"Several attempts to break open shops and cellars, a thing so unusual in this Country, are said to have been made"[8]
New bilingual weekly British-American Register is to "instill into the minds of individuals sound Principles, a love of learning, of order and propriety"[9]
Lease 200 acres of crown and clergy reserve land for 21 years at 10/- or 3 bushels wheat per year for first 7 years and higher for later 7-year periods[11]
Nova Scotia
Author compiles opinions on "Negro Slavery" because its legality "has long occupied the attention both of the learned and unlearned among us"[12]
Slave owner bequeaths to family enslaved "Negro Woman," "Prince," "Diana," "Jack," "Samuel," "James" and "Cloe" (last 4 valued at 90 (pounds?))[13]
Funds needed by King's College for "an useful and extensive Library[...]highly conducive to the Success and Prosperity of this infant University"[14]
New Brunswick
Member Ward Chipman finds Legislative Assembly disabled by members "as ignorant, as abandoned and wicked, [as should never] be again chosen"[15]
With so many in Europe coming to Nova Scotia and Lower and Upper Canada, New Brunswick needs to state its qualities and "use[...]to the Empire"[16]
After forcing its way through Hudson Bay ice, bow of brig sailing to Churchill is lifted by rope running from masthead to pack ice to repair damage[25]
Brig on Hudson Bay is struck by lightning, starting fire in cabin and hold and knocking men down - unhurt but "felt as if they had been Electrified"[26]
^"George III". Official website of the British monarchy. Royal Household. 31 December 2015. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
^"Catharine Parr Traill | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Archived from the original on 16 February 2020. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
^"By the King, a Proclamation, Declaring the Conclusion of the War" (April 26, 1802), The Quebec Gazette, Cahier 1 (August 5, 1802), pg. 4. Accessed 13 May 2024
^"From the London Gazette; Notice to Claimants under the Convention with the United States of America" (September 11, 1802), The Quebec Gazette, Cahier 1 (September 23, 1802), pg. 1. Accessed 13 May 2024
^"Dialogue I; Indian"The knowledge and practice of Christianity made easy to the Meanest Capacities, or, An Essay towards an Instruction for the Indians (1802), pg. 2. Accessed 8 May 2024
^"Notice" (May 11, 1802), The Quebec Gazette, Cahier 1 (May 27, 1802), pg. 4, continued in Cahier 2 pg. 1. Accessed 10 May 2024
^"A Petition of several Inhabitants(....)" (February 19, 1802), pgs. 104, 106, 108, l'Assemblée nationale du Québec, Bibliothèque, Québec. (See also similar petition from Quebec City) Accessed 9 May 2024
^"Caution" (October 18, 1802), The Quebec Gazette, Cahier 1 (October 21, 1802), pg. 3. Accessed 13 May 2024
^John Neilson, "Prospectus" (December 19, 1802), Séminaire de Québec, Bibliothèque. (See also first issue) Accessed 8 May 2024
^"Wanted" (February 2, 1802), The Quebec Gazette, February 4, 1802 pg. 2. Accessed 9 May 2024
^Anonymous, "Preface" Opinions of several Gentlemen of the Law, on the subject of Negro Servitude, in the province of Nova-Scotia (1802). Accessed 8 May 2024
^Sylvanus Brown and 3 others, petition of Queensbury Parish residents (February 3, 1802), Legislative Assembly: Sessional Records (RS24), Provincial Archives of New Brunswick. Accessed 15 May 2024
^"Letter from Thomas Carleton to Edward Winslow, 12 February, 1802," pg. 3 University of New Brunswick Library. Accessed 9 May 2024
^"6. The number of Brethren and Sisters employed[....]," 1801-1805, vol. 03: Periodical accounts relating to the missions of the Church of the United Brethren established among the heathen, pg. 160 (frame 176 of 562), Memorial University of Newfoundland. Accessed 13 May 2024