Nicholas Nepean

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Nicholas Nepean (1757 – 1823) was a British military officer and colonial official in Nova Scotia in the early 19th Century.

Born in Saltash, Cornwall in 1757, he joined the Royal Marines in 1776[1] Nepean would serve with the British Army after 1789 with the New South Wales Corps and then with the 93rd Regiment in 1794 where he was deployed to Ireland (1795-96), Gibraltar (1802-03) and Canada (1807-1812).

Nepean was appointed acting civil administrator of Cape Breton Island in 1807 to replace the unpopular John Despard,[1] what was his only major non-military appointment. He and Depard were a line of acting administrators as William Macarmick had left the colony since 1794 but remained in title only until 1815. After his time in Cape Breton he remained in the army until retiring as Lieutenant general in 1814 and returned to England and died at Newton Abbot in 1823.

Nepean claimed to fame was being brother of Sir Evan Nepean and in the dismissal of an equally mediocre official Sir William Campbell as Attorney General and Executive Councilor. Campbell appealed his dismissal and later became Chief Justice of Upper Canada.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b "Biography – NEPEAN, NICHOLAS – Volume VI (1821-1835) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography". Biographi.ca. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Biography – CAMPBELL, Sir WILLIAM – Volume VI (1821-1835) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography". Biographi.ca. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
Political offices
Preceded by Acting Administrator of Cape Breton Island
1807-1812
Served under: William Macarmick
Succeeded by