|
With only one exception, all the children of William Jarvis
were enrolled in the Home District Grammar School during
its first year. Two daughters were present at the
beginning in June of 1807, with three more Jarvis children
showing up in August. Only Samuel, aged 15, was sent
elsewhere, east to Cornwall, where John Strachan had
set up a school in his parish church. Strachan was
already earning the reputation for strictness, high
standards, and vehement Britishness that would soon
make him one of the movers and shakers of Upper Canada.
Brawling with Some Indians In 1808, however, Samuel and some of his school friends became embroiled in a very ugly street brawl with some native youths, nearly killing one of them. Stephen Jarvis, a relative of William, happened to be passing through Cornwall at the time on his way from New Brunswick to York and mentions the incident in his memoirs: I forgot to mention that at Cornwall I met with Samuel Peters Jarvis, a son of my relation, Mr. Secretary Jarvis. He was then at school at Cornwall, and with some others had been engaged in a fray with some Indians. They had nearly killed one of them and the magistrates of Cornwall were making an examination of the matter when I passed through the town.
More stories about the history of Jarvis Collegiate, early Toronto and William and Samuel Jarvis.
|