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The original copy was borrowed from, and filmed with, the kind consent of the following institution: Morisset Library University of Ottawa Maps or plates too large to be entirely included in one exposure are filmed beginning in the upper left hand corner, left to right and top to bottom, as many frames as required. The following diagrams illustrate the method: L'exemplaire filmd fut reproduit grdce d la g6n6rosit6 de I'dtablissement prdteur suivant : BIbliothdque Morisset University d'Ottawa Les cartes ou ies planches trop grandes pour dtre reproduites en un seul clich6 sont film6es d parth de Tangle sup6rieure gauche, de gaurhe k droite et de haut en bas, en prenant le nombre d'images ndcessaire. Le diagramme suivant illustre la m^thode : 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 •»-^ HISTORY CAf OF THB EASTERN TOWNSHIPS, PROVINCB OF QDEBEC, DOMINION OF CANADA. j^ I Y I L AND pESCRIPTIYE. IN THREE PARTS. By MRS. C. M. DAY. ^♦-♦-va^e legislation, and the rights of opinion are assured ; yet the objV jt we should all hold sacred, is the consolidation and perpetuation of our nationality, and this is high above all the means used to effect it. art Irtrst. CHAPTER I. Ay ATALANTIS. — PORTUGAL COF.UMBUS. — Sl'AIN. — SUCCESSFUL VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. — SUBSEQUENT HUMILIATIONS, DEATH AND BURIAL. — MISTAKES OF THE AGE. — SPANISH AND PORTU- GUESE CONQUESTS. — DISCOVERIES UNDER THE AUSPICES OP THE FRENCH. — CARTIER's EXPEDITIONS. — ABANDONMENT OF CANADA. — DEATH OF THE FRENCH KING. There is evidence that before the discovery of the New World by Cokimbus, the ancients and early navi- gators suspected the existence of land intervening between the western coast of Spain and the rich eastern country with which the civilized nations of Europe then held commercial intercourse ; but they could have had no properly conceived ideas of its loca- tion, size or importance. The traditions of the Egyp- tians, Carthagenians, and some of the nations of northern Europe, all point to the fact that a numerous and powerful people inhabited a vast island to the 12 HISEORY OF THE west of the " Pillars of Hercules," as the Straits of Gibraltar were then called/' Portugal, though one of the smaller Kingdoms of Europe, then held a prominent position and was a leading power in the cause of discovery and explora- tion. The success of their mariners had drawn the attention of other nations, and numerous adventurers repaired thither; among whom was Christopher Columbus who reached Lisbon in 1470. This remarkable man, whose name is for all time connected with the annals of the New World, was born at Genoa, Italy, in 1435. At an early age he showed a preference for a sea-faring life, and an aptitude for acquiring geographical knowledge. Being in humble circumstances his father could do little for him, and at the age of fourteen we hear of young Christopher as a boy mariner. Little is known of his experiences as such, but that little is favorable. On his arrival in Lisbon, he took service with the Portu- guese King, and was thus thrown into frequent and intimate relations with several of the most eminent scientific men of the age, and with those navigators who had taken part in the voyages and discoveries which had already made Portugal famous. Living thus in the society of enterprizing and aspiring spirits, and fully understanding the general anxiety for a more • These traditions assume a semblance of reality when taken in connection with the accounts of diacorcries made in later times, by explorers in Central and Southern America. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 13 of direct access to India or Cathay, he had become am- bitious of discovering a western route. His first application for assistance was made to the Portuguese King, who unwisely refused the necessary help. He next turned his longing eyes on Spain ; and in 148-1:, set out for Madrid to make Ferdinand and Isabella, then on the united throne of Castile and Arragon, the same proposals. He was for a long time unsuccessful ; but during eight years of fruitless solicitations, though regarded as an impracticable visionary, he retained a firm confidence in the sound- ness of Ills own views, and the feasibility of his plans. Their Spanish Majesties finally gave in to the pro- ject, and placed a flotilla of three small vessels at his disposal, with which he sailed from Spain in August, 1492 ; and on the 70th day, came in sight of land. This proved to be one of the group now known as the Bahamas, then called Guanahani by the natives, but named San Salvador by Columbus. He took posses- sion of this and others, including St. Domingo and Cuba, in the name of the Spanish monarchs. On his return, the King and Queen received him at a Royal Sitting, and for a time both rulers and people delighted to do him honor. A patent of Nobility was at once made out for him and his posterity. News of this discovery created an immense sensa tion throughout Europe, and roused the emulation of other nations. Columbus afterward made three voyages to the New World, each time adding to liis discoveries; 14 HISTORY OF THE but bitter disappointment and grievous humiliation awaited him, when on one of them he was made a pri- soner and sent back to Spain in fetters ; and thus instead of the rewards and honors which were his just due, he was allowed to be victimized and ruined through the envy and machinations of enemies. After some years of suffering through courtly neglect, po- verty and bodily pain, he died at Valladolid in Spain, May 20th, 1506. His body was first taken to Seville, then across the Atlantic to St. Domingo, and finally to Cuba, where it reposes under a monumental tomb in the cathedral at Havanna. At this period of time the idea was universal that the new discoveries were but parts or were partaining to the continent of Asia, and hence the name West Indies ; an error which was not corrected till the isthmus of Panama was crossed and the Pacific ocean discovered in 1513. By another grave mistake never likely to be corrected, the name America was given to the New World, from Amerigo Vespucci, who was sent by the Portuguese King to examine the new coun- tries. He took a plausible and extensive, but supeifi- cial view of the whole, with a chart of the Brazilian coast ; and thus through the presumption, skill and address, of an obscure drawer of charts, the New World missed taking its rightful name of Columbia. While Columbus had been busied in prosecuting his researches in the vicinity of the Mexican Gulf, other Spanish and Portuguese navigators were making dis- EASTERN TOAVNSHIPS. 15 coveries farther South. The attention of Spain was greatly given to the colonization of the West Indies, and to looking out these parts which promised the most ready returns in gold and silver. England was also in the field, and had sent out the Cabots in search of a north-west passage. As early as 1504, French sub- jects had discovered the bank and island of Newfound- land, but the French government claimed no interest in the New World before 1523. At this period King Francis I, gave command of four vessels to Verrazani, a Florentine navigator in the French service, who made three voyages ; on the last of which, vessels and crews were lost. In 1534, the attention of the French King was again drawn to the subject of seeking to share with his brother monarchs in their golden and territorial acqui- sitions ; and to obtain a firm footing upon the main land of America, an armament was equipped and placed under the direction of Jacques Cartier, a skilful and experienced navigator. Cartier sailed from St. Malo in 1534, and in 20 days reached the coast of Newfoundland, whence passing into the Gulf, he touched at some points and took possession in the name of the King. He also held some intercourse with the aborigines, two of whom embarked and returned with him to France. From these, he first learned of the great river, and in May, 1535, he made a second voyage, and guided by these Indians, entered the river which he named 16 HISTORY OF THE Ih ! I the St. La■s^Tcnce, and ascended to Stadacond, an Indian village then occupying the site of Quebec. Resolving to winter in the country, he moored his vessels at the mouth of the stream now known as the St. Charles, when with canoes and several men he ascended the river to Ilochelaga, where he found a considerable Indian town. He was kindly received and hospitably entertained by the natives, several of whom conducted him to the top of an eminence near, which he named Mount Royal ; words vrliich time and use have com^ bined and modified into Montreal. The party returned to their vessels at Stadacon^ to pass the winter. In December, scurvy of a violent kind broke out among the men, twenty-five of whom died before April ; the remainder being much reduced and debilitated. When too late to save the many fives so valuable to him, Cartier learned of a native remedy which speedily cured the suiTivors.* When spring opened they all returned to France, taking several natives with them, among whom was the Indian chief Donacond. On his arrival in France, Cartier found his native land plunged in war and distracted with both civil and refigious dissensions ; amid which troubles his presence was unheeded and his projects were disregarded ; and thus for a period of years, no attention was given to French interests in America. • A decoction of the spruce fir, which yields the well-known Canada Balsam, 'm EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 17 I chief About tlic year 1540, another attempt was made to revive them by a person higli in position and influence named Lalloque, who asked and obtained the right and title to govern all the newly discovered countries in the King's name ; when another expedition was sent out under Carticr. He was again obliged to winter in the country, but returned in the spring, taking his colonists with him. On his way out to sea, he met his superior with reinforcements and supplies, but nothing could induce his return to Canada. It appears that on this arrival of colonists, the Indians, though not openly hostile, were yet averse to farther intercourse with the strangers, and opposed to their settlement in the country. This was no doubt owing to a just resentment against the French for having carried off their countrymen and chief ; which act on the part of Cartier and his associates, was both untimely and unwise, though in accordance with the spirit of the age. This feeling against the French was increased by the fact that, of the captives taken away, all had pined and died in the stranger's land, except one little girl ; though accounts agree in saying that they were humanely treated. Roberval, who had been associated with LaRoque in the establishment and governorship of the colony, reached his destina- tion safely, but failed in his attempts to found a per- manent settlement, and on the breaking out of a war in Europe, was recalled with his colonists to France. King Francis I, died in March 1547. B 18 HISTORY OF THE CHAPTER II. THE ABORIGINES OF^NORTH AMERICA. — DIVISIONS INTO NATIONS AND TRIBES. — PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS. — HABITS OP IIFE. — INTELLECTUAL CAPABILITIES. — PROBABLE ORIGIN. — INFLU- ENCE OF CLIMATE ON THE PHYSICAL NATURE OF MAN. — ABORIGINES OF CANADA. When European settlements were first commenced in America, the expanse of country between the Atlantic ccean and the Mississippi river, was occupied by tribes belonging to the eight great families or divisions of the Indian race, viz., the Algonquina, Hurons, Sioux, Cherokees, Catawbas, Uchdes, Natchez, and Mobiles. These were considered substantive nations, because each spoke a language not understood by the others ; whereas, individuals of the different tribes belonging to a nation, could understand the language of any other tribe of that nation. In person the Indians are rather tall and slender, with frames indicating agility rather than strength ; their faces wearing that stern expression natural to such as are dependent on the chase for a subsistence, and exposed to the vicissitudes of war. Their visages EASTERN TOWNSIIirS. 19 afe rather round than oval ; with high cheek bones ; small but lustrous and deeply-set hazel eyes ; narrow forehead ; flattish nose ; thick lips : black, straight, long, coarse hair ; and beard wanting, owing to a custom of depilation, which is begun at an early age and continued through life, by the males. Such are the physical characteristics of the red men ; to which it may be added that their bodily senses while denizens of the forest, are exquisitely keen. Their complexion is a reddish brown. When first known to Europeans they went almost naked in summer, but in winter were clothed in skins and furs. The chiefs and warriors were often grotesquely arrayed in such guise as was intended to give indication of their exploits in war or the chase. They were fond of painting or staining their bodies with real or imagined resemblances, in lively and varied colors ; being extremely partial to a bright red. The hair was worn diflferently, many of them having head tufts of colored feathers or animal's hair arranged in the most fantastic ways. A pair of moccasins variously ornamented, composed the feet covering. The ears and septum of the nostrils were often pierced for affixing pendant objects, and brace- lets of serpent's skin or wampum were worn on the h nation and tribe had their distinguish- ing symbols, and even families had their armorials or distinctive marks. The only oflfensive weapons in use among them before the advent of Europeans, were the arrow and toma- 20 HISTORY OF THE I i hawk. Their defensive armour was a sort of cuirass of light wood, or a buckler of cedar wood. In times of peace, the occupations of the men were chiefly hunting and fishing ; and even the labor involved in these was put oif, till hunger forced them to take to the woods for game, or the water for fish. The ative hourgades or settlements were being constantly broken up, as they were obliged to move from place to place, as the game in the woods or the fish in the streams were either killed or driven away, and those parts of the wilderness had to be left to recover. Without fixity of habitation there could, of course, be no governmental institutions worthy of the name, and none of the stability in their communities, requisite to security of life and property. It was the unanimous opinion of those Europeans who first had intercourse with these Indians, that they had no religion as wo understand that term ; but though no religious worship existed among them, they made habitual offerings to departed or unseen exist- ences, and were great beUevcrs in supernatural agencies. Their medicine men pretended and were believed to be able to permit or prevent rain at will ; to turn aside thunderbolts ; predict events ; ensure success in any undertaking ; and were held in high estimation accord- ingly. They also undertook to heal wounds and cure diseases by the use of herbs, administered with super- stitious ceremonies to enhance the curative virtues. EASTERN TOWNSnirS. 21 pcans they but they cxist- ;ural 'ed to aside any cord- cure uper- is. Their funeral observances were of a touching cha- racter. If a person of distinction had died, ho was mourned over for days, and when the time of sepulture came, with peculiar and significant ceremonies the body was lowered into a deep grave lined with furs, covered over tenderly, and a memorial stone or other mark set up, to which were affixed divers votive arti- cles as signs of esteem for the departed. Females among the Indians, were the men's born slaves ; and as such did all the drudgery and servile work, outdoor labor included. To put hand to the latter, was beneath the dignity of a savage, and not only lowered his self-esteem, but degraded him in the eyes of his fellows. Although reasonable causes for going to war could not often exist, hostilities among the tribes were very frequent. The very mention of a coming war, raised in the bosoms of the younger savages, an uncontrol- lable feeling of joy. Imaginary enemies palpitating and bleeding at their feet, caused a kind of sanguinary intoxication. Questions respecting the mental capabilities of the red man have often been raised. Some reasoners draw explanatory and unfavorable inferences from the make of their skulls, the cast of their features, and even their complexion; but such suggestions are h3''po- thetical, absurd, and unworthy of acceptance. IIow many generations had to pass away before the barba- rians who inundated the Roman empire, were civilised 22 HISTORY OF THE l|M and christianized ? and yet they settled among nume- rous and well policied populations, and wore every where surrounded with monuments of art, scientific inven- tions, and all the products of genius and skill that had then existed. If, insiead of this, they had found a wilderness to rove in, inhabited by wild animals only, how soon would they have raised themselves from the abyss of their degradation ? We know that central America was once the seat of civilization : the relics of cities that once stood proudly on the table lands of Mexico, reveal this fact ; but when and by whom they wore built, and how long they existed, are questions still unanswered. But taking into account the evidence and probabilities in the case, we must believe that the aborigines of the New World had their origin in the Old ; that those of North America coming from the deserts of Tartary, were a people distinct from those who had reared the monuments and cities on the plains of Mexico ; and that the latter had been subjugated by the former, and if not exterminated, by becoming assimilated with them, had relapsed into barbarism. It would be im- possible to conceive in reality, of a greater similitude between two peoples, separated so long in time and so far removed in space, than we find between the Ame- rican savages and Asiatic Tartars. At the present day, we are made aware of the influence ^f climate upon the physical nature of man ; how it modifies his manners, his morals, and even the EASTERN TCWNSniPS. 23 tendencies of his mind. For instance, the British races in America retain little of the outward aspect that would conclusively identify them as being in flesh, blood, and bone, the same human stock that emigrated there during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It appears that when Canada was first visited by the French, the expanse of territory was divided between three principal nations, viz. the Algonquins who occupied the banks of the !St. Lawrence and Ot- tawa rivers ; the Hurons or Wyandots who dwelt in the section since known as Upper Canada ; and the Iro- quois or Five Nations ^ comprising the lesser tribes of Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Senecas, and Cayugas, who mostly occupied the territory now known as the State of New York. The Algonquins are said to have been somewhat superior in mien and manner, to the other nations* They lived entirely by the chase, and considered all industrious pursuits as beneath their dignity ; looking with contempt on those who drew any part of their subsistence from the earth. The Hurons were more given to agricultural pur- suits, but were indolent and effeminate, having ' less of the proud independence of savage life,'' than their haughty neighbors. The Iroquois were a powerful and warlike people, said to be mentally superior to the others, and to have had more knowledge of the few simple arts in use among the aborigines. I il I ii>Mi'lflIM"— ITT ^ 24 HISTORY OF THE ! illl! Though not inhabiting the country immcdiatci^?' ad- jacent to the early French settlements, tiiey were un- questionably the fiercest, most determined and vindic- tive enemies encountered by the early colonists of Ca- nada. By repeated encroachments this proud nation had succeeded in acquiring the domination of a vast territory ; but the French by resisting them and pro- tecting their adversaries, suddenly stopped the former in their career of conquest, and temporarily exalted the latter. Both were obHged finally to succumb before the over mastering power of civilization, to which their brute force and cautelous strategy were occasionally made subservient.* * The foregoing account of the aborigines of North America, has been mostly drawn from Bell's translation of Garncau's His- tory of Canada. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 25 CHAPTER III. UMN'EWED EFFORTS AT COLONIZATION. — LOSS OF THE BROTUERS ItODERVAL. — INDIVIDtTAL ENTERPRIZE3. — HENRY IV. — CHAM- I'LAIN's EXPEDITION. — THE SIBUR DE M0NT3. — ACADIA. — CANADA. — CHAMPLAIN'S CHOICE OP LOCATION. — SUMMARY OP EVENTS TILL 1063. Two years after the death of King Francis, Roberval organized another expedition to Canada, but on the voyage out, himself and brother, with all their follow- ers, perished at sea ; an event which caused all projects of the kind to be looked on unfavorably. Religious dissensions were then rife in France, and Admiral Coligny , who was himself a chief of the Hugue- nots as well as a patriotic man, resolved on founding an asylum in America for his -co-religionists, upon whom pressed the rigors of a cruel persecution. Attempts of the kind were made in different sections of the New World, but through mismanagement or other cause, they failed of becoming permanent settlements. An establishment of the kind had existed in Florida for three years, when the Spanish King sent a fleet to " fight the heretics and prevent them from establish- ing their worship in America ;" and accordingly the 26 HISTORY OF THE French protestant colony was mercilessly destroyed. This act being a direct violation of treaties existing between the nations, caused great indignation in France ; catholics as well as protestants regarding it an insult to the national honor. Under the enthus- iasm born of that feeling, a private expedition was fitted out to wreak a summary vengeance on the murderers. The command of this was given to the chevalier Dom- inique de Guorgues, himself a good catholic and an officer of merit. The purpose was successfully carried out, but Catherine de Medicis, who was then the real sovereign of France (as the young King was but fifteen years of age), would have sacrificed De Guorgues to the resentment of the Spanish King, but for the intervention of friends high in authority. In eflfort to palliate the act, the Spaniards insinuated that an understand- ing had been arrived at, that the Huguenots of Florida should be exterminated ; but the young King was too immature in years to be held personally responsible for the policy carried out in his name, and the connivance of the Queen-mother, though quite probable, was never clearly estabhshed. At length the storms that had long convulsed the country subsided ; Henry IV was established op the throne, and brought his kingdom into order. Its in- ternal affairs were regulated, commerce encouraged, manufactures established, and a general state of pros- perity pervaded the kingdom, opening up new resour- ces, and requiring some new career for its disposable energies. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 27 America was now more than ever before, fixing the attention of Europeans ; Spain and Portugal had ap- propriated much of her territory ; England and Hol- land were in the field, and France could no longer re- main a spectator while her enemies and rivals were actively at work in the New World. A trading society was formed of men of rank and leading merchants, and an expedition fitted out for the purposes of trade and colonization combined ; the com- mand of which was given to Captain Samuel Champlain, a naval officer Avho had seen service and was in good repute at Court. He set sail in 1603, and on arriving in Canadian waters, ascended the St. Lawrence as far as the Sault St. Louis (Lachine rapids). On his return he gave an account of his adventures, with a chart of his voy- age wliich so pleased His Majesty that he promised him patronage and encouragement. A new expedition was planned under the superintendence of the Sieur de Monts, comprising a mixed number of cathoHcs and protestants, gentlemen volunteers, soldiers, and skilled artizans. They sailed from Havre de Grace in March, 1604, bound for Acadia (Nova Scotia), which M. de Monts preferred on account of its milder climate. Acadia was at that time ihe chief place of resort for French traffic, and was considered the finest section of French America. It certainly had good ports, a tem- perate climate, and in parts, a fertile soil. The coasts were frequented by different species of marine animal s, Ml! t ill i 28 HISTORY OP THE and the numerous bays and rivers abounded with a variety of fish. A still greater advantage was, that its harbors were accessible at all seasons of the year. The choice of a location being made, a settlement was commenced, named Port Royal (now Annapolis) ; but notwithstanding its auspicious beginning, the ex- pectations of its patrons and friends were not realized in at once rearing a flourishing establishment : indeed, for many years it had but a languishing existence, as influences were at work unfavorable to its interests. The Sieur de Monts now turned his whole attention to Canada, in hope of extending the French possessions in America, and of finding the long sought passage to India ; which dream was still cherished. An expedition was now fitted out, one vessel of which was to traffic at Tadousac ; while the other under command of Cham- plain, was to land colonists and form a settlement at some point on the St. Lawrence. It arrived at Sta- dacond early in July, and landed at what is now known as the " Lower Town " in Quebec, when the men at once commenced the erection of cabins for temporary accommodation. While some were engaged in this work, others were building a fort, and others still, in clearing land ; and thus the foundation of a town was laid in the presence of wondering savages. * • The derivation of the name Quebec, has been the subject of discuasion and dispute, but Champlain distinctly says: " We landed at a place which the Indians called Kibec, in their lan- guage signifying a strait " ; and we have other authority for be- lieving the name to be of native origin. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 29 Champlain found that tiino had wrought great changes among the aborigines since Cartier's day. Their chief towns of Stadacond and Ilochelaga had passed away, and the section was in possession of an- other people, more barbarous still, than those encoun- tered by the first explorers of the region. They eager- ly sought alliance with the French against their oppres- sors the Iroquois, who occupied the wilderness to the south of Lake Ontario. Actuated by a very natural desire to stand well with his nearest native neighbors, and expecting by securing the people of one nation as allies, to subdue or awe into neutrality all others dis- posed to be troublesome, Champlain consented, — per- haps unwisely — and thus the colonists became involved in troubles that lasted more than a century. In 1G09, he first took part with his native aUies against their enemies, and as these savages were then entirely unacquainted with the use of fire-arms, when the Iroquois saw their chiefs and warriors fall dead or mortally wounded in such a mysterious manner, they the woods in terror. On this as on several jsuccessive occasi-s , volleys of musketry decided the [contest in favor of Champlain's allies. He now for the first, witnessed their method of treating their prisoners ; and shocked at their barbarity, sought leave to put an end to the wretches' tortures ; )ut this could not be allowed till the tormentors had exhausted every device of savage cruelty. Tidings of the death of Henry IV by foul assassina- 30 HISTORY OF THE i lilii i I tion, were received with sorrow and consternation at Quebec, and Champlain hastened home to attend per- sonally to the interests of the colony, which he feared might be jeoparded by that deplorable event. Jealousies had risen respecting competition in traffic, the old Society giving up their projects entirely. Cham- plain now sought to form a new Company, and place the colony under the protection of some high personage capable of assuring the favorable dispositions of the Court. The Count de Soissons succeeded M. de Monts as Lieutenant-general of Canada, retaining Champlain as his deputy ; when armed with a new commission and invested with extraordinary powers, he returned to America. Here he was occupied in at- tending to the general interests of the colony, and on a visit into the interior in 1613, discovered lake On- tario. Business relative to the colony of which he was act- ing governor and agent, called him again to France. Having succeeded in averting the threatened dissolution of the association, and being confirmed in his office, he again returned to Canada. The Lieutenant-generalship of New France * had • Early in the 17th century, the appellation " New France " was given to a vast region which now comprises the Hudson's Bay territory, Labrador, the provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, and a great part of the- United States. About the same time the eastern peninsula (Nova Scotia) be- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 31 now devolved upon the Duke de Montmorency, who took a much warmer interest in the aifairs of the colony than his predecessor had done. As early as il614, members of the order of Francis- can Friars called Recollets, had been invited to Canada, and four of their number arrived in 1615. They began to erect a convent on the bank of the St. Charles, while yet the population of Quebec did not exceed fifty souls. About the year 1621, many of the colonists began first to live on the product of their land, having subsis- ted hitherto mostly upon the profits of the peltry trafffic. The four principal fur factories were at Tadousac, Quebec, Three-Rivers, and at the Sault St. Louis. In 1622, a solemn treaty of peace was ratified among the Indian tribes, who according to their own accounts I had waged war for fifty years. But though the savages of Canada were at peace, the Society that through its agents trafficked with them, was divided and distracted (by conflicting views and interests among its directors land shareholders. Wearied with the cares and vexa- tious of his titular governorship, M. de ]\Iontmorency jeded his functions to the Duke de Ventadour, in .625. The new Governor, who was an enthusiastic religion- [an to take the name Acadia. The territorial terra Canada, fiora ie native word Kanata, was already not only the appellation of le country we now inhabit, but a name that covered a much irger region. than the united provinces which have since borne it. ■ Garneau, 82 HISTOK OF THE .ihil ! ist, sought to make his ofSce helpful to the conver- sion of the heathen of Canada, rather than the advance- ment of the material interests of the colony. Impatient and dissatisfied at the delays and indifier- ence of the association, Champlain entered a formal protest against them, and addressed a letter to the new Lieutenant-general, in which he represented in lively and forcible terms, the consequences of ne- glecting the colony. These complaints reached the ears of the Cardinal Duke de Richelieu, prime minister of France, who lent his attention the more readily to the patriotic representations of Champlain, that the one leading idea of his powerful mind was the aggrandi- zement and gloryof France. He therefore took upon himself the title of " Head superintendent of all the French possessions beyond the sea ; " but the state of the country left him little leisure to carry out his plans. He however, projected a renovated association which was organized in 1G28, under the name of the " Com- pany of the hundred partners," to which was granted powers and privileges amounting to an exclusive mono- poly of the colonial trade. The King made the Society a present of two new stout ships, and conferred patents of nobiUty on twelve of his chief members. They en- gaged to send out during the first year, a large num- ber of artizanb of the more useful callings, and to re- inforce the colony largely, providing temporarily for the wants of the settlers. The Cardinal Minister and others of the nobility were members of the Company, EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 88 and among the colonists were nobles, chief merchants ^ and men of substance, from the cities of France. Hostilities begun between European powers, soon extended to their American colonies, and an English fleet was sent to cruise in these waters. Quebec being then in a most defenceless state, fell into the hands of the British, but was restored after three years' possession. Champlain was then re-appointed governor and again assumed charge of the colony under the auspices of the " Company of the hundred partners." For a time the population increased rapidly, many seeking in New France the tranquillity denied them at home. In 1635, the foundation stone was laid for the col- lege at Quebec. This was altogether a year of great pro- imise for the colony ; but before its close, Canada suflfer- jed a heavy loss in the person of its governor and best [friend, who died on Christmas day. Samuel Champlain was a native of Brouage in Saint- longe. He had distinguished himself in the marine [service, and was chosen as a fit person to conduct those [colonizing expeditions which have made his name a lousehold word in Canada. Thirty years of his life were devoted to his great bask of establishing and extending the French posses- sions in America. He crossed the Atlantic fully a" jcore of f\in':s to defend the colony's interests at Paris, md has left .