Monthly Review• Each Month the Bank of Nova Scotia Prepares an Authoritative Report on Some Important Phase of Canadian Business Or Finance

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Monthly Review• Each Month the Bank of Nova Scotia Prepares an Authoritative Report on Some Important Phase of Canadian Business Or Finance Monthly Review• Each month The Bank of Nova Scotia prepares an authoritative report on some important phase of Canadian business or finance. A copy is yours for the asking. Simply ask the manager of any branch £or a copy 0£ the "Review", or write to the General Office of the Bank in Toronto. THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA ..... ....,. "' .iJVVA.0 ·-·-- - -----"''---- origin of the name Micmac is to be found in their own torm M aku­ megek i.e. "On-the-ground." But these are minor criticisms. This is a good book. T. H. R. THE LOYALISTS OF NEW BRUNSWICK. By ESTHER CLARK WRIGHT. Fredericton, N. B. 1955. $4.00. In this attractively printed book on The Loyalists of New Bruns­ wick, Esther Clark Wright has thrown new light on the gathering to­ gether and exodus of thousands of refugees transported from the port of New York at the close of the American Revolution, and has traced the struggles of those Loyalists who settled in what is now New Bruns­ wick. Incidentally, Mrs. Wright explains the origin of the namfl Loyalist to supersede such names as Tory, King's man, Royalist and Loyal Refugee. Mrs. Wright is a native of Fredericton and a graduate in history and economics from Acadia and Radcliffe, and is already well known for her regional studies of New Brunswick rivers-The Petitcodiac, The Mirmaichi, and The Saint John River. She became interested in the Loyalists of New Brunswick while putting together the story of her Loyalist ancestor, Alexander Clark, and has done extensive research in Canada, the united States and England. The practice of putting footnotes at the end of the book has made it readable for the ordinary person, and yet allows serious students of history to avail themselves of Mrs. Wright's painstaking research. The frontispiece is a clear map of New Brunswick and will be useful to those not familiar with the province. In the opening chapter Mrs. Wright explains the changing of "Tory" into "Loyalist". Her quotations are extremely well chosen, particularly the extracts from different diaries to show what life was like in those days. The accounts of Walter Bates, Sarah Frost, Mrs. _ .----t· - Fisher, John Ward and 11-year old Hannah Ingraham give vivid pic­ tures of the hardships of the Loyalists and show that satisfactory ar­ rangements were not made for the arrival of Loyalists or Provincial Corps. The author discusses why May 18 was chosen as Loyalist Day when some arrived on May 10 and the disembarking of passengers occupied nearly a month; and by using Commissary-General's ac­ counts and other sources has been able to work out a more comprehen­ sive list of ships in the Spring Fleet, June Fleet, Late Summer Arrivals and Fall Fleet. Everyone has heard in a vague way that the British government gave supplies to the Loyalists, but included in this volume is an interesting table of rations and their equivalents, which should prove most interestin~ to a modern dietitian. The author is critical of the complacent attitude generally adopted by New Brunswickers toward toe Loyalists and proves false the popular beliefs that New Brunswick Loyalists came mostly from Massachusetts and that they belonged to the first families of that colony and that many were Harvard graduates. It will come as a shock to many to realize that 90% of Loyalists in New Brunswick were American born. Mrs. Wright's researches have shown that approximately 40% of Loyalists - --- ----........... '-" '-Jt..J~..l..:J .J..\IJ.:.J y ..L .l.!J yy A ""''in the Comban7'1 "'"' Wor.4.r at Cwlblt, Ontario •.. lltt larttul (Jouxr transformtr (J/ant in Canada. Her<, transformtrs art built for lltt count,.,•1 ttreal ekctric Power (Jroittts. /lfa111 tltowantls of matliematical calculations are inwl11td in duicnintt transformers, and tltt widt vnn·e11 of otlttr tkctn"cal equi1Jm111t manufactured at Ca11adian Ctn<ral Eltctric's fifittn Plants. ''That's why you should study maths, son" A close loolr. at Canada today will quiclr.ly By the time many young Canadian• have com· convince any young man that mathematic~ pleted their education the use of electricity will play an important part in his future. will again have doubled. The more abundantly Everywhere about him he will see the electric power is produced and put to work in handiwork of the professional engineer industry and homes, the higher will go our whose training, based on math em a tics, standard of living and the lower will go the is contributing so much