1790s – British create protective tariffs to encourage timber production for Navy after Napoléon Bonaparte cuts off Baltic supply of tall trees and hardwood. First in New Brunswick then in Lower and Upper Canada. Montreal merchants expand transport to handle trade.
A road Act is passed, in Lower Canada, though opposed by country people, who fear a return of the Statue labor of Governor Haldimand's time.
After visiting Upper Canada in 1795, Duke de la Rochefoucauld explains Governor General Lord Dorchester's powers and their limitations[3]
Dorchester lays out moves he had to make to keep U.S. Gen. Anthony Wayne from starting war at Detroit, given British diplomatic policy and U.S. politics[4]
Indian Department official strongly recommends that Indigenous leaders not be given liquor when land deals and other business is to be done[5]
Jay Treaty gives such advantage to British traders "that American traders will not be able to maintain a competition with them"[6]
After crossing from British to U.S. lines and going to Cincinnati, William Kenny sends apology to former enslaver Alexander McKee for leaving him[7]
"The general failure of the crops this year" has induced Gov. Gen. Lord Dorchester to prohibit their export until December[8]
Agricultural Society offers $40 (or gold medal or silver cup) for "largest quantity of merchantable Fall or Winter Wheat" grown on 1 arpent for 1797[9]
Ships from places of "plague, pestilence or disease" must quarantine; guns may be used to compel, and captains hiding disease commit capital crime[10]
Montrealnotary offers cash for Lower and Upper Canada land certificates belonging to those "inclined to dispose of the same"[12]
Teenage apprentice in Gazette printing shop dies of head wound from musket ball fired through window; coroner's verdict: willful murder[13]
Apprentice "about fourteen years old, middling stout of his age, with a remarkable flat nose" is missing, but "will be well treated" if he returns[14]
Baby lies next to hole in Lake Champlain ice where sleigh fell through; mother probably threw her to safety; good start to "a heroine's life in a novel"[15]
In addition to schooling for young men and public, "Messieurs Tanswell and Son" offer young women education they cannot receive in schools[16]
Establishing British Constitution in U.C. offers "best method gradually[...]to disarm the spirit of democratic subversion" where it arose[18]
Thinking it conflicts with his authority, Lt. Gov. Simcoe wants reform of Indian Department, which he finds ignorant and indolent and people distrust[19]
Persons (including those born British subjects) from other countries must have lived in U.C. 7 years to be electable to legislature[20]
Settlers approved by Governor in Council may receive 200–1,200 acres of land, of which 2% must be cleared in first 3 years and 5% in next 4 years[21]
Simcoe links (pg. 349) education to "Children of the principal People[...]to qualify them for[...]leading functions in the Church and State"[22]
Simcoe wants "Protestant Episcopal University" in U.C. (or even in U.S.A.) to raise learned and united clergy favourable to Great Britain[23]
Simcoe wants pro-British newspapers "to counteract the baneful effects of the News Papers of the United States disseminated with great Industry"[24]
Temporary agreement requires U.C. not to tax goods from Lower Canada, but L.C. may tax goods from U.C., returning one-eighth of net to U.C.[25]
Lt. Gov. Wentworth says prosperity is increasing, provincial revenue will probably not need further duties and public debt will be extinguished[36]
Agriculture Society offers prizes totalling £100 to farmers raising most or heaviest quantity of wheat, flax seed, turnips, oxen, sheep and bulls[37]
Prohibition on further export of "Wheat and other Grain, Flour, Peas, Beef, Pork, and other Provisions" for 5 months[38]
Inspector-General of Mines wants both "Country Gentlemen [and] the Poor-Man" to watch for coal, gold, silver, copper, lead and other minerals[39]
Squadron commander at Halifax offers "exemption from all punishment" to deserters who return to service and possible recovery of forfeited wages[40]
Being exempt from militia service, Quakers ages 21-50 must work 4 days each year on highways or pay 3 shilling per day fine[41]
Loyalist with 200 acres in Shelburne County wants marshy tract where he can harvest hay for cattle that will support sawmill he plans to build[42]
Petition submitted on behalf of group planning grist and sawmill, who as Protestants are wanted because district is more than two-thirds Roman Catholic[43]
After militia fail to come to their aid, local inhabitants fire on its crew to drive off French privateer and rescue two ships taken by it[44]
"This morning his Majesty sloop of War 'Lynx', Capt. Hall, with two Mast-Ships under convoy, arrived here from New-Brunswick"[45]
