Stephen Leacock was born on 30 December 1869 in
Swanmore, a village near
Southampton in southern England. He was the third of the eleven children born to (Walter) Peter Leacock (1834-1940), who was born and grew up at Oak Hill on the
Isle of Wight, an estate that his grandfather had purchased after returning from
Madeira where his family had made a fortune out of
plantations and Leacock's
Madeira wine, founded in 1760. Stephen's mother, Agnes, was born at
Soberton, the youngest daughter by his second wife (Caroline Linton Palmer) of the Rev. Stephen Butler, of Bury Lodge, the Butler estate that overlooked the village of
Hambledon, Hampshire. Stephen Butler (for whom Leacock was named), was the maternal grandson of Admiral
James Richard Dacres and a brother of Sir Thomas Dacres Butler,
Usher of the Black Rod. Leacock's mother was the half-sister of Major
Thomas Adair Butler, who won the
Victoria Cross at the siege and capture of Lucknow in India. Peter's father, Thomas Murdock Leacock J.P., had already conceived plans eventually to send his son out to the
colonies, but when he discovered that at age eighteen Peter had married Agnes Butler without his permission, almost immediately he shipped them out to South Africa where he had bought them a farm. The farm in South Africa failed and Stephen's parents returned to
Hampshire, where he was born. When Stephen was six, the family moved to Canada, where they settled on a farm near the village of
Sutton, Ontario, and the shores of
Lake Simcoe. Their farm in the township of
Georgina was also unsuccessful, and the family was kept afloat by money sent from Leacock's paternal grandfather. Stephen's father, Peter, became an alcoholic; in the fall of 1878, Peter travelled west to
Manitoba with his brother
E.P. Leacock (the subject of Stephen's book
My Remarkable Uncle, published in 1942), leaving behind Agnes and the children. Stephen Leacock, always of obvious intelligence, was sent by his grandfather to the elite private school of
Upper Canada College in
Toronto, also attended by his older brothers, where he was top of the class and was chosen as head boy. Leacock graduated in 1887, and returned home to find that his father had returned from Manitoba. Soon after, his father left the family again and never returned. while other sources indicate that he moved to
Nova Scotia and changed his name to Lewis. In 1887, seventeen-year-old Leacock started at
University College at the
University of Toronto, where he was admitted to the
Zeta Psi fraternity. His first year was bankrolled by a small scholarship, but Leacock found he could not return to his studies the following year because of financial difficulties. He left university to work as a teacher—an occupation he disliked immensely—at
Strathroy,
Uxbridge and finally in Toronto. As a teacher at Upper Canada College, his
alma mater, he was able simultaneously to attend classes at the University of Toronto and, in 1891, earn his degree through part-time studies. It was during this period that his first writing was published in
The Varsity, a campus newspaper. == Academic and political life ==