to this country's costs of producing goods of every variety. vast expansion. In the coming years Canada's continuing de· The demand for engineers grows as Canada velopment will offer the challenge and reward grows. Just 15 years ago, only one in 660 of engineering careers to thousands of young worlters was a graduate engineer. Now there Canadians. For them there will be the satis- is one to every 180 and the need continues faction of participating in an important and to increase. For wherever big things are going skilful profession and the deeper satisfaction on, there you will find the engineer . of contributing to the strength and prosperity whose vision and initiative make him a key of our nation. man in Canada's progress. For over 60 years, Canadian General Electric Nearly a thousand engineers arc employed by has engineered and manufactured much of the this Company alone .. one to about every electricalequipmcntthatbasplayedsuchavital 15 employees. They design, develop, role in malr.ing this country one of the most manufacture, sell and service complex highly electrified in the world. T oday the electrical equipment ... equipment that Company continues to expand its generates power, transmits it and puts facilities, not only for present require- 1 i t to work in homes, farms and flI. ments, but also to meet the needs industry. ~ of the Canada of tomorrow. -,:J-ogre$S Is Ovr Most lmporlant Protlvcf CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY NEW BOOKS came from New York, 22% from New Jersey, 12.9% from Connecti­ cut and 7.7% from Pennsylvania and only 6.1% from Massachusetts. Nor do they fit into the categories usually accepted by American his­ torians that Loyalists belonged to the governing, wealthy and profes­ sional classes or to the Church of England clergy. The writer estimf!-tes that bet~een 14,000 and 15,000 Loyalists came to New. Bruns:wi~k, and has listed the names of 6 000 of these in the Appendix. This list shows names of families thei~ former homes, service during the Re­ vol.ution, their first gra~ts, and their subsequent g~an_ts or place of residence. However, it is a pity that so many abbrev1at1ons were used in this valuable list. Mrs. Wright has been able to draw on her past studies for the .chap­ ters on "The Old Province" and "The New Province," but she blames bad leadership at Halifax for dividing the Old Province of Nova Scotia and condemns Governor John Parr and Nova Scotian officials without in~icating clearly .the difficulties they had to overcome with the ~?pu­ l~t10n of the provmce doubled overnight. Parr may ha:ve lac~ed .far­ s1g~ tedness, goo~ judgment, ability to seize on t~e salient pomts m a policy or suggestion, and let the non-essentials go and may have been "timid about acting without instructions from home" as Mrs. Wright declares, but I disagree with her statement that the "members of the Council were even less statesmanlike than Parr, and the question of fees loomed eyen larger in their eyes than in the governor's." . Mrs. Wright has described the harsh treatment of the Loyalists by .the ~eb~ls, the delay in getting rations and gr!l'n~ in Noya Scotia, their exile m a strange country and their hardships m carvmg ho.mes and farms and towns from a wilderness and has thrown some new light on this familiar story by her careful r~search. There are many happy turns of phrase as when she men !;ions that Cartier had discovered ~ai~ de Chaleur "on one of its rare hot days" and. t~~t Willia~ Frank- lin was as fond of words as his father Benjamm. The writer con­ cludes that many descendants of Loyalists remain in New Brunswick to~ay and t~at the "belief in constitutional procedure for redress of -:-­ grievances, like the loyalty to the British crown one o! t~e funda~ental tenets of the Loyalists, meant patience and a conviction of ultimate triumph of justice. It meant respect for law and order and f?r orderl.Y procedure.... As the Loyalist developed into New Brunsww.ker, this was the most valuable contribution he made to the new province and to the ~ation of which it ultimately became a part." . ~his hands?me looking volume on The Loyalists of l:f ew Brunswick, W!th its cle~r pnnt and binding in scarlet cloth, is a cre41~ to the B_runs­ wick Pre~s m Fredericton and to publishers in the Mar1t1me Provmces. Mrs. Wright has produced a vivid and well-documented account of those families who settled in the wilderness north of the Bay of Fundy in what is now New Brunswick. P. R. BLAKELEY. THE DALHOUSIE REVIEW 291 Burchell, Smith, Jost, Willis & Burchell i&arnsurs. i;oliritors. £tr. Canadian Pacific Building HALIFAX. N . S. HON. c. J. Bt1RCBl:LL, Q.C. JoeN WtLLIS F. D. SMITH, Q.C. c. w. BURCHELL w. H. JOST, Q.C. s. P. CHISHOLM G. H. FITZGERALD Compliments of Maritime Photo Engravers Ltd.