Man is lost going from Chester to Windsor despite warning of "extreme badness of the road" and "changeableness and extremity of the weather"[46]
Night school open to teach youth "Arithmetic, Vulger, Decimal and Logarithmic,[...]Trigonometry, plain and spherical" and many other subjects[47]
The Beaux' Stratagem comedy to be presented for one night only; box seats 5 shillings, pit 3s[49]
"Umberella; Whoever has got one, on which[...]Theft is written in large Characters, is requested to return it to the Owner at Prince Edward Coffee-House"[50]
North West Companyvoyageurs are "equal to any thing" and "patient, emulous; indefatigable, and capable of performing seeming impossibilities"[56]
Unlike other Indigenous peoples, Cree receive praise from Roderick Mackenzie as "good hunters, hospitable and brave"[57]
John MacDonell gives "Grand Diable" keg of liquor and "a Chiefs Clothing" for sending so many to trade and "giving the Fort a good name"[58]
"The Brigade" finds many bison carcasses along Assiniboine River; "7360 Drown'd & mired along the River and in it; three to five files deep" on shore[59]
^"From Lord Dorchester to the Duke of Portland" (January 1, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pg. 251 (See also Joseph Brant letter reporting "Lake Indians" want to renew friendship, and letter to Brant telling him his efforts have little influence, as "the Indians[...]are sneaking off to General Wayne every day") Accessed 14 December 2023
^"From Lord Dorchester to the Duke of Portland" (April 25, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 346–8 Accessed 19 December 2023
^"From Joseph Chew to Thomas Aston Coffin" (January 1, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 254–5 Accessed 14 December 2023
^"From William Kenny to Alexander McKee" (September 30, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume V, 1792-1796 - (Supplementary), pg. 151 (See also affidavit of man sent to find "Molato man Named Bill the property of Colonel McKee") Accessed 20 December 2023
^"House of Assembly; Lower-Canada; Gentlemen(....)" (November 20, 1795), Journal of the House of Assembly, of Lower-Canada; From the 20th November 1795[....] (In English and French; 1796), pgs. 1, 3. Accessed 7 November 2023
^"From the Duke of Portland to Lord Dorchester" (excerpt; April 6, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pg. 343 Accessed 19 December 2023
^"Speculation -- Cash for Land" (March 9, 1795), The Quebec Gazette, Num. 1554 (April 2, 1795, Cahier 1), pg. 4. Accessed 8 December 2023
^"Died on Tuesday evening[....]," The Quebec Gazette, Num. 1559 (May 7, 1795, Cahier 1), pg. 2. (See also item just below this one, saying suspect in case killed himself; inquest verdict: insanity) Accessed 8 December 2023
^"Run away from the Subscriber[....]" (October 15, 1795), The Quebec Gazette, Num. 1585 (October 15, 1795, Cahier 1), pg. 4. Accessed 12 December 2023
^"Education," The Quebec Gazette, Num. 1556 (April 16, 1795, Cahier 1), pg. 4. Accessed 8 December 2023
^"Jean Gaston Pastry-Cook" (June 6, 1795), The Quebec Gazette, Num. 1566 (June 18, 1795), pg. 4. Accessed 8 December 2023
^"From J.G. Simcoe to the Duke of Portland" (January 22, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 264–8 Accessed 14 December 2023
^"From J.G. Simcoe to the Duke of Portland" (February 17, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 301–3 (See also Simcoe March 9 letter arguing constitutional and practical reasons for delegating Indigenous affairs to provincial council) Accessed 15 December 2023
^"From Francis Le Maistre to J.G. Simcoe" (April 9, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 343–4 Accessed 19 December 2023
^"From J.G. Simcoe to the Bishop of Quebec" (April 30, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 348–53 Accessed 19 December 2023
^"From J.G. Simcoe to the Bishop of Quebec" (April 30, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 348–53 Accessed 19 December 2023
^"From J.G. Simcoe to John King" (February 16, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pg. 298 (See also that Upper Canada Gazette printer is encouraged to publish true news favourable to government) Accessed 15 December 2023
^Statutes Passed [by] First Provincial Parliament[...]6th July, 1795; Chapter III; An Act to ratify[...]the Provisional Agreement [between] this Province [and] the province of Lower Canada, Statistical Account of Upper Canada (1822), pgs. 122–4 (PDF frames 160–2). Accessed 13 December 2023
^"From Phineas Bond to J.G. Simcoe" (February 16, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pg. 299 Accessed 15 December 2023
^"From the Duke of Portland to J.G. Simcoe" (January 8, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 255–6 Accessed 14 December 2023
