Episode 389
Episode 389: On a rain-soaked evening on June 13th, 1833, two young law students faced each other across a muddy field near Perth, Ontario, pistols in hand. John Wilson, a 20-year-old from humble farming stock, gripped his weapon with trembling fingers as rain dripped from his dark hair. Sixty feet away, 22-year-old Robert Lyon, handsome, aristocratic, and the son of a British officer, stood with the practiced composure of a gentleman born to privilege. Between them lay more than just distance: a bitter rivalry over the affections of Elizabeth Hughes, an English governess whose reputation had sparked this deadly confrontation. What had begun as whispered gossip in a lawyer's office in Bytown would end with one man dead, another's life forever changed, and a woman left to marry her lover's killer. This was Ontario's last fatal duel, a collision between Old World codes of honour and New World ambitions that would echo through Perth's streets for generations.
Sources:
A History of Perth | Perth Remembered
Perth Military Settlement
Robert Lyon 1812 - 1833 | Clark and Hogg Family History
WILSON, JOHN – Dictionary of Canadian Biography
Wlison and Lyon Duel | Richmond Heritage
Duel in Early Upper Canada by William Renwick Riddell
ARCHIVED - Criminal Code
Dueling for Honour or (Il)legal Murder?: Two Case Studies | The Loyalist Collection
Sword or Pistol: A Brief History of Duels | Believe it or Not | Éducaloi
En Guard! A History of Canadian Duels - Academie Duello - Learn Swordplay
Dueling: the Violence of Gentlemen
Le matin du 22 mai 1838, le dernier duel du Canada
pistol-provenance.pdf
Last Fatal Duel Historical Plaque
How a pair of men in St. John's survived the last duel fought on Canadian soil | CBC News
Updates to Canada’s criminal law will legalize duels and permit pretending to practise witchcraft
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Published on 2 weeks ago
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