V 5 ■" • " . : '.■■'■'■■': "■,•,' |««i»:|S .;';:■" i ':., . ■ . . . ....,■■.. ■ ■ .■.■■. ■...■. - . ■ . ■ . . ■ ■■.■■■■.■■ . . ■ . ■ ■ ■ ■ v.;. ■■ ■■■■■■ ■■■ ■ . ..■■■.■. ■ .■■. . . ■ : ■■ ■■■"■■:■'....■' ■.-■'■■■ ■■ W -■.>■■ ■■ : ■. ■ ■ ■ ■ : -.'... ■■■■■■...:■ /'.'... :,. .■■'.. , : ' . " ■ .. ".. ...... . ■ . ., ' . - ' " . . . ' ■■:"' ' :;.'. ' ' '.■'.. ''•' ' ' ' ■ . . .. .''...'.. • ' :. lli§ lliP^ ■■ ■■■::.:.: ■■i Illlll§l 111111 ■:• ■ ■■ . , t c?7 Cornell UtriMmtg ptatfg BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME FROM THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND THE GIFT OF Hcnrtj W. Sage 1S91 Ammm /#** F 10d1 r77 e " Un,versi, y Library olin 3 1924 028 898 181 The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028898181 COMPENDIOUS HISTORY OF THE NORTHERN PART OF THE PROVINCE OP NEW BRUNSWICK, AND OF THE DISTEICT OF GASPE, LOWER CANADA. BY ROBEBT COONEY. The lowest genius may afford some light, Or give a hint that had escaped your sight. REPRINTED IN 1896 BY D. G. SMITH AT CHATHAM, MIRAMICHI, NEW BRUNSWICK, FROM ONE OF THE ORIGINAL COPIES PRINTED BY JOSEPH HOWE, AT HALIFAX, IN 1832. fAftP TO JOSEPH CUNARD, Esq. ONE OF THE MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF NEW BRUNSWICK. Sir, Despising the expression of that opinion, which, possibly, may attempt to torture the unsophisticated language of sincere esteem, into the feigned or seitrile compliment of flattery, to you, do I frankly confess, that the opportunity which the compila- tion of this little work affords me, unreservedly to acknowledge my obligations to your friendship, is a delightful recompense for whatever of care, anxiety, or fatigue, the execution of the task has involved. When circumstances, familiar to all the respectable inhabitants of Miramichi, interrupted my profes- sional studies, through your disinterested sympathies, did a munificent Providence kindly bestow an affectionate, and an unshrinking friend. Therefore, to yon. Sir, do I now dedi- cate this unpretending effort, and pom- though the offering be, rest assured, that in the presentation of it, far loftier motives influenced me, than any private considerations would suggest. The faithful discharge, of the important duties of a Legi- slator, has obtained for you the merited approbation of a dis cerning constituency ; — the registered decisions of the Bench, eloquently vindicate your integrity as a magistrate; — and the magnanimity that uniformly pervades your mercantile pursuits, has invested your professional reputation with the distinguish- ing traits of liberality and enterprize. These, Sir, are the pri- mary reasons that more immediately influence me, whil.e to the series of facts they enumerate, I have now the honor to add another. By subscribing myself, Your obliged, and Grateful Servant, ROBERT COONEY. Halifax, May, 1832. CONTENTS. Page. Introduction, 1 greneral description, 14 County of Northumberland, - 25 County of Kent, 127 County of Gloucester, - ' 161 Natural History, - 227 Resources, - - - 277 District of Gaspe, - - - 281 [ It affords me unqualified pleasure to state, that I have, during my resi- dence in Halifax, enjoyed an uninterrupted access to the Town Library, the Commercial Reading Room, the Mechanics' Institute, and the other Lite- rary and Scientific Associations, which so eminently distinguish this enlight- ened metropolis ; and therefore, do I now, to the respective Directors and Managers of these Societies, unfeignedly tender my assurances of regard and esteem.] R. C. PRINTER'S NOTE. The general demand for Cooney's History of the northern part of New Brunswick and the fact that copies of the original edition, printed at Halifax by the late Honorable Joseph Howe, in 1832, are very difficult to obtain, together with the merits of the work itself and the importance of preserving it as a valuable his- torical record, have induced me to reprint it. The book as now reproduced— from the introduction to the last page — is a faithful copy of the original, (with the exception of a few corrected typographical errors, such as are apt to occur in any printed matter.) The num- ber of pages and of lines to a page, as well as the be- ginning and termination of every line, are the same, so that any references in other works, to Cooney's History, by page or line, will