Here's how they  tell Peter Russell's story: In 1796, Lieutenant Governor John Simcoe, who  had founded Toronto just three years earlier, was sick. So sick, in  fact, that he headed back home to England with his family, never to  return. In his absence, he left Peter Russell in charge, one of the  city's most illustrious douchebags.
Russell  had been born in Ireland, moved to England, and went to school at  Cambridge for all of six months before he'd lost so much money playing  poker that he was forced to drop out and join the army. In the army, he  kept gambling; his next twenty years or so were mostly spent traveling  around the world: sometimes fighting wars and sometimes running away  from the people he owed money to. When they finally did catch up with  him, he even spent a little time in prison. But none of that seems to  have kept him from making a good impression on Simcoe. They both fought for the British during the American Revolution and when  Simcoe became the first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada, he invited  the desperate, debt-ridden Russell to help run the brand new town of  York. 
In  return, Russell got a crapload of free land. His first house, Russell Abbey,  was built on a spot in town overlooking the lake (near Front and  Princess where Abbey Lane is now). His second home was at his farm,  Petersfield, a long strip of land running north from Queen to Bloor just  west of the Grange. And on top of that, he had hundreds of acres on the  hill above Davenport Road around the area where the  not-so-coincidentally-named Russell Hill Road runs today.
And  he'd get more. Once Simcoe was gone, Russell found new ways to take  advantage. He discovered a law that allowed him to seize land from  foreigners who hadn't lived in town for at least seven years and he used  it.  He appointed himself as a judge, despite the fact that he had no  legal experience, so that he could collect the salary. And when it came  time to make civic improvements, he was a cheap bastard; on at least one  occasion he just plain refused to pay, shocked that in a tiny, isolated  town in the middle of a thick forest, with barely any people in it, the  cost of labour was higher than usual. 
It seems that even the improvements he did make, he made with a prickish flair. Russell was the one who built the city's first jail,  a log hut on King Street where the King Edward Hotel is now, but he  didn't bother to include any beds or blankets or stoves to keep it warm  during the winter. He extended the town westward out to Peter Street,  but couldn't resist naming the street after himself. And when he hired  Asa Danforth to spend months in the woods building Kingston Road out  toward, um, Kingston, Russell figured he was the hero. "I expect the Gratitude of the People will erect a Statue to my memory for it," he declared.
But  all of that is nothing compared to the real reason he stands apart from  most of the other corrupt, pompous, self-serving, political assholes  this city has seen: this asshole owned slaves.
Simcoe  had wanted to abolish slavery right from the very beginning, but slave  owners in the legislature—including, it seems, Russell—fought against  it, forcing a compromise: they could keep the slaves they already had in  town, but it would be illegal to bring in any more, and the children  would be freed when they turned 25. They say it was the first  legislation to actively limit slavery in the history of the British  Empire.
From  what I've read, there were 15 slaves in York (though there were ten  more just outside of town), and the majority were owned by Russell and  his fellow jerkface, William Jarvis. They had six each. Russell enslaved  a Mr. Pompadour, his wife Peggy and their four children. And he wasn't  happy with them. His sister called them "insolent" and "pilfering". And  after Peggy tried to run away yet again, Russell decided to split the  family up. He placed this ad in the Upper Canada Gazette: 
The  ad didn't turn up any buyers or win Russell many fans in the  anti-slavery crowd. And those folks weren't his only enemies. There was  even a new saying in town, poking fun at his corruption: "I, Peter  Russell, convey to you, Peter Russell." So when Simcoe officially  resigned, Russell was passed over for the promotion and lost most of his  power. Once he'd been overlooked for a second time, he was pissed off  enough to announce that he intended to move back to England. But by that  point, he owned 75,000 acres of Upper Canada and he couldn't find  anyone to buy it. He was stuck here. And in 1808, he had a stroke. The  cure—a mustard plaster and a quart of wine laced with crushed deer  antler—didn't work for some reason. He died.
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Photo: Peter Russell, asshole
Adam Bunch is the Editor-in-Chief of the Little Red Umbrella and the creator of the Toronto Dreams Project.    He's been on the Polaris  Prize jury, lectured at Trampoline Hall and    written for PopMatters,  Crawdaddy!, 24 Hours and a whole bunch of   other  places. You can read his  posts here, follow him on Twitter here, or email him at adam@littleredumbrella.com.
This post originally appeared on the Toronto Dreams Project Historical Ephemera Blog, which      tells stories about the history of Toronto, including tales of bank      robbers, duels and 100 year-old fish. You can read more highlights   from    it here, or visit it yourself here.
 












 
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