< lelation of his voyages and expeditions, ?hich prove him to have been a judicious observer md jus I aarrator, ! !!: I i 84 HISTORY OF THE ifl^i I I In person he is said to have had a comely visage, a noble and soldierly bearing, and a vigorous constitu- tion -which enabled him to endure the wear and tear of body and mind he underwent in the accomphshment of the work which was chiefly effected through his native strength of character. The immediate successor of Champlain in office, Avas M. de Chuuteaufort, of whom little is known more than the name, as he was soon replaced by M. de Mont- magny. This nobleman purposed to carry out the views of Champlain, but he took the reins of govern- ment at a very critical time, as the Indians of Canada were then engaged in a bloody and destructive war. His situation was humiliating and disquieting, as with small garrison and scanty stores, he could only witness contending struggles. In 1642, a foundation was laid for the settlement of Montreal, by M. de Maisonneuve in his capacity as agent for a company of rich and influential persons. The Iroquois had now obtained fire-arms and ammu- nition and learned their use from the Dutch at Man- hattan (New York), and were becoming more insolent and encroaching than ever, as the French w^ere obliged to confine themselves to defensive action. The next governor was M. d'Aillebout, who how- 3ver, was constrained by circumstances to remain, to a great extent, a passive spectator of the tragic events going on around him. In 1651, M. de Lauzon arrived to fill the office of EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 35 visage, nstita- tcar of jliment gh his ce, was re than Mont- )ut the govern- Canada ve war. as with ' witness ;tloment japacity persons. ammu- ,t Man- insolent obliged iio how- lain, to h events loffice of governor. The short period of his administration was marked by continued troubles with the Indians. The population of the colony was sensibly diminishing through the numbers who were killed or captured by the Iroquois, till at length the critical state of the country was brought to the notice of the friends of colonization in France, by M. de Maisonneuve. Ho obtained a reinforcement of colonists, who arrived at Montreal in 1653. They Avere picked men, alike fit for the needs of war or peace. Events were proving that the governor was too inefficient in action, and in 1658 he was superseded by the Viscount Voyer d'Ar- genson. At this crisis, Canada was everywhere overrun by armed barbarians : in addition to wliich, civil and reli- gious quarrels involving questions of right and prece- dence, broke out between the clergy and chief laity. * In 1659, a royal edict was issued for harmonizing the action of the civil government of the colony ; de- fining the jurisdiction of the courts ; and reserving certain appointments to be made by the King in coun- cil. M. d'Argenson had solicited his recall before his term of service had expired. Troubles with the In- * In 1657, .the Pope had coustituted Canada a Vicariat-apos- tolical, with M. de Laval as its first head. He was consecrated titular bishop before coming to Canada, and wlien in 1674, Quebec was constituted a Diocese, was nominated its first bishop.— G^ar-. neau. illl'lill I ii 86 HISTORY or THE iillll dians, and angry discussions with the clergy, had filled up his short administration. In IGGl, the government passed into the hands of the Baron d'Avougour, a man of resolute temperament and unbending character. Through his efforts, an interest in the country hitherto wanting, was roused, and reinforcements were sent to Quebec. A treaty of peace was also ratified with the Iroquois. Unfor- tunately however, differences rose between the gover- nor and bishop, which finally culminated in open quar- rel. The bishop was a man of inflexible temper and lofty bearing; the governor was equally unyielding and stood upon his official dignity, contending that the civil power should be independent of the sacerdotal. The dispute was referred to France ; the bishop went there to justify himself, and succeeded in obtaining the recall of M. d'Avougour, and the appointment of M. de Mesy in his place. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 87 CHAPTER IV. THK NKW OOVEKNOR. — THE FEUDAL TENURE. — REFORMS. — AN IN- TENDENOY. — CHURCH AND STATE. — DIVISIONS. — QUARRELS. — COMPLAINTS CARRIED TO FOANCB. — REMOVAL AND DEATH OF M. DE MESY. — A VICEROY. — SUMJklARY OP EVENTS TILL 1685. The Chevalier de Saffray Mdsy having been appoint- ed to succeed Baron d'Avougour, arrived at Quebec in the spring of 1663. He had been the choice of M. de Laval and the Jesuits concurrently, and was charged with orders to institute several important re- forms. He came to Canada with his episcopal patron. The Iroquois still maintained a threatening attitude, the colonists being kept in a state of perpetual inquie- tude. The governor showed firmness and tact in ne- |gotiating with these savages, and gave them to under- stand that it was his determination to punish enemies Iwith whom no lasting pea^e could be kept. At this [period the population of Canada did not exceed 2,500 souls, sparsely distributed between Tadousac and yiontreal, 800 of whom were in Quebec. The introduction of the feudal tenures into Canada, 88 HISTORY OP THE i ' ^h;: hliil III ii hli conformable to those of olden France, dates from the last years of the 16th century; and when Richelieu re-constituted the Company of a hundred partners, he invested it with such powers, rights, privileges, and faculties, as should be judged fitting ; all its erections and creations however, being subject ^o royal confir- mation. Parts of their territory were divided into simple seigniories which were accorded to merchants, military officers, religious corporations, &c., and were apportioned into farms burdened with a yer.rly ground rent. Territorial jurisdiction over Canada having been now resumed by the King, a new system seemed called for by the growing wants of the country. A royal commissary had been sent out with the governor, whose business was to examine into the internal affairs of the country and ascertain the needs and wishes of its inhabitants. Ilis reports were by no means favor- able, and a sweeping reform was determined on. The first step was the establishment of a supreme tribunal in April, 1663. It was composed of the go- vernor, bishop, five councillors and an attorney-general the six latter being appointed every year by the two chief dignitaries conjointly. On the arrival of an In- tendant, that functionary also took his seat at the coun- cil board. As a law court, this council sat only as a court of appeal. The Royal Intendant as chief of jus- tice and police, had also his tribunal for criminal and civil affairs. Difficulties soon rose in the council, which were EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 39 followed by an entire estrangement between the governor and bishop. Their actions at length became invariably antagonistic : the bishop was supported by the Jesuits and clergy, but the sympathies of the people were with the governor and his minority. In this exigency, M. de M<^sy very imprudently resorted to extreme measures w4iich gave his enemies an advan- tage ; complaints were carried to France ; the King was highly incensed, and resolved to make an example of this rash governor as a warning to all others. A new viceroy was appointed for New France ; M. de Courcelles was to replace De Mcsy, as provincial governor of Canada, and a new intendant was also sent out. These were commissioned to collect evidence and bring the offending functionary to trial ; but this was not needed, for he sickened and died before their arrival. He however, dictated a letter to M. de Tracy, the new viceroy, in which he protested that in all he had done he had ever in view the interests of his king and the prosperity of the colony ; and confided to him as his successor, the clearing up of the whole business. In the eyes of the people of the colony, De Mesy passed for a victim of the twice triumphant bishop ; his disgrace being yet more signal than that of his predecessor.. The Marquis de Tracy reached Quebec in June, 16G5, accompanied by the Carignan regiment of troops. Energetic measures were taken now against the hostile Iroquois. An expedition conducted by the viceroy in MiH^HUiHtaM) 40 HISTORY OF THE person, penetrated the enemy's country, effectually humbled them, and obliged them to sue for a peace which lasted several years. De Tracy returned to France in 1667, the functions of government devolving on M. de Courcelles, a pru- dent far-seeing man, who possessed in an eminent degree, the qualities valuable in an administrator. The intendant, M. Talon, was also a faithful and efficient public officer. According to the spirit of their instruc- tions from the penetrating home minister Colbert, while showing all proper respect for the clergy, care was taken that they were not allowed to overstep the bounds that separate ecclesiastical from civil functions. In 1772, the Count de Frontenac replaced M. de Courcelles as governor. His reputation for talents and energy had preceded him, and in addition, he was shrewd, fertile in mental resources, and had an am- bitious mind ; but his manners were cold and haughty, and his tendencies altogether despotic. Unfortunately at the outset, he came in contact with prejudices as strong, and wills as unpliant as his own, and excited an implacable enmity against himself. Questions of prd- cedence were allowed to become a fruitful source of dispute between the governor and bishop ; and not- withstanding repeated and authoritative admonitions from court, the quarrel rose to such a height that it became necessary to recall De Frontenac. It was during these successive administrations that those discoveries were made which tended so largely EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 41 to increase the territorial possessions of Now France. Between the years 1635 and 1647, the countries bor- ering on the western lakes, were visited by eighteen Jesuit missionaries. The Amer.can historian Bancroft pays a just compliment to these adventurous men, when on this subject he says : " The annals of missionary labor are inseparably connected with the origin of a'^ the establishments of French America. Not a cape was doubled, not a stream discovered, that a Jesuit did not show the way." It was these men who first heard from the natives of the " Father of waters" as they called Mississippi river ; and from the same source were derived ideas of the real boundaries of North America, which though vague and indistinct at first, gradually became clearer, and were in time, found correct. M. de la Barre, sent to supersede De Frontenac, was a marine officer who had seen service in the West Indies, and arrived at Quebec in 1682. The Iroquois were again assuming a threatening attitude. The governor wrote home complaining that the people of the adjoining colonies were using unfair means to de- tach the Indians from the French interest, and con- stantly exciting the Iroquois against the colonists of Canada. He also urged the necessity of reinforce- ments of men and supplies. In response, the King sent out 200 regulars, and informed M. de la Barre :that he had taken steps to prevent any future violation I of existing treaties. Ill \i ill' I III l! ! ! !' ill 1 il'; 42 HISTORY OF THE It would appear that a most astounding blindness pervaded the councils of the French nation at that period, as the repeated calls for extended emigration received no practical response, though thousands upon thousands of the King's protestant subjects were seek- ing leave to settle in French America, and promised to live peaceably under a flag they much preferred. The mystery involved in this, may find clear elucidation in the history of the religious persecutions then so rife in France. The course of M. de la Barre in dealing with the Iroquois, showed him plainly unequal to the emergency ; as the more timid and perplexed he allowed himself to appear, the more insolent and encroaching they be- came. While matters were in this critical state, the gover- nor was superseded in office, by the Marquis de De- nonville, who arrived at Quebec in 1685. He was a Colonel of Dragoons and brought with him 600 regular troops ; which significant act on the part of the home government, showed plainly its disapproval of the late governor's inaction. The new governor had the reputation of being a brave and efficient officer, possessed of a lofty sense of honor, and of being cultivated and polished in manner. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 43 CHAPTER V. IVDIAN TROUBLES. — MASSACRE AT LAOmXE. — INEFFICIENCY OF THE GOVERNOR. — RETURN OF DE FRONTENAC. — SPIRITED ACTION OF THAT NOBLEMAN. — IMPROVED STATE OF AFFAIRS. — SUM- MARY OF EVENTS TILL THE TREATY OF UTRECHT. TrME passed in preparations for war, and on the part of the Iroquois, in fraudful negotiations for peace. The governor was extremely averse to any attempt to act against them before other reinforcements arrived from France, and the perplexities of the situation were greatly aggravated by the trading relations of the hos- tile savages with the English colonists. The expected reinforcements at length arrived, yet even then, no very decisive action was taken ; the dilatory conduct of the governor being very unsatisfactory to the coun- try. Worse evils were in store for the later days of the administration ; the most calamitous period known to the early colonists of Canada. An unwonted quiet had for a time prevailed among the tribes, which was all the more dangerous as it tended to slacken prepa- rations for the coming storm. During the night of the 6th of August, 1689, amid liiii'i I' i' li Hill 44 HISTORY OF THE a storm of rain and hail, 1400 Iroquois crossed lake St. Louis and silently disembarked near Lachine, and before daybreak, parties of them had surrounded every considerable dwelling in the vicinity. The inmates were buried in profound slumber, soon to become for many of tliem, the " Dreamless sleep that knows no waking." At a given signal, doors and windows were driven in and the victims dragged from their beds — men, women and children, struggling in the hands of their butchers. Such houses as could not be readily forced, were fired ; and as the terrified inmates were driven forth by smoke and flame, they met certain death from beings who knew no mercy. Two hundred persons were burned alive, and numbers died under prolonged tortures. Houses and outbuildings were reduced to ashes, and crops were totally destroyed. After having ravaged the whole vicinity, they crossed the river, and on the opposite side continued their fear- ful work. Those who escaped the destruction were paralyzed by the brain-blow. The governor who was in Montreal, seemed to lose self-command altogether. It had been long evident that he exercised no proper influence ; but the small use he made of the means at his disposal when this crisis arrived, was most surpris- ing. His incapacity on every occasion where promp- titude and energy were required, gave little room for doubt that had he not been soon recalled by royal order, the colonists themselves would have set him aside. The last season of his unfortunate administra- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 45 m were tion was called the year of the massacre. In not one particular, had he justified his reputation for bravery and efficiency. His successor was no other than the Count de Fron- tenac, who landed at Quebec in 1689. His return was hailed with joy by all, by none more than those ; who had labored to obtain his recall. Despite the unpropitious aspect of affairs, Frontenac Isa^ that if it were possible to raise the minds of the people from the apprehension and despondency into which they were sunken, matters might yet be retrieved. His presence and counsels were already beginning to [operate favorably, and a feeling of restored confidence (was extending to the friendly natives. They were en- Icouraged to make raids into the English colonies, in |wliich, true to their savage natiu'e they practiced all the horrors of Indian warfare. About this period the town of Schenectady was destroyed by a party of French and Indians, said to have been done in reprisal for the massacre at Lachine. Presents were also dis- tributed among such tribes as still appeared hesitating, thich with the news of the successful raids, gave them issurance that the French were now on the. winning kide. The European nations being now at war, an expe- ition was planned against Quebec, and a fleet under |ommand of Sir WiUiam Phipps, appeared before that [ity ; but by assuming a bold and fearless attitude, and laking the most of scanty resources, with no little Im \ 46 HISTORY or THE i llillill '.!;; iii;iii ,' I,!! iiii'i II ! manoeuvring and finesse, and by the aid of concurrent circumstances, Frontcnac succeeded in creating the impression that he was prepared for a formidable resis- tance ; when after a few hostile demonstrations which were vigorously met, Sir William drew off his ships. No assistance having been sent to help against the Iroquois, they had become more bold and encroach- ing than ever. Frontenac now determined to abase their pretensions and conquer a peace. He therefore assembled a corps at Lachine, moved thence to Catara- qui, then crossed into the enemy's country and de- stroyed two Indian cantons. De Frontenac died November 28th, 1698, aged 77 years ; preserving to the last, the talent, firmness and energy, that had characterized him through life. His character has been variously estimated. That he had great faults is certain ; but Canada owed him much. The Chevalier de Callieres was appointed to succeed him. The new governor had occupied a subordinate position in the colony, and was well experienced in the affairs of the country ; was also popular with the sol- diers under his command, and possessed quahties which rendered him very acceptable to the people, and made the savages pliant to his will. The principal events of his administration were the ratification of a treaty of peace with the assembled deputies of the various tribes, and the formation of a settlement on the site of the city of Detroit. De CaUieres died in May, 1703, ' ■W^.iu EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 47 and wtis succeeded by the Marquis de Vaudreuil, some time governor of Montreal. A war was now in progress in Europe, which soon extended to the American colonies, and a fleet was preparing to ascend the St. Lawrence, to capture Que- bec ; but the elements were now the best defenders of the country, and in consequence of the dispersion of the fleet by a storm, the enterprize was abandoned. The Iroquois had now begun to waver in their fidel- ity to the English, and appeared anxious to sell their services to the highest bidder. One of their chiefs re- marked that their independence was only maintained by the mutual jealousy of the rival nations, and that 1 it would be impolitic to let either quite prevail over the other. The English had claimed them as British sub- jects ; but this had roused their jealousy, and they loudly disclaimed all foreign supremacy, asserting an independence in which they gloried. Their trading interests inclined them to the English ; but the religious sympatliies of numbers among them were with the French, owing to the influence the missionaries had obtained over them. A favorite project with them had been the formation of a confederacy, of which they were to take the lead, powerful enough to resist the encroachments of Europeans, and avenge the wrongs [done to their race. A treaty of peace was signed at Utrecht in 1713, ) I ! ! : ! -• !!!ii' ' !!l ! H ill!; 48 HISTORY OP THE 4 CHAPTER VI. INTERVAL OF PEACE. — FRONTIER LIMITS. — DE VAUDREUIL. — THE MARQUIS UE BEAUIIARNOIS, — DISCOVERY OF THE ROCKY MOUN- TAINS. — TRADERS AND EXPLORERS. — SUM3IARY OF EVENTS TILL THE DECLARATION OF WAR. The treaty of Utrecht was followed by some of the most peaceful years Canada had ever known. Both French and English colonists, wearied of an exhausting war, were now able to turn their attention and ener- gies to internal improvements. At the period of which we write, the colony was divided into three distinct governments, viz, Quebec, Three Rivers and Montreal ; but no regular subdivisions, civil or parochial, had been properly fixed. In the years 1721-2, the whole was parceled into 82 parishes ; 48 being on the north side, and 34 on the south side of the St. Lawrence. In the year 1721, the whole estimated population of Canada was only 25,000 souls, of which number 7000 were in Quebec, and 3000 in Montreal. There were 62,000 acres of land under tillage, and 12,000 acres in grass. The question of the frontier lines between the two countries was becoming every year more compUcated eastehn townships. 4d and difficult to deal with. The former attempts to settle it, had always come to nothing. By a stipula- tion of the treaty of U trecht, commissioners were ap pointed for this object, who met, conferred long, and. parted, leaving the matter as they found it. Disputes concerning boundaries bet\yeen national possessions arc proverbially the most difficult to terminate by any other arbitrament than that of war. De Vaudreuil died October 10th, 1725, after ruling Canada 21 years. He was much and deservedly esteemed in private, and his death was generally la- mented. After having passed 53 years in the royal [service, he received the cross of St. Louis as a distinguishing mark of his sovereign's favor. He was [an energetic and successful public oflficer. His successor in office was the Marquis de Beauhar- lois, who arrived at Quebec in 1726. Among the )rincipal events that occurred during this administra- tion, was the discovery of the Rocky Mountains by the ^lessrs. Vdrandrye in 1743. For the purpose of con- tinuing these explorations, an association was formed, Comprising nearly all the chief functionaries of the (olony, which company had its own trading projects view. This speculation was carried on at the cost of 10 State, though the profits were divided among the partners. In the year 1715, there had appeared two published memorials or reports, in which the management of )lonial aifairs was very freely discussed and exposed ; ) 1 m 60 HISTORT OF THU ! i N ! nil '"'I : I ;i i 'III 'I'll; ;|lli(l I and tho chief co .lal functionarios were often compro* mised as being more or less directly engaged in the unscrupulous speculations so rife at that period ; or at best, as being wholly indifferent to such proceedings. They were made to appear as if in having no perma- nent interest in tho country, they only thought of enrich- ing themselves while here, that they might pass hence to higher stations at home. The legitimate trade of Canada was from time to time, through <' <^ monopolies of associations or the rivalries of otb )lonists, subjected to such burdens, restrictions, and consequent fluctuations, as greatly em- barrassed and retarded it. Peltry was the main article of export, but was at most times a strict monopoly car- ried on under licenses granted to favored persons, who usually sold them to inland traders. Those who held them often strained every nerve to make the most they could — bv fair means or foul — durino; the time for which they were given ; and to beguile the Indians to accept insufficient values for their furs, it was not un- usual to ply them with liquor. The natives at length became aware of the dishonesty often practiced upon them, through intercourse with rival traders. * In 1721, posting first began in the colony ; a mono- poly of the posts between Montreal and Quebec having ♦ It is related that at a western post on one occasion, beaver skins were bought for lour grains of pepper each, and that as much as 800 francs were realized by the sale of one pound of ver- million. No wonder at the Indian's want of faith in Europeaos! EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 51 been granted to one person for twenty years ; the car- riaf^c of letters being charged by a table of fixed rates according to distance. As early as 10 ^0, it had been proposed to introduce negroes into the colony ; but though the institution of slavery rni^H have been legally recognized at one pe- riod, it never prevailed to any great extent in Canada. In 1755, Canadian exports wcro valued at 2i million dollars ; its imports at 8 millions ; much of the latter I being supplies and munitions of war during those years I of hostility. Owing to systems of secret confederacy, fiivoritism and intrigue, which at that period operated to (throw patronage into certain channels, all healthy action |iu trade was destroyed. During the later years of French domination in Cana- |(la, there was great confusion in the monetary circula- tion of the country ; indeed, it seemed to have become ilmost destitute of a reliable circulating medium, and to )e fast sinking into insolvency ; the miserable effect of )urblind expedients, the legitimate fruit of unscrupulous lal-administration, and the inevitable precursor of revo- ition and change. France and England were again at i^ar, and their respective American colonies were, of mrse, involved in the quarrel. Their frontier relations rere every year becoming more difficult to adjust, and ^ng before any European aid could reach them, they fere engaged in hostilities. The Marquis de la Jonqui^re "who had been sent out supersede M. de Beauharnois, was taken prisoner by Illliiilii S2 HISTORY OF Tirai ill! the British, and the Count de la Gallisoniere who had heeh nominated to ^11 his place, arrived at Quebec in September, 1748, bringing news of approaching peace. The treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle was signed Oc- tober 7th, 1748, by which the territory either power had acquired during the war, was muiaally restored. But this peace was only a truce as regarded the American colonics ; hostilities scarcely ceasing, so determined were the rival parties to extend their frontiers to the ut- most. A sharp correspondence was kept up between the governors ; but this did not answer the end, eacli party taking forcible possession of disputed grounds. A general war was now imminent. Late in the year 1752 the Marquis Duqucsne de Menville arrived as governor, and the next year, war was declared. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 63 CHAPTER VII. HOSTILITIES. — DE VAUDREUIL. — RELATIVE STRENGTH OF CONTEST- ANTS. — CANADIANS. — ANGLO-AMERICANS. — BRADDOCK's DE- FEAT AND DEATU. — DEFEAT OP THE FRENCH UNDER BARON DIESKAr. — ARRIVAL OF MONTCALM. — SUMMARY OF EVENTS ATTENDING THE DOWNFALL OF FRENCH POWER IN CANADA. A British fleet left England in January 1755;^ for the purpose of cruising in American waters ; anC a French fleet sailed from Brest, in i^.pril, bearing rein- forcements and warlike stores to Canada. Hostilities were now commencing in earuesit. M. Duquesne bad asked to be recalled , and transferred to the marine ser- vice. His departure caused no regret, altbougb he had governed with success and been heedful of the colony's interests ; but his haughty bearing made him [unpopular, and the people looked for the appointment lof another in his stead. He was succeeded in 1755, [by the Marquis de Vaudreuil do Cavagnol, son of the ^larquis de Vaudreuil, who had been governor from [1708 to his death in 1725. The new governor was oyously greeted by the Canadians on his arrival, as they regarded him the more for his being a compatriot, D F— ■ 1 I ii jl i i II 1 1 ) 1 1 1 [ f 64 HISTORY OF THE 'ii^ 'I ^ii-:l' t !ii! I ! ! I « and had anxiously solicited the king to appoint him for their chief. The state of France at this period was anything but favorable to a successful prosecution of the war in America. The king at all times too indolent and in- different to act with energy, was at this peiiod under the influence of a female favorite of most capricious temper ; and there being neither unity nor accord in state councils, they underwent almost constant muta- tions. Ecclesiastical dissensions, new and startling innovations, the needs of war and troubles in the state councils, greatly occupied the public mind ; in fine, all was commotion among both moral and political idealists ; and the government itself moved with uncertain and hesitating step. France had allowed herself to be again led into a continental war, and the defence of Canada was thus left greatly to its own inhabitants. — The regula.' force in the country, never large, in 1755 was augmented to a total of 2,800, under the command of Baron Dieskau. The miUtia were armed, so that there was soon ready for action, in garrison and in field, an army 7000 strong, besides a force of 800 men employed as escorts. On the other hand Great Britain was in a prosper- ous state. The English government habitually yielded to popular inspirations, and thus observant of the national instincts, might safely assure itself in advance, that success would attend any enterprize undertaken in obedience to the popular will. No preceding war had EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 65 been so agreeable to the people as that about to com- mence ; and warlike ardor was no less manifest among the people of the American colonies, who far out-num- bered the inhabitants of Canada. The same differ- ence extended to their pecuniary resources. But though false and illiberal views prevailed in France, and caused indifference to the coming struggle, the Canadians were patriotic, and though mostly cul- tivators and traders, were inbued with a confident and self-reliant spirit. They had all the military ardor necessary to make them vigorous soldiers, especially now that their homes were menaced by aliens. On the other hand, the English colonists of America had long looked for the interference of their mother country in putting an effectual end to those barbarous irruptions that had so frequently desolated their frontier settlements ; and now that their hopes were about to be realized, they welcomed war, and seconded it with united energies and untiring zeal. The British General Braddock, had been sent out in command of regular forces, with instructions which comprised a detailed plan of hostile operations ; the first step in which was to drive the French from the Ohio valley. On his arrival, a concerted plan of action was agreed upon, by which four different points were to be attacked at once. According to the arrangement, he advanced to the attack of Fort Duquesne, but an ambuscade was formed [by the French and Indian? into which the British ^iiipljliliiil :|||!iill!l 56 HISTORY OF THE forces fell, when a desperate struggle ensued. Out of 86 British officers, 26 were slain, and 37 wounded ; for they made heroic efforts to rally and inspirit their men who were all unused to the savage mode of warfare, and fell back panic-stricken upon a reserve of 1000 men left with the baggage, artillery, &c. ; when the whole force retreated in disorder. In the heat of action, Braddock had two horses kill- ed under him, and mounted a third, only to receive a mortal wound. He was then carried to Fort Necessity where he died on the 13th of July. He was a brave and experienced officer, but an arrogant man ; con- temning his enemy ; despising ahke militia and savages ; yet had the mortification of seeing his regulars madly flee, while the provincials stood their ground and fought bravely. Singularly enough, Col. Washington, then in command of the colonial mihtia, was the only mounted officer who escaped unhurt. The news of this defeat spread dismay among the English, and the back settlements of Virginia, Pennsyl- vania, and Maryland, were forthwith abandoned. Soon after this, a body of French, under Baron Dieskau posted near lake Georga, was attacked by the British under Col. Johnson, when after a series of spirited conflicts with varying success, a severe action was fought, in which the French were beaten and dis- persed, and their leader, who was severely wounded, taken prisoner. Like the British General, Braddock, this commander owed his defeat, in a great measure, to EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 57 an absurd reliance on European discipline, an under estimation of the colonial forces, and a contemptuous disregard of the advice of provincial officers. The most urgent demands were now made for troops, supplies, &c., and it was also solicited that a chief o^ tried bravery and miUtary experience, should be sent over to take the place of Baron Dieskau. In response to this appeal, the Marquis de Montcalm was sent as military chief, and with him came several officers of merit, beside reinforcements of men and munitions of war. At this time the whole force on foot for the defence of New France, from Cape Breton to Illinois, did not exceed 12,000 men; and many of these were cultivators, obliged to be absent in seed-time and harvest. The preparations of Britain for the campaign of 1756, were far more considerable. America, as the chief Ifiuld of military operations, drew to her colonies many [officers of distinction. Two entire regiments of regu- |ilars were sent out, and a force raised which in all amounted to 25,000 men. Nothing of importance was [effected, however, in this campaign. Though still holding her own and able to keep her [outward foes at bay, Canada was in a critical state from a scarcity of food among its inhabitants. Small- )ox had also broken out and extended its ravages, to the native tribes. Thus threatened without, and re- luced by pestilence and famine within, all joined in earnestly petitioning the home government to come to ^he rescue. Yet home politicians and favorites of the D n ! 