Background
He was born at his grandfather"s home, Humewood Castle, Kiltegan, County Wicklow, Ireland, the son of the Review Dominick Edward Blake, and Ann, daughter of William Hume (1747–1798) Member of Parliament, of Humewood Castle.
He was born at his grandfather"s home, Humewood Castle, Kiltegan, County Wicklow, Ireland, the son of the Review Dominick Edward Blake, and Ann, daughter of William Hume (1747–1798) Member of Parliament, of Humewood Castle.
He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin. In a few years he removed to Toronto, studied law, and was called to the bar in 1838.
He was the father of Edward Blake, an Ontario Premier and federal Liberal party of Canada leader. His ancestors were counted among the Tribes of Galway. In 1832 he emigrated to Canada and settled on a farm in Middlesex County.
He soon distinguished himself in the profession, but was strongly interested in the political issues which agitated the province.
In 1848 he was elected to the Legislature for East York (now Ontario County) and in the same year was appointed Solicitor-General for Upper Canada in the Lafontaine-Baldwin ministry. In 1849 he prepared the act reforming the practice and organization of the Court of Chancery in Upper Canada and resigned from the ministry in order to become in 1849 the first chancellor of the court.
In March, 1862, he resigned on account of failing health, and eight years later he died in Toronto. He was named a Queen's Counsel in 1848.
William Hume Blake, Esquire, married Catherine Honoria Hume (born in 1804), daughter of Joseph Samuel Hume, and Eliza, in 1832.
The couple emigrated to Canada in 1832. Her death on February 3, 1886, resulted from an accident. She served on the Committee of Management of the Toronto General Hospital and of the Female Emigrant Society and other similar bodies.
The couple were the parents of the Honorary
Edward Blake, an Ontario Premier and federal Liberal party of Canada leader and of the Honorary
Samuel Hume Blake, Knights of Columbus, a member of the Ontario Bar.