Covenanter Democracy: Scottish Popular Religion, Ethnicity, and the Varieties of Politico-religious Dissent in Upper Canada, 1815-1841
Authors
Michael Gauvreau
Abstract
The Anglican Church functioned as the primary institution for the transmission of
Tory values in the British colonies, a fact recognized and stolidly defended by Upper
Canadian elites, who used the church as their central weapon against any challenge
to the Tory state from the American Republic or from internal dissent. One underexplored
variable that affected the shape and diversity of the Protestant and
Reformist critique of Anglican Toryism was ethnic identity, which often found its primary
expression through religion. Nowhere was the fit between ethnicity, evangelical
religion, and politics more overt than among Scottish Presbyterian Seceders
who emigrated in large numbers to Upper Canada in the years after 1815. As an
examination of the relationship between their faith and political radicalism illustrates,
the critique of Tory-Anglican dominance did not emanate from a unified and
homogeneous Reformist ideology, but rather from several divergent strands of political
radicalism anchored in dissenting religious cultures and practices.