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         Canada Before Confederation:     more books (64)
  1. A Dictionary of Scottish Emigrants to Canada Before Confederation
  2. Interpreting Canada's Past Vol. 1 : Before Confederation by J. M. Bumsted, 1982
  3. Canada Dry: Temperance Crusades before Confederation by Jan Noel, 1995-04-19
  4. Canada dry: temperance crusades before Confederation.: An article from: American Review of Canadian Studies
  5. Interpreting Canada's Past Vol. 1 : Before Confederation
  6. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Canadian History: The Simple Way to Learn about Your Country, All the Facts and Dates from before Confederation to Present Day, Easy Format Makes History Come to Life by Ann Douglas, 1997
  7. Dreams of Empire: Canada Before 1700 by Andre Vachon, 1983-03
  8. The Birth and Growth of Canada. An Historical Record of Its Territorial Changes Before and After Confederation.
  9. Before Canada: First Nations And First Contacts, Prehistory-1523 (How Canada Became Canada) by Sheila Nelson, 2005-09-08
  10. Interpreting Canada's Past Vol 1 Before Consideration & Vol. Ll After Confederation by J. M. Bumstead, 1986-01-01
  11. THE COLONIAL CENTURY : English - Canadian Writing Before Confederation by A.J.M. Smith, 1973-01-01
  12. The Commercial Prospects of Canada: A Lecture, Delivered Before the Montreal Mechanics' Institute, on Tuesday Evening, January 29, 1850 by William B. Bristow, 2009-08-13
  13. Sketch of business: before the Provincial Parliament of Lower-Canada, in the session to commence 21st January 1826. (Extracted from the Quebec Gazette). -- by Québec (Province). Législature. Assemblée législative., 1826-01-01
  14. An historical directory of Nova Scotia newspapers and journals before Confederation (Occasional papers of the Department of English, R.M.C. ; 1) by Thomas Brewer Vincent, 1977

21. NYG&B: A Selected Bibliography For Scottish Research
1939 ILL. L EL64; Whyte, Donald Dictionary of Scottish Emigrants tocanada before confederation Canada G 34; Woodburn, James Albert
http://www.nygbs.org/info/articles/Scottish_Bibliography.html
Compiled by Catherine M. Ellard, Assistant Librarian General/How To
  • Campbell, R.G. Scotch-Irish Family Research Made Easy [E 184 S4 C35]
  • Cory, Kathleen Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry [Scot. G 2.25]
  • Durning, William The Scotch-Irish [E 184 S4 D87]
  • Hamilton-Edwards, Gerald Kenneth Savery In Search of Scottish Ancestry [Scot. G 2.2 1986]
  • Irvine, Sherry Your Scottish Ancestry: a Guide for North Americans [Scot. G 2.26]
In The United States And Canada
  • Alexander, John Edminston A Record of the Descendants of John Alexander, of Lanarkshire, Scotland, and His Wife, Margaret Glasson, who Emigrated from County Armagh, Ireland, to Chester County, Pennsylvania, A.D. 1736 [G AL 271]
  • Bolton, Charles Knowles Scotch Irish Pioneers in Ulster and America [E 184 S4 B6]
  • Cameron, Viola Root Emigrants from Scotland to America, 1774-1775 [E 184 S3 C3]
  • Christian, Bolivar The Scotch-Irish Settlers of the Valley of Virginia [Virg. L AU45.51]

22. RootsWeb: SCOTLAND-L Archive (April 2000)
SCOTLAND ReDictionary of Scottish emigrants to canada before confederationby Tony Betty Chevalier Re SCOTLAND ReDictionary
http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/SCOTLAND/2000-04
SCOTLAND-L Archives: April 2000
Display in threaded chronological order with names with dates

23. Toronto Public Library Unique Collections Baldwin Room -
The Baldwin room also has books and periodicals, regardless of authorshipor content, printed in canada before confederation. All
http://www.tpl.toronto.on.ca/uni_spe_baldwin_books.jsp

24. ARTICLE - Ryan's Genealogical Notebook, By Ryan Taylor
Donald Whyte's A Dictionary of Scottish Emigrants to canada before confederationhas been a treasure for Scots descendants for fifteen years.
http://globalgazette.net/gazrt/gazrt85.htm
H O M E R E C E N T A R C H I V E M E M B E R S H I P ... S H O P
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CANADA - General