1 1' ■i; li i li 1 ! 1 i Im 1 \ |!i: '::'iiili ijili 58 HISTORY OF THE 4 King, who profited by courtly prodigality, called out in concert that Canada was an icy wilderness which cost more than it was worth. An unscrupulous intendant named Bigot, was guilty of peculations to an enormous extent at this period ; abusing his official power, and through secret agents playing an odiously dishonest part in order to enrich him:elf ; and it is said that his fraudful policy had its confederates even in France. The governors of the Anglo-American colonies met at Boston in January, 1757, to concert action for the year's campaign, when an attack on Louisbourg in Cape Breton, was projected. On the 9th of August, 1757, Fort William Henry near lake George, capitulated to the French and In. dians ; when a large number of prisoners, — men, women^ and children, — were massacred by the me rciless sava- ges ; an event which inflicted an indelible stain upon the record of this military success. The Fort and its precincts were literally converted into a place of blood, and the works entirely destroyed. If the resentments of the Anglo-American colonists against the French and their native allies were strong before, the butchery that followed the surrender of this Fort, and others similar, rendered them more deep and fixed ; and a deadly determination took possession of the British mind and heart, to put an efiectual end to these massacres. It was therefore determined to attack concurrently, Louisbourg, Carillon (Ticonderoga), and Fort Du- q^uesne. The first blow fell on Louisbourg ; the place EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 59 3SS sava- was bravely defended, but step by step was gained by the besiegers, till the French were obliged to retire within the town, and its fall only became a question of time. In order to prevent or delay attack on Canada, the Fort was persistently defended, so long as the works were tenable ; but the siege was closely pressed by the invaders and the fortress capitulated July 20th, The force sent against Fort Duquesne was equally successful, as the French commandant, hopeless of suc- cor, retired with his men and munitions, and burned the works. The British took possession of the ruins and in compliment to their great minister, gave the name of Pittsburg to a locality which is now the site of a flourishing city. The attack on Carillon was not as successful how- ever, as the assailants met a spirited resistance. The season of repose was now come, and the invasion of Canada was again postponed ; yet, left a prey to famine and the sword, the consummation of its fall could not long be delayed. In vain the governor wrote that if no help came, they must succumb. In April 1759, Montcalm Avrote to the minister im- j parting his own inquietudes regarding the destiny of [Canada ; plainly expressing his entire want of faith in both governor and intendant ; and also complaining, I that the most unscrupulous corruption existed among all classes and grades of officials. He also solicited [his recall from the King. D ! I llMf il!|lli|! I! I I III ,.im i H ) 60 HISTORY OF THE An unfortunate estrangement had grown up between the civil and military chiefs of the colony ; owing in part to a natural dissimilarity of character, and in part to the evil machinations of others. The partisans of either, made mutual and grave accusations against the other ; one of Montcalm's friends strongly advising that De Vaudreuil should be superseded by the mili- tary chief; the fact that the former was a native born Canadian^ being alleged against him as a prin- cipal demerit. Such differences were particularly unfor- tunate at this juncture ; and efforts were made by the real friends of both, to restore a good understanding between the parties, with partial success. In the meantime, the British were making vigorous preparations for an attack on Canada. A corps had been assigned to General Wolfe, with Avhich he was to ascend the St. Lawrence and invest Quebec. A fleet of ships of the line, frigates, smaller vessels and transports, were sent to convey them up the river. Amherst was to force a passage by Lake Champlain ; a third corps was to take Niagara and descend Lake Ontario ; while a fourth was to clear that whole section of every enemy to Britain. The savages foreseeing the fall of French domination, and anxious to secure favor in time, mostly alHed themselves with the stronger power. The regular force in Canada now amounted to 5,300 men, and all the valid males in the colony between the ages of 16 and 60, were found to number 15,229. All being in readiness, the governor, Mont- w Eastern townships. 61 e river. calm, and Do Ldvis, 'withdrew to Montreal to watch the movements of the enemy, and see in what direction the disposable forces were most needed. On the first appearance of the hostile fleet in the St. Lawrence, they returned to Quebec where all was soon in a state of activity. On the 25th of June, 1759, the British fleet reached the island of Orleans ; and on the 30th, batteries were erected opposite Quebec, and fire opened on the city. An attempt was made on the position of Montcalm, which however, was spiritedly repulsed with loss to the assailants. It was finally decided to operate from above rather than below the city as the surest means of striking a decisive blow ; and while active demonstrations were kept up against Montcalm's position in order to mys- tify the French and cover the real design, part of the forces embarked and ascended the river to Cap Rouge : soldiers were landed on cither bank of the flood, and Avith their officers were closely inspecting the shore from Quebec to that point. Not being able to understand the enemy's move- ments and apprehensive that they threatened the ma- gazines of the army, * Bougainville had been des- I patched to watch them in that quarter. Threatening demonstrations were contirmed against (*) Before the enemy's arrival, the garrison stores and govern- Ement archives had been removed to Three Rivers, and the army [magazines fixed at Montreal. P 62 HISTORY OF Tnn ill"!" PI !Ml!i! ii i Bcauport, while the ve'^'sels and troops at Cap Rouge neared other points to retain Bougainville in that quarter ; and having learned from deserters that a con- voy of provisions were to descend the river during the night of September 12th, and by the same means learning the watch-word that was to be given by the crews of the barges to the sentinels on shore, Wolfe resolved to profit by these fortuitous circumstances, land his troops at the Fuller's Cove, and carry the adjoining heights. Officers who were perfectly acquainted with the French language and customs were chosen to res- pond to the sentinel's challenges, and during the ob- scurity of the night, the barges with their hostile freight, were allowed to pass on. Arrived at the goal, the vanguard landed without resistance ; the light infantry, headed by Wolfe him- self, forced the guard-house at the foot of tho steep pathway leading up the cliff, scaled an escarpment par- tially covered with trees and brushwood, reached the table-land above, surprised and dispersed the men on guard, and as the day broke, an army was ranged in battle order on the Plains of Abraham. A battalion of Scots Highlanders took part in this enterprise and contributed very materially to its success. The only cannon in use had been dragged up the height with ropes. Intelligence of these movements reached Montcalm, at six o'clock in the morning ; but under the impres- sion that it was some detachment of no account, he EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 63 Rouge n that ; a cori- ng the means by the Wolfe 33, land joining 3d with to res- the ob- hostile without fe him- 10 steep nt par- led the men on iged in attalion ise and le only ;ht with ntcalm, mpres- unt, he started for the scene with only part of his men ; yet when in sight of the enemy to his consternation and dismay, found them ready for his reception. Through a fatal precipitation, despite the advice and remon- strances of his brother officers, and in face of the po- sitive commands of the governor who had sent him written orders to act on the defensive till all the forces could be got together, ho resolved to commence the attack at once, formed the ranks and ordered his men to advance against the enemy. Knowing that retreat would be impossible were he beaten, Wolfe passed along the ranks animating his men to fight well, but not to fire a gun till the enemy were within twenty paces. The French advanced boldly to the attack, but began firing too soon, and when near enough were assailed with so deadly a dis- charge that they fell into immediate confusion. Wolfe chose this moment to attack in turn, and though already wounded in the wrist, led on his grenadiers to the charge, but had not advanced many steps when he sunk to the earth mortally wounded. He was carried to the rear, and his troops, in ignorance of his fall, con- tinued to press their enemies, part of whom were already giving way. Wolfe was dying ; but hearing the cry " They fly, they fly !" his eyes lighted with their wonted fire as he eagerly asked " Who ?" and when answered " The French," he exclairaed " What, n 64 HISTORY OF THE i 111 n III mum ll'.il jniillHlii; already ? then I die content," and faHing])ack, expired.* General Monckton being also severely wounded, the command fell on General Townslicnd. The defeated French were pressed with bayonet and broadsword. Montcalm though wounded, made ev^rjf effort to rally the fugitives and regularize their retreat, but in the vain attempt, fell mortally wounded an 1 was carried into the city. He acknowledged his fault when too late to retrieve it, and regret was unavailing o ' •General Wolfe was born nt Greenwich, England, in 1724, and was 35 years of age at hia death. His father was an invalid general who had served with distinction. Being anxious to engage in active service, young Wolfe had renounced a consider- able place on the Irish staCf, and took his chance of obtaining promotion in the American war. His conduct at the siege of Louisbourg, where he was only subordinate in command, drew the attention of his superiors, and he was chosen to lead inthe "ix- pedition against Quebec ; a charge which required activity, dar- ing, and prudence combined. His lieutenants, the Brigadiera Moncktcn, Townshend, and Murray, all three of whom were in the flower of manhood, were leaders who had studied the art of war, and gained experience in action. The news of the capitulation of Quebec, created universal joy in England, chastened however, by an equally wide-spread sorrow for the death of the bravo and talented young general, as its costly price. " Throughout broad England, were illuminations and songs of triumph: one country village alone was silent and still : there Wolfe's widowed mother mourned her only son." His remains were taken to England and laid beside those of his father in his native place ; and a suitable monument was erected to his memory in Westminster Abbey. He is described as having been comely in person and pleasing in address ; and was to have been married on his return to England. evn EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 65 but; whatever his errors and nfistakes had been, they were expiated in his death. After receiving the sacra- ments of the church, and dictating a letter commending \i\o French prisoners to the generosity of their victors, ho 'lied on the morning of September 14th, and was ried by flambeau light the same evening, in the chapel of the Ursulinc sisterhood ; his grave being a trench along the wall of the edifice, made by the ploughing of a bomb shell.* Such was the battle of the Plains of Abraham, so fatal in its final results to French domination in Canada. Quebec capitulated on the 18th of Sep- tember, and one by one, other posts were aban- doned to the enemy. Some further show of resis- [tance was made by the remaining troops under command of Do L^vis, still in hope of effectual succor [from Frr^nce ; but as the invading armies invested [ontreal, this illusion vanished, and that city capitu- lated September 8th, 1760 ; and thus Canada finally [passed from French to British domination. De Vau- • The Marquis de Montcalm was bora near Nismes, France, ni2, being thus 4Y years of age at the time of his death. He ms descended from a family of distinction, and had served suc- BcssfuUy in the European vrars ; but possessed some defects of jharacter. His personal courage and bravery were beyond luestion ; but this could not avail against want of prudent fore- sight and strategic ability. He was impulsive even to rashness ; ill of vivacityand heedlessness ; but not energetic or persevering. le liked to live luxuriously ; but was unselfish, generous, and ^arelesa of expenditure. E QQ HISTORY OF THE 'ifilil I: !i]:;l!i'.,r dreuil sent orders to the chiefs of the French posts at the west, to surrender their commands to those author- ized to receive them ; and by the year 1761, all had been given up. Most of the privileges of the people were assured to them, but the principal French functionaries, and many of the prominent among the people, returned to France. The possession of Canada and its adjacent territories, was confirmed to Britain by the treaty of Paris, signed May 16th, 1763. When the notorious Bigot appeared at Versailles, he was met with reproaches and indignities ; then arrested, and after suffering a lengthy imprisonment, was tried and exiled for life and his estates confiscated. Several of his accomplices shared similar punishments ; the ex- coramissary Cadet, being fined 6,000,000 francs ! Even the ex-governor did not escape imprisonment, which indignity he owed &n much to the criminating insinua- tions of Montcalm's partisans, as to the perfidious calumnies of Bigot. He made a dignified defence; showed that he had sacrificed not only his salary, but property he had before accumulated, in order to supplj deficiencies toward the close of the war ; and best of all, the patriotic and high-minded Do L^vis, stood his firm friend. De Vaudreuil was relieved from the accusations made against him, but died the next year, less from old age, than vexation of spirit. State obligations to the amount of 40,000,000 francs were held by Canadians at this period, which became almost valueless to the holders in the end. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 67 CHAPTER VIII. CANADA AT THE COXQUEST. — MILITARY RULE. — QUEBEC GAZETTE. —SIGNS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. — CANADIAN INTER- ESTS. — LAW OF 1774. — PROVINCIAL CONGRESS. — GENERAL CARLETON's ADMINISTRATION IN CANADA. — THE CRISIS PRE- CIPITATED. — INVASION OF CANADA BY AMERICANS. — LEGIS- I ATIVE COUNCIL OP CANADA. — INDEPENDENCE OP AMERICA ESTABLISHED. — SUCCESSIVE GOVERNORS OF CANADA. — LORD DOKCUESTER. — PEACE. — A CONSTITUTION' FOR CANADA. — ELECTIONS APPOINTED. — SUCCESSIVE GOVERNORS. — THE WAR OF 1812. — TREATY OF GHENT AND RETURN OP PEACE. — DEATH OP SIR GEORGE PREVOST. The population of Canada at the time of the conquest is estimated to hi^ve been 69,275 souls. The British government proceeded to organize a regular colonial administratiou, and the colony was dismembered. La- brador, Anticosti and Magdalen Island were annexed to Newfoundland ; Cape Breton and Prince Edward to Nova Scotia ; the territories of the great lakes to the neighboring American colonies, and a part of Canada took the name of New Brunswick with a sepa- ^rate administration. Sir Jeffery Amherst, the first British governor general, having returned to England, general Murray c Yas openly manifested. There were now unmistakeable signs of the Ame- rican revolution looming up in the distance. Disputes were commencing between Great Britain and her old American colonies respecting the rights of iraposi- Ition ; and even in the Imperial Parliament great diver- sity of opinion existed and was expressed on the sub- [ject. The American provinces were opposed to being [taxed, and if they had before submitted to pretensions they held in aversion, it was because they did not think themselves strong enough to resist liuccessfully. }ut their strength was rapidly increasing, and when series of resolutions serving as the basis of a Stamp .ct, were adopted in March, 1764, all the colonies mtered protests against the principles thus laid down, 'he essence of their opposition was expressed in the isscrtions, '' No taxation without representation. As Iritish subjects, we assert that we are not imposable fxcept through our representatives." They were also )iul in their complaints on other points, which they konsidered as so many steps taken towards bringing iicm into subserviency. Notwithstanding this strong |pposition, the Imperial Legislature passed a law in 765, extending the provisions of the Stamp Act in Britain, to all its colonies. This brought the spirit of )ntradiction to a culminating point, and roused so trong an opposition that finally the obnoxious law was 70 HISTORY OF TUE 'iiiiii'f i liiiii !i M repealed ; wliich had the effect of softening provincial hostility for a time ; but with the advent of a new ministry, other troubles arose. In 1767, taxes were initiated on several articles for exportation to the co- lonies, and stringent measures were taken to enforce submission. This project was yet more odious to the Americans than the Stamp Act had been ; overt re- sistance was manifested ; and a general convention was proposed. The arrival of four regiments of sol- diers with artillery, for a time put a stop to demons- trations of opposition ; but the discontent only smoul- dered. In 1770, energetic measures were taken to carry out this new policy, but the ministerial agents were met by a system of such spirited and concerted resistance as effectually thwarted their purposes, and eventually led to the separation of the colonies from the mother country. This state of things was rather favorable than other- wise to' Canadian interests, as an important concession was made at this period, by the restoration of the civil jurisprudence of Lower Canada. This however, was done in the face of a strong and determined opposition on the part of the old subjects of the King, who had settled in the Province, expecting that in all cases wherein they were personally concerned, the laws of England were to apply. While laws, enacted in 1774, thus tended to recon- cile the Canadians to British domination, that which ,closed the port of Boston, infuriated the southern pro- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 71 vincials to the utmost. This act had been passed in retaliation for the outrages and audacities committed by the radical colonists against the ministerial agents. It had become apparent that neither Old or New Eng- land would bate a jot of their respective pretensions, and that the sword alone must decide the quarrel. At the first provincial congress which met in Philadel- phia, an address was drawn up inviting the Canadians to join the disaffected party ; copies of which, found their way into the country ; yet the effect intended to be produced by them, was to a great extent neutralized by expressions used in an address previously issued, which bore hardly upon the recognition of the Catholic religion in Canada, and the permanent establishment of French law. This, with the remembrance of old antagonisms, was the means of losing Canada to the new confederation. General Carleton, now Major-General and Knight of the Bath, returned to Canada in 1774, and inaugura- ted a new constitution. He formed a legislative coun- cil of twenty members, eight of whom were Catholics. Several Canadians were placed in office ; colonial feu. dality was respected, and the seminaries were recogni- zed. But Carleton's situation was a difficult one at this crisis, as many, through widely different motives, became American partisans. " Liberty " and " Inde- pendence " are high sounding words, and in the present case, were not without effect. However, the clergy and seigniors were bound to British interests, and the ma- 72 HISTORY OP THE 1!H lijiili •!il III! Ili jority following the lead of the superior classes, reject- ed the American invitations to revolt. In the meantime hostilities between the British and their American olonists were precipitated by the casual conflicts at Lexington and Concord ; blood had been spilt ; the Americans were arming everywhere, also taking possession of forts, arsenals, and government stores. The battle of Bunker Hill was fought, in which the British, though twice repulsed, were finally success- ful in carrying the entrenchments of the pro\ Incials. — This battle, according to the numerical forces engaged, was the bloodiest and most obstinate of the whole war ; and if eventually lost to the Americans, answered the parliamentary slightings of their opponents, and taught the British regulars to respect their courage and deter- mination. A project was now put on foot for the invasion of Canada, by a combined attack ; one detachment was to enter the Province by Lake Champlain, while Col. Arnold was to make a descent on Quebec, by way of the Kennebec and Chaudi^re rivers. The details of this futile attempt to take Canada, also the more suc- cessful ending of American campaigns at the South, the " Declaration of Independence " in 1776 ; and the aid subsequently afforded by France in achieving that independence, are all matters of common history. This independence having been established, negotia- tions for peace were opened in Paris, and the memorable Treaty by which Great Britain recognized that inde^ pendence, was signed September 3rd, 1783, EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 78 General Carleton had been replaced by General Haldimand, who, after a short administration, had given place to Lieutenant-Governor Hamilton. The latter was superseded in 1785, by Colonel Hope, who soon after gave place to Sir Guy Carleton, raised to the Peerage as Lord Dorchester, and re-appointed as Governor- General of British North America. A project for a constitution of Canada had been i submitted to Lord Dorchester which divided the coun- try into two provinces : the expressed design of hich I separation was to put an end, if possible, to the com- petition between the old French inhabitants and the new settlers from Britain and the British colonies. A Council and House of Assembly were proposed for each I division. When the new law came into operation, Canada )assed under the rule of the fourth government set )ver her during the thirty-one years succeeding the iJonquest. First, there was martial law from 1760 to 1763 ; military sway from the latter date to 1774 ; a species of civil rule from 1774 to 1791 ; and finally, a )artially elective system to commence in 1792. After dividing Canada into two provinces, and ap- )ortioning the laws and regulations which were to )revail in each, the new constitution provided that all )ublic functionaries, beginning with the Governor- rcneral, should be nominated by the Crown, and be |emovable at royal pleasure ; and that the free exer- lise of the Catholic religion with the conservation of D n V:l< llllll 74 HISTORY 0¥ THE its rights should be guaranteed permanently. In each province there w as to be instituted a legislative Council and a legislative Assembly. An executive Council, the members of which were to be of royal nomination, to uJiviso the Governor, was instituted, with the powers of a court of appeal in civil matters. In 1790, the division of the Province into three se- parate districts, or departments, took place. In order to visit England, Lord Dorchester transferred his func- tions to Major-General Alured Clarke, who fixed the time for the election of members to the Assembly, in June. Lord Dorchester resumed the duties of his office in 1793, and in the succeeding session of Parliament, gave great attention to efforts at equalizing the income and expenditure of the Province. In 1796, Robert Prescott, Esquire, replaced Lord Dorchester as governor. Soon after his accession to office, difficulties arose with the council respecting the management of the public lands ; which troubles were the probable cause of his Excellency's return to Eng- land in 1799. He was succeeded by Robert Shore Milnes, Esquire, as Lieutenant-Governor. About this time, the government entered on possession of the Jesuit's estates. In 1800, an Act was passed to sanc- tion the foundation of a royal institution intended to promote a general system of public instruction. The Protestant bishop of Quebec, himself the originator of the project, was called to preside over the new insti- t^tio^, EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 75 The first French newspaper Le Canadimy appeared at Quebec in November, 180G. Events were now transpirhg which seemed a fore- cast of coming war. Prcparitions wore made for the crisis, which, however, was long delayed through the efforts of diplomatists. At this critical juncture, Sir James Craig arrived as governor, and took the oailis of office in October, 180T. He was a military off.cer of some repute, but possessed some characterisiics which mado him unpopular as an administrator anong the people to ^yhorll he was sent. Party spirit ^ai been kept alive by the frequent introduction of v»xtd questions and angry debates upon them ; and though a certain restraint was temporarily observd, adverse feelings grew stronger, each contestation kving a tinge of na- tional jealousy. An unfortunate aitagonism between the Executive and the Legislative branches of the government, finally led to a dissoluion of parliament, the suppression of Le Canadiei iBwspaper, and the arrest and imprisonment of seveial lersons, which gave great offence to the opposition. Governor Craig was succeeded ty Sir George Pro- vost, a veteran officer of Swiss orgii His first official acts restored to a great extent he good feelings be- tween parties ; and soon the nosi lively sympathy sprang up between the governoi aid people. War was now imminent between Britiin ani the United States. T^ 76 HISTORY OF THE iiii The governor made a tour of observation along the frontier lines, examining -he fortified posts, and noting the military positions ; from which ho returned satis- fied \,ith the spirit manifested by the people. Anxious to stand well with the clergy, Sir George had several concihatory interviews ^ith the Cathohc bishop of Quebec ; who profited hy the occasion to obtain a full recognition of the legal existence of Catholicism in Ca- nada. The Americans coiamenced the campaign of 1813, by a series of operatbns against Upper Canada, which, though at first atceixied with varying success, termin- ated in their beirg criven from the country. Invasions from other quarceri were equally abortive ; and after various attacks anc defeats, ravages and retaliations, hostiHties ceased ; and in August, 1814, British and American envoys net at Ghent in the Low Countries, to confer on terms f pacification. On the 22nd and 24th of Decembe:, two treaties were signed ; the first containing coanercial, the second, pohtical sti- pulations ; both of vhch were ratified by the respec" tive governments. lach party was to restore what- ever territory had )ein taken during the war ; and the subject of the rightu limits of Canada and New Bruns- wick was referret t( a mixed commission, afterwards to be constituted, fo* its final settlement. Sir George Prev)st had been popular as a ruler among the people o^ Canada, aid when summoned to England to deiend hmself against accusations preferred EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 7T In consequence of the unfortunate ending of the Platts- burg expedition, he carried with him their deepest regrets and warmest sympathies. But before ho was called to meet his enemies face to face, he died from the combined effects of fatigue, exposure, and a deeply wounded spirit. His health, never robust, had been materially affected by an overland passage from Que- bec to St. John, N.B., where he embarked for Britain ; his death taking place shortly after his arrival in Lon- don : consequently the court martial appointed to try him, never met. The military reputation of the dead Avarrior was at last cleared of the stain attempted to be cast upon it, by members of his own profession. n 78 HISTORY OP THE mi ■ Mt illljii' 1 ! 'i' CHAPTER IX. RENEWAL OP POLITICAL DISCUSSIONS AND AGITATIONS IN CANA- DA. — SUCCESSIVE ADMINISTRATIONS. — DISORDERED FINAV OES. — CONTINUED ANTAGONISM OP PARTIKS. — THE EARL OF DALIIOUSIE.— APPRO ACHING CRISIS.— DEPUTATIONS, ADDRESSES AND COUNTER ADDRESSES SENT TO LONDON. — CANADIAN AFFAIRS IN THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. — SUCCESSIVE ADMIN- ISTRATIONS. — COURSE OF CANADIAN HOUSE OP ASSEMBLY.