Aylwin, T. C., in office, [150]
B
Bagot, Sir Charles, Governor-General, [70], [126] et sqq., [156], [163]; as Financier, [237-8]; and King's College, Toronto, [36]; Political antecedents of, [126-7]; Political opportunism of, [138] et sqq., [143-6], wisdom of his methods, [147]; the practical surrender of Responsible Government by, [158], [161], [228-9]; Russell's view on, [261], Stanley's view on, [278]; Relations with French-Canadians, [57], [146-7], [149-50]; Stanley's instructions to, [129], and relations with, [127] et sqq.
Work of his period of office, three factors of, [128] et sqq.
on Autonomy, Separation, and Loyalty, [138]; on the Crown's right to name the Capital, [155]; on the French Canadians after the Union, [57-8]
Baldwin, Robert, Leader of Reforming Loyalists, [64], [105], [125], [197], [295]; Anti-annexation actions of, [339]; Averse to the "Double majority," [308]; Bagot and, [143], [144]; Challenge by, to Sydenham's system, [143-6]; Character and Politics of, [109] et sqq., [141]; Check to, [155]; and the Clergy Reserve question, [52]; and Elgin, [203]; Harrison's views on, and Draper's, [134]; Insistence by, on Responsible Government, [113-5], [116], [119], [150], [161-2], [176]; Loyalty of, [339]; Motion by, demanding a Provincial Parliament, [119]; Office claimed for, [149]; and the Patronage crisis, [168]; as Solicitor-General of Upper Canada, [109] et sqq.; Stanley's attitude to, [142].
on Coalition government, [299-300]; on Patronage, and the position of the Council, [175]; on Russell's Colonial Administration Speech (1850), [264]
Baldwin-Hincks Reformers, in Politics, [301]
Baldwin-La Fontaine Ministry, the, [161], [212], and the origin of Anglo-French Solidarity, [215-6], [229], [295], [298]; Precedent provided by, [307]
Belleville, Population (1846), [24]