Robert Barry Dickey - Amherst, NS
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 45° 50.045 W 064° 12.764
20T E 405815 N 5076328
Robert Dickey's memorial plaque is one of four affixed to the face of the Amherst town hall building, originally built as the Amherst Dominion Public Building in 1934-36. It is mounted near the Edward Chandler plaque.
Waymark Code: WMZMBV
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
Date Posted: 11/30/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
Views: 5

Four of Canada's Fathers of Confederation were natives of Amherst and area and are commemorated on Amherst's town hall. They are Edward Chandler, Robert Barry Dickey, Jonathan McCully and one time Prime Minister Sir Charles Tupper.

About three blocks south of the Dominion Public Building, on the west side of Victoria Street, is a dead 21 ft tall Elm tree which has been turned into a large wood carving. It contains the likenesses of the four Amherst Fathers of Confederation. The carving was done by Bruce Hebert in 2008.

Robert Dickey's plaque reads as follows:
ROBERT BARRY DICKEY
1811-1903

Born in Amherst, educated at Windsor Academy, and called to the bar in 1834, Dickey practiced law in Amherst and sat in the Legislative Council of Nova Scotia (1858-67). A Father of Confederation, he attended both the Charlottetown and Quebec Conferences but refused to subscribe to the Quebec Resolutions until more generous financial terms were conceded in 1866. A widely-travelled and successful Amherst businessman he gave general support to the Conservative Party but played a minor political role. He was called to the Senate in 1867. He died in Amherst.
Robert Barry Dickey
Robert Barry Dickey, QC, senator, politician, lawyer, businessman (born 10 November 1811 in Amherst, NS; died 14 July 1903 in Amherst), attended the Charlottetown Conference and the Québec Conference as a member of the Nova Scotia Legislative Council. Initially skeptical of Confederation, he supported union when Canada offered lucrative subsidies to Nova Scotia in 1866. After Confederation, he was one of 12 Nova Scotians appointed to the Senate.

Early Life and Career
Robert Barry Dickey was born in Amherst, Nova Scotia, to judge and political figure Robert McGowan Dickey and Eleanor Chapman. Educated primarily at Truro Grammar School and at Windsor Academy, Dickey went on to study law at age 15 with Alexander Stewart, representative for Cumberland County in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly (1826–1838). In 1834, he was accepted to the Nova Scotia Bar and set up practice in his hometown of Amherst. In 1835, he was accepted to the New Brunswick Bar. In 1863, he was made a Queen’s Counsel. He was a judge and registrar of probate in Cumberland County for 20 years.

In 1844, Dickey married Mary Blair. In addition to his legal and political work, he held substantial business interests in the lumber sector.

Political Career
Robert Barry Dickey was appointed to the Legislative Council of Nova Scotia in 1858, where he would serve until 1867. His appointment garnered opposition, with Martin Wilkins, solicitor general in James William Johnston’s government, resigning. Wilkins claimed that Dickey did not have the confidence of the people in his riding and objected to the fact that Dickey had been named to the 1858 Nova Scotia delegation sent to London, England, to discuss the Intercolonial Railway. (Dickey visited London twice, in 1858 and in 1865, as part of a delegation promoting the Intercolonial Railway.) While in provincial government, Dickey acted as the consular agent for the United States, and also as one of the directors of the Nova Scotia Electric Telegraph Company.

Confederation
Robert Barry Dickey was invited by Nova Scotia Premier Charles Tupper to represent Nova Scotia as a Conservative delegate at the Charlottetown Conference and at the Québec Conference in 1864. He was strongly opposed to Nova Scotia joining Confederation, believing that the financial terms offered to Nova Scotia were unjust. Perhaps because of his steadfast opposition to joining Confederation on the terms offered at the first two conferences, Dickey was not included in the Nova Scotia delegation sent to the London Conference in 1866. He continued to fight for better terms and only converted to support of the union when Canada offered more lucrative subsidies to the province. He remained skeptical of Confederation’s benefits for Nova Scotia, with one biographer speculating that he accepted it only because he felt the second option would be annexation by Canada. See also Nova Scotia and Confederation.

Senator
Part of the Québec Resolutions indicated that the first Canadian Senate should be drawn from members of the various provincial legislative councils. Nova Scotia sent 12 men from its council, including Robert Barry Dickey, in 1867. Dickey continued to support the Conservative party from within the Senate, but dedicated more of his time and effort to his business concerns.

Dickey’s political ambitions were passed on to his second son, Arthur, who entered public life in 1888. Arthur Dickey represented Cumberland County in the House of Commons from 1888 to 1896, holding ministerial positions including secretary of state, minister of justice and attorney general, and minister of militia and defence. Arthur Dickey drowned in 1900, crushing his father’s spirit. Robert Barry Dickey died three years later at age 90.

Legacy
Dickey spent 9 years on the Legislative Council of Nova Scotia and 36 years in the Senate. His presence at two of three Confederation conferences, and his eventual backing of Nova Scotia’s entry into Canada, obtained for him the title of Father of Confederation.
From the Canadian Encyclopedia
Website with more information on either the memorial or the person(s) it is dedicated to: [Web Link]

Location: Amherst Town Hall

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