— SESSIONS OP 1831-2. — RIOT AT MONTREAL. — CHOLERA LN CANADA. — INTENSE POLITICAL FBEIIXO.— SESSION OF 1S34. The war just terminated had, while it lasted, a calm- ing effect upon the habitual discord between the ex- ecutive and representative chambers. Peace having come again and Provost being gone, the old dissensions began to re-appear. General Drummond entered office as substitute pro- tein for a regularly appointed governor ; and while in the discharge of his official duties, his attention was | drawn to existing abuses, and to providing means to regulate them. With these official probings, he was' occupied till the opening of ParHament in 1816 ; soon after which, the house was dissolved by the governor in virtue of an order sent from London. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 79 At this period Sir John Coapo Sherbrooke, arrived as governor. His official career was begun by acts which seemed to indicate sympathy with the people, and augured favorably for his future popularity. In a general way, his prudent polity greatly moder- ated the ardor of partisanship in the colony ; and after the Parliament met, January ITth, 1817, the Assembly seemed well disposed toward the executive. He soon after demanded his recall under the plea of failing health, and embarked for Europe shortly after the close of the session. It was confidently asserted that ho was disgusted with the task he had attempted ; and it is probable that he wished to avoid troublesome contentions. Instructions had been sent him to stand firm against the opposition of the House, but in answer ho had enlarged on the embarrassments of his situation, and the impossibility of carrying out such a course in the present unquiet state of the popular mind. His immediate successor was the Duke of Richmond who arrived at Quebec in 1818, and at once assumed his official duties; but sickened and died suddenly, August 28th, 1819. For a time the government was administered by the Hon. James Monk ; and afterward by Sir Peregrine Maitland, until the arrival of the Earl of DalLousie in 1820. Parhament had assembled in 1819, but was at once dissolved by Mr. Monk ; a step which greatly in- creased the agitation already existing, and from the D n WW am 80 HISTORY OF THE ill first it was foreseen that the government would have a more refractory Chamber to deal with in future. As soon as the New ParHament met, the representatives elected their speaker, but nothing further was effected, as on the demise of King George III, an immediate dissolution of both the Imperial ParHament and Cana- dian Assembly followed. Lord Dalhousie arrived during the election of 1820 ; and on the meeting of the House in December, the new governor's opening address seemed to flow from the heart of a man who ardently desired that good-will and harmony should prevail. Intelligence of the introduction to the House of Com- mons, of a bill for the reunion of the Provinces, at once awoke opposition, and was postponed for a time through the influence of some distinguished Commoners. When news of this reached Canada, public meetings were convoked among French Canadians in all parts of the country to enter a protest against the measure. On the meeting of Parliament in January, 1827, it was found that the old animosities were still in force ; and when the supplies were asked for, the demand was mot by a flat refusal, which act brought matters to a sudden issue. This was the most solemn censure that a country could pass against the adrauistration. So Lord Dalhousie understood it, for the Chambers were prorogued the next day. In the elections which ne- cessarily followed, the Assembly gained every possible advantage, and the liberal press were strong in con- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 81 demning the Governor's polity. But that functionary . ^% i/i (/, 1.0 S:« I.I 1.25 2.8 1^ 1^ M 2.2 20 m 14 IIIIII.6 V] ^ /a "c1 c'l ^;. >^'} /A ^X^V^^ ^^y #• % ^ iV iV .V o .^^ r^^ ^1^ ^ Illlil llBllr 92 HISTORY OF THE illiil I'll III 1 'i 1 ji 1 ^'' §' i i '■ i 1^ \^ 'C I'll' 1 1 pi j ; III Il '^'^' jl ^l-:- CHAPTER XI. ADMINISTRATION OF LORD SYDENHAM. — SIR CHARLES BAGOT. — SIR CHARLES (baron) METCALFE. — EARL CATHCART. — THE EARL OF ELGIN AND KINCARDINE. — SIR EDMUND HFAD. — LORD MONCK. — CONFEDERATION. — SIR JOHN YOUNG. The union of the two provinces marks an era in Ca- nadian annals. The law passed by the Imperial Par- liament in 1840, took effect February 10th, 1811, when the Right Hon. C. P. Thompson, who had been in the country since 1839, was raised to the Peerage as Lord Sydenham, and became sole representative of the Queen in Canada.* The first united Parliament was summoned to meet at Kingston in June, 1811. Several im'portant mea- sures were passed by it, relating to municipal institu- tions, popular education, customs, currency, &c. The * Notwithstaadiag the political troubles, in 1840 the provin- cial revenue had reached the sum of £184,000, while the expen- diture was but £143,000. In 1844, (the year nearest to the union wherein a census was taken) the population of Canada East was given as 697,000 souls, of whom 524,000 were of French origin, the remainder being of British or foreign blood. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 93 [•ovin- cpen- inion was k-igin, session terminated in September under the most me- lancholy circumstances, l ccasioncd by the violent and unexpected death of the Governor- General, who was thrown from his horse and mortally hurt. The accident took place on the 13th of that month. The deceased nobleman was deeply and universally regretted. The new constitution of Uniced Canada as embraced in the act of union, embodied several features not before introduced into colonial constitutions, the most important of which was responsible government, that is, a government controlled by colonial ministers of the crown having seats in the legislature, responsible to it for their ofl&cial acts and for their advice to the Gov- ernor-General. Second in importance, was the conces- sion to the House of Assembly, of a complete control over the revenue in all its branche? and the entire supervision of the expenditure of the country. This was just what the great liberal party had long been con- tending for ; while to meet as far as possible the views of the other party, guards and checks were interposed, which have been gradually relaxed. Much had been accomplished in a short space of time by the late Lord Sydenham towards elevating and improving the coun- try. Sir Charles Bagot was his successor in office, becom- ing Governor-General of Canada in 1 842. He had many difficulties to contend with, arising from the smouldering embers of party rivalries and passions which were some times fiercely roused. By a prudent and conciliatory mhmi D 94 HISTORY OF THE course however, he succeeded in calming the heats of angry strife, and many useful measures were passed by the legislature during his administration. His health failing, he returned to England where he died in 1843, aged 63 years. Sir Charles Metcalfe, who had distinguished himself as Governor of India and of Jamaica, succeeded Sir Charles Bagot. His efforts to mitigate what he felt to bo the evils of mere party government, and his appoint- ments to office, led to a difference between himself and the members of his cabinet, who resigned office. They maintained that appointments under the Crown should be made chiefly with a view to strengthen the adminis- tration, and upon the advice of ministers responsible to Parliament. Sir Charles, on the other hand, maintain- ed that the patronage of the Crown should be dispensed according to merit, irrespective of party objects, and for the sole benefit of the country. Other points of difference arose, which widened the breach ; on an ap- peal to the country, the poHcy of Sir Charles was sus- tained Dj a majority of the electors, and he was shortly afterward raised to the Peerao;e as Baron M( tcalfe He was compelled to resign his office and return to England, in consequence of disease, where he died of a cancer in the face in 1846, aged 61 years. It was during his administration that the government removed to Montreal. On his return to England in 1845, Gen- eral Lord Cathcart, Commander of the Forces, assum- ed the reins of government, which he held till the EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 95 irn to lied of [t ■svas ved Gen- jssum- lll the 10 arrival of the Earl of Elgin and Kincardine, early in 1847- This period was made sadly memorable by the prevalence of what was termed " ship fever," which had been induced by famine, and had spread desolation in Ireland and Scotland, dj-iving multitudes to seek refuge in Canada. They brought fever and death with them ; and for a time pestilence was abroad in the land. Measures which were promptly taken to provide for this calamity, in some degree mitigated the evil. Lord Elgin entered heartily into his oflficial duties, and soon public attention was drawn from the pesti- lence to the poHtical state of the country. He ex- hibited a comprehensiveness of mind and a singleness of purpose, -which at once gave dignity to his admi- nistration, and divested the settlement of questions then agitating the public mind, of much of that petty bitterness and strife which had before entered so much into the political discussions of the day. Under his auspices responsible government was fully carried out, and every reasonable cause of complaint was removed. Rarely had a governor so identified himself with the interests of Canada, or sought so ably and effectually to promote them ; and the consequences were favorable in the highest degree to the general improvement and prosperity of the country. A general election took place in 1848, giving a large preponderance of the reform party in the House of Assembly. The governor at once surrounded himself with the chiefs of that party, and measures of great utility and impor- tance were passed by the legislature. P D 96 HISTORY OF THE l,-:idi! liiliiijiii il PI j! liiijiiii'lii One measure however, produced a sudden ebullition of party violence, which for a time disturbed the gen- eral harmony and brought disgrace upon the Province. In 1845, a former ministry under Lord Cathcart's administration, had issued a comr^iission of inquiry into the losses sustained during the rebellion, by individuals, either from military necessity or from lawlessness. Their report was but partially acted upon at the time ; but so great was the pressure brought to bear upon the government by parties who had suffered those losses, that in 1849, the matter camo up before the governor in council, and subsequently before the legislature for final settlement. The measure proposed, being thought too indiscriminate and liberal by the party in opposi- tion to the government, warm discussions arose in the house, and a violent agitation commenced throughout the country. The measure however, passed both houses, and was assented to by Lord Elgin in the Queen's name. No sooner had he done so, than he was assailed in the streets of Montreal, and as a crowning act of violence, the Houses of Parliament were set fire to, and with their valuable library almost totally destroyed. Beside the irreparable loss of the library, and of the public records, a fatal injury was inflicted upon the good name and public credit of the country, and po- pular violence for a time triumphed. The seat of gov- ernment was at once removed to Toronto. In consequence of this ebullition. Lord Elgin tender- ed his resignation ; but the Queen dechned to accept -|iii|!f!i!i|ii EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 9t it, and raised him a step in the Peeraf);e. After a time tranquillity returned ; and with it the unfeigned re- spect of the great mass of the people for his Lordship, with an admiration for the courage and ability he had displayed during an eventful crisis in their history. Many measures of great benefit to the country be- came law during his administration, and at the period of his departure from Canada in 1854, the Province again enjoyed peace and prosperity. Before leaving, he procured the passage of the reciprocity treaty with the neighboring republic ; which opened a ready market for surplus agricultural products, and for large quantities of lumber. * Several important lines of railway, prominent among which were the Grand Trunk and Great Western, * This treaty was concluded in June, 1854, between Lord Elgi.i, Governor of Canada, and Mr. Marcy on the part of the United States. Its design was to regulate commercial inter- course between the two countries ; and it was to remain in force ten years from the time at which it came into operation ; or further stiU, until the expiration of twelve months after either of the contracting parties gave notice to the other, of its wish to terminate the same. It expired on the 11th of September, 18G4, after which, either Great Britain or the United States were free to give notice of the termination of its provisions; to take efTsct twelve months after^the date of such notice. Of this power the United States government availed itself, and the treaty came to a final termi- nation in March, 1866. Steps have since |been taken towards negotiating a new treaty, but hitherto without any successful issue. a Lg0s 98 HISTORY OF THE ii m m I Ji5 l! M iMllll'iii; H ii i were also projected and commenced during this admi- nistration. In the great International Exhibition which was held at London in 1851, Canada made a most favorable impression on the British public. Sir Edmund Head succeeded Lord Elgin as governor of Canada in 1854. His administration was a memorable one in the annals of the country ; being noted for the number and extent of public improvements effected ; foremost among which, was the completion of the Grand Trunk Railway to Riviere Du Loup, and of the Victoria Bridge over the St. Lawrence river at Mont- real. The Clergy Reserve, and Seigniorial Tenure questions, were also finally disposed of. In 1855, and in 1861, Canada again distinguished herself in the great International Exhibitions. In 1856, the Legis- lative Council was made a partially elective Chamber. In the same year, an ocean line of steamers running to Ireland and England was established. In 1858, the decimal system of currency with appropriate silver and copper coins, was introduced. The closing period of Sir Edmund's administration was rendered still more memorable in 1860, by the visit of his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, to Canada and other British North American Provinces as well as to the United States. The Prince met with an enthu- siastic reception wherever he went; his presence as the especial representative of his august Mother the Queen, evoking feelings of the warmest enthusiasm s.!^£a:,aift3ssi:itoa!*«s,.-j»4'«Gsiss«)taft wis'^w EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 99 the 5gi9- iber. ming .858, jilver •e as the tiasm anil loyalty for Ilcr Majesty. While in Canada, His Royal Highness inaugurated the Victoria Railway Bridge, and laid the corner stone of the Parliament buildings at Ottawa, that city having been previously selected by Her Majesty as the permanent seat of Government for Canada. On the retirement of Sir Edmund Head, Lord Vis- count Monck was appointed to succeed him. The civil war which commenced in 1861, between the Northern and Southern States of America, greatly deranged the trade of the country, and led to many difficult and embarrassing complications. In 1864, the feeling of antagonism that had been kept alive in Parliament between the Upper and Lower Canada factions reached a crisis. In the successive elections that had been held during the preceding years, it was found that the hostile majority from either Aovince in the legislature, was increased rather than lessened. A project of confederation designed ulti- mately to embrace the whole of the British North American Provinces, was therefore set on foot, by which each was to have the management of its own local aifairs ; while to a general government it was designed to leave matters comraon to all. An Intercolonial Railway con- necting Canada, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, directly with each other, so as to aiford a winter outlet for travel and commerce, has also been projected. It was expected by friends of the enterprise, that should this principle of confederation be applied to the ti 100 HISTORY OF THE ii 'h-'|i; ^1 |ji| diflferent Provinces, an impetus would bo given to in- ternal trade and foreign commerce, and a new era of social and political prosperity dawn upon the colonies ; and further, it was hoped that the bitter party per- sonalities which had grown out of national rivalries and sectional jealousies, might give place to more en- larged and liberal views, and to a more enlightened statesmanship, and that our public men might feel that in representing parts of a great confederation, their pohcy and acts should be dictated by a higher and more dignified national e*andard than as yet they had attained. By Act of Imperial Parliament the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, were con- stituted one Dommion under the name of Canada ; which Act, according to Royal Proclamation, took effect July 1st, 1867. It was provided in the Act, that the new Dominion should be divided into four Provinces, named, respectively. Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. The part of Canada known as Upper Canada, con- stitutes the Province of Ontario ; the part known as Lower Canada, forms the Province of Quebec ; while the Provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, retain the same names and limits as before the passing of the Act of Confederation. In the autumn of 1868, Sir John Young arrived in Canada, to succeed Lord Monck as governor general. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 101 CHAPTER XII. sing in jral. UNITED CANADA. — ITS LIMITS AND BOUNDARIES. — SURFACE OF COUNTRY. — LAKE SUPERIOR. — HURON. — ERIE. — ONTARIO. — THE ST. LAWRENCE AND ITS TRIBUTARIES. — EXTENSIVE CHAN- NEL OP INTER-COMMUNICATION. — EXTRACT FROM EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE. — UPPER CANADA. — LOWER CANADA. — COMMERCIAL FACILITIES. — AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS. — EXPORTS AND IMPORTS. — REVENUE AND EX. -JDITURE. — DEBT AND ASSETS. — PUBLIC Lv PROVEMENTS. — CONSTITUTION AND CIVIL GOVERNMENT. — EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM. — MUNICI- PALITIES. — JUDICIARY. The country hitherto known as Canada, comprises but a small part of British America. Taking it length- wise, its limits extend from the 60th to the 84th de- gree of west longitude ; and from the 42nd to the o2nd parallel of north latitude. It Hes in the form of a parallelogram extending north-east and south-west. The inhabited part of it is included in about 36,000 square miles ; the remainder being still in its primitive state. The northern and eastern boundaries are Hudson's Bay Territory, Labrador, the Gulf of St. Lawrence, New Brunswick, and a part of the State of Maine ; the n ^41 102 HISTORY OF THE » ! southern, arc the States of Newhampshu'c, Vermont, and a part of New York, to St. Regis on the St. Lawrence, about 75 miles above Montreal ; that being the point where the 45th parallel of north latitude strikes the river, which then constitutes the division to Lake Ontario ; whence the countries are separated by the chain of lakes and connecting rivers, to Lake Superior at the north-west, where it must be confessed, the extreme limit seems rather undefined. The surface of this vast extent of country includes every variety of scenery, from the bold and precipitous mountain with its snow-capped summit, in its rugged and unapproachable grandeur ; the magnificent river with its thundering cataract or foaming rapid; the expansive lakes within which lie beautiful and fertile islands; to the extensive forest plains or cultivated fields from amidst which have sprung up towns and villages ; while at many points on lakes or rivers, are cities of commercial or miUtary importance. At the further north-west 5s Lake Superior, said to be the largest body of fresh water in the world. It is 360 geographical miles in length ; resembles an irre- gular crescent in form ; while its surface is 627 feet above the level of the Atlantic, and its shores give in- dication of having been forty or fifty feet higher. Through this lake we are enabled to attain a distance of 2,000 miles by water, from the mouth of the St. Lawrence. Its surplus waters issue near its south- eastern extremity into St. Mary's channel, through msmmmm EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 103 .i'l to It is irre- feet in- ;her. ance St. uth- lougli which they arc carried more than forty miles to Lake Huron. About midway are the St. Mary's falls (Sault Ste. Mario) around which a short canal has been constructed, so as to admit vessels into Lake Superior. Lake Huron is the second in succession, as well as magnitude, of this great chain. It is about 240 miles in length, and not less than 220 in breadth ; its circumference being nearly 1,000 miles. Its surface is only 32 feet below that of Lake Superior; being thus 595 feet above the sea level ; and it is equally with that lake, distinguished for the clearness and brilliancy of its waters, and for an extraordinary depth of 900 or 1000 feet. This lake pours out its surplus waters at its southern extre- mity through the river St. Clair, which stream expands into a lake of the same name, about 26 miles in length, by about the same in breadth. Both this lake and the Detroit river which issues from it, are extremely shallow. The latter flows 26 miles, when it expands into Lake Erie. This body of water is about 244 miles long, and at its centre, 58 miles in breadtli ; its circumference being estimp.ted as somewhat less than 658 miles. Its surface is said to be 565 feet above the level of the ocean ; making it thirty feet lower than Lake Huron. The depth seldom exceeds 270 feet ; which shallow- ness is accounted for by the supposition that the basin of the lake is becoming filled with deposits car- ried down by the rivers. It is the most dangerous J 1 104 HISTORY OP THE „ J -J \^* of the lakes to cross, being very subject to storms and sadden gusts of wind, rendering the navigation at all times insecure. Here the great channel cf communication changes to the north-east. The Niagara river issues from Lake Erie, between Fort Erie and the city of Buffalo. It is about 33 miles long, steam navigation ending at Chippewa nearly opposite Navy Island, where the Welland river enters it. Below this point, the cur- rent rapidly increases ; the roaring of the yet distant and unseen Fall is heard ; a misty cloud rises and hovers over the waters ; the sound grows louder ; the banks rise higher ; and with swiftly concentrating force, the mass of waters rush, foaming and furious, to their tremendous leap, the world-renowned Falls of Nia- gara. Some seven miles below this, the river again becomes navigable, till it enters lake Ontario. These obstructions to the passage of vessels are overcome on the Canadian side, by the Welland Canal, which joins Lake Erie at Port Colborne, and enters Lake Ontario at Port Dalhousie. Ontario is the last and most eastern in the chain of these " Inland Seas." Its length is given as 172 miles Ihrough the centre from soath-west to north- east. It is 750 miles from the sea, and 234 feet above it The name " Ontario," which signifies " The Beautiful," is considered peculiarly appropriate ; as the surrounding scenery partakes of the calm anci peaceful order, rather than the striking and sublime EASTEBN TOWNSHIPS. 105 le on joins itario tliain 172 )rth- Ifeet iThe as lanci lime in nature. It lies in the midst of a highly cultivated country ; and numerous cities and towns on its bays, inlets and tributaries, are fast growing into importance. At its eastern extremity, through the mighty stream ^vhich now for the first takes the name of St. Law- rence, the surplus waters of this vast connection of lakes and their numberless tributaries, pour their re- sistless flood, hastening "Onward to the Ocean." After a short distance the channel of the river expands and takes the name of the " Lake of the Thousand Isles ;" given in consequence of the innumerable islands of every variety of size and form which are here grouped together. Passing these, with somewhat contracted channel the river continues on its course till an island causes the viiipids of Long-Saulty to avoid which the Cornwall canal was constructed. Past this point, the river again expands to the wid% of five miles, and is here called lake St. Francis. Below this, the channel is obstructed by rapids in a degree that makes navigation difl5cult and dangerous for some distance ; to avoid which, and enable vessels to ascend as well as descend the current, the Beauharnois canal has been constructed. Below tliis the river spreads out into Lake St. Louis. Here at the point opposite where the waters of the Ottawa mingle with those of the St. Lawrence, is situated the Indian village of Cmtghnawaga, or "the village of the rapids." Passing this the river again contracts, when the La- chine rapids, or Sault St. Louis of Jacques Cartier memory, are formed by the body of wier which rushes 5 '^Bm 106 HISTORY OF THE foaftiing among rocky obstructions for a distance of nine miles ; to avoid -vvhich, the Lachine canal was built. We now pass the city of Montreal, the com^ mercial metrop'"' s of Canada , below which, the river is navigable for sea-going vessels. But about 40 miles down, where it receives the waters of several large rivers from the south side, it expands into Lake St. Peter and becomes so shallow that it has been found necessary to dredge and deepen a channel which is extremely intricate at best. This lake is 25 miles in length, with a breadth varying from one to ten miles. Immediately below this, on the northern side, is situa- ted the town of Three Rivers ; up to which the waters of the great river rise and fall at the regular ebb and flow of the ocean tides. Now expanding, then con- tracting, and occasionally receiving the waters of some considerable tributary, the mighty flood nears Quebec, and flows majestically past the " Stronghold," in a somewhat narrowed channel, yet with a deep strong current. Twenty miles below this, the waters begin to have a saline taste which naturally grows stronger till they acquire the briny saltness of the ocean. At Kamouraska the river is twenty miles in width, \Yliich continues increasing till it reaches the island of Anti- costi, where at what is usually termed its mouth, it has acquired a breadth of 60 miles. This island is 185 miles in length, by about thirty miles in width at its broadest part. It has but few in- hiibitants, little of the land being fit for cultivation ; ii-Sir«SSiKSfciti»*saK,i-«i«*iiwrJ>®Eai.7!eiiii .siiiit^irii'aiaaiaiaraiSKSfeA' .i.K2j-iK,*;-a«i EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 107 ancc of lal wag [Q com- le river :0 miles il large ake St. 1 found rhicli is miles in n miles, is situa- 3 waters ebb and len con- of some Quebec, 55 in a > strong 'S begin stronger m. At I, ^v•llicll If Anti- it has |t thirty few in- Ivation ; but contains two light-houses for the benefit of mariners ; two depots of provisions in case of shipwreck ; and a permanent hunting and fishing establishment. The Gulf of St. Lawrence from the coast of Nova Scotia to that of Labrador, is 300 miles in width. The northern shore of this river for more than 200 miles up from its mouth, is said to present nearly the same primeval range of forest as when first penetrated by the early French navigators : the only exceptions to this, being Tadousac at the mouth of the Saguenay river, and a few other unimportant settlements. Ta- dousac owed its former importance to having been for a long time a chief fur trading post. The southern coast, however, from Gaspd up, gives more sign of civi- lization and advancement, and the further we ascend, the improvement becomes more apparent. Some points along the coast of the lower St. Lawrence, have more recently become fashionable sea bathing resorts. This noble and majestic river, which carries in its moving flood all the surplus waters of an immense extent of country, likewise bears on its surface those *' White-winged messengers," which take away our own staples of commerce, and bring back to us the products of more genial climes. Up to Quebec the largest class of sea-going vessels ascend without difficulty ; and those of 3000 tons go up as far as Montreal, from which city an inferior class of vessels can reach the Upper lakes, by the course above described. In magnitude and importance, the Ottawa river D n .■^?.;v;>^v<;VjifflL;i.- 'i ftm Ji^aigartfriirHBM 108 HISTORY OF THE lliiiif' '' iiiillilll 'm !!, ranks next to the S^. Lawrence. It has its sources among the lakes of the north, and may safely be said to exceed 500 miles in length. It was formerly the great thoroughfare by which an extensive traffic in furs was carried on with the natives of those regions ; the voyageurs a\ oiding the numerous rapids, and passing from lake to river hj portage ; till according to previous arrangement, they met another class of messengers called couriers des bois, whose business it was to col lect and bring the furs to an appointed rendezvous. More recently, however, the valuable timber on the banks of this river and its tributaries, has drawn the attention of those engaged in lumbering, and immense quantities of saw-logs are every year floated down to the cities of the St. Lawrence, whence much manu- factured lumber finds its way to European markets. The channel of the Upper Ottawa is much broken and obstructed by islands and rapids, among whicli may be found many points of interest to the lovers of beautiful natural scenery : yet it is hardly probable that either the voyageurs of old, or the hardy raftsmen of the present day, had either time to admire, or taste to appreciate them : more probably thinking of them as greatly multiplying their labors and fatigues. Near the location of the city of Ottawa, are tlie fa- mous Chaudi.ere or Kettle Falls, said to be eighty feet in height by about 212 feet in width. The peculiar shape of the impeding rock turns the current toward the centre of the river, and thus concentrates its force as it plunges EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 109 into a chasm, or kettle as it is termed, which has been found to be of extraordinary depth. The supposition that there exists a subterraneous passage beneath the bed of the river, which receives part of the mass of waters, is increased by the fact that half a mile lower down, they come boiling up as if from the kettle. Below this, the navigation is obstructed at points, rendering it perilous except to boatmen of strength, skill and experience. Sections of canal have been construct- ed to avoid these dangers. Still further down, the river expands into the " Lake of Two Mountains," so called from two hills in the vicinity ; after which the channel of the Ottawa is separated ; which division forms the island of Montreal. The part of the river passing back of that island, joins the St. Lawrence below at Repen- tigny ; while far the greater volume of water enters it above at Lake St. Louis. The St. Maurice which enters the great river from the north, is composed of two principal branches, the most westerly of which has its source in a remarkable chain of small lakes situated far to the north. Catar- acts occur upon this river, one of which is said to be 150 feet in perpendicular height. The waters of the St. Maurice are divided at its mouth by two small islands into three distinct channels, giving it the ap- pearance of Three Rivers, which is the origin of the ;riame given to the town near its junction with the St. Lawrence. Much valuable timber is found on the banks [of the St. Maurice and its tributaries, and floated down Ito Three Rivers. 