In summer 1784, with the administration of Government safely under Shelburne's colleague
Pitt the Younger, Col. Thomas Carleton was appointed as the first Lieutenant-Governor of
New Brunswick. Here, he helped to re-settle the many
Loyalists leaving the
United States. He was made
major-general in the regular army on 12 October 1793, and colonel commandant of a battalion of the
60th (Royal American) Regiment of Foot in August 1794. and so future events between the two would necessarily have been poisoned. Carleton would serve as Governor of New Brunswick until his death on February 2, 1817. In 1803 he departed for England and administered from there, as he never returned to the province, In view of heightened tensions following the 1807
Chesapeake–Leopard affair and New Brunswick's strategic position on the border with the United States, Carleton was ordered to return to his post. However, Carleton refused on the grounds that the new
Governor General, Sir
James Henry Craig, was only a
lieutenant-general while Carleton was a full general, and that “officers of a superior rank in the King’s Army cannot with propriety serve under the command of inferiors”. Carleton's duties in New Brunswick had to be borne by a succession of local officers. ==Legacy==