CANADA - Alberta

CANADA - Brit. Columbia
... Technology - Misc Shopping Books, CDs, Video Genealogy Software Archival Supplies Magazines ... Gift Shoppe Services Free Magazine Upcoming Events Advocacy Post-1901 Census Project Web Site Articles Donations ... APOLROD Article posted: July 23, 2002 Ryan's Genealogical Notebook By: Ryan Taylor rtaylor@acpl.lib.in.us Several new publications from the Ontario Genealogical Society may contain information you will find useful. The eighth volume in their Strays! series, compiled by Ken Young and David J. Browne, is very welcome. Strays have nothing to do with dogs or cows, but are people in a household or mentioned in a record who do not bear the same name as the rest of the family (as in a census) or who are from a place outside the one mentioned in the record. So, for instance, if you have a family of Smiths in the 1891 census, with Mary Morgan, a servant, listed at the end, then Mary is a stray.

25. UCCLA : MAIN PAGE :
seen federal funds go toward the establishment of a national park at GROSS ISLE,to commemorate the losses of Irish immigrants to canada before confederation.
http://www.uccla.ca/pressreleases/internment/press27.html
ABOUT THIS SITE UCCLA ISSUES PRESS RELEASES POSTCARDS ... LINKS YOU ARE CURRENTLY IN: UCCLA : PRESS RELEASES : INTERNMENT :
ARTICLE TYPE: UCCLA Media Release
Prime Minister says "I'm sorry" to Ukrainians
SOURCE: UCCLA Media Release DATE: January 28, 1999
Speaking before students at Ukraine's KYIV-MOHYLA ACADEMY, Canada's Prime Minister, the Honourable JEAN CHRETIEN, was invited to comment on whether his government will apologize for the needless imprisonment of many Ukrainian Canadians as "ENEMY ALIENS" during Canada's first national internment operations of 1914-1920. The Prime Minister responded that the matter was "not under discussion at this time" and that while he preferred to focus on the future rather than on the past, "yes...If something wrong happened in the past, yes, I'm sorry." Commenting, the chairman of the UKRAINIAN CANADIAN CIVIL LIBERTIES ASSOCIATION, Mr John B GREGOROVICH, said: BACK ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: For More Information Please Visit:
www.infoukes.com/history/internment

26. Ontario Genealogical Society
8. Strays! British Strays in Canada Resulting from the OGS Strays Project, vol.2.A Dictionary of Scottish Emigrants to canada before confederation, vol. 3.
http://www.ogs.on.ca/publications/first.html
OGS PUBLICATIONS RESEARCH FORMS MAPS MICROFICHE ... CALL FOR AUTHORS
What's New? - Publications
March 31, 2003 Writing Family Histories and Memoirs , Kirk Polking A Book of One's Own , Susan Yates and Greg Ioannou Vanished Villages of Middlesex , Jennifer Grainger Dating Old Photographs , Halvor Moorshead, editor Introduction to Genealogy , Halvor Moorshead, editor Out of Muskoka , James Bartleman January 24, 2003 1906 CENSUS RECORDS NOW OPEN TO RESEARCHERS

27. Ancestral Vault: Canada
Dictionary of Scottish Emigrants to canada before confederation Volume1 (Added 2Feb-2001 Hits 198 Rating 0 Votes 0) Rate It.
http://www.genealogysearch.org/products/Canada/
MyTrees.com Ancestor Search - Over 1 Billion Names! Enter your ancestor's name for a FREE search: From To
Top
: Canada
Ancestral Vault: Canada
Home Add a Site Modify a Site What's New ... Genealogy Detective
Categories:
Amazon Canada Manitoba New Brunswick Nova Scotia ... Ontario new Quebec new Yukon
Links:
  • Canada Parliamentary Marriage and Divorces, 1867-1919 (Database Online - Ancestry.com) : From 1867 to 1919, civil divorces in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba were granted by private acts of the Parliament of Canada. This database includes the names of the spouses, places of residence at the time of the marriage and divorce, other marriages (if noted), and dates of marriage and divorce (the date when the act became law) for divorce acts from this period. The original records may include additional information such as other places of residence, occupations, additional court action taken, and number of children (and occasionally their names or genders), if any. The very restrictive grounds for the cost of a divorce made them quite rare; the records are, however, worth obtaining when they apply.
    This is one database among thousands available at Ancestry.com.

