 1806)

Biographical history

The Simcoe family was part of the landed gentry of Great Britain. The family first came to prominence during the 1750s when Captain John Simcoe commanded the British vessel HMS Pembroke, which took part in the British military’s expedition to Quebec. Simcoe died of pneumonia on the vessel prior to the sieges of Louisbourg and Quebec. During his career he established connections with leading naval officers including Admiral Samuel Graves, who served as godfather for his eldest son, John Graves Simcoe.
John Graves Simcoe was born at Cotterstock, England in 1752 as the only surviving child of John and Katherine Simcoe. He was educated at Oxford and entered the army as ensign of the 35th Foot in 1770. He was posted to Boston at the beginning of the American Revolution in 1775, arriving two days after the Battle of Bunker Hill. His agitation for the creation of a special formation of light infantry led to the creation of the Queen’s Rangers in 1777, which he commanded with the rank of Major. The Rangers were active in campaigns in Pennsylvania, Richmond and Yorktown. He was invalided home in 1781 as a Lieutenant-Colonel.
Simcoe married Elizabeth Posthuma Gwillim in 1782. He spent nine years as a half-pay officer, during which time he managed the newly-purchased Wolford Lodge, pursued military promotions and appointments, and corresponded with members of his former command about land claims and problems faced by loyalists. He briefly served as a member of British Parliament from 1790 until 1791 but took little part in debates. On September 12, 1791, Simcoe received a commission to become the first Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada. The position was established following the Constitutional Act of 1791, in which the western portion of the Province of Quebec was established as a separate entity—Upper Canada—with its own Lieutenant-Governor and Assembly. Simcoe, however, was still made subordinate to Guy Carleton, who was commissioned as governor-in-chief of both Upper and Lower Canada.
Simcoe arrived in Newark (now Niagara-on-the-Lake), the capital of Upper Canada at the time, in 1792. In his capacity as lieutenant-governor of Upper Canada, Simcoe was instrumental in organizing the first civil government of the colony. In his first legislative session, he passed bills establishing British civil law, trial by jury, and a provision for jails and courthouses. Additionally, Simcoe began the process of road construction and the survey of town and rural lots on which British settlement were to be based. Simcoe passed the Act Against Slavery on July 9th, 1793, aimed at ending the sale of enslaved people by Canadians to Americans, and liberating freedom seekers entering from the United States. It did not, however, free adults who were enslaved already residing in Canada. Simcoe’s other duties included maintaining good relations with the Indigenous nations in territory ceded to the United States in 1783 .
In 1796, Simcoe returned to England on leave, and in 1797, was appointed as commander of a British expeditionary force dispatched to capture the French colony of Saint-Domingue (present day Haiti) during the Haitian Revolution. In Saint-Domingue, he was tasked with fighting against the rebellion of the island’s enslaved population that was working with the French Republic. He only spent eight months in this position and returned to England in the same year. In 1799, Simcoe accepted command of the Western District, where he organized and planned defensive measures against an expected invasion from France. In 1806, he was then appointed as commander-in-chief of India but became seriously ill during a diplomatic mission to Portugal and died shortly after returning to England.

Name of creator

(1762 - 1850)

Biographical history

Elizabeth Posthuma Simcoe was born in 1762, the daughter of Thomas Gwillim and Elizabeth Spinkes. Her father died seven months prior to her birth, and her mother died in childbirth. She was in the care of her mother’s sister, Margaret, who was married to Admiral Samuel Graves. Through this connection, she met John Graves Simcoe. Through a sizeable inheritance from her mother and father, she was able to purchase and restore Wolford Lodge, which would serve as the Simcoe family estate. She accompanied her husband to Upper Canada in 1791, alongside her two youngest children, Sophia, aged 2, and Francis, aged 3 months.
Throughout her five years in Upper Canada, Elizabeth Simcoe maintained an active social and artistic life. She was a leader in the social life of the province and served as an unofficial secretary and cartographer for her husband. She was an accomplished artist, and the time spent in Upper and Lower Canada was well-documented through her sketches and water colours. She was also an avid diarist, recording many of her experiences in the province.
In 1796, she returned to Wolford Lodge, where she would live for the remainder of her life. She remained active as an artist, and although she maintained active correspondence with friends in Upper Canada, she never returned. She died in 1850 at the age on 87.

Name of creator

(1791 - 1812)

Biographical history

Francis Gwillim Simcoe was born in 1791, accompanying his parents—John Graves Simcoe and Elizabeth Posthuma Simcoe—to Upper Canada, where he spent his infancy and early childhood. In 1793, John Graves Simcoe purchased a tract of land east of the town of York, and built a summer residence, naming it Castle Frank in his son’s honour. At age 17, he entered the British army as an Ensign, and in 1809, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant and assigned to Wellington’s army in Iberian Peninsula. He took an active part in the campaigns in Portugal and Spain and was fatally wounded during the assault on the Portuguese town of Adajos in 1812.