110 HISTORY OF THii isji |3 1 i i 1 j! ! k' '■ 11 II M ! t' ll Further down toward Quebec, but on the same side of the flood, comes the Jacques Cartier River, which, issuing from the distant mountains in the north, rashes rapidly in with its tributary waters, as if hastening to swell the mighty current. The Saguenay river issues from Lake St. Johns, which lies directly north of Quebec, and is said to be just 100 miles around. This lake receives the waters of many large rivers and streams, but discharges only through the Saguenay ; which accounts for the extra- ordinary depth of that river. Though some distance north of Quebec, the climate in the vicinity of this lake is said to be far preferable to that on the sea coast, and the land is of excellent quality for cultivation. The scenery is thought unsurpassed in any section of Canada, and settlements are rapidly springing into life. Ships of the largest size can ascend the Saguenay river 70 miles, and schooners go up to the head of tide water 15 miles further, to the foot of a series of rapids ten miles in length. The Saguenay flows in a south- western course, till it enters the St. Lawrence at Tadousac. The chief tributaries of the St. Lawrence coming from the southern side, are described elsewhere. This great river with the connecting lakes thus affords im- mediate and direct water communication for about 2,000 miles of inland coast, without reference to those affluents which come from ail parts of the interior. A European, wnting on the resources of Canada and EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. Ill their availability through these natural and improved facilities for inland navigation, says : " Their waters transport the produce of the settler's labor to distant markets, and lay open to his enterprize the wide-spread forests and plains, that but for them would still have remained the heritage of the Indian hunter and his brutal prey. Among the greatest proofs of enterprize in the world are those canals by which navigation is made practicable from the ocean to Lake Superior. " The display of the natural products of the far-reach- ing lands, watered by the giant St. Lawrence and its tributaries, at the great Exhibition of 1862, came to the eyes of most of us with a sort of shock. It was surprising, indeed, to behold such evidences of wealth given by a dependency which was associated in the popular mind with frost and snow, — with Niagara, Labrador, and French insurrection — Moose, moccasins, and Indians. " There we saw an exuberance and excellence of growth in timber and in the cereals — in all kinds of agricultural produce, combined with prodigious mineral riches, sho'A^ing what a future Canada may expect when population and capital combined, shall disinter its trea- sures and develope its resources.'* Upper Canada (Ontario). This Province is about 750 miles in length, and from 200 to BOO miles in width. Its surface is generally undulating rather than mountainous,the most elevated mm 112 lilSTORT 01* TIlD portions hd'rn^ tlio Liurontian hills, which appear at lu- tervals running west, and north-west, but are generally mere water sheds rather-than bold prominences. The magnificent chain of lakes which fo m the southern and western boundaries of Upper Canada have a total length of 1085 miles, and cover an area of more than 70,000 square miles. The principal rivers are the Ottawa, separating it from Lower (^anada ; the Niagara, divid- ing it in part from the United States ; the Grand River which flows into Lake Erie ; the Trent which discharges into the Bay of Quinte ; the Thames, which falls into Lake St. Claire ; and the Aux Sables, Maitland, and others which enter Lake Huron. Upper Canada was originally settled mostly by the United Empire Loyalists of America and their descen- dants, and by emigrants from the British Isles. It was constituted a distinct government under the name of Upper Canada in 1791 ; the first Parliament being opened at Newark (Niagara) in 1792, by Col. J. G. Simcoe, the first Lieutenant Governor. The House of Assembly consisted of only sixteen members, and the Legislative Council of only seven. The chief cities and towns of Upper Canada are Toronto, Hamilton, Kingston, London, Brantford, Belleville, and Cobourg ; while many others are fast growing in population and importance. Ottawa city, on the river of that nama, is the seat of government of the Dominion of Canada. The climate of Upper Canada, though somewhat EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 113 inclined to extremes both in winter and summer, is yet sensibly tempered by the influence of the great lakes ; and is milder than that of LoAver Canada. Wheat is the staple product ; and barley, oats, rye, peas, buckwheat, Indian corn, and the common domestic vegetables are raised in abundance. Some sections also, particularly the south-western parts, produce fine fruits. Lower Canada (Quebec). This Province is about 600 miles in length, by about 300 miles in breadth. Though not strictly speak- ing a mountainous country, its scenery is more imposing than that of Upper Canada, on account of the magni- tude of its rivers, and the greater height of its moun. tains. A range enters the Province from the south, known here as the Wotre Dame Range, and continues at intervals to the lower St. Lawrence ; while on the north is the Laurentian range, extending west and north-west, from the Gulf of St. Lawrence into the interior. Some of those mountains are from 3000 to 4000 feet high. The chief rivers are described elsewhere. The chief cities and towns are Quebec, the ancient capital ; Montreal, the commercial metropohs ; beside which, are Three Rivers, St Hyacinthe, and the towns of St. Johns, Sorel, and Sherbrooke ; while others are grow" [ing apace. The climate of Lower Canada is more steadily severe [in winter, and warmer in summer than that of Upper D 114 HISTORY OF THE if lU' Canada. Spring usually opens late, but vegetation grows rapidly. The agricultural products of the Provinces are similar, with the exceptions that less wheat is grown and less choice fruit is raised here than in Upper Canada. Commercial Facilities. In addition to the natural iidvantages possessed by Canada, commercial facilities have been increased by the construction of numerous canals, railways and tele- graph lines. Steamboats and other lake and river vessels are now numerous. The first steamboat built in Lower Canada, was launched at Montreal, by the Hon. John Molson, in 1809, and was named the Accom- modation. On the first trip, she left Montreal on the first of November, and reached Quebec, on the morn- ing of the fourth ; the return trip occupying a week. The first steamboat built in Upper Canada, was launched at Ernesttown, in 1816, and named the Frontenac. The first trip was made May 30th, 1S17. The postal system of Canada is now quite efficient. Reciprocity arrangements exist for the free exchange of natural productions with Great Britain and her other North American colonies. Agricultural Products. In addition to the different kinds of grain and veg^ tables, hemp, flax, hops, tobacco, &c.,are successfully cultivated in many parts j and maple sugar, Canada mi>-^' ^M'W^ EASTEm TOWNSHIPS. -^^ -Balsam, Gcnsiiiir. kc <\rn ^^t. - , - The total auantit; oS/^^ZS t","" '"^''^^^• Canada, is about 30 000 000 h!, ^ ''-^ '" ""'^^ «5,000,000 ; ryo abou't 1 Jo OOo I^."' T ""-' r- 15,000,000 ; buckUeT4'ooo n'oo'^'r'?'' corn 5,000,000; potatoes 20,000 000 ^: 'o/"'"'"' 0; flax and hemp about 4 oi 000 T''^ '^'""''- 15,000,000 lbs ; and mar,Io „, '"""'"^^ ">» J tobacco '^^. Vast a«an«tes oS/pllrS 7'''''''''« ™arket from Upper, and {rUZlotTl "\"''" '° The value of occupied farm, I f, "*"■ ^^n^da. about $425,000,000 and off ""' ^"""""^ « 000,000. '"""-a-doffarm stock about 180,- Exports and I.uporis '^as valued at 110 000 000 r J!^'^ ^''"^ Q^^b^e nicnce of having open £ '"f "'"" '" *° """ve- 3ea-port., slides are eonstteted r^" "" ^^^^^ing and rapids on rivers 2 St "'^" !^''' ^^e fallf -toated that at leasr25 00^1 J'"'' '''''■ '' - '7"- fade of Canada. The ^a 1 ? '"''''' '» *« '» double that of the timber /„ itl T'""^ 8™'» ''"^olsof wheat alone were eS";'::^^'''*'^^'*'*''' f an estimated value of aboutTn nn/™"' ^^^^^a fr°«> these resources may be 1„ '*'?'^"*'- ^^^e f the forest, the sea tb. """' *« P^'J-cts don.e.tic manufacturl' L"'"'^''? building, a„d The annual vai„e ^f „„^ » 116 HISTOKY or TUE iP't Biiiiiiiji ii!ri?;:ii::iiii: I I !ll exports is from 130,000,000 to $40,000,000. The chief imports into Canada, arc Woollcns,Cottons, Silks, Iron, Tobacco, Tea, Wine, Sugar &c. Their annual value is estimated at from $40,000,000 to 150,000,000. The Revenue and Expenditure are about $11,250,000 each. The total debt of the Province about $76,000,- 000 ; total assets $77,000,000. Public Improvements. The public improvements of Canada consist of canals, railroads, public buildings, harbors, light-houses, roads and bridges ; the most important of which are canals and railroads. The total length of the canals altogether is 235 miles ; their cost $21,000,000. The aggregate length of railway is near 2000 miles ; constructed at a cost of over $100,000,000. The two principal lines are the Grand Trunk and Great Western. The former includes the celebrated Victoria bridge over the St. Lawrence: the suspension bridge over the Niagara river, connects the Great Western and New- York Central railways. A Canadian line of mail steam- ships, running to England and Ireland, from Quebec in summer, and from Portland (Maine) in winter, has been established. The Telegraph was introduced in 1847, and extends to all the principal places in the country. Post-offices are also generally established, and are increasing in number. A uniform postage rate of five cents was introduced in 1851 ; which has been reduced to three cents since the passing of the Confederation Act. I I' EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 117 e over er the NeTV- steam- ^uebec winter, oduced in the ilished, ostage ich has of the Civil GovernmkiNT. In Canada, the system of government is monarchical in its most popular form. The Queen is represented by a Governor-General, who is aided and advised by a Council styled the " Queen's Privy Council for Cana- da." The Constitution is founded upon and is identical with that of England, with the single exception that the sanctioning of any law may be reserved for the supreme authority of the " Mother Country," when- ever the Governor -General thinks proper.* This pre- rogative is only exercised to maintain the principal of colonial dependence ; for in point of fact, the Impe- rial Parliament grants the fullest liberty to the colonial Assembly, and the management and enjoyment of all their revenue. The Parliament of Canada consists of the Queen, an Upper House styled the Senate, and the House of Commons. The Queen is represented by the Governor- General, aided and advised by the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, the members of which are chosen and sworn in as Privy Councillors by the Governor- General, and may be removed by him. * The assemblage of laws, termed the constitution (says an eminent Juri:u) is distinguished from the term government in this respect, viz : the constitution is the rule by which the sove- reign ousht to govern at all times ; and the government is the machinery by which he does govern at any and at all times. n I ' ! 118 '^i!l!ll!i i ; i; ■II ii^Hi ' il 1 if ,r ' 1 1 ! ;i im "ir i ■ HISTORY OF THE Senate. This body consists of seventy-two members styled Senators ; twenty-four of whom are appointed by the Governor-General to represent each of the three divi- sions named in the constitution of the senate of Canada ; viz : Ontario, Quebec, and the Maritime Provinces. The qualifications of a Senator are as follows : He must be full thirty years of age ; a natural born or legally naturalized subject of the Queen ; must possess lands or tenements to the value of four thousand dol- lars free from all incumbrances ; and must also be a resident in the Province for vy^hich he is appointed. A Senator holds his place during life, subject to the provisions of the act, but may resign it by addressing a -writing to that effect, to the Governor-General. Cases are also specified in which the place of a Senator be- comes vacant; when the Governor-General is em- powered to fill the vacancy. Questions arising respecting qualifications, &c., are heard and determined by the senate. Fifteen sena- tors including the speaker are necessary to constitute a meeting of the senate for the exercise of its powers. iliiiil aii; mm^] House of Commons. The House of Commons consists of one hundred and erghty-one members. The several Provinces are divid- ed into Electoral Districts, each of which returns one member to the House. Eighty-two are elected lor On- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. lis tario ; sixty-five for Quebec ; nineteen for Nova Scotia ; and fifteen for New Brunswick. The presence of at least twenty members are necessary to constitute a meeting of the House for the exercise of its powers ; the speaker elected by the House, presiding on all such occasions. Questions arising are decided by a majority of voices ; the speaker being entitled to a vote only Avhen the voices are equal. Provincial Constitutions. For each Province there is an oflScer styled the Lieu- tenant-Governor, appointed by the Governor-Gener- al, and holding office during his pleasure. The Execu- tive Councils of Ontario and of Quebec, are at first composed of the Attorney-General, the Secretary, Registrar, and Treasurer of the Province, the Commis- sioner of Crown lands, and the Commissioner of Agri- culture and Public Works ; and in Quebec, the Speaker of the Legislative Council, and the Solicitor General. The Constitution of the Executive authority in each of the Provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, are to continue as they existed at the union, till altered by authority. The seat of government for Ontario, is the City of Toronto ; for Quebec, the city of Quebec ; for Nova Scotia, the city of Halifax ; and for New Brunswick, the city of Fredericton. The Legislature of Ontario consists of the Executive and of one House styled the Legislativ^e Assembly of Ontario, which is composed of eighty-two members, representing the several Electoral Districts. p: n 120 HISTORY OF THE |||lilli|i«li!!l!lt! Iil^':;:ii;i!i';!'liii s ii iLl< I The Legislature of Quebec consists of the Execu- tive and of two Houses, styled the Legislative Council of Quebec, and the Legislative Assembly of Quebec. The Legislative Council is composed of twenty-four members, appointed by the Lieutenant-Governor in the Queen^s name, one of whom represents each of the Electoral Divisions. These Councillors hold office during Hfe, unless the Legislature otherwise provides. Their qualifications are the same as those of Senators. The Speaker is appointed from among the members of the Council, ten of whom, including that officer, are necessary to constitute a meeting for the exercise of its powers. The Legislative Assembly of Quebec is composed of sixty-five members, elected to represent the sixty- five Electoral Districts. The Legislative Authority of '' The Parliament of Canada," extends to that class of subjects which are considered of general importance ; instance, the public debt and credit ; the regulation of trade and com- merce ; the postal service ; such public improvements as extend beyond the limits of one Province ; the issue of paper money ; the regulation of intercourse with other countries ; bankruptcy and insolvency and numerous other matters affecting the interests and prosperity of the Dominion as a whole ; while to the respective Provincial Legislatures are assigned matters of a more local nature, or such as involve the regula- tion of the internal affairs of the Province. This class EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 121 of subjects includes the raising of «a revenue for pro. vincial purposes ; the regulation of municipal institu- tions ; the supervision of educational matters ; the appointment of provincial officers ; the management and sale of the public lands belonging to the Province ; the estabUshment and maintenance of hospitals, asylums, &c., with many others of like nature. Educational System. The earliest educational efforts in this Province were confined to the Roman Catholic institutions of Quebec and Montreal. A Legislative Act in 1801, establish- ing a " Royal Institution " for the promotion of English education, received the royal sanction in 1802, but failed of accomplishing much. The next step in legislation was in 180i5 ; when an act was passed facili- tating the establishment and endowment of elementary schools, and making it lawful for the Fabrique (that is, the Roman Catholic priests and church-wardens of each and any parish,) to establish one school in each parish, and to increase the number in proporti^m to the increase of the inhabitants. This, however, failed of accomplishing the desired object. In 1829, another step was taken in legislation by an appropriation of lands for the establishing of schools ; and provision was made for the election of trustees for their manage- ment. This is the earliest date of the introduction of the popular element into our educational system. In 1832, a further appropriation was made by govern- GpMM D iiii iMMMU 122 HISTORY OF THE mcnt, and the sum of X20 each, was granted to ahmited number of schools in each county. Reading, writing, and arithmetic were th'^ only branches required of the teachers. In 1841, a permanent fund was erected for the es- tablishment and support of the schools, and an annual grant of X 00,000 voted for their continued maintenance. In 1848, other changes were made, re- sulting in the enactment of separate schools for Upper and Lower Canada, adapted to the prevailing religious elements in each section. In Quebec (Lower Canada) the general local municipalities have the direct con- trol of the schools, and elect commissioners for their management. They are supported partly by govern- ment and partly by local taxation, a monthly scholar fee being laid to cover deficiencies. It is provided that in communities composed of mixed religious ele- ments, minorities may dissent from majorities, and on going through certain prescribed forms, are entitled to a proportion of the school money for the establishment and support of the dissentient schools. In 1856, the whole school system of Lower Canada underwent a comprehensive revision under the direction of the Hon. Dr. Chauveau, Superintendent of Educa- tion for the Province. There are now three Universities in Lower Canada, viz : McGill college at Montreal, Laval college at Quebec city, and Bishop's college at Lennoxville : aito four special schools, viz : two institu- tions for Deaf Mutes ; one Agricultural school, and one EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 123 School of Arts and Manufactures. Besides these are eleven Classical colleges ; fifteen Industrial colleges ; sixty-two Academies for boys and mixed ; sixty-eight for girls ; one hundred and eighty-four Model schools, and three thousand five hundred and eighty-nine Primary schools ; under the supervision of twenty-eight school In- spectors. All of the above receive Legislative aid. Three Normal schools for the training of teachers have been established ; two of which (one French and Eng- lish each) are at Montreal and one (French) at Quebec city : the three being under the direction of the Superin- tendent of Education, who divides among the colleges, academies and schools, the annual legislative grants, and administers the school laws generally. Two " Journals of Education," — the one French and the other English — are published by the Depart- ment. By the late Union Act equal powers and privileges are extended to the dissentient schools in each Province, and should questions arise respecting the rights of minorities of the Queen's subjects on this point, final appeal is open to the Governor-General in Council ;. and in case of the neglect of the steps necessary to be taken by the Provincial authorities, the Parliament of Canada reserves the right to make and enforce remedial laws. Municipal System. Up to the Union of the Provinces of Upper and Lower Canada in 1840, there had existed no municipal D n i!i|i!li|i|||i!!jii| 124 HISTORY OP THE i ,!' ^Ixn system in the country. Special acts were passed for incorporating cities and towns, but there were no local representative bodies in the rural districts. From the year 1796 till 1841, all matters relative to the opening of roads, building of bridges, &c., were under the direc- tion and superintendence of the Grand Voyer or his deputy ; and as these officials usually lived in the cities, it can be readily conceived that the opening up of a road in those days was a work involving time and expense. Soon after the above named union, municipal districts were established in which district councils were formed; and in addition to other powers transferred to those , bodies, was that hitherto vested in the Grand Voyer. During the few subsequent years, other changes were made, and in 1855, the present system of parish or township and county councils was established. Each parish, township, or village corporation elects seven councillors, who may hold monthly or quarterly sessions, choosing a mayor and secretary- treasurer. The business of this council relates to the valuation and assessment of property ; the preservation of public order ; the imposition of fines, and the general regula- tion of the internal afifairs of the municipality. The Mayors of the diflferent local councils within the county, form a county council, which holds quarterly sessions, from among their number electing a chairman or Warden. A secretary-treasurer is also chosen.— EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 125 This body has supervision of those matters within the county in which more than one local council is inter- ested, and also acts upon such appeals as are made by the township, parish, or village councils. The object sought by the repeated changes that have been made in the order of municipal affairs, has been their better regulation ; and as new views and improved plans were presented, to adopt and incorporate them into the system ; till at length it has become so thoroughly im- proved as to operate to the very general satisfaction of the people. A city must contain at least 10,000 inhabitants to entitle it to an act of incorporation as such ; and have a mayor, aldermen, and common council men. A town must contain 3,000 inhabitants, and have a mayor and town councillors. A village is a smaller municipal division. The mem- bers of the corporation are elected once in two years by the assessed rate payers. With the extension of settlements in the countr}', counties were formed for representation in Parliament, and as inhabitants increased, have been divided as oc- casion required. The counties of Lower Canada were assigned their present limits by Act of Parliament in 1853; the new counties being formed for electoral purposes, while the old divisions remained for conven- ience in registration, till the new counties were furnished with Registry offices. Where the population is sparse, two counties are 126 HISTORY OF THE hi ilil sometimes united for tli* return of one member. Town- ships are divisions of less extent, and are formed into municipalities as soon as found to contain the required number of inhabitants. Judiciary. From a very early period, Lower Canada has been divided into districts for judicial convenience. On account of the great extent of these divisions, the steady increase of inhabitants within them, and the necessity there existed for a more ready and efficient administra tion of justice, other divisions have been made, and new limits assigned the respective districts from time to time. Each of these divisions comprise two or more counties, and contain a court house, jail and public offices. The place where these are located is called the chef lieu of the district. The superior courts of the Province are the Queen's Bench, which has one Chief Justice, and four Puisne' Judges. It hears appeals, and also gives judgment in serious criminal matters. The Superior Court has one Chief Justice, and eighteen or more Puisn^ Judges. It gives judgment in important cases, and in appeals referred from the Courts below. The third in order is the Circuit Court, the juris diction of which is limited to sums not exceedin;^ $200. The circuit at the chef lieu of a district, has ipgc'- |ce, and [gment •om the le juris ;eedin{i let, has EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 127 concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit courts in and for the various counties in the same districts. The Admiralty Couvb which tries maritime cases, has one Judge residing at Quebec. Commissioners' courts having jurisdiction in sums not exceeding $25, are held in the several townships and parishes, the first Monday of each month, by com- missioners appointed by the Government. Justices of the Peace are also appointed from among the prominent inhabitants, and invested with the power of deciding on all rural and other matters of police. There is a final appeal in important cases, from the superior courts of Canada, to the Judicial Committee of Her Majesty's Privy Council, in England. n i\§ 1 III ill; ' i'lli ; ■ 128 HISTORY OF THE hti Btconh, CHAPTER I. THE ABORIGINES OF OUR OWN SECTION. — ■ HOSTILITY TO THE ENGLISH BEFORE THE CONQUEST. — USUAL ROUTES OF TRAVEL. — SETTLEMENT OF VERMONT RETARDED. — DANGERS ATTENDING IT. — A MORE EASTERN ROUTE. — FINDING OF INDIAN RELICS. i }l| It appears that the territory now known as the Eastern Townships, before the conquest was the hunt- ing ground of tribes belonging to the Algonquin nation, as the Abenquis, or St. Francis Indians, and the Coos- sucks were known to have occupied the section lying on the St. Francis and Beconcourt rivers and their tributaries, with the northern parts of Vermont and Newhampshire. The absence of any town or village of Indians within this section, may be accounted for from the fact that a race of men subsisting entirely by the chase, required a large field from which to draw even a scanty susten- ance, and, notwithstanding the great extent of forest EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. i2d TO Tire TRAVEL. TTENDING RELICS. as the le hunt- nation, le Coos- )n lying id their )nt and Is within !tthata [equired susten- foreit land in North America, its aborigines were often in straits from the diflficulty of finding a suflficiency of game for their support. Their frequent depredations upon the frontier set- tlements of the English colonists while the Euro- pean nations were at war, is matter of history ; and it is also well understood that in their predatory excursions, their usual routes lay through Lake Cham- plain; and if the settlements to be attacked were Jocated on the Connecticut river, they passed up one of the larger streams entering the lake from the east as far as that was navigable for their canoes, and thence by portage to the Connecticut or some of its largest tributaries. All the streams falling into the lake being known to them, there were several frequented routes ; but between the navigable head waters of Otter Creek which enters La!:e Charaplain, and those of Black River which discharges into the Connecticut, was a way so much frequented by these hostile parties as to be called the " Indian road." The obvious reason why no Indian villages were lo- cated within the tract now known ^% Vermont, was the near proximity of several powerful tribes, who were almost invariably at war with each other. During the Colonial and Indian wars, that territory was the great thoroughfare through which most of these warlike ex- peditions proceeded, and where hostile parties often came into collision ; and being situated at nearly an equal distance from the Enghsh or French frontier, it might ■■P Hi 180 HISTORY OP THE Mil m ;'i ■ l'^j:;.;LMi) 1'^ 1 k i have been exposed to the depredations of either party, as it was the frequent battle ground of their Indian allies ; nor was it till after the conquest of Canada by the English, that any considerable settlements were made. True, several points were at times occupied by either, but rather as military posts than actual settle- ments. In 1752, townships were surveyed and stockades erected by the British at Coos, on the Connecticut river, the object of whic^ was to form a barrier against the incursions of the St. Francis Indians in case of war ; but the effort was of little avail and was finally relinquished. Before the year 1754, several settle- ments had begun at different points along the Connec- ticut, but they were effectually checked, and some of them entirely abandoned at the breaking out of the war, which lasted till the conquest. The instincts of these settlers were sharpened to keenness by the dangers and vicissitudes of their man- ner of life. " There were seasons when the deer fur- nished the best venison ; the bear, the richest tongue and steak ; and when no lurking enemy was near to be attracted by the click and report of the rifle, those sounds were the sure premonitions of a repast, which, but for the meagrenessof its appointments, might have been a feast for an epicure. In places where the settlers risked remaining, their houses were fortified to withstand the attacks of musketry. In the spring aen poughingwas to be done and seed put into the ground, SiBTSm TOWNSHIPS. « guard was stationed near so ,. . • ^^ case of danger; and ingoing to fh« ®'? "^n^^gin would as soon have lefnCfrt^Z '7^' *" ««"'«« at home, as their fire arms forlr""'' "^ '"''bandrjr case, that the same wood £/''?""' ^^ ^' *« pot of ground and sheltered 1^2:?'' '''^'^ '""^ the lurkmg place of their dea-lT .7 "«' ""^ "'^o continued depredations had th« ^ . ^'"''" ^hese united strength bv which tL 7 ' °f "rousing the fin% effected, and an en^putlo'^' °' '""'''^ ^^^ and devastation. P"' '" ""^ne* of massacre • History of Veriaoo.. IF m 132 HISTORY OF THE ,iiii!!!!!l!!!!;i' CHAPTER II. DESTRUCTION OF THE INDIAN VILLAGE OF ST. FRANCIS. — RETREAT OP HOGERS' PARTY UP THE ST. FRANCIS. — THE PURSUIT. — REPULSE OP THE INDIANS WHO CONTINUE THE PURSUIT. — THEIR FINAL DEFF.AT AT THE LOWER FORKS. — DISPERSION AND SUFFERINGS OF ROGERS' MEN. — FINAL END OF THE EXPEDITION. During the interval between the taking of Quebec by Wolfe, and the final cessation of hostilities, a large body of French troops had taken possession of Isle-aux-noix at the north end of Lake Champlain ; a post that commands the entrance into Canada in that quarter. The forces there collected being well suppHed with munitions of war, made an effectual stand against the entrance of the English at that point. The French had still several vessels on the lake, and General Amherst who at this time commanded the British colonial forces at Ticonderaga and Crown Point (which places the French had successively abandoned) , thought it best to delay his advance till he had prepared a su- perior naval force. In the meantime he took the opportunity of carrying into effect a project long before determined on, viz., that of punishing the St. Francis Indians (Abenquis) if EASTEBN TOWNSHIPB. 183 for the frequent and fearful depredations and atroci- ties they had been guilty of. These Indians had always teen firm allies of the French, and as persistent and bloody foes of the English colonists. Major Rogers, a brave and experienced officer of the colonial force, was therefore selected to command and conduct the expedition which was to put an effectual end to their depredations and cruelties.