28. The Centre Of Canadian Studies
1 and 2 (by Marjory Harper); Dictionary of Scottish Emigrants to canada before confederation,Vols. 1 and 2 (by Donald Whyte); Historical Atlas of Canada, Vols.
http://www.cst.ed.ac.uk/

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29. S22 EMIGRATION BEFORE 1867
in the Ottawa library attention came to a small publication A dictionary of ScottishEmigrants to canada before confederation (Confederation in Canada being
http://www.scrimgeour-edin.freeserve.co.uk/scrim/skirmisher/skirmisher22/s22emig
EMIGRATION BEFORE 1867 When browsing through the genealogy bookshelf in the Ottawa library attention came to a small publication: A dictionary of Scottish Emigrants to Canada before Confederation (Confederation in Canada being the year 1867 in which those regions that were settled and had established governments agreed to form a country.) "Could there be any Scrimgeours listed in the book?" was an obvious thought and natural question. With all the names being listed in alphabetical order the answer was not hard to find in this 1995 publication of the Ontario Genealogical Society. Yes there was one entry: A quick search also showed: Ed Note: These will be the ancestors of Gordon Scrimgeour as described in the 1996 Skirmisher p. 25.

30. Canadian Culture Flash News Issue 3 Vol 2
of Geolog need no introduction to Logan, and know that he mapped the geology andmineral resources of most of what was canada before confederation in 1867
http://www.canadianculture.com/newsletter/2001/3.html

Brought to you by CanadianCulture.com Front Door Exposure! Add url ~ Reciprocate! Culture Flash Online! Main Directory ... Home Proudly doing our part for Canada!
January 15, 2001 Issue 3 - Vol 2
Volunteers ~ Fellow Canadians ~ This newsletter is for you!

We publish Culture Flash to provide Canadians with a forum for sharing ideas, solutions, stories and experiences. Content is contributed by various Canadians and does not necessarily reflect the views of CanadianCulture.com.
Share Your Ideas!
Send us your ideas and ask yourself...
What would make a difference or make Canada better?
We would love to hear from you.
Send your ideas to: myideas@canadianculture.com
Help support Canada! Our newsletter is archived online We thank you for your support! To subscribe, simply email us at: culturenewsletter@canadianculture.com Let us know whether you want the text version or our maple version! (enhanced) Canadian Featured Site of the Week Visit Coast Cultural Alliance SAVING MOUNT LOGAN - Website a lightning rod for dissent It's hard for people today to realize, overwhelmed as we are with modern wonders of science like the space shuttle, GPS, and microwave popcorn, that the technological marvels of recent times weren't always with us. Sometimes it is even harder for people to appreciate the accomplishments made by some great scientists who came before us.

31. History
HIST 109 — Issues and Themes in US History 1865 Present. HIST 110 —canada before confederation. HIST 111 — Canada Since Confederation.
http://www.capcollege.bc.ca/programs/history/
History Information History teaches an understanding of the past that helps people cope with the present and suggests possibilities for the future. Critical thinking and analysis form the core of this discipline and are essential skills in a rapidly changing society. Students planning to major in History should take at least four History courses at the College. These can be ANY four courses. An intended major should also have a broad sampling of courses in Social Sciences and Humanities. Students planning to major in History at SFU should take six History courses in the first two years. For UBC the requirement is four History courses. Students planning to take honours should acquire a reading knowledge of an appropriate non-English language. University Transfer Credit All History courses at Capilano (including WMST 220) transfer to SFU, UBC, UNBC and UVic and count as Humanities credit for the Associate Degree. Please check the B.C. Transfer Guide

32. RootsWeb: Genealogy Mailing Lists: Canada : UPPER-CANADA
A mailing list for discussion of genealogy and history of Upper canada (present day Ontario) before confederation (1867).
http://lists.rootsweb.com/index/intl/CAN/UPPER-CANADA.html
UPPER-CANADA Mailing List UPPER-CANADA-L Topic: A mailing list for anyone with a genealogical or historical interest in Upper Canada (present day province of Ontario). This was the region split from the Province of Quebec after the American Revolution. List topics include its history and settlement by Loyalists and British and German soldiers, up to and including the year 1867. There is a Web page for the UPPER-CANADA mailing list at http://olivetreegenealogy.com/can/lists/uppercanada.shtml. For questions about this list, contact the list administrator at UPPER-CANADA-admin@rootsweb.com.