Recommended publications
  • Reference Manual
    WOLFVILLE HISTORICAL SOCIETY REFERENCE MANUAL MANAGEMENT AND OPERATION OF THE SOCIETY AND THE RANDALL HOUSE MUSEUM Revised April 2016 ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THIS MANUAL CHIN Canadian Heritage Information Network CMAP Community Museums Assistance Program CCI Canadian Conservation Institute CPP Canada Pension Plan CRA Canada Revenue Agency ECWA Esther Clark Wright Archives EI Employment Insurance ANSM Association of Nova Scotia Museums HST Harmonized Sales Tax KHHC Kings Hants Heritage Connection NSM Nova Scotia Museum RHMC Randall House Management Committee WHS Wolfville Historical Society TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 PURPOSE OF THE MANUAL 1.2 FOUNDATIONAL STATEMENTS 1.3 A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE SOCIETY 1.4 BRIEF HISTORY OF RANDALL HOUSE 1.5 ACTIVITIES AND SERVICES OF THE SOCIETY 1.5.1 Randall House and Contents 1.5.2 Exhibits 1.5.3 Program 1.5.4 Social Events 1.5.5 The Civic Memorial Book 1.5.6 Archives 1.5.7 Outreach 1.6 GOVERNANCE DOCUMENTS 1.6.1 Memorandum of Association of the Wolfville Historical Society 1.6.2 By-Laws of The Wolfville Historical Society 1.6.3 Certificate of Incorporation 1.7 THE STRUCTURE OF THE SOCIETY 1.7.1 Stakeholders 1.7.2 Society Organization 1.7.3 Organization Chart 1.8 THE SOCIETY'S RESPONSIBILITY & ACCOUNTABILITY TO THE STAKEHOLDERS 1.8.1 Federal, Provincial & Municipal Stakeholders 1.8.1.1 The Canada Revenue Agency 1.8.1.2 Nova Scotia Registrar of Joint Stock Companies 1.8.1.3 Nova Scotia Workers Compensation Board 1.8.1.4 Nova Scotia Department of Education & The Department
    [Show full text]
  • Regular Baptists in Maine, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, 1780 to 1815
    The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Electronic Theses and Dissertations Fogler Library Spring 5-26-2020 Separating God's Two Kingdoms: Regular Baptists in Maine, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, 1780 to 1815 Ronald S. Baines University of Maine, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd Part of the Canadian History Commons, Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, Christianity Commons, History of Christianity Commons, History of Religion Commons, Political History Commons, Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Baines, Ronald S., "Separating God's Two Kingdoms: Regular Baptists in Maine, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, 1780 to 1815" (2020). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 3183. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/3183 This Open-Access Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SEPARATING GOD’S TWO KINGDOMS: REGULAR BAPTISTS IN MAINE, NOVA SCOTIA, AND NEW BRUNSWICK, 1780 TO 1815 By Ronald S. Baines B.S. Westfield State College, 1989 M.A. Reformed Theological Seminary, 2007 A DISSERTATION Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy (in History) The Graduate School The University of Maine May 2020 Advisory Committee: Liam Riordan, Professor of History, Advisor Richard Judd, Professor of History, emeritus Michael Lang, Associate Professor of History James M. Renihan, Professor of Historical Theology, IRBS Theological Seminary Scott See, Professor of History, emeritus SEPARATING GOD’S TWO KINGDOMS: REGULAR BAPTISTS IN MAINE, NOVA SCOTIA, AND NEW BRUNSWICK, 1780 TO 1815 By Ronald S.