* " He embarked at Crown Point with 200 men, and proceeded down the lake in batteaux. On the fifth day, while encanped on the east shore of the lake, a keg of gunpowder was accidentally exploded, by which a cap- tain and several men were severely wounded. They were sent back to Crown Point with a party to attend them, and with a force thus reduced to 142 men, Rogers moved forward to Missisquoi Bay, where he con- cealed his boats among the bushes that overhung one of the inlets, and left in them provisions sufficient to carry the party back to Crown Point. " Leaving two of his rangers to watch the boats, the party advanced into the wilderness, but on the evening of the second day, were overtaken by the trusty rangers, *ia one account of tbis affair, it is related that Rogers had beea driven to the verge of madness by having returned to his hotre after an absence, to find his wife and children murdered and ecalned by a party of these savages; and that in his burning indignation, he sought and obtained the commaud of an expedition that was to wreak a summary vengeance on the perpetratorsof that and oi'oer kindred atrocities. The attacking party was co-jri.osed entu iy of provincials accustomed to Indian warfare. |!ii|!|ii ii'ii 134 HISTORY OF THE !l|l|!;iNi| and Rogers was informed that a party of 400 French and Indians, had discovered the boats and sent them away with fifty men. and that the remainder were in pursuit of the English. He kept this intelligence a secret, but despatched a lieutenant and eight men with the two rangers to Crown Point to inform General Amherst of what had taken place, and request him to send provisions to Coos on the Connecticut river, by which route he intended to- return. He then deter- mined to out-march the pursuing enemy, and pushed on toward St. Francis with the utmost expedition. " Rogers came in sight of the village on the evening of the fourth of October, and leaving his men to refresh themselves, disguised himself in an Indian garb brought for the occasion, and went forward to re- connoitre the town. He found the savages engaged in a grand dance without apprehension of danger, and returning about one o'clock, led forward his men within 500 yards of the village. At four o'clock the dance was ended and the Indians retired to rest. " Having posted his men at the most favourable points, at day-break they commenced the assault. The place was completely surprised ; the Indian method of war- fare was adopted, and wherever the savages were found, without regard to age or sex, they were slain without distinction and without mercy. As day-liglit increased, the ferocity of the provincials was roused to intensity, by discovering the scalps of several hundred of their countrymen suspended on poles and waving in EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 136 the air. They were determined to avenge the blood of their friends, and resolved on completely 'destroy- ing the village and its inhabitants. Of the three hun- dred souls it contained at the time, two hundred were slain on the spot, several AYcre taken prisoners, and some English captives were recovered. It appears that most of the warriors of the tribe were absent on a hunting and fishing expedition, so that comparatively little resistance could be made. " The English had only one killed and six slightly wounded: when having reduced the village to ashes, and refreshed his men, Rogers set out on his return at eight o'clock in the morning, with the retaken captives, and such articles of plunder as were of value and could be easily taken away.* '* In order to avoid the party of Indians he knew to be on his track by the way of his entrance into the country, he commenced his retreat up the St. Francis river, directing his course towards Coos on the Connec- ticut. He was several times attacked in the rear by a party of warriors who had followed in pursuit, and lost several men by them ; but finally formed an ambuscade on his own track, and fell upon the enemy with such , success as to put a stop to further annoyance. • Tradition says that this plunder was taken from the church in St. Francis, and the probability is, that if so, it consisted of valuable articles which according to a very common practice in those early times, had been sent from Franco by pious devotees, to the native church. ^Other articles may also have been collected. ^m^ — ■ !! 'li!! iHfiiij I iiilliiiil 186 HISTORT OP THE III in ill -|i III HI iii- Nil -4' " In the meantime, by order of General Amherst, four persons proceeded from Charlestown on the Connec- ticut, up that river, in two canoes loaded with provisions. They landed on a small island at the mouth of the Pas- sumpsic river, where they encamped for the night; but in the morning, hearing the report of guns and supposing Indians to be in the vicinity, they were so terrified that they reloaded their boats and hastened back to Charlestown. " Rogers at this time was encamped but a few miles up the Passumpsic, and about noon reached the mouth of that river. Observing fire on the island, he made a raft and crossed over to it ; but to his great surprise and disappointment, no one was there, nor was any provision left. The men with him, already reduced to a state bor- dering on starvation, were so disheartened by the pros- pect before them that they gave up in despair, and before the next day several of them died. Rogers now gave up command, telling the men to take care of themsel/es. Some were lost in the woods and perished miserably : but the leader and several of his party, after the most incredible hardships, succeeded in reaching Charles- town, and after having collected and refreshed the survivors of his band, proceeded with them to Crown Point, where they joined General Amherst's command about the first of December. Upon examination, Rogers found that his loss after leaving the ruins of St. Francis, was three officers, and forty-six privates." The foregoing narrative of the destruction of St, EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 137 >) >P St, Francis village by Rogers and his party, which Tvas taken nearly verbatim from Thompson's " History of Vermont," gives but a meagre description and conveys but a faint idea of the difficulties and dangers which he really encountered on his retreat through the wilder- ness. The subjoined account was received from the late Jesse Pennoyer, Esq., who, while en a professional tour of exploration and survey in the townships, was accom- panied by Captain St. Francis, late Chief of that tribe of Indians, and one oi the few survivors of the pursuing party. This Captain St. Francis gave Mr. Pennoyer the following relation of the affair, which was corrobor- ated by a person named Bowen, son of one of Rogers' men ; and still further in its main features, by the descendants of a person named Barnes, one of the re- covered captives mentioned. A little discrepancy .exists between this and the published account respect- ing the number of survivors, but at this distance of time, we can do no better than to receive both, and weigh probabilities. Mr. Pennoyer's account is as fol- lows. " On the morning of the fifth of October, 1759, the assault took pUce ; 200 Indians of ail ages and sexes were slain ; some few taken prisoners, and a number of English captives retak^en ; when Rogers with his party, prisoners and rescued captives, made a hasty retreat up the St. Francis river. The Chief of the tribe (father of the Capt. St. Francis above named) H ifiillillil'! 138 HISTORY OF THE with a number of his warriors had come in during the day and immediately held a council of war, at which it was decided that all present should start in pursuit the next morning ; and that as many more of their warriors as they could call in, should start with canoes on the second day. Accordingly on the morning of the sixth, about fifty warriors, each armed with a gun, tomahawk, and scalping knife, started up on the north shore of the river ; and on the 7th, about forty-five more, armed like the others, set oflf in seven large canoes. These over- took the party that had started the day before, at the rapids in the township of Wendover, wherfe the first detachment had waited the arrival of the canoes ; and at day break on the morning of the eighth, they all set off together. They came up with Rogers' men in Kingsey, and in the skirmish that ensued, the Indians lost several men, while only three or four of the other party were slightly wounded . As soon as the Indians discovered any of their enemies, they fired and often missed aim ; in fact, their shots seldom took efiect, and before they had time to reload they were shot down, or if the savage was separated from his fellows, his enemy quickly rushed up and dispatched him with the bayonet. The Indians sustained considerable loss ia this manner throughout the day, though they succeeded in doing but little injury to their enemies. On the morning of the ninth, they held a council, at which it was proposed and urged by quite a number of their pcjrty, to abandon the pursuit and return. Well llllinilJIe |i |;H^i|!||ii!|! Rogers decided to make ft stand and give the Indians battle , a small party, of whom himself was one ,was detail- ed to carry this treasure to a given point on the Connec- ticut rivoi ; and that on hearing guns and being in doubt as to the success of their comrades in repulsing their enemies and fearful of being overtaken by tlio savage victors, they buried the treasure in what they considered a sale manner, and hastened on without such wearisome incumbrance. Tradition has also assigned various localities as the place 0£ this deposit ; and though search has been made by piirties professing to possess instructions left by the survivors of those engaged in burying it, nothing approaching any des- cription of this property has ever been found. The more reasonable supposition is, that if ever such articles were buried here, they were subsequently carried off by parties who had obtained a knowledge of the locality, and had the hardihood and ehrewdness to effect the removal and turn it to their own advantage. Some years previous to the destruction of St. Francis, in a descent of those Indians upon one of the frontier towns of New England, among other captives they brought away two young children, a boy and girl, belong- ing to different families. The boy, who was the eldest of the two, remembered that his family name was Gill.— After the cessation of hostilities for the time being, the surviving friends of the children, sought to reclaim them ; but their captors had become their protectors, and being attached to the little ones, refused to give them up.— 11 WfMimMkii !t**?1}C'»,'. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 145 An appeal was made to the legal authorities in hope of recovering them by force, but the children were sud- denly missing, and were kept in hiding till the parties seeking them were obliged to abandon the search as hopeless and return without them. They were there- fore left to grow up among their captors, who had them carefully educated in the French language, and Roman Catholic religion. When of proper age, these two young people, thus strangely associated, were united in marriage, and from this union have sprung a numerous and highly respec- table progeny, who in time, have become so wealthy and influential, as in a great measure to supersede the owners of their captive ancestors in the proprietorship of the soil, and to become, in fact, the largest land- holders in the vicinity. Fortunately the captive boy's name had been retained ; his -.tosterity have honored it, and risen to enjoy a high social standing in the country ; one of them having represented his county in the Pro- vincial Parliament. Our informant had the pleasure of a personal interview with a late member of this family, whom he found intelligent and cultivated, affable ai.d prepossessing. From him (Mr. Gill,) he received the facts above given, and was likewise told that he (Mr. Gill) had visited the place of his ances- tor's nativity, and had instituted inquiries respecting any surviving members of the family ; but up to that period without other success than learning that all of the kindred had long before left the place, and if any n ■I 146 HISTORY OF THE were still living, it was at a distance. The whereabouts of these young people when the village of their captors and protectors was destroyed, is not known ; but the supposition is, that they were absent at school : and as they were universal favorites and proteges of these Indians, an event so disastrous to the tribe generally, might have contributed to their material benefit and worldly advancement. aH^lsa -■■':» '>«»"-"■ EASTEBN TOWNSHIPS, 14T CHAPTER III. THE SEIOrNIORIES, THEIR LAND TENURE, &C. — COA^MENCEMENT OF AMERICAN REVOLUTION. — GREAT INFLUX OF POPULATION. — DIFFERENT CLASSES. — EFFECTS OF CIVIL COMMOTION U. B. LOYALISTS. — STEPS NECESSARY TO OBTAIN GRANTS OP LAND. — RELATIONS OF AGENT AND ASSOCIATE. — ERRORS OP THE SYSTEM. — EMIGRATION. — PIONEER LIFE. When the French began their settlements in Canada, land was granted in extensive lots called seigiiicries, stretching along either coast of the St. Lawrence far below Quebec, and above Montreal, comprehending an extent of several hundred miles ; and as time progress- ed, spreading along the principal rivers of Lower Canada. These seigniories each contained from 100 to 500 square miles, and were parcelled out into lots in a freehold lease to the inhabitants, as the persons to whom they were granted had not the means of culti- vating them. The proprietors were generally officers of the army, gentlemen of limited means, or religious communities, who were not in a state to employ work- men and laborers. The portion assigned to each in- habitant was three acres in breadth, and from 70 to 80 acres m depth, commencing on the bank of the 148 HISTORY OF THE I • ill'li river, and running back into the woods, thus forming an entire and regular lot of land. To the proprietors of seigniories, some powers as well as considerable profits were attached. Their grants authorized them to hold courts and sit as judges in what was termed haute and basse justice, which inclu- ded all crimes committed within their jurisdiction, treasons and murders excepted. The seignior's in- come was derived from the yearly rent of his lands, from lods et ventes or a fine on the disposal of property held under him, and from grist mills, to the profit of which he had an exclusive right. The rent paid by each tenant was considerable, and those who had many inhabitants on their estates, enjoyed quite a handsome revenue. In the event of the sale of any of the lots of his seigniory, a proprietor might claim a preference of right to re-purchase it ; but this power was seldom exer- cised unless with a view to prevent frauds in the dis- posal of the property. The seignior had also certain rights respecting timber for building mills, &ic. ; and tithes of all the fisheries on his domain belonged to him. With these advantages, seigniors might in time have attained to a state of comparative affluence, were their estates allowed to remain entire. But by the practice of divisions among the different children of a family, they became in a few generations reduced in circum- stances. The most ample share which retains the name of seigniory, was the portion of the eldest son, the other partitions being denominated fiefs. In the next gener- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. ation, these were again divided, and thus in the course of a few descents, seigniors became possessed of little more than their titles. This is the condition of most of those estates that have passed to the third or fourth generation. The inhabitants in like manner make divisions of their small tracts of land or houses, and it is from these causes that many of them are retained in a state of poverty, a barrier to industry and emulation inter- posed, and a spirit of litigation excited. Some of the domicilated savages also held land in the right, of seigniors. The townships have all been granted since the con- quest of the country by the British, and are settled by a mixture of English, Scotch, Irish, French Canadians, and Americans, with a slight infusion of other national elements in their population. The people of the town- ships hold their lands by a tenure denominated " free and common soccage." A period of fifteen years had elapsed from the con- quest of Canada by the English, to the breaking out of the American revolution, which time had passed in measurably successful effoits toward a reconcilia- tion of existing diflferences between conquerors and conquered : and when the troubles between Great Britain and her older American colonies culm.inated in open war, and attempts were made to induce the Canadians to join the standard of revolt, they were ineffectual. These efforts failed principally through ^yrafiwi* 150 HISTORY OF THE I! Kill i!l i the entire alienation of feeling caused by the old feud between them, and from the distrust born of religious differences. Many sought refuge in Canada, from the troubles of that distracting period. Prominent and influential men among those who favored the royal cause, then left the country which had ceased to be to them a home. Some of them were native Britons who had crossed the ocean and established themselves in the colonies, expecting still to enjoy the protection of their country's laws, and end their days under the sheltering influences of the flag they honored and loved. But this hope proved an illusion to be quickly and rudely dispelled, and the alternative which remained to them was either submis- sion to what was distasteful and highly offensive ; — was to some an unbearable indignity ; — to return to the land of their fathers, or seek an asylum m the wilds of Canada. Many foresaw the gathering tempest and wisely withdrew in time to escape its fury. Others who had ever been accustomed to regard the yeomanry of their country in the light of dutiful and obedient subjects, and to consider those who should rebel against con- stituted authority as worthy of the direst punishment, only brought trouble upon themselves in attempting to reason with their opponents, or to coerce them into submission. Warmly and sincerely attached to the Royal cause, it was with mingled excitement, indig- nation, and disgust, that they beheld people demand- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 161 ing redress for wrongs which seemed to them more imaginary than real, and enforcing those demands with threatening manifestations. These men had vainly striven to stem the tide of populav feeling, and had brought suffering upon themselves and anxiety and dis- tress upon their friends, by interference in the disputes of that troublous time. Not only persecutions and indig- nities, but arrest and close imprisonment, was often the measure meted out to them in consequence of their loyal principles ; yet, as is usually the case, these only increased their attachment to the government of their choice and in like degree prompted dislike and hatred of its enemies. A short experience of life in the midst of such commotions was sufficient, however, to convince them that all efforts to stem the current were unavailing, and desirous of avoiding like repeti- tions, they withdrew, while yet there was time. Many who had remained to share the vicissitudes of war, in hope of the retrieval and ultimate triumph of what they believed to be the right, were finally glad to secure a safe retreat. In some cases, through the in- fluence and address of friends who were favorable to the popular cause, their property was saved from con- fiscation and finally transferred to them in this coun- try. But still more common were the cases when after prolonged attempts to subdue a power already too strong for them, they were forced to yield to inevitable necessity, and resign house and lands, home and WRM n 162 HISTORY OP THE P- friends, wealtli and station, all that men desire in this life, aside from that precious boon itself. Still another class, more cautious and less impulsive, while hopeless of a successful resistance of the pre- vailing powers, wisely avoided the heat of party strife, and waited till the fury of the storm was spent, when they quietly disposed of their eflfects, and transferred their interests and allegiance together. Additions of worthy and desirable inhabitants were made in this undemonstrative manner. But it cannot be denied that many were brought in by the exigencies of the times, who could only be regarded in the Hght of unavoidable evils, being of that irresponsible, ill-regulated class that accumulates and thrives amid scenes of tumult and commotion, and constitutes a disturbing element in any community. It is well understood that for many years before the revolution reached a culminating point, a numerous floating population representing many different nation- alities, had been accumulating in those Colonies which oflfered not only an asylum for the oppressed of all grades and distinctions, but a hiding place fot the refugee from justice. This class of people, without fixed principles, or permanent interests in the coun- try, on the breaking out of the war, at once sided with the party which could offer the most tempting inducements. Some were drawn into it by a morbid taste for exciting adventure ; others may have had some private pique to be gratified, or some personal EASTERN TOWNSHIPI. 158 quarrel to be avenged, and but waited the opportu- nity for giving vent to a long nursed wrath ; while others still, who were but designing and unscrupulous adventurers, rushed into the conflict with the mere hope of gaining some advantage. The associations into which such characters were thrown during the long and bloody struggle which preceded their advent into Canada, had anything but a softening and humanizing effect, as all the angry and vindictive feelings were kept fully roused : and when in the course of events the scale turned in favor of the popular party, the bitterness of dis- appointment and the humiliation of defeat were added to intensify the already over-wrought and over-master- ing passions. Such of the colonists as preferred exile to a sur- render of their allegiance, were encouraged to come to Canada. Numbers of them entered the British ser- vice, and when the end came, settled in the country. Some of character and ability had offices of trust and profit conferred on them, while others received special grants of land in reward for service rendered, or in remuneration for losses sustained. Large acces- sions were thus made to the population of the country. It would appear however, that up to the year 1791, unless along the immediate frontier of the Province, the part known as the Eastern Townships was an almost unbroken wilderness. In order to facilitate its 154 History op the settlement, lands were granted on conditions speci- fied, to such as would locate there. The preliminary steps to be taken in order to obtain the grant of a township of land, were for a number of individuals intending to become settlers, to organ- ize themselves into a company called associates, and select one from their number to act as their agent in the transaction of the business with the govern- ment. In this arrangement the agent was to bear all expenses incurred in the sui'vey of the township ; to open a road to, and through it; to erect mills within it ; and to obtain the signatures of a certain number of persons, pledging themselves to become actual settlers on the premises. The number of asso- ciates required, corresponded with the size of the tract petitioned for ; forty being the usual number designated for a township ten miles square. As a first qualification, the person acting as agent for the associates, was to procure a certificate from some source considered reliable, to the effect that he was a responsible character ; and furthermore he must show his authority for acting as agent of the associates, by presenting a petition for a certain tract of land desig- nated ; in which petition, the peculiar claims of those who preferred it, were set forth ; which claims almost invariably related to embarrassments and losses suf fered in consequence of the then late American rebel- lion ; and redress was asked for these grievances, in the manner above related. Then followed a description n Eastern townships. 155 of the size and location of the tract asked for : " Which petition was referred to the land committee for consi- deration." The power to issue " Warrants of Survey" rested with who Governor In Council, who for the convenience of parties interested, appointed a board of commission- ers at a convenient location, whose duty it was to make the requisite examinations into the characters of par- ties presenting the petitions, to administer the neces- sary oath of allegiance, and attend to the busi^iess in its various details. The examinations were to be made and the oaths taken, before the parties could be accepted and have their names entered in the Letters Patent. The arrangements between agents and associates were personal and private agreements by contract between the parties who shared equally, to the eflfect that of the number of lots drawn by the associate, he should re- convey to the agent, in consideration of the expense incurred and the latter's services in the busi- ness, all received over a certain number of acres agreed upon between them, on which '' Actual settlement " was to be made. This number was usually 200, and the settler was entitled to his choice of the lots falling to his share ; yet exceptions to this were very common, especially if the associate had sons growing up who were considered desirable acquisitions to the community in process of formation, and extra inducements were thought necessary, when a larger proportion of land was offered ; the matter admitting of great latitude. 166 HISTORY OF THE ;ded the l.irvest and much of their future comfort : yet as a general thing, it was not till tlic second cr third year that grain enough was raised to furnish bread for the family, and it was no unusual event for this harvest to prove a failure, cither through the depredations of bears or destruction by frosts. Those who had been thus unfortunate, or from any cause had been unable to provide against such emer- gency, were often obliged to go on foot thirty, forty, fifty miles, or even more as the case might be, before finding what they sought, and then return laden with all they could bring for their destitute famihes. During seasons of scarcity and high prices, much suflfering was experienced by these poor people. Until the introduction of sheep and the raising of flax, such clothing as had been brought 'n with the 'mMUfiJiLZ llillll]liili iiii 176 HISTORY OF THE 1 !' i!' i ill' iiii settler's family had in most cases to suffice, as there were then no ready means by which the supply ild be renewed. We are told that in some of the m^.- ' .d- mote sections, before wool and flax could be produced and made into cloth, mothers of families were some- times driven to the necessity of cutting up the blankets they had prepared with great care for bedding, in order to clothe their needy little ones ; and further- more, that the clothing of the men had often to be patched with the skins of animals, for want of cloth. WB wm^^'^w^vfrni EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 177 CHAPTER V. IMPROVEMENTS IN DWELLINGS, FURNITURE, AND OTUER CONVE- NIENCES. — MECHANICAL LABOR. — METHOD OP OONVERTENa CORN INTO FOOD. — ERECTION OF MILLS. — OPENING OF ROADS, — CLOTHINO IN USE. — FEALALE EMPLOYMENTS. — SOCIAL GATHERINGS.— DRINKING HABT.TS.— FERTILITY OP SOIL.— SUR- PLUS PRODUCE.— WANT OP A MARKET EARLY PRODUCT'S. — TRADING ESTABLISHMENTS.— POBLIC HOUSES.— WHEELED VE- HICLES.— WILD ANiatiVLS. After the first year's scanty crops had been put into the ground, attention was' usually given to the erection of more convenient dwellings, which to a great extent superseded the cabin, though years elapsed before many of the poorer class of settlers had more comfort- able habitations. The new buildirgs were necessarily of the same material, and had the same covering as the cabin, but were a decided improvement on the score of size, being designed to correspond in this with the numbers and circumstances of the families which were to inhabit them. A cavity for the cellar was made in the centre of the spot chosen, and at one end was a large open chim- ney \N'hich was built up a short way with stones and M Ktgg/gi I i I ii i'lii ~ i 1 III' 1 • ! 'l ™i J 1 I 178 HISTORY OF THE clay, to resist the action of the fire, and thence carried up through the bark roof, with small split sticks cross- ed at the corners and filled in with clay, when the ■whole inside of the chimney was plastered with a thick coating of the same substa,nce. and the largest flat stones that could be procured were laid around the fire- place for a hearth. If the dwelling was put up before the advent of a saw mill in the vicinity, the floors, doors and partitions, were made of hewn planks, fast- ened together by wooden pins. Hand-saws were often passed lengthwise through the joints of these floors while the timbers were in a frozen state, in order to pre- vent any unevenness of the sides, and of course, when thawed, the natural expansion of the wood made them tighter still. If in these houses there were either nails, iron door latches, hinges, glass windows, or other fixtures of the kind, they had been brought at great trouble and expense from the older settlements. A log barn and shed completed the farm buildings, as these were required for storing the grain and fodder that might be raised, and for sheltering the domestic ani- mals and fowls. The furniture of the new house was also an improve- ment on that of the cabin, at least it had the added convenience of being moveable ; both the table and bed- stead described in the foregoing chapter being firm fixtures ; but as there were floors in the new building, " the mother of invention" prompted such change as was effected in the bedstead, by having four posts of eastjSrn townships. 179 proper height, bored near the top so that poles of the right length for the sides and ends, could be inserted to form the frame, when the whole was bound together with bark woven as before described. The tables, benches, and other articles in daily use were improved accordingly, as necessity had taught these people to rely on then' own eflforts. Beside their bedding and a few utensils of iron and earthenware, some small articles of furniture found their way in with the family, most of which had been kept as mementos of departed friends, or relics of by- gone and better days. These were generally more prized for their connection with past associations than for any intrinsic value, and were cherished with a care amounting almost to veneration. The necessity of a supply of tools has already been adverted to, but these articles when in constant use will wenr out or get broken, and this made the blacksmith a most necessary adjunct to the new settlement. At first, men wore mocassins of the imperfectly tanned hides of animals ; but in time the shoemaker made his appearance, and in addition to his legitimate calling, was both saddle and harnessmaker. The saw mill called in carpenters and joiners, and many of the persons named as associates had more or less knowledge of some one of the essential branches of mechanics. After the people began to raise corn and before the general erection of mills, an article of domestic use known as the '•'Plumping millf'' was brought into c In I ii I 180 HISTORY OF THE mam •1! tf-s*-. requisition to convert the grain into meal. It was made of a section of log standing upright, with a cavity in the top into which the corn was put. The pestle was a long piece of wood rounded at the bottom, of convenient size for the hand in the middle, and fastened at the top to a spring-pole, so that after one stroke upon the corn in the mortar, it would rebound for another. When the corn was sufl&ciently pounded, a seive sepa- rated the coarse and fine meal, the former of which was made into hominy, * and the latter into whole- some coarse bread, or used in various ways known to housekeepers in this country. The plumping mill was probably an improvement upon the Indian method of pounding corn in order to convert it into food, there being otherwise no way except the process known as hulling, and was in use only till the erection of grist mills. Settlers who lived near the lakes and streams which were navigable for canoes, often took their grain a long distance to be ground, as in some localities there were no streams suflSciently large to carry mills, f But the first practiced methods of converting grain into food by pounding, boiling or sending it a long distance to be ground, were found to be much too incon- * An Indian dish made by boiling the coarse meal when sepa- rated from the bran. I At a very early period in the settlement of Bolton, Nicholas Austin procured a largo ooflfce mill, which when propelled by the water of a small brook near his residence, would giind corn at the rate of six bushels in twenty-four hours. ^,;tf'^-V'*"-^*»""-s>'.