33. Canada Dry: Temperance Crusades Before Confederation. By Gr
more articles and book reviews from this and other journals visit UTPJOURNALS onlineat UTPJOURNALS.com canada Dry Temperance Crusades before confederation.
http://www.utpjournals.com/product/chr/773/dry4.html
Published in Canadian Historical Review Volume 77, Number 3 September 1996 To see more articles and book reviews from this and other journals visit UTPJOURNALS online at UTPJOURNALS.com Canada Dry: Temperance Crusades before Confederation. Jan Noel. Toronto: University of Toronto Press 1995. Pp. viii, 310, illus. $19.95
Reviewed by Graeme Decarie Concordia University
Ruth Spence's Prohibition in Canada appeared in 1919. Though the work of an amateur - if a remarkably careful one - its attention to detail has made it the standard work on the subject. Professor's Noel's study does not replace it for detail, but it does jostle Prohibition in Canada for shelf space as a co-standard by amending some of Spence's information and suggesting vast areas for investigation.
Noel is commendably cautious about defining simple causes for the movement. Though she recognizes the importance of religious zeal in temperance - perhaps a little too much - she also notes its connections with material self-improvement, social control, questions of the morality of money-making, and various social reforms. It should be remembered that the movement was originally temperance, meaning an individual decision to cut down on drinking. By 1840, many temperance advocates had moved to total abstinence and, by the 1850s, to prohibition. In each period, all the stages of the movement were to be found, and all were commonly referred to simply as temperance.

34. In The Shadow Of The Law: Divorce In Canada, 1900-1939. By J.M.Bumsted
so little is known about the history of divorce in canada, it might In the first period,before confederation, a number of provinces (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick
http://www.utpjournals.com/product/chr/744/shadow3.html
Published in Canadian Historical Review Volume 74, Number 4 December 1993 To see more articles and book reviews from this and other journals visit UTPJOURNALS online at UTPJOURNALS.com In the Shadow of the Law: Divorce in Canada, 1900-1939. JAMES G. SNELL. Toronto: University of Toronto Press 1991. Pp. xii, 322. $50 cloth, $22.95 paper
Reviewed by J.M. BUMSTED St John's College, University of Manitoba
Despite its ever-increasing prevalence in Canadian society, divorce remains a legal and social process not well understood by historians. The complex history of divorce, as a subfield of the nation's law and as a major social experience for the Canadian people - obviously connected with the institution of marriage that it dissolves - remains largely unexplored in this country. This work by James Snell, covering the period from 1900 to 1939, is the first modern book-length study of Canadian divorce by a historian.
In the Shadow of the Law is a ground-breaking study that should stimulate a variety of new research, in both social and legal areas.

35. Western Libraries - Canadian History Before Confederation
DB Weldon Library has to offer on the subject of Canadian History before confederation. allwalks of life, different ethnic groups, and all regions of canada.
http://www.lib.uwo.ca/resources/canadianhistorybeforeconf.shtml
More information and resources can be found in the Library Catalogue
Problems with links?

Feedback? Please let us know
Contents: Encyclopedias/Dictionaries Reference Sources Books Government Information ... Specialized Resources
Introduction:

Welcome!
Below you will find a selection of some of the best research resources The D.B. Weldon Library has to offer on the subject of Canadian History Before Confederation.
If you don't find what you're looking for on this page, please feel free to contact one of our knowledgeable, helpful staff for further assistance. We're available in person, over the telephone (661-3162) and via e-mail at dbwref@lib.uwo.ca . You can also view our web site at www.lib.uwo.ca/weldon
Please note that this page is constantly being updated with new materials to assist you with your research. Check back often to see what's new!
Encyclopedias/Dictionaries
Consult the following encyclopedias and dictionaries for a subject overview or brief information about people, dates, events, trends, concepts and terminology: Dictionary of Canadian Biography Presents biographies of individuals whose death or last known activity occurred in the years from 1000 to 1700 and 1911 to 1920. The 7,790 biographies include those from all walks of life, different ethnic groups, and all regions of Canada. The biographies represent a whole range of professions and occupations-business people, artists, politicians, nurses, judges, physicians, soldiers, athletes, lawyers, poets, farmers, workers, clerics, and entertainers.

36. Western Libraries - A-Z Listing Of All Subjects
canada; Great Britain; International Organizations; Other Countries; United States.H History American History; British History; Canadian History before confederation;
http://www.lib.uwo.ca/resources/alpha_subjects.shtml

