An Historical and Statistical Account of Nova-Scotia, Volume 2J. Howe, 1829 |
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Page 202
... Island , and of all the coasts bounding the Gulf of St. Lawrence . The space on the Globe occupied by Cape Breton , is but small , extending only from latitude 450 27 , to 470 5 north , including the southern extremity of Isle Madame ...
... Island , and of all the coasts bounding the Gulf of St. Lawrence . The space on the Globe occupied by Cape Breton , is but small , extending only from latitude 450 27 , to 470 5 north , including the southern extremity of Isle Madame ...
Page 214
... Isle Madame , near Arichat harbour , interrupted by the Bay of St. Peter's , and pierced with several harbors along its course . The first of these , after passing two small places frequented by the fishing vessels , termed big and ...
... Isle Madame , near Arichat harbour , interrupted by the Bay of St. Peter's , and pierced with several harbors along its course . The first of these , after passing two small places frequented by the fishing vessels , termed big and ...
Page 220
... Isle Madame partake of the same general character , being broken into a great variety of small harbours , inlets and ... Isle Madame and the main island . At the upper part of Grand Anse a Scotch agricultural population is settled , and ...
... Isle Madame partake of the same general character , being broken into a great variety of small harbours , inlets and ... Isle Madame and the main island . At the upper part of Grand Anse a Scotch agricultural population is settled , and ...
Page 221
... Island . It has a fine harbour on the southern coast of the Isle Madame , the most southerly point of Cape - Breton , and opening to the S. W. It is seldom obstructed with ice , being even less liable than Louisburg to be blockaded by ...
... Island . It has a fine harbour on the southern coast of the Isle Madame , the most southerly point of Cape - Breton , and opening to the S. W. It is seldom obstructed with ice , being even less liable than Louisburg to be blockaded by ...
Page 222
... Isle Madame and Canseau strait , lies the mouth of the River Inhabitants , in a recess of the coast term- ed the Basin of Inhabitants , full of small irregular Islands and points from the main shore , sparingly in- habited by the ...
... Isle Madame and Canseau strait , lies the mouth of the River Inhabitants , in a recess of the coast term- ed the Basin of Inhabitants , full of small irregular Islands and points from the main shore , sparingly in- habited by the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acadians acres afford agricultural Annapolis Annapolis County Antigonish appearance Arichat August Basin Bason Bay of Fundy beautiful beds bour branch Bras Bras d'Or Lake British Canseau Cape Breton Cape North cattle Clunch coal field coast Colonies contains coun Court cultivation Cumberland distance District Ditto east eastern emigrants England entrance erected export extends feet fish fishery formed French Government Governor granted Greywacke Gulf of St Guysborough Halifax harbour head houses Indians inhabitants Ironstone Island Isle Madame July June lake land latter Lawrence Lunenburg marsh ment mouth navigable nearly Nova-Scotia Number of bushels Pictou population Port Port Hood Province quantity river road rocks sandstone Scotia settled settlement settlers Shale Shelburne ships shore Shubenacadie Shubenacadie river side situated soil strait strata Sydney three miles tide timber tion town township tract trade Truro upland veins vessels village western whole Windsor winter wood
Popular passages
Page 327 - ... the king and parliament of Great Britain will not impose any duty, tax, or assessment whatever, payable in any of His Majesty's colonies, provinces and plantations in North. America or the West Indies ; except only such duties as it may be expedient to impose for the regulation of commerce...
Page 177 - ... bounded on the west by the Atlantic Ocean and on the east by the Indian Ocean and its dependencies, including the islands adjacent to the mainland within 100 nautical miles from the coast.
Page 386 - Goods shall be imported into, nor shall any Goods, except the Produce of the Fisheries in British Ships, be exported from, any of the British Possessions in America by Sea. from or to any Place other than the United Kingdom, or some other of such Possessions, except into or from the several Ports in such Possessions, called " Free Ports," enumerated or described in the Table following; (that is to say,) Table of Free Ports.
Page 2 - Our said Province hath anciently extended, and doth of Right extend as far as the River Pentagouet or Penobscot, it shall be bounded by a line drawn from Cape Sable across the entrance of the Bay of Fundy, to the mouth of the River St. Croix, by the said River to its source, and by a line drawn due north from thence to the Southern Boundary of Our Colony of Quebec.
Page 308 - Charter governments, in the nature of civil corporations, with the power of making bye-laws for their own interior regulation, not contrary to the laws of England ; and with such rights and authorities as are specially given them, in their several charters of incorporation.
Page 327 - Trade is an extended and complicated consideration: it reaches as far as ships can sail or winds can blow: it is a great and various machine. To regulate the numberless movements of its several parts, and combine them into effect, for the good of the whole, requires the superintending wisdom and energy of the supreme power in the empire.
Page 301 - ... over the laity in any case, but only a power to regulate the behaviour of the clergy who are in Episcopal Orders, and to correct and punish them according to the...
Page 1 - Vizt. to the Northward, Our said Province shall be bounded by the Southern Boundary of Our Province of Quebec as far as the Western extremity of the Bay des Chaleurs ; To the Eastward by the said Bay and the Gulph of St.
Page 377 - Speculative reasoners, during that age, raised many objections to the planting of those remote colonies ; and foretold that, after draining their mother country of inhabitants, they would soon shake off her yoke, and erect an independent government in America...
Page 104 - And that the Students in the said College shall have liberty and faculty of taking the degrees of Bachelor, Master and Doctor in the several Arts and faculties...