    [Show full text]
  • Acadiensis Cover
    Bibliography/Bibliographie BIBLIOGRAPHY/BILIOGRAPHIE Esther Clark Wright: A Bibliography, 1914-1988 Compiled by Patricia Townsend 1914 “A Contrast.” Acadia Athenaeum 41 (December 1914): 70. 1915 “Christmas Night.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (December 1915): 66. 1916 “On the Washademoak.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (January 1916): 140-2. “Rivers and Lakes.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (January 1916): 146-8. “January Thaws.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (January 1916): 154. “The Propylaeum Society.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (June 1916): 502. “Public Opinion.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (June 1916): 565-8. 1917 “Mission Band Lesson.” Tidings 24 (January 1917): 12-14; 24 (February 1917): 11-13. “Mission Band Lesson: The Grande-Ligne Mission.” Tidings 24 (March 1917): 17-19. “Mission Band Lesson: On Turkey.” Tidings 24 (April 1917): 12-14; 24 (May 1917): 13-14. “Mission Band Lesson: Missions to Turkey.” Tidings 24 (June 1917): 12-14. “Mission Band Lesson: On Persia.” Tidings 24 (July/August 1917): 11-12. “Mission Band Lesson: On South America.” Tidings 24 (September 1917): 14-15. 168 Acadiensis “Mission Band Lesson: Bolivia.” Tidings 24 (October 1917): 11-12. “Mission Band Lesson: African Adventurers.” Tidings 24 (November 1917): 30-2; 24 (December 1917): 10-12. 1918 “Mission Band Lesson: African Adventurers.” Tidings 25 (January 1918): 11-13; 25 (February 1918): 13-14; 25 (April 1918): 13-15; 25 (May 1918): 16-17. 1919 “The Challenge to Canadian Womanhood.” The Maritime Baptist 14 (20 August 1919): 11. 1920 “The Student Volunteer Convention at Des Moines, December 31-January 4.” The Maritime Baptist 15 (4 February 1920): 8. 1922 “Overseas Students in British Universities.” Canadian Student 4 (March 1922): 18-20.
    [Show full text]
  • Esther Clark Wright: a Bibliography, 1914-1988 Patricia Townsend
    Document generated on 09/28/2021 5:04 a.m. Acadiensis Esther Clark Wright: A Bibliography, 1914-1988 Patricia Townsend Volume 27, Number 2, Spring 1998 URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/acad27_2bib01 See table of contents Publisher(s) The Department of History at the University of New Brunswick ISSN 0044-5851 (print) 1712-7432 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this document Townsend, P. (1998). Esther Clark Wright:: A Bibliography, 1914-1988. Acadiensis, 27(2), 167–176. All rights reserved © Department of History at the University of New This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit Brunswick, 1998 (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit. Érudit is a non-profit inter-university consortium of the Université de Montréal, Université Laval, and the Université du Québec à Montréal. Its mission is to promote and disseminate research. https://www.erudit.org/en/ Bibliography/Bibliographie BIBLIOGRAPHY/BILIOGRAPHIE Esther Clark Wright: A Bibliography, 1914-1988 Compiled by Patricia Townsend 1914 “A Contrast.” Acadia Athenaeum 41 (December 1914): 70. 1915 “Christmas Night.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (December 1915): 66. 1916 “On the Washademoak.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (January 1916): 140-2. “Rivers and Lakes.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (January 1916): 146-8. “January Thaws.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (January 1916): 154. “The Propylaeum Society.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (June 1916): 502. “Public Opinion.” Acadia Athenaeum 42 (June 1916): 565-8. 1917 “Mission Band Lesson.” Tidings 24 (January 1917): 12-14; 24 (February 1917): 11-13.