-*i»v.V' .• WWm^ EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 181 venicnt and laborious, and a more general erection of grinding mills was called for by the increasing wants of the people. In the building of these, heavy iron castings and mill-stones were required, and must be brought from a distance. If there was no route by which they could be transported at least part of the way by water, all such weighty articles were usupjly brought in on sleds in winter. In some places however, stones were found in the vicinity, which by being brought into something of the required shape, were made to answer a purpose, and though as soon as circumstances favored the change, they were replaced by others of improved quality, it must be claimed for them that they did good service for the early settler. Saw mills in time were greatly multiplied, and then came a very decided im~ provement in the building line, as a well covered barn in which the hay, grain, and farm stock, might be well secured, was of little less i.aportance than a comfort- able dwelling. When the first locations were made in these town- ships, the roads leading to the several settlements were merely bushed out, and the next step in advance was the opening of cross roads from one section to another, but from the nature of the soil and the imperfect manner of their construction, they were in a bad state for years. As regarded local convenience these early people had to depend upon themselves, and any efforts to improve their roads were of course voluntary ; the usual course pur- ^^it^mm 182 HISTORY OF THE ! !'l ^■iiiiiiii il I ni sued being to meet and tax themselves so much labor yearly. Most of the clothing worn by the early settler and his family, was necessarily of home manufacture, spun, woven, and made into garments by the industrious hands of our grand-mothers,mothers and aunts ; fortius branch of work belonged exclusively to the female depart- ment. To them a practical knowledge of the use of hand-card, distaff, wheel and loom, was indispensable. To a great extent it was their education, and pre- sented a field for emulation in efibrts to excel in mak- ing the various kinds of cloth, yarns, bedding, &c. The winter and summer clothing were products of the home farm, both of them being often finely spun, woven and colored with skill and taste. The house keeping and cooking departments were also under their charge ; for to the domestic sphere and the care of the sick, their faculties and energies were devoted. Few resources or opportunities for religious instruc- tion or intellectual culture were theirs to enjoy. These were reserved for their children and grand-children. It was customary from the earliest formation of set- tlements, for the scattered inhabitants to assemble at times for the cultivation of a neighborly intercourse, and the gratification of a natural desire for companion- ship. Where people had so few sources of enjoyment, it is probable that these gatherings were looked for- ward to with pleasurable anticipations. Old people who in youth shared in these merry-makings, assure us m ■s'^^^-S»r-*'*tr»^-«'mf^K^^.- . EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 18S that in those days a more hearty good feeling and a more unconstrained freedom prevailed, than in later years ; and that less of the unamiable and unloveable spirit of envy, rivalry, or detraction, existed at that time, then has since been the case. Though dancing was much practiced, it is hardly probable that th3 music whether of the fiddle or the human voice, was subjected to any very close criticism. For years there were no public houses; every man's dwelling was open to the traveller, and a cordial welcome was ex- tended alike to friend or stranger. A mutual regard and consideration for each other's comfort and convenience is said to have been character- istic of society at that early day ; the people seem- ing bound to each other by a community of interests and sympathies as well as trials. Each felt the neces- sity of cherishing a spirit of mutual accommodation, as this seems to have become almost universally diffused among them. Many came into the country who were not fully supplied with teams, farming implements, mechanic's tools, &c ; and as there was no place in this section where such could be readily procured, resort was haci to the practice of borrowing. This system which has its evils and abuses, had its origin in necessity, and in time came into very general use. A man would hirdly feel juetified in refusing to lend his property if not using it himself, when h\s neighbor was in want; and even money was often regarded as valuable only in contributing to the T 184 HISTORY OF THE general convenience and comfort. He would often loan it "without bond or interest ; and such was the mu- tual confidence, that there was no thought of fastening doors at night, or of otherwise confining or secreting property. And yet instances of dishonesty or theft were extremely rare. When they did occur however? they were regarded with unaffected horror and disgust. Notwithstanding the many disagreeable peculiarities which characterized life in the woods at that day, this mutual confidence, common sympathy, and generous feeling, made amends for much. In the days of which we write, spirituous liquors ■were considered essential as a beverage, and no doubt the stimulant went far toward promoting the general enjoyment and hilarity on their festive occasions : but however the practice of drinking to excess might have been indulged in at other times and places, we are as- sured that such was seldom the case at these social gatherings. An examination into this subject, would reveal the fact that a most astonishing quantity of whiskey was manufactured and consumed by these early people. As their land was new and generally very productive, after the first few years the farmers raised a large sur- plus of grain, which, till a market was available, was mostly converted into whiskey and taken as a bever- age. Distilleries became exceedingly numerous ; the making and selling of this article being pursued and j-ecognized as a respectable and legitimate employment. i^*- ^'^vyvwj^^aifct/,*...* EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 185 After the introduction of taverns, soiling whiskey be- came the most lucrative and of course the most im" portant branch of the business. Alihough this whiskey was not then adulterated and drugged as at the pre- sent day, its effects on those who became slaves to their appetites, were in most respects the same. The way was thus gradually but too surely prepared for drunkenness, poverty, and the various forms of vice which often culminated in crime and its fearful penal- ties. But notwithstanding the many drawbacks and dis- advantages with which these settlements had to con- tend in the days of their infancy and for a period of years, persevering effort was finally rewarded by a measurable success. The new land produced well, and after the first few years of labor, grain was usually plenty. In the more rapidly increasing settlements there was also abundant use for the surplus produce that was raised. But in the more isolated parts, many trying and discouraging influences were at work, and the poor settler had to struggle for a bare subsistence. Though the soil might produce ever so luxuriantly, there was little use in raising more grain than was needed for home consumption, as for a long time there was no market available foi the surplus. The game in our woods, the fish in our streams, and the maples in our forests, being the most readily avail- able natural resources of the country at that day, had contributed largely to the living of the settler, till IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-S) V / O .^. / &?^ c/. 1.0 II I.I 1.25 ^ i^ 12.0 m Ilia 1.8 U ill 1.6 ^^^ <^ /] 'cf-l -^ c^l .'^^v >^ ''W o 7 iV <^ •I' ^v ;v rv i«r^ 186 HISTORY OF THE farms could be cleared and made to produce. As soon however, as this was the case and a necessity was felt for a market, eflforts were made in many sections to open winter roads that would give the people that advantage once in the year at least. Those living west of Lake Memphremagog sought a market in Montreal by different lines of road through the interior, while inhabitants along the line of the St. Francis and its principal tributaries found their way in canoes down that river to its mouth, and thence across the St. Lawrence to Three Rivers. Along the rivers and streams which afforded tran- sportation by canoes, this had been carried on to some extent from the first, and as the population in- creased, it was pursued with enlarged and improved faf'ilities. For several years the only available routes to Mon- treal, had been either around by Missisquoi Bay and St. Johns, or down some navigable river to the St. Lawrence and thence up to the city. But in the course of time it was ascertained that by going through the wilderness to the French seigniories, a consider- able saving in the distance would be made, and winter roads were opened connecting with different lines lead- ing direct to Montreal. Settlements had first been commenced in localities chosen for good land and valuable timber, rather than in reference to any facilities for communicating with other parts ; but the necessity for such connection in EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 187 iuce. As essitj was y sections le people Those a market 'ough the f the St. md their )uth, and e Rivers, led tran- ed on to lation in- improved to Mon- Bay and > the St. it in the through consider- id winter tics lead- localities ler than ng with action in time became apparent, and the more enterprisinf' among the settle rs met and agreed upon concerted action for the good of the whole. On some of these routes there were few indications of settlement for many miles, and a still more unpromising feature of the case, was that some of the proposed routes lay through sections of swamp, hitherto penetrated only by the foot traveller who picked his way through on fallen trees and mossy formations. Such enterprises were not effected without the most laborious toil and many dis- couraging adventures. After the commencement of cold weather, the streams were sufficiently frozen to cross upon the ice ; but owing tc the shade of heavy trees, or the peculiar nature of the soil, the ice in swamps was not so firm,and many places had to be filled with logs, brushwood, &c., before a passage could be effected. While engaged in this work the poor beasts would often sink so deeply into the mud that their drivers had to cut poles and pry them out ; but perse- verence at length accomplished the task and winter roads were opened. This partial success had the effect of stimulating the people to further efforts toward improving their condition ; an ambition which seemed to have reference to the future opening before them, rather than the pressure of any existing neces- sity. The next steps in the work, were to bridge the streams and construct causeways over the swamps, when ox-sleds could pass in summer to the navigable rivers, mm ) 1 iilf! iiiii' 188 HISTORY OF THE 11 ! i ■ il 1 1 ■ i i 1 •1 1 i 1 i 1 1 Hi' T or to travelled roads in older settled sections. Those ■who had money gave it to these enterprizes, ar>d those who had none — which was much oftener the case — gave their labor. In the two principal lines leading from the east to Montreal, were two large rivers in the way ; and as there were then no bridges either at St. Johns or Chambly, that river (the Richelieu) was crossed by means of scows ; a large flat boat formed of planks, the sides being some fifteen or eighteen inches high, while the ends of about the same height rise gradually, to facilitate the embarkation and debarkation, and to pass more readily over the surface of the water. Teams could thus be ferried across without detaching the animals in case they were quiet and manageable ; but if otherwise, great care and pains were necessary to effect a safe passage. In case of storms, tra^-ellers were obliged to wait till the wind subsided before the boatman dared venture upon the water, and often whole days or even several days were spent waiting for a change of weather, as the elements could not be braved, and there was no remedy. Batteaux were necessary on the St. Lawrence, as the greater depth of that river and the consequent &!;rength of the current, required differently construc- ted boats ; though this as well as the scow, was mana- ged by oars and setting poles. These boats were more in the form of a canoe, being curved toward the end so as to present nearly a point to the surface of the EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 189 water over which they were to glide ; usually about twenty-five or thirty feet in length by seven or eight in width at the centre ; built of ship timbers covered with boards and planks. They were brought up to the shore against a projection or wharf, and strongly fastened ; when planks were laid so as to form a sort of bridge des- cending toward the centre of the boat, over which walk animals were led in and securely tied ; or whatever was to comprise the loading was taken on board and stowed away as compactly as possible. If very bulky substances were to bo taken over, two of these boats were often bound together firmly so as to pre_ vent rocking, when a large body of freight could be carried to the opposite wharf, whence it was taken by carters up to the city ; or a boat could be towed up against the current by men who took the end of a cable attached to it and drew up along the shore, while others on board with setting poles, kept it at floating distance from the bank. On returning, the current favored descent to the place of crossing, when the journey homeward was simply in reversed order. In illustration of the difficulties and labors encounter- ed in getting to market at that early period, we give the simple experience of two settlers living about seventy mileo from Montreal. This was their first effort in this line. In the days of the famous " Emhargo,^^ when potash commanded a high price, they started from their homes with each a sled drawn by cattle, on either of ivhich were two barrels of potash. These they took 190 HISTORY OF THE 'i : i 1 1 'Hi 1 \''\ ■ 11 "1 i iifl i 1 1 :■) !! M to the Yamaska river whore a ferry had been establish- ed, whence it was carried by scows six miles to the Montreal road ; thence by hired carters across the Chambly river in scows, and from there to Longueuil ; thence across the St. Lawrence in a batteau, and from the landing, taken by truck-men to the inspec. tion office, when after the necessary examination it was ready for sale. Notwithstanding the labor and expense of the journey, the times were so favorable that they realized a very considerable profit, each receiving one hundred dollars for his load. Household necessaries were taken back by the same route rever- sed, when after an absence of eighteen days and an expense of twenty dollars each, the travellers reached their homes. Beside surplus grain and the products of wood ashes, the furs of wild animals taken by hunting or trapping, were carried to market. Black salts however were the poor settler's principal dependence, as they bore a high price, and were always in demand. It has been estimated that the product of the ashes thus sold, paid for the labor of clearing the farm ; and this was certainly a great help to tho poor people whon money was scarce and resources were few. So profit- able was it at particular times, that at the less busy seasons of the year, men would go into the woods, fell trees and burn them for the simple purpose of making salts : or in cases of emergency when money was greatly needed, this was the readiest and surest way to obtain it. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 191 establish- IS to the jross the mgueuil ; 3au, and s inspec. nation it ibor and favorable &t, each ousehold te rever- s and an reached of wood inting or however lence, as demand, he ashes irm ; and )le when 5o profit- ss busy )ods, fell making ) greatly )btain it. For many years pot and pearl ashes were the staple articles with which to make remittances in trade, and for a long time were the principal products which could be spared from sections of the country where a non- producing population was rapidly multiplying. Trading establishments on a small scale, were opened at a very early day in localities which served as a sort of centre where the surrounding inhabitants could ex- change their potash, pork, furs, sugar, or surplus grain, for salt, tea, tobacco, whiskey, or such other neces- saries as were required. The goods kept in these stores were not generally of a very superior quality, but the prices asked for them were exceedingly high ; often exorbitant. To some extent this was a necessity, as an offset to the trouble and expense involved in bringing them from market ; and in further paUiation of this apparent extortion, was the undeniable fact that in order to convert this ready pay into money, time and labor were both requisite. But in some cases the prices asked were out of all proportion to the original cost even with this just allowance ; and this injustice fell upon those whose necessities obliged them to gi-pply their wants in this manner. The following instance is given, not with the view of reflecting upon a useful and honorable class of men, but in illustra- tion of the system then pursued by some who dis- graced their calling, in making " their neighbor's ne- cessities theu- opportunity;" and further as an indi- vidual case of a certain order of intelhgence, by no ^'\ SS^Kiiai^^aKfeasaa; 192 HISTORY OF TUB ill i!lHi Hi- ll! I jji III - means exceptional at that period ; and \yhich is nearly always allied to, and associated \vith an unscrapulous disregard of the rights and convenience of others. On occasion of the visit of a certain country trader to Montreal for the purchase of goods, the merchant with whom he was transacting business, very naturally in- quired what profit the other made on his goods. " Only three or four per cent," was carelessly replied ; when the merchant looking up with an expression of surprise, doubt, and inquiry, repeated in a tone indicative of all these : •' Three or four per cent ! what do you understand by three or four per cent ?" " Only three or four times as much as they cost" was the character- istic rejoinder. An ungenerous advantage was often taken of the temporary scarcity of some article of necessary use, to demand an exorbitant price for it, when the pres- sure of necessity favored sale at an unreasonable rate . Instances occurred when seven or eight dollars per bushel were asked for salt ; and a case is related where a settler was obliged to give twenty four bushels of such corn as weighed sixty pounds to the bushel, for just one hundred weight of nails. Some of the men engaged in this business accumu- lated wealth, while others accomphshed little or failed entirely ; and at best it was attended with a great deal of uncertainty, and anxiety. An ashery where black salts were refined and prepared for market, was usually an appendage of the store. WL^. EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 193 After a period of years, taverns or public houses were generally introduced into the more thickly settled locaHties, and on the more frequented routes of travel. But in numbers of places purporting to be houses of entertainment, liquor selling and its concomitants in time usurped an unmerited prominence, often to such an extent that the wearied traveller failed to find the quiet and repose he needed ; and what was in itself a reputable and legitimate calling, was thus let down to the level of the common grog-shop. The first wheeled vehicles that penetrated the coun- try were ox-carts, of course constructed with a view to strength and durability, and as far as finish was con- cerned, in perfect keeping with the high-ways over which they were to pass. The first that penetrated to a certain locality some d' ^-^nce north of the Province line and west of Lake Mem ^'•emagog, was loaded with iron castings for a mill tl ia in course of erection. The load was so heavy and the road so rough, that ttie axle-tree of the cart gave way three times and was on the point of the fourth break-down, when arrived at its destination ; being replaced each time by the driver who carried with him both axe and auger, from the hard timber which grew so plentifully by the way. As the cart rolled on over all obstructions, the iron load, which was fastened on with chains, created an unusual and unaccountable noise which with its echoes could be heard reverberating and resounding through the forest, long before the lumbering vehicle appeared in N ) " T'-':^ :^->iSJ^w;f ^vV^'-^->vt'^--V-;^^^ 194 HISTORY OP THtl II il'' iH*ii#:'' sight to explain to the astonished and expectant people living along the way, the simple cause of such an uproarious din. Among the wild animals found here, the panther or catamount though the largest and most ferocious, was by no means the most numerous or destructive among the flocks and herds of the early settlers : indeed we incline to the opinion that they were occasional visit- ants, rather than frequenters of these wilds. Their appearance in any locality was always a signal of terror, and though they may not have destroyed human lives in these parts, m*en have been closely pu - sued by them and were only saved by reaching a timely covert. Domestic animals used to disappear in a mysterious and unaccountable manner; but if killed by these creatures, retreat was made by them to some far distant and inaccessible spot. In some of the mountainous sections, panthers of an enormous size, were seen and killed. But of all the denizens of these woods, the black bear became the most destructive, as he not only killed the domestic animals, but ravaged the grain fields of the settler ; and became so bold and encroaching as at times to break into enclosures thought secure, when the destruction was often terrible ; as if the creature's bloody instincts sought revenge for not being allowed his prey^at will. It often appeared as if this animal required the promptings of hunger or rage to attack fr >* I . ■aaiiiiaiiaiarria EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 195 and destroy ; at others, as if he could really distv;ni signs of alarm and distress, and even play upon the fears of those who were terrified at his appearance. Unless in self-defence or when they consider theiryoung in danger, they are not thought particularly formid- able to man ; but let their c ubs be attacked, and they will appear to forget themselves and fight with ferocity and desperation. When completely subdued and in the power of their captors, they have been known to ^^play possum^^ or feign themselves dead ; but whatever in- stinctive object prompted such cunning, could only be conjectured. They finally became so bold and encroaching that many expedients were devised to extirpate them. At times they were caught in steel- traps which were chained to logs that they might not be carried away d lost ; but both trap and log h*? ve been dragged to a distance, while the torn up earth, trees bitten and scratched, and sapplings broken off or torn out by the roots, gave evidence of inconceivable strength and fury. It has occurred that when thus taken by the leg, and the bone of the limb was broken so that the foot was only held by skin and muscle, the beast would savagely gnaw these off and escape on three feet, in which case his path was marked with blood. Bears often grow to an enormous size, and seem to learn cunning with age, as was evident from the w ays in which they would evade the efforts made to des troy them. Often large domestic animals and sometimes iiii liii 196 triSTORY OF TltEl iij|iij||i!iiiif colts in the pasture were killed by them ; and breakin*,' into enclosures, they would carry off* their living, strug- gling victims, clasped tightly in their arms as they walked away erect. Some years since, a monster of this species came out of his hiding place in the wilder- ness near the township of Eaton, and for a length of time evaded all effbrts to kill or take him, while he car- ried on his work of destruction. Traps were set for him and guns fired at him in vain, as he was cunning enough to avoid the one, and his skin seemed imper- vious to the other. Ilis death which was finally effec- ted, was a matter of public rejoicing, as his depreda- tions had not been confined to one locality. Several balls were lodged in him before he finally yielded, and on examination of the skin, the tanner found others imbedded in it, over which the wounds had healed, showing that they must have been made some time previously. As the country became more generally settled and a bounty was offered by government for killing these creatures, such as escaped destruction were driven to take refuge in remote and unfrequented regions ; yet even at the present day, one occasionally strays from his mountain home and finds a hiding place in the vicinity of some tempting flock, among which he usually succeeds in doing a deal of mischief before he can be discovered and destroyed. Wolves were also numerous in the country at parti- cular seasons, and often roamed about in packs or com- W^St breaking ig,8trug- as they 3nstor of wilder- length of e ho car- :e set for 3 cunning 3d imper- ally cffec- deprcda- Scveral Idod, and [id others d healed, omc time }tlcd and [ing these \o driven regions , [ly strays !0 in the Ic usually [e can be I at parti- or com- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 107 panics, as if " socking what they might devour," when if any unlucky creature came in their way, it was sure to be attacked, and if not too formidable or fleet of foot, was destroyed ; but when single, they seldom attacked animals larger than sheep. Among flocks in the field, they killed all they could catch, and often made great havoc ; but if by any means they found their way into yards, it would seem as if an instinctive cowardice prompted them to hurry away as soon as their hunger was appeased. For persons camping in the woods, fire was considered a protection from night attacks, as it is thought that they have a dread of that element ; though as the early settlers had good reason to know, the bears care nothing for it. The early people had frequent occasion for learning that, when together, wolves will attack men ; and like- wise, to observe the peculiar sounds by which they communicate with each other ; which perhaps might aptly be termed howls of inquiry and response. At some particular seasons, deer were very numer- ous in this section, and old people tell us that when such was the case, their natural enemy, the wolf, fol- lowed in overwhelming numbers. They are very prolific, and multiplied to such an extent, that government was obliged to come to the rescue and oiFer a bounty for their destruction. ■On one occasion as a settler was out in the woods, he came upon a large hollow log lying horizontally, into the open end of which a beaten path led in such ) 1 H c::^-.^7<;S— ^ fiASTEKN TOWNSHIPS. 213 :sons were Yet, notwithstanding all the untoward influences that opposed the spread of truth among these early people, or the evils that grew out of any form of fanaticism, a foundation of religious society was laid, and a wor i commenced, which in time has resulted in the perma- nent establishment of churches and their auxiliaries. The first houses of worship built in the country were small wooden edifices, erected by the united efforts of parties professing different faiths. They were called " Union meeting houses," and were occupied as occa- sion required by each alternately, or by such preacher or lecturer as visited the locahty. In process of time, however, the lines of separation between the several sects became more clearly defined ; preferences became prejudices ; controversies were introduced begetting rivalries, jealousies, and the deplorable spirit of detrac- tion which is so prolific of evil. One of the results of this we may see in the number and variety of sects among us ; some of which, however, are but distinc- tions with very little difference. To some extent, the circumstances of former resi- dences and associations may have contributed to their increase ; but on the whole, it is to be regretted that such prominence should have been given to mere mat- ters of opinion. Between such differences and aliena- tion of feeling there is but a step, and then the door is open for a conflict of interests. Forbearance, modera- tion, and those mutual concessions which are perfectly :m i i i i ' il [ It 1 1 u 1 'i 1 i ■ !|i iM^l J 1 ii i'l if ! i' 1 ji Hi ! 1! i J ^ - 1 ■ii ■ liUlliyjiiillii; 214 HISTORY OF THE consistent with decision of character, should prevail in the intercourse of Christians. As evidence of improvement in these matters, we now see ministers of different creeds, meeting on terms of amity and good feeling, and side by side pleading in behalf of some work of benevolence or mercy, as brethren of the same family and children of one common Father. Distinctions and orders may never be done away from among Christians, yet we await with hope the time when religion s'aall appear freed from the mists of blinding passion or the trammels of prejudice, and when sectarian bigotry shall give place to an en- lightened and comprehensive catholicity. The inhab'tants of our towns and larger villages can generally have their choice of churches in which to worship, and in the smaller country villages, some Protestant church edifice is usually found. As a rule, if a man is in health, and has a disposition to attend the public worship of his Maker, by a little exertion he may find such as are of his own way of thinking ; but if the case be such that he cannot well have his choice, let him meet with others and acommodate himself to the necessity, rather than contract that miserably unhappy and unsettling habit so common, of regax Jing religious worship of no account. The seeds of irreligion, long since sown among our people, having taken deep root, have borne a plentiful and fully matured harvest. Then, however, there was apparent excuse for much of this ; now there is none : EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 215 yet we hear the same self-complacent assumptions, and the same cynical fault finding among them ; which is in fact, but the poorly concealed effort to justify to them- selves and others, what they cannot but feel to be doubtful and unsatisfactory. There is much to awaken appehension, in the insen- sibility and irreverence ; in the disposition to throw off restraint and regard obligation lightly, which is so de- plorably prevalent at the present day ; for in these the germs of insubordination and anarchy are painfully evident. The pulpit, press, school-room, and social circle, are the remedial agents by which these great moral evils are to be eradicated, and should be of one accord in forming correct views, and establishing a proper stan- dard of thought and action upon this subject. I MM ijMlji iiliijipl', 216 HISTORY OF THE i i '!!!'