apply to the present edition, exact- ly the same as to that printed by Mr. Howe in 1832. D. G. Smith. Chatham, New Brunswick 1896. INTRODUCTION. Although we protest against the unwarrantable vani- ty, that would betray us into the institution of a com- parison between New Brunswick and other Colonies of Great Britain ; we feel satisfied that no one will im- peach our consistency, if we briefly allude to the rise and progress of the maritime strength and commercial prosperity of the latter ; thence modestly hinting, that her Colonies have eminently contributed to both. Considerations of this kind, though perhaps destitute of any intrinsic utility, are on this occasion recommend- ed by a sort of natural pertinency, inasmuch as they may exhibit the general importance of Colonial posses- sions ; and embody an expression of the sentiments, as well as an avowal of the principles, cherished by the inhabitants of this Province in particular. 1 & , INTRODUCTION. 1 am, moreover, induced to make these preliminary remarks, from a view of the injustice of some late mea- sures of Colonial policy ; as well as from a dignified conception of our own co-relative situation, as the sub- jects of a country, of which we are a constituent part ; under whose laws we live ; by whom we are protected ; of whose greatness we participate ; and to whose insti- tutions we are attached. Towards the close of the loth century, Venice and Genoa were the only great commercial powers in Eu- rope. Between these two nations a similarity of pur- pose inspired mutual rivalship ; but in trade, Venice maintained the pre-eminence. She engrossed the whole commerce of India, then carried on through the inte- rior of Asia, or by way of Egypt and the Red Sea. America, comprising the great western Continent, and including almost innumerable fertile Islands, was then a Terra Incognita, or an unknown land. Under these circumstances, the trade of England, was very limited ; we did little more than wander through the Mediterranean, or crawl along the coast of Africa. This was the extent of our navigation ; and the few ships employed therein, were, as well as our Naval stores, imported. We purchased all manufactured me- tals from German;", we were dependent on Portugal, for Sugar ; we bought American produce from Spain ; and .we had to pay the Venetians and Genoese for the' commodities of India. INTRODUCTION. 3 At this time, the revenue of England did not exceed £36,000 a year. Such was the state of our trade, and oi' our tinauce, when Elizabeth ascended the Throne. The cautious policy of Henry VII. had precluded us from the advantages of Columbus's service; but the li- berality of his grand-daughter admitted us to a partici- pation of them. The intrepid navigator had, by pe- netrating beyond the imaginary precincts of the globe, enlarged the circumference of visible creation. At his touch the western boundary receded ; and then Em- pires and Kingdoms issued from the sea, while the mist that overshadowed it resolved itself into a world. These discoveries inflamed the zeal of the queen, and roused the energies of the nation ; and having once in- haled the spirit of enterprise, we enlisted science for our guide — pursued territory into its last retreat ; and in the recesses of obscurity, established new dominions. In prosecuting her research, England neither acknow- ledged an obstacle, nor recognized a difficulty. She neither calculated the danger, nor measured the dis- tance : her discernment taught her- the value of com- merce, and her insular situation convinced her of the necessity of its cultivation. She saw other powers en- r riched by its possession, and she determined to rival them ; the decree went forth, and the monopoly of the south was destroyed forever. Then did the Genoese navy shrink into a few gal- lies : then did commerce slumber on the bosom of the 4 INTRODUCTION Adriatic ; and then did the produce of Brazil become a drug on the Tagus. What England acquired by discovery, she retained by liberal policy. Her new subjects learned civiliza- tion from her intercourse, and clemency from her ex- ample. Her Colonies are trophies, not spoils ; they were acquired by research, not obtained by plunder ; and they have been preserved by conciliation, not held by massacre, as the Spaniards retained Mexico