2nd Parliament of Upper Canada
The 2nd Parliament of Upper Canada was opened 1 June 1797. Elections in Upper Canada had been held in August 1796. The first session was held at Navy Hall in Newark. The Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada John Graves Simcoe believed York was a superior location for the capital as it would less vulnerable to attack by the Americans. York became the capital of Upper Canada on 1 February 1796. The remaining three sessions were held at the Parliament Buildings of Upper Canada in York, Upper Canada. This parliament was dissolved 7 July 1800.
This House of Assembly of the 2nd Parliament of Upper Canada had four sessions 3 June 1797 to 4 July 1800:[1]
| Sessions[1] | Start | End | 
|---|---|---|
| 1st | 3 June 1797 | July 1797 | 
| 2nd | 5 June 1798 | 5 July 1798 | 
| 3rd | 12 June 1799 | 29 June 1799 | 
| 4th | 2 June 1800 | 4 July 1800 | 
| Riding | Member | 
|---|---|
| Dundas | Thomas Fraser | 
| Durham, York & 1st Lincoln | Richard Beasley | 
| 1st Glengarry | Richard Norton Wilkinson | 
| 2nd Glengarry | John McDonell | 
| Grenville | Edward Jessup, Jr. | 
| Kent | Thomas Smith | 
| Kent | Thomas McKee | 
| Leeds & Frontenac | Solomon Jones | 
| Lennox, Hastings & Northumberland | Timothy Thompson | 
| 2nd Lincoln | Samuel Street | 
| 3rd Lincoln | David William Smith – Speaker 1796–1800 | 
| 4th Lincoln & Norfolk | Benjamin Hardison | 
| Ontario & Addington | Christopher Robinson died 2 November 1798 in office. | 
| William Fairfield (from June 1799) | |
| Prince Edward & Adolphus Township | David McGregor Rogers | 
| Stormont | Robert Isaac Dey Gray | 
| Suffolk & Essex | John Cornwall | 
See also
- Legislative Council of Upper Canada
 - Executive Council of Upper Canada
 - Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada
 - Lieutenant Governors of Upper Canada, 1791–1841
 - Historical federal electoral districts of Canada
 - List of Ontario provincial electoral districts
 
References
- ^ a b Archives of Ontario "Library-English". Archived from the original on 11 June 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2009.
 
Further reading
- Handbook of Upper Canadian Chronology, Frederick H. Armstrong, Toronto : Dundurn Press, 1985. ISBN 0-919670-92-X