Naming history and etymology Cataraqui, Kingston's original name, is a derivation of an
Indigenous language name for the Kingston area. The word may mean "Great Meeting Place", "the place where one hides", "impregnable", "muddy river", "place of retreat", "clay bank rising out of the water", "where the rivers and lake meet", "rocks standing in water", or "place where the limestone (or clay) is". Cataraqui was referred to as "the King's Town" or "King's Town" by 1787, in honour of King
George III. The name was abbreviated to "Kingston" in 1788. Cataraqui today is an area around the intersection of
Princess Street and Sydenham Road, where the village of Cataraqui (formerly known as Waterloo) was located. Cataraqui is also the name of a municipal electoral district.
Early Indigenous habitation Archaeological evidence suggests people lived in the Kingston region as early as the
Archaic period (about 9,000–3,000 years ago). Evidence of
Late Woodland Period (about 500–1000 AD) early
Iroquois occupation also exists. The first more permanent encampments by
Indigenous people in the Kingston area began about 900 AD. The group that first occupied the area before the arrival of the French was probably the
Wyandot people (Hurons), who were later displaced by Iroquoian groups. Although the area around the south end of the
Cataraqui River was often visited by Iroquois and other groups, Iroquois settlement at this location only began after the French established their outpost. By 1700, the
north shore Iroquois had moved south, and the area once occupied by the Iroquois (which includes Kingston) became occupied by the
Mississaugas, a subtribe of the
Anishinaabe, who had moved south from the
Lake Huron and
Lake Simcoe regions.
French settlement and Fort Frontenac European commercial and military influence and activities centred on the
fur trade developed and increased in North America in the 17th century.
Fur trappers and traders were spreading out from their centres of operation in New France. French explorer
Samuel de Champlain visited the Kingston area in 1615. To establish a presence on Lake Ontario for the purpose of controlling the fur trade with local indigenous people,
Louis de Buade de Frontenac,
Governor of New France, established Fort Cataraqui, later to be called Fort Frontenac, at a location known as Cataraqui in 1673. Partially reconstructed parts of the original fort can be seen today at the western end of the
La Salle Causeway.
Loyalist settlement In 1783,
Frederick Haldimand, governor of the
Province of Quebec directed Major
Samuel Holland, Surveyor-General of Quebec, to lay out a settlement for displaced
British colonists, or
Loyalists, who were fleeing north because of the
American Revolutionary War and "minutely examine the situation and site of the Post formerly occupied by the French, and the land and country adjacent". Haldimand had originally considered the site as a possible location to settle loyal
Mohawks. The survey would also determine whether Cataraqui was suitable as a navy base since nearby
Carleton Island on which a British navy base was located had been ceded to the Americans after the war. Holland's report about the old French post mentioned "every part surpassed the favorable idea I had formed of it", that it had "advantageous Situations" and that "the harbour is in every respect Good and most conveniently situated to command Lake Ontario". With the completion of the Mississauga agreement, settlement could proceed, although the planning of the layout of the townsite had not waited for the completion of the negotiations. The area was surveyed, and the survey report mentioned the area was deemed to have productive lands, abundant resources, a good harbour and an existing townsite. These requirements were considered ideal to settle the Loyalists. Three kinds of refugee Loyalists would settle at Cataraqui: 'associated' or 'incorporated' Loyalists who were organized into companies under militia officers, provincial colonial regiments and their dependants, and unincorporated Loyalists who came to Canada independently. Many Loyalist refugees had at first settled on Carleton Island, and operated businesses there. When the Island was ceded to the United States after the Revolutionary War, these Loyalists, along with their businesses, relocated to Cataraqui. Notable Loyalists who settled in the Cataraqui area include
Molly Brant (the sister of Six Nations leader
Joseph Brant); businessman and political figure
Richard Cartwright;
John Stuart, a clergyman, missionary and educator who arrived in 1785; and militia captain
Johan Jost Herkimer. The first name given to the settlement by the Loyalists was King's Town, which would eventually develop into the current appellation. Klein was brought to Carleton Island with Molly Brant, and arrived in Cataraqui in 1783, before the influx of Loyalist settlers in 1784. A group of Loyalists from New York State, led by Captain
Michael Grass who arrived in 1784 after sailing from New York City and up the
St. Lawrence River, established a camp south of Fort Frontenac at Mississauga Point. The first high school (grammar school) in what later became the province of Ontario was established in Kingston in 1792 by Loyalist priest John Stuart, which evolved into
Kingston Collegiate and Vocational Institute.
