William Renwick Riddell | |
Birth Date: | 6 April 1852 |
Birth Place: | Hamilton Township, Canada West |
Death Place: | Toronto, Ontario |
Occupation: | Jurist, historian |
Spouse: | Anna Crossen |
Education: | Victoria College |
Office: | Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario |
Term Start: | 1906 |
Term End: | 1925 |
Termstart2: | 1925 |
Termend2: | 1945 |
Office2: | Justice of the Court of Appeal for Ontario |
William Renwick Riddell (6 April 185218 February 1945) was a Canadian lawyer, judge, and historian.
Riddell was born on 6 April 1852 in Hamilton Township, Canada West, and attended a public school in Hamilton Township, Cobourg Collegiate Institute, and Victoria College (then located in Cobourg).[1] He received a BA from Victoria College in 1874.[1]
Riddell was called to the bar in 1883 and conducted a law practice in Cobourg until he moved to Toronto in 1893. Riddell was named a queen's counsel in 1899. In 1892, he attempted to prevent the Law Society of Upper Canada from admitting Clara Brett Martin to the bar of Ontario.
Riddell was appointed as judge to the Supreme Court of Ontario in 1906.[2] He was the trial judge in Sero v Gault, where Eliza Sero, a Mohawk woman, argued that her fishing net had been illegally seized by Thomas Gault, a government fisheries inspector, because the Haudenosaunee were sovereign over the land on which she lived. He dismissed Sero's claim.
He was elevated to the Court of Appeal for Ontario in 1925 and remained in office until his death in 1945.
As a historian, he published numerous works of legal, medical, and social history, including biographies of William Kirby and John Graves Simcoe. Riddell wrote more than 1,200 articles on history, law, and other subjects.
Riddell was the president of Crossen Car Manufacturing Company and married Anna Crossen, daughter of the company's founder.
Riddell had an interest in the history of slavery in Canada and abolition, as well as the history of various Indigenous peoples. He has been criticized for holding white supremacist views related to his writing. In 1923 he wrote that "the negro refugees were superior to most of their race, for none but those with more than ordinary qualities could reach Canada."[3] He also referred to Europeans in Canada as the "higher race" in his article about criminal law in the far north.[4]
He was known for biting, sarcastic remarks,[5] and was an "ardent imperialist". Riddell was not well-liked: William Mulock thought him a "terrible man", while according to John Josiah Robinette, "everyone hated the old boy".
Riddell died at his home in Toronto on 18 February 1945.[6]
Escutcheon: | Argent a chevron Gules between three ears of rye slipped and bladed Proper. |
Crest: | A demi-greyhound Proper. |
Motto: | I Hope To Share[8] |