Background
James Murray was born on Jan. 21, 1721, at Ballencrief, Scotland, United Kingdom. He was the fifth son of Alexander, the 4th Lord Elibank and his wife Elizabeth(Betty) Stirling. His brother was Alexander Murray who served in Nova Scotia.
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administrator General military
James Murray was born on Jan. 21, 1721, at Ballencrief, Scotland, United Kingdom. He was the fifth son of Alexander, the 4th Lord Elibank and his wife Elizabeth(Betty) Stirling. His brother was Alexander Murray who served in Nova Scotia.
He was educated in Haddington and Selkirk.
In 1740 Murray was appointed a second lieutenant in Wynyard's Marines and served subsequently in the West Indies, Flanders, and Brittany and at the defense of Ostend in 1745. He took part in the Rochfort expedition of 1757 and commanded a brigade during the successful siege of Louisbourg, Cape Breton, in 1758.
At the decisive battle of the Plains of Abraham near old Quebec on Sept. 13, 1759, Murray commanded the left wing of the British army. After the death of James Wolfe and the French surrender of the garrison, he was put in charge with 4, 000 troops under his command. After a winter filled with hardships both for the British forces and for the French inhabitants of Quebec, Murray was faced in the spring of 1760 with a French force greatly superior in numbers.
On April 28, 1760, he met the French at Saint-Foy but was forced to retreat to the citadel. The French forces, led by Levis, laid siege to Quebec but were forced to retire when, on May 15, a British naval squadron arrived. Murray then reorganized his forces and proceeded to Montreal. He was there with his troops when Vaudreuil surrendered Montreal and New France to the British on Sept. 13, 1760.
In October 1760 Murray was appointed military governor, and, after the signing of peace between England and France in 1763, he became the first civil governor of Quebec. He got on well with many of the leading French Canadians in the colony and ignored the imperial authorities' wishes for the summoning of an elected assembly. The English merchants demanded not only an elected assembly but the introduction of English civil law, and when these demands were not met, they forced Murray's recall.
In 1774 Murray was appointed governor of Minorca off Spain. In August 1781 a force of 16, 000 French and Spanish troops laid siege to Fort St. Philip on Minorca. Murray held out for some months but finally was forced to surrender on Feb. 5, 1782. He was subsequently tried by a general court-martial, but he was acquitted early in 1783 of all charges except two minor ones.
He was made a full general in February 1783 and subsequently served for a time as governor of Hull in Yorkshire. He died at his residence, Beauport House, near Battle, Sussex, on June 18, 1794.
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He favoured the the French-Canadians over British merchants who came to settle in the wake of the conquest. He allowed the continuance of French civil law and he needed to be careful not to incite discontent or rebellion. Murray successfully argued for the Quebec Act to continue slavery in Quebec as it had existed under the French.
On 5 September 1760, Murray signed a Treaty of Peace and Friendship with the Huron Nation, then residing at Lorette, near Quebec City.
In December 1748, he married Cordelia Collier, of Hastings. In 1780, he married, as his second wife, Ann Witham, daughter of the Consul-General. His first marriage had been childless, but by his second, he had six children (two of whom died in infancy).