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Colonel By

John By
John By.jpg
Lieutenant-Colonel John By
Born (1779-08-07)7 August 1779
Lambeth, Surrey
Died 1 February 1836(1836-02-01) (aged 56)
Frant, Sussex
Nationality English
Education Royal Military Academy
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Baines Johnson (1801)
Esther March (1818)
Children Harriet Martha By (1822–1842)
Esther By Ashburnham (1820–1848)
Parent(s) George By and Mary Bryan
Engineering career
Discipline military engineering
Projects Rideau Canal
Quebec City fortifications

Lieutenant-Colonel John By (7 August 1779 – 1 February 1836) was an English military engineer, best remembered for supervising the construction of the Rideau Canal and founding Bytown in the process, which would become the Canadian capital of Ottawa.

By was born in Lambeth, Surrey, the second of three sons of George By, of the London Customs House, and Mary Bryan. By studied at the Royal Military Academy. He entered Officer Training in the army when he was 18 years old. He was commissioned in the Royal Artillery on 1 August 1799 but transferred to the Royal Engineers on 20 December the same year. In 1802 he was posted to Canada for the first time, where he worked on the fortification of Quebec City and on improving the navigability of the Saint Lawrence River. During the Napoleonic wars he returned to Europe, where he served in Spain under the Duke of Wellington from 1811 until 1815.

With the end of the war By retired from the military but in 1826, in view of his engineering experience in Canada, he was recalled and returned to Canada to supervise the construction of the Rideau Canal. Since the canal was to begin in the wild and sparsely populated Ottawa River valley, his first task was the construction of a town to house the men who were to work on the canal, and associated services. The resulting settlement, called Bytown in his honour, was later renamed after the river.

The canal was completed in six years, and was acclaimed as an engineering triumph. The huge cost overruns, however, became a political scandal for the Board of Ordnance. Colonel By was recalled to London to face accusations that he had made a number of unauthorised expenditures. The charges were spurious and a parliamentary committee exonerated him. By petitioned Wellington and other military leaders to review his case, but the damage was done and he never received a formal commendation for his work on the canal. He died in 1836, and is buried in the village of Frant in Sussex.


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