Benjamin Hart

1824 - 1844
446 Sainte-Hélène

Benjamin Hart (1779-1855) was a merchant, prosperous businessman, militia officer and well-regarded justice of the peace. Son of the prominent Trois-Rivières merchant Aaron Hart, he followed in his father’s footsteps and took over the family store when the latter died. Hart also owned shops in Montreal (where he lived from 1818 to 1850) and was active as an importer, a commissary merchant, an investor and the owner of substantial land holdings. During the 1830s, his import business, Benjamin Hart and Company, was among the most important in Montreal.

Hart also made his mark as a militiaman. In 1820, he became a lieutenant in Montreal’s 1st Militia Battalion, and in 1837, he accepted an appointment as justice of the peace. The Patriot War (1837 to 1838) broke out soon after, pitting French-speaking civilians against the British colonial government. Hart fought to suppress the rebellion. When recognition for his efforts was not forthcoming, Hart became embittered with the British administration of Lower Canada, a situation that eventually prompted him to move to the United States in his last years.

Throughout his life, Benjamin Hart advocated for Jewish civil liberties. Accordingly, he lobbied for the adoption of a bill in 1832 granting full rights of citizenship to Jews. He was influenced in this by his brother Ezekiel, a person of experience who was elected as the member of the Legislative Assembly for Trois-Rivières in 1807, but was prevented from taking his seat on grounds of his Jewish faith. Hart was a pioneer in the public service, which had been previously closed to Jews. An Orthodox Jew, Hart actively participated in financing, reorganizing and revitalizing the Spanish and Portuguese synagogue, Congregation Shearith Israel. When the synagogue lost the land on which in stood in 1825, its activities moved to the home of Benjamin Hart.

Compiled by Valérie Beauchemin, translated by Helge Dascher

Links

Liens

"The Sons of Aaron Hart" by Fredric Gaffen - University of Ottawa

Sources

Law, Charles. Brother Benjamin . Bloomington: Trafford Publishers, 2010.

Miller, Carman. “Benjamin Hart." Dictionnaire biographique du Canada. 2000.

Rosenberg, Stuart E. The Jewish Community in Canada. Toronto: Éditions McClelland and Stewart, 1970.

Tulchinsky, Gerard. Canada’s Jews: A People’s Journey. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008.

*Images courtesy of the McCord Museum and the Canadian Jewish Congress Charities Committee National Archives.

Media

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