•:: i I 1 i'i i i i 1 1 i 1 1! i 1; i liliP i| 1 CHAPTER VIII. INFLUENCES ADVERSE TO THE IIATERIAL PROSPERITY OP THE COUNTRY. — DIFFERENT CLASSES OF EMIGRANTS. — DESTITU- TION AND SUFFERING AMONG TIIEM. — LOCATION OF THE RICE FAMILY. — POOR EMIGRANT FAMILY, — IMPROVED FACILI- TIES. Prominent among the adverse influences with which these early people had to contend at different periods, were seasons unfavorable to the growth of grain, vege- tables and grass ; when cold and frost either late in spring or early in autumn, entirely cut off the crops or materially injured them ; beside which, they were often destroyed by wild animals. Though of course all felt the consequences of these evils and were obliged to submit to much that was inconvenient and uncomfortable, it was among the poor class of settlers and those hving in the remote and newly opened sec- tions, that the greatest suffering was experienced. At one time flour was eighteen dollars per barrel, wheat four dollars per bushel, and corn proportionally high in the markets ; which with other necessaries at cor- responding prices, came hard upon them. T^ore was EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 21t no help for it however, and the only resource for the poor was the making of black salts, which were carried by some one of the circuitous and laborious routes be- fore described to market, where it was exchanged for breadstuflfs and other necessaries. This made the most self-denying economy necessary, and resort was often had to new and unheard of expedients to increase the amount of eatables. During the season of wild berries they were made to contribute their utmost to the means of living ; and in some localities the poor people were driven to the necessity of gathering the tops of growing vegetables, cowslips, nettles, pig-weed, brakes, and even to resort to the forest for such leaves as could be boiled, beside the various kinds of wood-nuts, ground-nuts, wild onions, or whatever would relieve the pangs of hunger and prevent starvation. Not only women and children, but strong-handed and stout-hearted men were often reduced to a pitiable state of suflfering from hunger. Yet though thus re- duced at times and often obliged to live without bread, there are few if any records of death from immediate starvation. As has already been stated, many of these early people were from New England, where some of them had been inured to poverty, toil, self-rehance, and the usual incidents of pioneer life ; and in consequence of this training to the work, they were better fitted to meet its vicissitudes and endure its hardships, than the more refined and delicately nurtured, who, for 218 HISTORY OF THE reasons which we may not seek to know, ^.^iiclimes found their way here when the country was new. Tliis latter class, — proud, refined, and sensitive, as they often were, and all unused to depend on their own exertions, — were altogether out of place in the life they had undertaken, and were often sufferers to an extent ut- terly inconceivable to the less susceptible and more practical natures of those by whom they were sur- rounded. A case bearing strongly upon this point, is related of a family of English emigrants who by some misfortune had been reduced from a state of afiluence to actual poverty, and thought to hide this from the world by a voluntary exile. They had come to this country entirely destitute of means to live without labor, yet all unused to self-denial or exertion, and as unfitted as possible to enter upon the life they had in view. Having moved in *' good society" at home, they brought with them much of the natural reserve and dignity of manner which is characteristic of the class to which they belonged, and retained it in the little intercourse with others which was unavoidable. The people among whom they settled, though not wanting in common understanding, had been too intently occupied with the cares of daily life, and were too much absorbed n getting a living^ to pay much attention to a cul- ivation jof the social proprieties and amenities ; or per- haps they were careless and rudely inattentive to these matters, as many such people think them of little im- portance. They were not slow however, in under- EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 219 standing the wish of their new neighbors to hold them- selves aloof from intercourse with them ; and with a characteristic readiness to suspect what they could not understand, and condemn what they thought savored of pride^ they had allowed a partition wall of coldness, prejudice and distrust, to rise between themselves and the new comers. This state of things had continued for some time as neither showed the least sign of yield- ing, when one morning Mrs. S., the wife of a farmer in the vicinity, was greatly surprised by a call from the English lady who asked to see her in private. The interview was readily granted, when a case of destitu- tion and real suffering was disclosed. The lady had brought a small but beautiful and costly article from her own wardrobe, which she wished to exchange for potatoes, as her cJiUdreti were crying with hunger, and she had nothing to give them to eat. Their suffering had induced her to break through the restraints which had held her, and seek the readiest relief. The occa- sion appealed directly to the sympathies of the other, and the wall that had risen between them as neighbors, was effectually broken down. In an after confidence, the lady told Mrs. S., that when she reached home with the poiatoes, the famishing children would not be prevailed on to wait till they were cooked, but fell to eating them raw. Emigrants of the poorer and uneducated class, though inured to labor and often to want, met with so much that differed from anything in their former experiences 220 HISTORY OP THfi or wliat their minds had been made made up to exp< ct, that some gave 'p to the disappointment and became utterly disheartened. Much suffering and complaint existed not only on account of the rigors of the climate, but of the scarcity of food ; yet no doubt these evils were in many cases aggravated by a thriftless impro- vidence and a general unfitness for the life they had undertaken ; and not unfrequently the whiskey bottle was the secret of extreme destitution. In 1830, Israel Rice and family located in Soutli Ham, on a line of road then in course of construction through from the townships to Quebec. It was called the Craig road, from having been surveyed and com- menced during Governor Craig's administration. For the accommodation of laborers on the road through an extensive tract of unsettled country, temporary dwel- lings or shanties were built along the line, and moved from place to place as the Avork progressed. Here at a distance of nine miles from any perma- nent neighbors on the one hand, and eighteen miles on the other, the Rice family lived for thirteen years, during which time their house was necessarily the stopping place for every description of travellers. One class of these were drovers who had collected cattle in the townships south, and were taking them thro'.?gh to Quebec ; but a far more numerous class were emigrants who had landed at that city, and were on their way either to the townships or through to the 'United States. Much suffering existed among the?o I- -t EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 221 latter, many Ox whom were wretchedly poor. The workmen in their shanties along the way had orders to supply the passing wants of the needy strangers by giving them food or shelter when required ; and when the different sections of the road were finished, the cabins were left standing and were often used as tem- porary refuges, for such of these poor wayfarers as needed the shelter they afforded. The family inhabiting this " lodge in the wilder- ness," (as Rice's house was in reality) were often called to minister to the needs of such poor people as fell ill through want and exposure, and had found shelter in the cabins. Instances occurred when children were born to these rtrangers in ( 'rcumstances of groat destitution. Common humanity required that they should be cared for, and in warm weather, this was comparatively easy ; but during the cold and sudden variations to which our climate is subject, it was a more difficult task. In a situation Hke that occupied by the Rice family, all the evils of ignorance and inexperience on the part of emigrants, were seen in their full force, and the scenes often presented were heart-sickening indeed, as poor creatures with frozen feet and festering sores, hardly able to drag their weary way along, came to the door seeking food and rest. Often days and sometimes weeks elapsed before they could proceed on their journey ; during which time the house was a hospital. Some were hastened to an untimely end through these sufferings ; others disabled for life ; > nit 'itii iitus^H ; lii! Illi 222 HISTORY OP TUB ii 1 Snihlii i ^ while the most unreasonable and unjust prejudices •were raised against the climate and country. One of the many cases of peculiar suffering which came to their knowledge, is related by them as having excited their deepest sympathies. About the first of March, or at that period of tlio year when in consequence of sudden thaws, a break- up of the winter road was expected and the through travel for the winter had ceased, an emigrant family consisting of father, mother, and six children, who had arrived at Quebec the autumn before, were induced to undertake the journey through to the townships on foot ; apparently in entire ignorance of the difficulties and perils to be encountered at such a season. There was still a great depth of snow upon the ground, and for the most unfrequented part of the way, the only visible track was that made by hunters and others on snow-shoes. The man carried a large bundle, the woman an infant about nine months old, and each of the elder children had such things as they were able to carry, or helped the little ones along. When the snow was stiffened by frost, they made some progress, but after the rising of the sun and thawing of the crust, they gained ground but slowly. Up to a dis- tance of twenty three miles beyond the dwelling of the Rice family, there were houses at intervals along the way, where the travellers had found shelter at night, but the above named distance was at that period a solitary wilderness. On entering this, their EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 223 progress was so slow that thoy were obliged to camp out two nights. On the third day, the elder boy arrived at Rice's house bringing his little brother on hia back, when he told the family of the cold and hunger of the party he had left behind, and proposeu to leave the little boy that he might return and assist the others. In the meantime he had taken off his shoes to warm his feet more readily, but in trying io get them on again, found that his feet were rapidly swelling, and on making the effort, was unable to walk. Unfortunately there was no man on the premises ; Rice was away, and his eldest son absent from the house, so that no one could be sent to the help of the party coming in. Very soon however, the emigrant father came in alone, and appeared to feel so little anxiety about the others, that the family were entirely deceived in the supposition that as he said, " they would soon be in." When young Rice came in from his work, the day was far advanced, the weather was becoming colder, but the expected tra- vellers had not arrive'^' ; and on hearing from his mother what she knew of the case, and furthermore, what she feared, (for she was already distrusting the man) he proposed to go out in search of them. Taking bread to feed the hungry children, and his hand-sled to draw them in, accompanied by his younger brother, he went out to meet the wanderers. After going some distance without seeing or hearing anything of them, and calUng without getting any answer, he cut 1 1 j- [ i i[ |;|| ' 1 i itilli 1 ■■■"■' ■ ',■ I ■vi, i ' •J I' 1 1 k' 1' i: i \ 1 ! 1 224 HISTORY OF THE a stick, set it in the snow directly in the path, fixed the bread upon it, and returned with his little brother to the house. It was now about 8 o'clock in tho evening, and after thoroughly warming and wrapping himself up, he returned to renew his search, this time accompanied by his sister, a young woman of seven- teen, who fortified herself against the cold to help her brother in his work of mercy. Following the road about two and a half miles, they came upon the objects of their search, where, wearied, chilled, and unable to proceed farther, they were closely huddled together under the snow-laden branches of a fir-tree, where they had resolved to pass the night. The rescuers were guided to the spot by the cries and moans of the baby which missed its accustomed nour- ishment as its poor mother had been so long without food. The little girl was vainly endeavoring to hush its cries, while the mother who had taken off a stocking and shoe, was rubbing her foot with snow to take out the frost. But a little boy seven or eight years old was missing from the number expected, and on inquiry they learned that he was dead. "When in the early part of the day, the elder son had started on for help with his little brother, Jimmy (the missing boy) had started with him, leaving the father, mother, and other three children together; but finding the little one on his back beginning to sufier from cold, and Jimmy unable to keep up with the pace it was necessary he should take, the elder brother :saf,irf3^1«artK()i EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 225 had pnrsuadod hiin to wait and go with the others, promisui^ to hurry on and return with help a8 soon as possible ; and accordingly Jimmy had waited. By this time the father had founu his wife and little ones too slow in their movements, and leaving them to get on as they might, started at a more rapid pace. He must have come Up with and passed Jimmy, (as the child was found directly in the path) but arrived at the house alone ; and without showing any real interest, or properly representing the state of the others, seemed only intent on securing his own comfort. When young Rice and his sister started out on their errand of mercy, he refused to accompany them, stupidly insisting that he couldnH, though more warmly clad than the others of his family. After this desertion by her husband, the poor woman and her remaining little ones got on as they were able, till toward evening they espied a dark object in the path directly before them, which at first they thought to be a bear ; but on looking more closely and seeing that it did not move, tlie mother approached it till in the gathering twilight she discerned the form of a child ; and coming nearer, with a great throb of heart agony, she found it to be her darling Jimmy whom till then, she had supposed safe with his elder brother. How this had occurred she had no means of knowing ; for though the boy was not dead, he was in a dying state ; and when in her distress she called him by naiac, he tun I his wistful but fast dimning eyes upon 1 ii&uHlaiiii S Iliillilfc':: iii 226 HISTORY OF THii her and attempted to speak, but could articulate no word. Giving the baby to the little girl, she seated herself upon the slow, drew th;^ dying boy into her lap, rubbed his linibSj breathed inti; ais face, and sought by every means in her power to impart warmth and produce circulation ; but he only moaned and looked into her face as thi9 life-blood oozed from his mouth and nose. In half an hour he was dead ; and the poor woman was recalled from her stupor of grief to action, by the cries and moans Oi the survivors. She drew the corpse aside from the path, straightened its limbs, and conscious that she could do no more, yet with the great fear at her heart that some ravenous beast of prey might devour the precious remains, reluctantly left the body to attend to the living, and started on with them. When arranging the corpse of her dead boy, she heard the calls ot young Rice, but thinking them the cries of such wild animals as had already scented their prey, she neither made nor suffered the children to make any answering sound. And when they came to the bread, thinking it had been poisoned and placed there to destroy wild beasts, she would neither touch it herself nor allow them to do so. Coming at length to a cluster of fir-trees, the bent branches of which seemed to promise a sort of shelter from the wind, in utter weariness and exhaustion, she resolved to pass the night there. This would in all probability have been her last on earth, for the event proved that help had come none too soon to save her. The foot from ICASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 227 which she had taken the covering, had been so badlj frozen that she was unable to get on the shoe in conse- quence of the swelling. But the young people wrapped it carefully in their mufflers, took the little boy on the hand-sled, and causing the little girl td go before them, while the sister took the crying baby in her <^rms as she supported the exhausted mother, they Started on their way to the house. But the poor woman's remaining strength gave out ; the little girl sought to lie down continually, declaring she had as lief die as not; so taking the Httle boy on his back, and driving the other child before him, young Rice left the exhausted woman and baby with his sister, hastened to the house, and giving the children into his mother's care, returned to the others with refreshment and cordial. About midniglit, all the living had been brought in. During all this time, the brutal husband and father could not be prevailed on to leave his warm berth by the fire, to go to the help of the others, though quite able to do so, as he was neither frozen nor otherwise disabled. Indeed his conduct throughout, had given evi- dence of an unfeeling selfishness if nothing worse. The fact that his poor boy was found dying in such a man- ner, when it was clear that his father must have been the last with him, created a strong feeling against the man. Whether in order to hasten the child's movements, still his entreaties or complaints, or force him to ^vait and go with his mother, a blow had been struck, which Mi > ^28 EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. tinder the circumstances of weakness took deadly effect, was known only to Omniscience and to the wretched man himself; but surmises all pointed to this, and the suspicions thus aroused, received strong confirmation from rumors respecting his antecedents, which subse- quently reached the country. The next morning young Rice went out with his hand-sled in search of the body of little Jimmy, which he found frozen stiff, though it had escaped injury from wild animals. Coming in with it, he was met by his father and others who had arrived in his absence, and together they drew it to the house. Exhausted and suffering as was the poor woman, the grief of her boy's death under such circumstances had nearly driven her wild ; and till the corpse was brought in, imagination was constantly picturing her darling boy as torn and disfigured by beasts of the forest ; a fear which was only quieted by sight of the body. That was decently laid out, a sort of cofiin prepared, a grave dug, and all that remained of the unfo'. tunate emigrant child was committed to the frozen earth. The mother and children were sent on to a point where they re- ceived the necessary assistance, but the unworthy father had lictle favor shown him and was obliged to go to work. Yet notwithstanding the many mistakes that were made and the suffering that ensued, many emigrants did succeed by a course of persevering industry, and have now their reward in homes they can call their i* 1 riFP'i EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 229 own, with all the essentials and many of the comforts and conveniences of life. At the present day, there are places where all neces- sary information may be obtained respecting any par- ticular section ; direct routes of transportation either by water or railway to points in the vicinity of the newly opened portions ; available resources near them ; with which facilities and the most ordinary prudence and forethought, the difficulties above recounted may be entirely avoided, and should therefore be consid- ered as belonging exclusively to the past. \ II f ^, 230 HISTORY OF THE CHAPTER IX. EXTENT OF TERRITORY INCLUDED WITH THE EASTERN TOWN- SHIPS. — PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS. — GOLD REGIONS. — AGRI- CULTURAL CAPABILITIES. — DIVISION INTO TOWNSHIPS. — CO- LONIZATION BOADS. — CIUEF RIVERS. The Eastern Townships are considered as including +]ie belt of hilly country south of the St. Lawrence, extending from the soutiiorn and eastern frontiers of the Province, to the Bay of Chaleurs. As hitherto known, they have not embraced this north-eastern extension J but as it appears to belong to them both geographically and geologically, it has been found convenient to include it with them.* Unlike the level country bordering the great river, this region abounds in hills and valleys, lakes and ponds, rivers and streams. The ridge which enters the Pro- vince from the south as a continuation of the Green mountains of Vermont, appearing at intervals running * For many items of information contained in thig chapter, wo are indebted to a pamphlet published " By authority of the Bureau 01 Agriculture," which contains a Geographical, Agricultural, ^nd Mineralo^ical Sketch of Canada, i 1 m i 1 EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 231 in a direction a little east of north, is called in this country, the Notre Dame range. In places, they attain a mountainous height of near four thousand feet above the sea ; and three of the principal lakes on the south side of the range, viz, Memphremagog, Aylmer, and St. Francis, are from 750 to 900 feet above that level. South-east of Montreal these hills appear at a distance of fifty miles or more from the St. Lawrence, but seem gradually to approach it, as at a point opposite Quebec, they come within thirty miles of the river. Parts of this section have been brought into more extended notice by recent developments of mineral wealth, and in consequence of the great attention drawn to that subject, important regulations for the sale of mineral land, have been made ; two gold mining dis- tricts erected, named the Chaudiere and St. Francis divisions, and an inspector appointed to each ; one item of his duties being to afford any requisite infor- mation pertaining to the business. Most of this region is well wooded, possesses an abundant soil, and when the labor of clearing a farm has been accomplished, the sandy loam of which it is mostly composed has been found well suited to the production of grain and vegetables. Root crops, flax, hops, &C.5 are grown to a considerable extent. Though some of the townships into which the section has been laid out, are tolerably well settled, and par- ticular localities even thickly inhabited, a large part of the tract is still in a wild state, Numerous roads if \\'' 232 HISTORY OP THE i illill:!!! |||!|||||ll:lii iilS;!i extending in diflforent directions and connecting various points where settlements are commenced, have been constructed or are projected by government, with the view of opening up the country and still further faci- litating its settlement. This region is watered by numerous small streams and rivulets which unite to form rivers of considerable magnitude ; and these, with the single exception of the St. John, after flowing in a general north-west direc- tion through valleys which at intervals separate the hills, enter the great river at different points, and in draining this large extent of country, contribute to swell the mighty flood. The Richelieu river, though not flowing directly through the townships, may yet be properly mentioned as the channel through which the surplus waters of Lake Champlain are discharged into the St. Lawrence. It is about 70 miles in length, and unlike many of the rivers of Canada, flows for the most part through a cultivated and populous country. Near the point where it issues from the lake, is situated the American Fort Montgomery ; and a little below, are the British naval station and garrison of Isle-aux-noix. Navi- gation is unobstructed to St. Johns, where commence a series of rapids which extend twelve miles ; which obstacle to navigation has been overcome by the con- struction of a canal, through which the smaller class of steamboats pass directly to Chambly Basin at the foot of the rapids. This expansion of the river is said EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 233 to be about one and a half mile in diameter ; from which, the river flows north into the St. Lawrence at Sorel. The Yamaska and St. Francis rivers, which come from the southern sections of the Eastern Townships, will receive suitable attention in connection with the districts which they drain. The next coming into notice in this order is the Ni- colet, consisting of two main branches, distinguished respectively by the initials N. E. and S. W., both of which are receiving frequent accessions to their waters. The sources of the N. E. branch consist of small streams and rivulets uniting in one, which after winding through several townships, enters Nicolet. The S. W. branch has its extreme source in the far off higlilands of Dudswell, whence it winds through the townships into Nicolet, where at a point near La Baie, it unites with the N. E. branch, when after flowing together a short distance they again separate and enter the St. Lawrence by two distinct channels, near the lower extremity of Lake St. Peter. The next in course is the Becancour, a large river having its sources in the many small lakes and streams abounding in Leeds, Ireland, Somerset, and the sur- rounding townships ; when passing through Becancour, with a continually augmenting volume of water, it enters the St. Lawrence opposite Three Rivers. Be- tween the Becancour and Chaudiere, the rivers enter- ing the St. Lawrence are few and unimportaiit. If 234 HISTORY OF THE I ll! ill In September 1775, Col. Benedict Arnold of the American revolutionary army, received instructions to take command of a body of men and effect a passage through the wilderness, by proceeding up the Ken- nebec river in Maine, thence across the highlands to the head waters of the Chaudierc river, and down that stream to its entrance into the St. Lawrence near Quebec. The object of the expedition was to co-ope- rate with the forces of General Montgomery in the reduction of that city. Arnold and his men entered the Province at the southern extremity of Woburii) and followed up the stream which still bears his name to where it enters Lake Megantic, thence down that lake to the point where its surplus waters are discharged through the Chaudierc. The unfoHunate ending of an expedition as boldly conceived as bravely carried out is matter of history, and Quebec then remained as it still continues a British stronghold. Lake Megantic the chief source of the Chaudiere, is a fine body or' water about ten miles in length, lying between the tracts known as Marston and Ditchfield. It has of late become a favorite resort for hunting and fishing excursionists, as an excellent quality of fish are taken from its waters, and the deep solitude in which it is environed, affords abundance of wild game. It receives the waters of Arnold stream on the south, those of Spider lake from Ditchfield on the east, the Megantic river from Marston on the west, while its outlet, the Chaudiere river, issues from the north-east, and for a considerable distance flows in the same direction. Gra- Miilii EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 235 dually it diverges towards the north, as it does so receiving the waters of many streams from the east and north-east ; the largest of which are the Samson, Du Loup, Gilbert and Famine. Innumerable small tributaries fall into it along its entire course. It inclines a little towards the west on approaching the St. Law- rence, into which it falls a short distance above Quebec. The next river in the course designated, and the last to be mentioned as tributary to the St. Lawrence is the Etchemin, the head waters of which come from Roux and Standon, and after flowing some distance and diverging a little toward the south and west, constantly receiving accessions to its waters, it finds its way through other townships into the St. Lawrence oppo- site Quebec. The next and last we shall mention in this connec- tion, is the river St. John, known as forming the boundary for a certain distance between Canada and the State of Maine. Parts of the gold region are washed by this river and its Canadian tributaries. Its head waters are the outlets of ponds and small streams coming from the highlands on and near the boundary line, and as it flows a little to the east of north, it sepa- rates portions of Canadian and United States territory ; but turning more directly to the east, it crosses the northern part of Maine, diverges to the south-east, and passing through New Brunswick, empties into the Bay of Fundy. In its course along the boundary and through the north of Maine, it receives the waters of several considerable tributaries from the Canadian side. > i^ism 236 HISTORY OF THE lliiiiii CHAPTER X. ADVANTAGES OFFERED TO EMIGRANTS. — WILD LANDS. — CLASS BEST ADAPTED TO THE COUNTRY. — ELEMENTS OF SUCCESS. MISTAKES AND FAILURES.—BUSH LIFE EARLY SETTLERS— PARTIALLY IMPROVED FARMS.— EXTRACTS FROM DR. RUS- sell's work on CANADA. Prominent among the advantages now offered by this country as a field for emigration, may be enu- merated a facility and cheapness of access ; a loyal and peaceable population ; healthy climate ; liberal institutions ; moderate taxation ; a free press ; free schools ; fee simple of the soil which only awaits occu- pation ; an abundance of fuel ; the necessaries of life at a moderate cost, and access to market at the larger towns and villages, or through the different lines of railway which traverse the country. By means of these, daily communication is had with the cities they connect, or the places along their course. Many localities thus favored, have additional natural advantages, and require but the aid of capital and energy to enable them to rise into importance as centres of manufacturing or commercial business, EASTERN TOWNSHIPS. 237 ill The land which is still -vvild, is cither the property of the Crown, the British American Land Company, or of private individuals who have become possessed of it by purchase or heirship. Millions of acres of surveyed lands are always in the market in Canada, and the prices are affixed at which settlers can acquire them upon application to agents in different localities. The class of settlers best adapted to this country in its present state, arc those known at home as small farmers ; men who do their own work or a part of it ; whose wives are ajso accustomed to the work of the house or dairy, and think it no hardship to get up at four o'clock of a summer morning and proportion- ally early in winter, to see that each department of the housework is properly attended to,. Such men are sure to succeed unless under very exceptional circumstances. Energy, self-command, and strength to labor, are the essential elements of success in a new country; a y?ant of these must involve failure, and exaggerated expectations must invariably end in disappointment. An emigrant coming to this country with little capital, would act wisely if before purchasing land, he placed his money in some savings bank and worked for wages a year, thus acquiring a necessary knowledge and experience of the country. Such a course is not deemed degrading in Canada, and is sure to result in ultimate good. It must be borne in mind that all emigrants whether possessed of one hundred or one ^Hr I \ > I I "j '^^^t. 'Ntti, I !l iiliii ■ 1 i