    [Show full text]
  • The Growth and Evolution of an Historical Myth, 1825-1914
    MURRAY BARKLEY The Loyalist Tradition in New Brunswick: the Growth and Evolution of an Historical Myth, 1825-1914 . They were But words are wanting to tell what they were; Ask what men should be? and they were that. — Quoted in the New Brunswick Courier (Saint John), May 23, 1863 (from the Colonial Presbyterian). The "Loyalist experiment" in New Brunswick was the attempt to establish an exclusive Elysium in the north. It was to have been based on a hierarchical social structure, an agricultural society founded on large land-holdings, and a corporate, self-sufficient community of loyal, well-disposed subjects. It had been designed as a bastion against levelling republican principles.1 The experiment, as such, proved an unmitigated failure. For, united by war, the Loyalists were divided in peace. Throughout the American Revolution, the adversities of war had produced a powerful cohesion among the Loyalists. But in peace, the circumstances of the first settlement of New Brunswick seem to have precipitated only diversity and dissent.2 What really constituted 1 W.S. MacNutt, New Brunswick; A History: 1784-1867 (Toronto, 1963), pp. 42, 44, 89, 150, 164, & 179. 2 For a fuller discussion of the innumerable dissensions and rivalries which arose among the Loyalists during the initial stages of the settlement of New Brunswick, see MacNutt, New Bruns­ wick, pp. 32-63, passim; Esther Clark Wright, The Loyalists of New Brunswick (Fredericton. 1955), pp. 145-150, 175-177, 233-240, passim; Robert Fellows, "The Loyalists and Land Settle­ ment in New Brunswick, 1783-1790; A Study in Colonial Administration", Canadian Archivist, II, 2 (1971), pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Bound to Slavery: Economic and Biographical Connections to Atlantic Slavery Between the Maritimes and West Indies After 1783
    University of Vermont ScholarWorks @ UVM Graduate College Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 2021 Bound to Slavery: Economic and Biographical Connections to Atlantic Slavery between the Maritimes and West Indies after 1783 Sarah Elizabeth Chute University of Vermont Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis Part of the African American Studies Commons, and the Caribbean Languages and Societies Commons Recommended Citation Chute, Sarah Elizabeth, "Bound to Slavery: Economic and Biographical Connections to Atlantic Slavery between the Maritimes and West Indies after 1783" (2021). Graduate College Dissertations and Theses. 1359. https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/1359 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Dissertations and Theses at ScholarWorks @ UVM. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate College Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ UVM. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BOUND TO SLAVERY: ECONOMIC AND BIOGRAPHICAL CONNECTIONS TO ATLANTIC SLAVERY BETWEEN THE MARITIMES AND WEST INDIES AFTER 1783 A Thesis Presented by Sarah Elizabeth Chute to The Faculty of the Graduate College of The University of Vermont In Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements For the Degree of Master of Arts Specializing in History May, 2021 Defense Date: March 24, 2021 Thesis Examination Committee: Harvey Amani Whitfield, Ph.D., Advisor Sarah E. Turner, Ph.D., Chairperson David Massell, Ph.D. Cynthia J. Forehand, Ph.D., Dean of the Graduate College Abstract Born in Africa, shipped to the West Indies, enslaved in the American colonies, and promised freedom in Colonial Canada: this well-known narrative traces a journey from tropical climates to northern temperate zones, from slavery to freedom.
    [Show full text]
  • A Tribute to the Life and Legacy of Esther Clark Wright Bonnie Huskins
    Document generated on 10/01/2021 6:20 p.m. Acadiensis Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region Revue d’histoire de la région Atlantique The Personal and the Professional: A Tribute to the Life and Legacy of Esther Clark Wright Bonnie Huskins Volume 47, Number 2, Summer–Fall 2018 URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1058006ar DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aca.2018.0021 See table of contents Publisher(s) Department of History at the University of New Brunswick ISSN 0044-5851 (print) 1712-7432 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this document Huskins, B. (2018). The Personal and the Professional: A Tribute to the Life and Legacy of Esther Clark Wright. Acadiensis, 47(2). https://doi.org/10.1353/aca.2018.0021 All Rights Reserved ©, 2019 Bonnie Huskins This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit. Érudit is a non-profit inter-university consortium of the Université de Montréal, Université Laval, and the Université du Québec à Montréal. Its mission is to promote and disseminate research. https://www.erudit.org/en/ 02031-06 Wright Forum-Huskins_Layout 2018-11-15 10:03 AM Page 112 The Personal and the Professional: A Tribute to the Life and Legacy of Esther Clark Wright IN 2016 THE 21ST ATLANTIC CANADA STUDIES CONFERENCE OPENED with a roundtable profiling the life and legacy of historian Esther Clark Wright.