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C Canadian History before Confederation Canadian History since Confederation Canadian Literature Canadian Music Resources ... Consumer Health
  • D Dance Dentistry E Earth Sciences Economics Education English Environmental Sciences F Family Medicine Film Studies French G Genealogy General Management General Medicine General Reference Sources ... Genetics Geography
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    German Government Publications H History Human Geography Human Resources I Instrumentalists' Resources International Business J Journalism K Kinesiology L La Linguistique Latin American Studies Law - Canada Law - Commonwealth ... Linguistics M Marketing Mathematical Sciences Media, Information and Technoculture
  • 37. Confederation For Kids: Ontario
    In the years before confederation (1840 to 1867), what we now call Ontarioand Quebec were part of a British colony called the Province of canada.
    http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/confederation/kids/h2-1315-e.html
    Ontario
    Entered Confederation: 1867
    Upper and Lower Canada, 1791 In the years before Confederation (1840 to 1867), what we now call Ontario and Quebec were part of a British colony called the Province of Canada . Many people in Ontario, including the co-"Prime Minister" John A. Macdonald , wanted to form a new country with the other British colonies Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland. There were four main reasons for this:
    • Between 1854 and 1864, the Province of Canada was changing governments very often. This made it very difficult to make important decisions. Many politicians in Canada West (Ontario of today) and Canada East (Quebec of today) agreed that creating a new country called Canada was the solution to this problem. This meant that Ontario would get its own provincial government to make important decisions. The government in Ottawa would make decisions for all the people of the new country.

    Province of Canada (Canada East and Canada
    West), 1840
    • The leaders believed that a closer connection with the other colonies would help to make the economy stronger.

    38. Confederation For Kids
    What is the website about? before confederation, Britain ruled somecolonies in what is now canada. The confederation website is
    http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/confederation/kids/index-e.html
    See Also
    Introduction to Confederation
    Who is this website for?
    This site was written for young people ages 9 to 13 who are learning about how Canada came to be a country. It is also for anyone else who wants to learn more about Confederation.
    What is the website about?
    Before Confederation, Britain ruled some colonies in what is now Canada. The Confederation website is the story of how those colonies came together to become Canada, and how Canada has grown since then.
    Where do I start? How do I get around?
    The tour of the Confederation site begins with the Prelude . It will give you some background information on the history of Canada before it became a country. From there you can go to the Provinces page. This lists all the provinces and territories in Canada, and when and why they became part of Canada. Next, the People page tells the life stories of important people who helped to shape this country. If you want to find out the definition of a word in the text, or to learn more about a person whose played a role in Confederation, click on the underlined word or name to look it up in the Glossary or People page.

    39. CRICKET IN CANADA: An Historical Chronology Before Confederation
    CRICKET IN canada An historical chronology before confederation Preparedand collated by Jon Harris, with contributions from K. Boller.
    http://www.canadacricket.com/history/pre-confederation.htm
    CRICKET IN CANADA
    An historical chronology before Confederation
    Prepared and collated by Jon Harris, with contributions from K. Boller. Cricket “was probably the first of the major games played in Canada, being popular in the garrisons in the late 18 th century”. ( Canadian Encyclopedia Records show that in a game was played on an island near Montreal, in the colony of Lower Canada. The garrison of  Fort York was established in , and is now in the heart of Toronto. Cricket has a long association with the City of Toronto, for cricket had been played at the Home District Grammar School, which was founded in . Most of the early matches played in Toronto were ‘friendlies’, There is a record of cricket, in the form of an engraving, being played on the ice in The participants were the crews of two Royal Navy vessels, under the command of Capt. Parry, which became trapped in the ice near the island of Igloolik close to the Arctic Circle. Certainly these games were the venue of the first cricket played in Canada’s far north. Beyond playing cricket, the crews created a year long record of meteorological data.  According to the Canadian  Encyclopedia  “The first regular club formed was probably the St. John’s Cricket Club (

    40. CHA - Historical Booklets
    Translate this page 52. Malcolm MacLeod, Kindred Countries canada and Newfoundland before confederation/Terre-Neuveet le canada avant la confédération des pays apparentés.
    http://www.cha-shc.ca/english/hist_bookl.html
    HISTORICAL BOOKLETS The CHA publishes a series of booklets to provide the general reader, the teacher and the historical specialist with concise accounts of specific historical problems in the history of Canada. They are written in English or French, according to the author's preference, and are available in both languages. Prices are $6.00 each ($5.00 for orders of 10 or more) or $120.00 for the series. Bookstores receive a 50% discount on orders of 30 booklets or more of the same booklet. Postage and GST added. Prices outside Canada are expressed in US currency. ORDER FORM NAME: ADDRESS:_ Booklet number / Quantity / Language Please send order to: CHA, 395 Wellington Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0N3. An invoice will follow. 1. C.P. Stacey, 2. G.F.G. Stanley, Louis Riel: Patriot or Rebel?/Louis Riel: patriote ou rebelle? 4. W.S. MacNutt, 5. A.L. Burt, Guy Carleton, Lord Dorchester, 1724-1808: Revised Version/Guy Carleton, Lord Dorchester, 1724-1808 6. Marcel Trudel

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