and Pe- ru ; and the Dutch Aruboyna, and Surinam. The acquisitional character of our Colonies, as well as the capabilities they developed, frequently excited the envy of our maritime rivals, who in some instances by sinister policy, in others by open violence, endea- voured to dissolve the amiable connexion. Their jea- lousy, however, only increased' our influence^ and im- paired their strength, for it always involved them in a war that weakened them in its progress, and humbled them at its close. At length our own impolicy, in no inconsiderable de- gree, accomplished what neither the subtlety, nor the power of our enemies could effect. A cabinet of Imbe- ciles, striving to extend the prerogatives of the crown, produced by their ultraism a general discontent through- out the New England Colonies. France surveyed the progress of the eruption with pleasure ; she thought of Quebec and Louisburg ; and then regulated her inter- ference as Insubordination advanced. JJncoujaged, by INTRODUCTION. 5 the fleets and armies of so great an ally, the Americans succeeded, and the thirteen Provinces became a Re- public. The French people, groaning under a most oppressive despotism, viewed the struggle with intense anxiety ; every victory gained by the revolted colonists gratifled and reproached them ; and the issue of the contest in- spired them with emulation. The besotted Court of Versailles had not sufficient penetration to perceive, that the revolutionary infection had been brought home. Affluence had closed their ears against the cries of dis- tress ; bloated with pride, remonstrance could not reach their vanity ; debauched by luxury, they measured a nation's energy by the scale of their own effeminacy ; and blinded by dissipation, they were unable to read an admonition in symptoms. The good natured but passive Louis reclined upon his Thione, unconscious of the bloody grave that was yawning at his feet. What the French King endeavoured to establish in America, that was he destined to endure at home. — When his troops returned from the rehearsal, they were prepared for the performance ; they had seen li- berty meretriciously drest in the camp at Washington, and allured by her appearance, they became enamour- ed of her person. Soldiers and citizens leagued against the government ; and the clubs inflaming their violence, . murder became a science in France, and every ruffian a professor of it. The sceptre dropped from the palsied hand of tlie Monarch ; hjs. throne crumbjed under h,im ; 6 INTRODUCTION. his crown fell into the kennel ;his head rolled on a scaf- fold ; and his kingdom became the booty of his execu- tioners. A violent moral disorganization impressed on the French character a distox-tion the most unnatural and disgusting. Every vice was privileged, and every vir- tue outlawed ; every tie was broken, and every connexi- on severed. Worth inspired hatred ; villany was a distinction : religion a reproach ; infidelity an honor ; loyalty a crime ; and treason a boast. The revolution, lost all its efficacy in its violence, nor did any thing dis- tinguish it but the infamy that disgraced it ; for the people who had waded through blood to dethrone a legitimate King, basely submitted to the imperial sway of a needy adventurer. England deplored the miseries of her rival, and gene- rously determined to alleviate them. She saw with horror the fearful re-action of Louis s mistaken policy, and she condemned the spirit, as well as the extent of the reprisal. She had been deprived of a valuable co- lony, partly by the intervention of the. monarch, whom she now saw fall under the recuperation of his own principles, but the remembrance of her loss was lost in her sympathy. To rescue France from total oblivion ; to save her from herself ; and to preserve Europe from anarchy, confusion, and civil war, England drew her sword against the regicides. Such were the motives that un- iNTRomurrioN. 