    [Show full text]
  • Morale of Canadian Censors During the Second World War…………………………….47
    MORALE OF CANADIAN CENSORS DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR by Ryan Alan d’Eon Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts with Honours in History Acadia University April, 2016 © Copyright by Ryan Alan d’Eon, 2016 This thesis by Ryan Alan d’Eon is accepted in its present form by the Department of History as satisfying the thesis requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts with Honours Approved by the Thesis Supervisor __________________________ ____________________ Dr. Paul Doerr Date Approved by the Head of the Department __________________________ ____________________ Dr. Gillian Poulter Date Approved by the Honours Committee __________________________ ____________________ Dr. Anna Redden Date ii I, Ryan Alan d’Eon, grant permission to the University Librarian at Acadia University to reproduce, loan or distribute copies of my thesis in microform, paper or electronic formats on a non-profit basis. I, however, retain the copyright in my thesis. _________________________________ Signature of Author _________________________________ Date iii Acknowledgements First off I would like to thank Wendy Robicheau for her guidance during the archival process of my thesis and for being my second reader despite being on sabbatical. I would like to thank the others within the Kirkconnell Room as they also helped me to familiarise myself with the archival process. I would also like to thank Dr. Paul Doerr for carefully reading my thesis despite being on sabbatical and for giving me guidance on how to write an articulate, coherent thesis. I thank Wendy Elliott for taking time out her day to discuss her father’s service during the Second World War and Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • C:\Documents and Settings\Cleadie\My Documents\WE-LIVED.PUB
    WE LIVED A GENEALOGICAL NEWSLETTER OF NEW BRUNSWICK SOURCES BOOK LISTINGS & OTHER AIDS {NOTE: Many of these items may not be in print at this time. They are listed here to let people know that they do exist, and copies may be found through the authors, or in libraries.} Issue # 1, = None listed in Issue 1 Issue # 2, April 1979 = Courage Through Adversity, by John B. Beyea, R. R. # 8, Fredericton, NB, E3B 5W5. = Descendants of Edmund and Jane (Webb) Price, by Fred Amos, Myrtle Perry and Gerald Keith = New Brunswick Census Records = see the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick for a listing of all census books available. = A Guide to the Manuscript Collection in the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, by Ann B. Rigby {out of print, and much data added since this was published. = The Libby Family Genealogy 1602-1881, a re-print was for sale from Mr. Clark Libby, Portland Farm Road, Scarborough, Maine. Issue # 3, July 1979 = Lost In Canada, a quarterly publication, by Joy Reisinger {1020 Central Ave, Sparta, Wisc, USA 54656} This is mainly about French ancestry from Quebec and Ontario that crossed the boarder into the US. Data from both sides of the line is included. = Passamaquoddy - Genealogies of West Isles Families, by Martha Ford Barto {Clam Cove Head, Fairhaven, Deer Island, NB} = Planters and Pioneers, Nova Scotia 1749-1775, by Esther Clark Wright* {deceased} NS took in NB for this time period. Her source materials are on deposit at Acadia University {?}, in NS. = Samphire Greens: The Story of the Steeves, by Esther Clark Wright* = Alexander Clark, Loyalist, by Esther Clark Wright* = People and Places I, New Brunswick, by Esther Clark Wright* = Bloomindon Rose, by Esther Clark Wright* = The Loyalist of New Brunswick, by Esther Clark Wright* = Saint John Ships and Their Builders, by Esther Clark Wright* * {Esther Clark Wright's books might be available in the NB Mesuem Book Store, Douglas Ave, Saint John, NB.} = Early Marriage Records of New Brunswick (1776-1839), {Saint John City and County}, by B.
    [Show full text]
  • Thus Far Thou Shalt Come and No Farther”: Domestic Science
    “THUS FAR THOU SHALT COME AND NO FARTHER”: DOMESTIC SCIENCE AND THE LIMITS OF WOMEN’S EDUCATION AT THE ACADIA LADIES’ SEMINARY, 1878-1926 by Zoë Elisabeth Tustin Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts with Honours in History Acadia University April, 2015 © Copyright by Zoë Elisabeth Tustin, 2015 This thesis by Zoë Elisabeth Tustin is accepted in its present form by the Department of History and Classics as satisfying the thesis requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts with Honours Approved by the Thesis Supervisor __________________________ ____________________ Dr. Gillian Poulter Date Approved by the Head of the Department __________________________ ____________________ Dr. Paul Doerr Date Approved by the Honours Committee __________________________ ____________________ Dr. Anthony Thomson Date ii I, Zoë Elisabeth Tustin, grant permission to the University Librarian at Acadia University to reproduce, loan or distribute copies of my thesis in microform, paper or electronic formats on a non-profit basis. I, however, retain the copyright in my thesis. _________________________________ Signature of Author _________________________________ Date iii Acknowledgements First I would like to thank Dr. Gillian Poulter for her guidance through this thesis, from its conception to the last minutes of editing. I simply would not have been able to complete this project without your patience and direction. Special thanks also go to my second reader Dr. Stephen Henderson for his keen editorial eye and insightful input. I also extend sincere gratitude to the Acadia archivists who allowed me hours pouring over material and provided such support in my research. To all professors who have taught me in my time at Acadia, especially those in the Department of History, I have been inspired and humbled in your classes.