Name of creator

(ca. 1784 - 1865)

Biographical history

Eliza Simcoe was the eldest daughter of John Graves and Elizabeth Posthuma Simcoe. She was born ca. 1784 and lived until 1865. She resided at Wolford Lodge throughout her life, alongside her three younger sisters born before Simcoe’s term in Upper Canada. Simcoe took an active part in the promotion of the careers of other members of the family, particularly John K. Simcoe, an officer in the Royal Navy. She also worked to preserve the papers and memory of her parents. Eliza may have been responsible for the arrangement of her mother’s sketches into binders and scrap books.

Archival history

Material was donated to the University of Toronto Library in 1945 by R. Samuel McLaughlin. Prior to this, the Simcoe Family papers were held by the descendants of John Graves Simcoe. His eldest daughter, Eliza Simcoe, retained possession of them until her death in 1865. Between 1859 and 1861, a portion of the records were loaned to the Canadian Library of Parliament for arrangement and partial copying. Upon Eliza’s death, the records passed to the children of Reverend Henry Addington Simcoe, Eliza’s only surviving brother. McLaughlin purchased the records from these descendants and donated them in their entirety to the University of Toronto Library.
In 1952, the Simcoe Papers and three other collections belonging to the University of Toronto Library, were sent on indefinite loan to the Archives of Ontario, as the University of Toronto Library did not have the proper facilities to care for them at the time.
In 2024, the material was transferred back to the Rare Books and Special Collections Department at the University of Toronto and kept at the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library.

Immediate source of acquisition or transfer

Content and structure area

Scope and content

This accession consists of textual and cartographic materials documenting the lives of several members of the Simcoe family in the United Kingdom and Canada. It covers the activities of four members of the Simcoe family, John Graves Simcoe, Elizabeth Posthuma (Gwillim) Simcoe, their son Francis Gwillim Simcoe, and their eldest daughter, Eliza Simcoe. The fonds also contains material documenting the activities of various other members of their extended family and descendants.
Materials documenting the activities of John Grave Simcoe include correspondence, reports and cartographic material documenting his service in the British army in North America and England, his five years as Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada and his unofficial activities as a landowner managing Wolford Lodge throughout his professional career.
Elizabeth Simcoe’s activities are documented through several diaries that predominantly cover her time accompanying her husband in Upper Canada. Her life after this, spent in England, is also represented through a significantly smaller extent of diaries and correspondence with relatives and friends. Her diaries are accompanied by a large number of watercolour sketches and maps that illustrate scenes in Upper and Lower Canada represented in the diaries.
The military activities of Francis Gwillim Simcoe in the early 19th century are represented by a single series of correspondence and a personal journal. Similarly, the activities of Eliza Simcoe are captured in a single series containing correspondence with friends and relatives.
Materials related to other members of the Simcoe family, including Captain John Simcoe, and John K. Simcoe, the father and grandson of John Graves Simcoe, respectively, are included in a single series. This series also includes genealogical information related to the Creed, Cole, and Hubert families, descended from Simcoe.
The fonds also includes three series of oversized materials that document the same activities as other series in the fonds, but for reasons of size, have been kept separate from the series to which they correspond.

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling

Accruals

System of arrangement

The arrangement mostly reflects how the materials were received upon transfer from the Archives of Ontario. It is unclear how this arrangement was settled upon. The arrangement has only been altered in cases where items have needed interfiling, materials lacked accession numbers, or files were physically separate from the rest of their series. The latter of these conditions has resulted in 3 new series for oversized materials (see Series 18,19, and 20 for notes on these) and one new sub-series (see “Oversize maps from other series” sub-series in Series 5).

Conditions of access and use area

Conditions governing access

Material may be requested in person at the Fisher Library Reference Desk, or in advance using our online stack retrieval request form: https://aeon.library.utoronto.ca

For conservation purposes, the entirety of Series 11, "Elizabeth Posthuma (Gwillim) Simcoe – Sketches" is restricted from public use. Digital scans of the contents of this series can be found at https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Images_from_Archives_of_Ontario_-_Series_F_47-11_Elizabeth_Simcoe_sketches.

Conditions governing reproduction

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      Finding aids

      Uploaded finding aid

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      Notes area

      Note

      A note has been added to each file's entry indicating the accession number used by the Archives of Ontario. This is intended to help convert the old accession number into the new Box:Folder Number identifiers now being used for the materials.

      Note

      The Archives of Ontario purchased a quantity of records and artefacts related to the contents of the Simcoe Family papers in 1993. This included material originally found in Series 1, 4 and 9, as well as artefacts related to Simcoe's life. These have been retained by the Archives of Ontario. Researchers should contact the Archives of Ontario to gain access to these materials.

      Alternative identifier(s)

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      Description control area

      Description identifier

      CA OTUTF MS COLL 343

      Institution identifier

      Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto

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      Dates of creation revision deletion

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