Lt.-Colonel The Hon. Benjamin Joseph Frobisher (March 26, 1782 – March 18, 1821), M.P., J.P. was a fur trader and political figure in Lower Canada.
Career
editHe was born in Montreal, the son of Joseph Frobisher, and studied in England. In 1799, he joined the North West Company and travelled west, becoming clerk in the English River department. He later worked as a clerk for a merchant in the fur trade at Quebec City. Frobisher represented Montreal County in the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada from 1804 to 1808. He was named a justice of the peace for Trois-Rivières district in 1805. He served in the local militia, later becoming lieutenant-colonel. In 1815, he was named provincial aide-de-camp for colonial administrator Sir Gordon Drummond and, in 1816, for Governor Sir John Coape Sherbrooke.
In 1817, he led an attack by the North West Company against a Hudson's Bay Company fort at Île-à-la-Crosse, located in what is now Saskatchewan. In 1819, he was taken prisoner by the HBC and detained at York Factory. He later escaped and returned to Quebec.
Family
editIn 1804, he married Isabella Grant, daughter of James Grant and Susannah Coffin. Mrs Frobisher was a niece of both The Rt. Hon. Sir William Grant and General Sir Roger Hale Sheaffe. After the death of her father, her mother had remarried The Hon. John Craigie. Benjamin Frobisher died at Quebec City in 1821. After his death his widow and their only son went to live in England at Barton House, Dawlish, the home of her aunt, the widow of Admiral John Schank, and two of Mrs Frobisher's uncles, Sir William Grant, of Beldorney Castle, and Major John Grant (1766-1837). The Frobishers were the parents of one son,
- Rev. James Joseph Frobisher (1805-1843), was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge. He was presented to the living of Halse, Somerset by his mother in 1839.[1] In 1841, at Ringwood, he married Mary A. Catherine Willis, daughter of George J.B.J. Willis, of Sopley Park, Hampshire.[2] They were the parents of one daughter, Mary Isabella Frobisher (1842-1854), who died aged twelve at Clifton.
References
editExternal links
edit- "Biography". Dictionnaire des parlementaires du Québec de 1792 à nos jours (in French). National Assembly of Quebec.
- "Benjamin Joseph Frobisher". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016.