^"From Joseph Brant to Joseph Chew" (February 24, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pg. 310 (See also Brant letter P.S. saying about 20 miles (32 km) of Grand River land must be disposed of, and why; also see how "Extremely distressed" Brant is at word his son has murdered "a White man") Accessed 18 December 2023
^"From Dr. T. Mervin Nooth to J.G. Simcoe" (January 21, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume III, 1794-1795, pgs. 261–2 Accessed 14 December 2023
^"From George Hammond to J.G. Simcoe; Memorandum on Wild Rice Enclosed" (February 20, 1795), The Correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe[...]; Volume V, 1792-1796 - (Supplementary), pg. 133 Accessed 19 December 2023
^"Philadelphia; Extract of a Letter from Sir Joseph Banks[....]" The Quebec Gazette, Num. 1590 (November 5, 1795, Cahier 1), pgs. 3-4. Accessed 12 December 2023
^Letter of Catherine Hamilton (translation; February 25, 1795), The John Askin Papers; Volume I: 1747-1795 (1928), pgs. 540-2. Accessed 4 December 2023
^"Halifax, March 17," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VI, No. 308 (March 17, 1795), pg. 3 (left column). Accessed 29 November 2023
^"Agriculture Society, Halifax, Nova-Scotia," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VI, No. 315 (May 5, 1795), pg. 4. Accessed 30 November 2023
^"Proclamation," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VII, No. 350 (November 24, 1795), pg. 4 (centre column). Accessed 4 December 2023
^"A Gentleman being appointed[....]," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VI, No. 317 (May 19, 1795), pg. 3 (right column). Accessed 30 November 2023
^"Deserters from the Navy" (December 13, 1794), The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VI, No. 300 (January 20, 1795), pg. 3 (centre column). Accessed 28 November 2023
^Text of Militia Act, The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VI, No. 313 (April 21, 1795), pg. 2 (right column). Accessed 30 November 2023
^"Halifax, Sept. 17," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VII, No. 341 (September 22, 1795), pg. 4. Accessed 1 December 2023
^"Halifax, October 20," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VII, No. 345 (October 20, 1795), pg. 3. Accessed 4 December 2023
^"Halifax, March 10," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VI, No. 307 (March 10, 1795), pg. 3. Accessed 29 November 2023
^"Mathematics," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VII, No. 351 (December 1, 1795), pg. 3 (centre column). Accessed 4 December 2023
^"Dancing," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VI, No. 298 (January 6, 1795), pg. 1 (centre column). Accessed 28 November 2023
^"Halifax Theatre," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VII, No. 353 (December 15, 1795), pg. 3 (right column). Accessed 4 December 2023
^"Umberella," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VII, No. 348 (November 10, 1795), pg. 3 (right column). Accessed 4 December 2023
^"From the Royal Gazette," The Saint John Gazette and Weekly Advertiser, Volume X, Number 483 (August 21, 1795), pg. 1. Accessed 28 November 2023
^"New Brunswick, St. John's September 11," The Quebec Gazette, Num. 1584 (October 8, 1795), pg. 2. Accessed 12 December 2023
^"Whereas my Wife[....]" (August 21, 1795), The Saint John Gazette and Weekly Advertiser, Volume X, Number 483 (August 21, 1795), pg. 2 of 6 (righthand page, left column). Accessed 28 November 2023
^Roderick Mackenzie, An Account of the Athabasca Indians by a Partner of the North West Company, 1795, Page 5 of 54. (See also Mackenzie's detailing (Page 49 of 54) of number of lakes, rivers, rapids and portages of the "common route of the Canoes") Accessed 20 December 2023
^Roderick Mackenzie, An Account of the Athabasca Indians by a Partner of the North West Company, 1795, Page 8 of 54. (See also his praise for "Dog Ribs" (Tłı̨chǫ; Page 14 of 54) Accessed 20 December 2023
^"Tuesday 24th (March 1795) Journal, Assiniboines and Rivière Qu'Appelle, 1793-1795, pgs. 28-9, In Pursuit of Adventure: The Fur Trade in Canada and the North West Company, McLennan Library, McGill University. (See also following journal entry in which writer has to pacify man and his wife after latter's "favors" are refused) Accessed 13 December 2023
^"Monday 18th (May 1795) Journal, Assiniboines and Rivière Qu'Appelle, 1793-1795, pg. 34, In Pursuit of Adventure: The Fur Trade in Canada and the North West Company, McLennan Library, McGill University. Accessed 13 December 2023
^"From Hopedale(....)" (August 21, 1795), 1790-1795, vol. 01: Periodicals Accounts Relating to the Missions of the Church of the United Brethren, pgs. 349-52 (frames 373-6), Memorial University of Newfoundland. (See also following letter, in which "Esquimaux" are considered "wretchedly depraved and corrupt creatures") Accessed 6 December 2023
^"From the London Gazette - Tuesday, September 15," The Quebec Gazette, Num. 1594 (December 24, 1795, Cahier 1), pg. 1. Accessed 12 December 2023