War of 1812, and development During the
War of 1812, Kingston (with a population of 2,250) was a major military centre. It was the base for the Lake Ontario division of the
British naval fleet on the
Great Lakes, which engaged in a vigorous
arms race with the American fleet based at
Sackets Harbor, New York for control of Lake Ontario. The
Provincial Marine quickly placed ships into service and troops were brought in. A Royal Naval detachment built warships in order to control Lake Ontario. This fort was replaced by a more extensive fort on Point Henry in 1813. In 1843, the advanced battery overlooking the lake to the south was completed when the
casemated commissariat stores and magazines were built. Fort Henry was garrisoned by British until 1871. It was restored starting in 1936 and is a popular tourist attraction, now part of a
World Heritage Site.
Regiopolis College (for training priests) was incorporated in March 1837, and in 1866 the college was given full degree-granting powers, although these were rarely used and the college closed in 1869.
Queen's University, originally Queen's College, The
Royal Military College of Canada (RMC) was founded in 1876.
Kingston Penitentiary, Canada's first large federal penitentiary, was established in 1835 and operated until 2013. Several more prisons would be established in later years in the greater Kingston area, including the federal
Prison for Women (1930, closed in the 1990s),
Millhaven Institution,
Collins Bay Institution, Frontenac (which amalgamated with Collins Bay in 2013), and Joyceville Institution. During the
Upper Canada Rebellion, 1837–38, much of the local militia was posted in Kingston, under Lieutenant-colonel
Richard Henry Bonnycastle who completed construction of the new Fort Henry.
As Canada's first capital Lord Sydenham, the
Governor General of Canada chose Kingston as the first capital of the united
Canadas, and it served in that role from 1841 to 1844. The first meeting of the
Parliament of the Province of Canada on June 13, 1841, was held on the site of what is now
Kingston General Hospital. The city was considered too small and lacking in amenities, however, and its location near the border made it vulnerable to American attack. Consequently, the capital was moved to
Montreal in 1844, and it alternated between
Quebec City and
Toronto from 1849 until
Ottawa, then a small lumber village known as
Bytown, was selected as the permanent capital by
Queen Victoria. Subsequently, Kingston's growth slowed considerably and its national importance declined. In 1846, with a population of 6,123, Kingston was incorporated as a city, with
John Counter as the first mayor. and more. Five weekly newspapers were being published. Fort Henry and the marine barracks took up a great deal of space. Kingston Penitentiary had about 400 inmates. (The prison opened in 1835, with a structure intended to reform the inmates, not merely to hold or punish them.) Industry included a steam grist mill, three foundries, two shipbuilders, ship repairers and five wagon makers; tradesmen of many types also worked here. All freight was shipped by boat or barges and ten steamboats per day were running to and from the town. Five schools for ladies and two for boys were operating, and the town had four bank agency offices. There were ten churches or chapels and the recently opened
Hotel Dieu hospital was operated by sisters with the
Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph as a charity. Both Hotel Dieu and Kingston General Hospital (KGH) cared for victims of the typhus epidemic of 1847. The KGH site held the remains of 1,400 Irish immigrants who had died in Kingston in
fever sheds along the waterfront, during the
1847 North American typhus epidemic, while fleeing the
Great Famine. They were buried in a common grave. The remains were re-interred at the city's St. Mary's Cemetery in 1966. In 1995, KGH was designated a
National Historic Site of Canada, because it is "the oldest public hospital in Canada still in operation with most of its buildings intact and thus effectively illustrates the evolution of health care in Canada in the 19th and 20th centuries". In 1848, the Kingston Gas Light Company began operation. (Gas lamps would be used until 1947.) By that time, the town was connected to the outside world by telegraph cables. Kingston was the home of Canada's first Prime Minister,
John A. Macdonald. He won his first election to
Kingston City Council in 1843, and would later represent the city for nearly 50 years at the national level, both before and after
Confederation in 1867. One of his residences in Kingston,
Bellevue House, is now a popular
National Historic Site of Canada open to the public, and depicting the house as it would have been in the 1840s when he lived there. In the early hours of April 18, 1840, a dock fire, fanned by high winds, spread to a warehouse containing between 70 and 100 kegs of gunpowder. The resulting explosion spread the fire throughout the city's downtown area, destroying a large number of buildings, including the old city hall. To prevent similar incidents from occurring in future, the city began building with limestone or brick. This rebuilding phase was referred to as "the Limestone Revolution" and earned the city the nickname "The Limestone City".
20th century The
Canadian Locomotive Company was in the early 20th century the largest locomotive works in the
British Empire and the Davis
Tannery was at one time the largest tannery in the British Empire. The tannery operated for a century and was closed in 1973. Other manufacturing companies included the Marine Railway Company, which built steamboats; the Victoria Iron Works, which produced iron in bars from scrap; several breweries; a distillery; and two soap and candle manufacturers. (By the start of the 21st century, most heavy industry would leave the city and their former sites would be gradually rehabilitated and redeveloped.) A telephone system began operation in Kingston in 1881; at that time the population was 14,091. Electricity was not available in Kingston until 1888. Kingston grew moderately through the 20th century through a series of annexations of lands in adjacent Kingston Township, including a 1952 annexation of some ==Military history==