    [Show full text]
  • They Planted Well
    They Planted Well v THEY PLANTED WELL NEW ENGLAND PLANTERS IN MARITIME CANADA Edited by Margaret Conrad TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 7 INTRODUCTION 9 IMMIGRATION AND SETTLEMENT R.S. Longley, The Coming of the New England Planters to the Annapolis Valley 14 D. Murray Young, Planter Settlements in the St. John Valley 29 Esther Clark Wright, Cumberland Township: A Focal Point of Early Settlement on the Bay of Fundy 36 Ernest A. Clarke, Cumberland Planters and the Aftermath of the Attack on Fort Cumberland 42 HISTORIOGRAPHICAL CONTEXT Jack Greene, Recent Developments in the Historiography of Colonial New England 61 George Rawlyk, J.B. Brebner and Some Recent Trends in Eighteenth-Century Maritime Historiography 97 Barry Cahill, New England Planters at the Public Archives of Nova Scotia 120 Terrence Punch, Genealogy, Migration and the Study of the Past 132 CULTURE AND SOCIETY Graeme Wynn, The Geography of the Maritime Provinces in 1800: Patterns and Questions 138 Debra McNabb, The Role of the Land in Settling Horton Township, Nova Scotia, 1766-1830 151 Elizabeth Mancke, Corporate Structure and Private Interest: The Mid-Eighteenth Century Expansion of New England 161 Allen Robertson, Methodism Among Nova Scotia's Yankee Planters 178 Daniel Goodwin, From Disunity to Integration: Evangelical Religion and Society in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, 1761-1830 190 Thomas Vincent, Henry Alline: Problems of Approach and Reading the Hymns as Poetry 201 Gwendolyn Davies, Persona in Planter Journals 211 MATERIAL CULTURE Allen Penney, A Planter House: The Simeon Perkins House, Liverpool, Nova Scotia 218 Daniel Norris, An Examination of the Stephen Loomer House, Habitant, Kings County, Nova Scotia 236 Heather Davidson, Private Lives from Public Artifacts: The Architectural Heritage of Kings County Planters 249 M.A.
    [Show full text]
  • Nova Scotia's New Englanders and the Creation of a British
    An Unsettled Plantation: Nova Scotia’s New Englanders and the Creation of a British Colony, 1759-1776 by Alexandra L. Montgomery Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts at Dalhousie University Halifax, Nova Scotia July 2012 © Copyright by Alexandra L. Montgomery, 2012 DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY The undersigned hereby certify that they have read and recommend to the Faculty of Graduate Studies for acceptance a thesis entitled “An Unsettled Plantation: Nova Scotia’s New Englanders and the Creation of a British Colony, 1759-1776” by Alexandra L. Montgomery in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts. Dated: July 24, 2012 Supervisor: _________________________________ Readers: _________________________________ _________________________________ ii DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY DATE: July 24, 2012 AUTHOR: Alexandra L. Montgomery TITLE: An Unsettled Plantation: Nova Scotia’s New Englanders and the Creation of a British Colony, 1759-1776 DEPARTMENT OR SCHOOL: Department of History DEGREE: MA CONVOCATION: October YEAR: 2012 Permission is herewith granted to Dalhousie University to circulate and to have copied for non-commercial purposes, at its discretion, the above title upon the request of individuals or institutions. I understand that my thesis will be electronically available to the public. The author reserves other publication rights, and neither the thesis nor extensive extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author’s written permission. The author attests that permission has been obtained for the use of any copyrighted material appearing in the thesis (other than the brief excerpts requiring only proper acknowledgement in scholarly writing), and that all such use is clearly acknowledged.
    [Show full text]