ColonelGeorge Taylor Denison II (July 17, 1816 – May 30, 1873) was a Canadian lawyer and military officer.
Life and career
He was a scion of what would later be called the Family Compact, the closely associated group of insiders in Upper Canada from which colonial Lieutenant Governors picked those to appoint to political appointments and sinecures.[1] His grandfather John Denison was a good friend of Peter Russell, the acting Lieutenant Governor. His grandfather, and father George Taylor Denison, acquired substantial wealth in real estate.[2][3][4]
His father distinguished himself during the War of 1812 and, in 1822, founded the York Dragoons, a cavalry militia unit, which he paid for out of his own funds.[1] George Taylor Denison II would later command this unit, following his father's example, and paying its expenses out of his own funds.
Denison served as a Toronto alderman from 1843 to 1853.[1] Denison and several other aldermen resigned to protest what they regarded as corruption on the part of the mayor at that time, John G. Bowes.
^"Kensington Market, Toronto". Exploring Ontario. 2016. Archived from the original on 2017-07-07. Retrieved 2019-06-08. George Taylor Denison would continue to accumulate land around York, (Toronto) through purchase and marriage (Esther Borden Lippincott in 1806) and would become one of the wealthiest landowners in Upper Canada.
^"The Denisons". Kensington Market Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2017-08-23. Retrieved 2019-06-08. In 1815, after his service in the War of 1812, George purchased park lots 17 and 18, the location of modern day Kensington Market. That same year, he started the construction of his home Bellevue at the corner of Bellevue Square park, the modern location of the Kiever synagogue, which was roughly the center of his property.
^"Bellevue". Lost Rivers of Toronto. Archived from the original on 2018-09-15. Retrieved 2019-06-08. George Denison, like many of the other Denisons, was a military man and loyal to the British Empire. He served with the militia in 1812, beginning a lifelong affiliation with Upper Canada's military. From 1822 to 1837, Denison organized and led a voluntary cavalry troop, mostly at his own expense, which he commanded during the Rebellion of 1837. The troop later became the Governor General's Horse Guards, the first eight commanding officers of which were Denisons. In 1846, George took command of the 4th Battalion of Toronto militia. He held this post until his death in 1853.