1 locked her treasury, and armed her troops. Her voice roused the potentates of Europe, and railed a moral earthquake into bring ; and the conflict thus excited by the chivalry of her spirit, was afterwards sustained by the redundancy of her energies. She encouraged the timid, subsidized the needy, and maintained the tran- quility of the neutral states. Whenever her allies were terrified into vacillation, her constancy reproved them ; and when they were cajoled into indecision, her un- flinching bravery shamed them into resolution. King- doms disappeared, but she remained immoveable : and when Kings became paupers, and beggars reigned, she learned wisdom from the vicissitude, and acquired strength by its application. Napoleou aspired to universal dominion, and the wi- thering curse of his cupidity descended upon every thing, and blighted all it touched. Like the reeds smitten by the storm, Legitimate Monarchy, and every other venerable Institute, fell to the ground ; and from their ruins rose a rabble cf Mushroom Kings, and Mili- tary Xobles. Crowns degenerated into camp furniture; Marshals' batons were exchanged for sceptres ; the vo- cabulary of honors was ransacked for the creation of new titles ; and every River and Village was enlarged into a Dutchy, or manufactured into a Principality. In short, the political axis of the continent was broken ; and the whole immense structure of Empires, King- doms, and Republics, lay in dismembered and shapeless masses at the feet of the usurper. • 8 INTRODUCTION, Snoh, in 1809 and 1810, was the disorganized state of Europe. In the midst of this terrific commotion England stood erect; wrapt up in her own impregnability, the storm could not affect her ; and therefore, while others trem- bled in its blast, she smiled at its fury. Never did the "Empress Island" appear so magnificently grand ; — she stood by herself, and there was a peculiar splendor in the loneliness of her glory. Occupying such an exalted position, a less resolute nation would have retired from the conflict; but her strength being unimpaired, and her ends unaccomplish- ed, she determined to perfect the consummation she had proposed. Again was her voice heard mingling with the roar of the hurricane ; and again did it re-ani- mate the dispirited Sovereigns of Europe. They thronged round her standard ; and she led them to vic- tory and to peace. The cause of humanity prospered, and Buonaparte fell with a precipitancy, equal to the rapidity of his flight. The task was accomplished, and the magnitude of the undertaking, essentially general- ized the benefits of its success. The integrity of Egypt was secured, and the inde- pendence of Spain maintained. Russia and Prussia were saved from annihilation ; Austria and the Penin- sula were preserved from a similar fate ; the Roman Pontiff was released from prison; the vassals of the Rhine were emancipated ; and France was restored to INTRODUCTION. 9 her original dignity. Such were the prizes England won by her valor, such were the gifts her munificence bestowed. From these remarks the question arising is, how did Great Britain accomplish all this ? What enabled her to exercise such astonishing influence — to put forth such overwhelming powers ? I answer, her Colonies. They created the commerce that filled her Treasury, and cra- dled the Navy that fought her battles. The Colonies, from being the offspring of her research, became the children of her solicitude. They had extended her territory into every clime ; and from this increase of dominion, it became expedient to erect a force for its protection. Hence sprung a Navy, irresistable in pow- er, and matchless in bravery ; hence arose that invin- cible strength, which ever since its organization, has enabled a small Island to awe the whole world, and to maintain an almost exclusive possession of the ocean. But the Colonies not dnly rocked the cradle of our Na- vy, but they even cherished it into adolescence. The long voyages to those newly discovered regions, and the advantages arising from an intercourse with them, Created a commercial marine, that has since sustained the Navy, and in war frequently enabled it, not only to protect our dependencies, but even to extend them. In all ages, from the day we defeated the Spanish Ar- mada, until we destroyed the Turkish fleet at Navari- no, the Navy has been the right' arm of our strength 2 10 INTRODUCTION. and the chief pillar of our greatness ; but never did its glory shine so brilliantly, or its power appear so strik- ingly, as during the last war. Our pendants quivered in every atmosphere, and by our ships was the ocean swept. Whatever wind fanned the British En- sign, honor and renown were its attendants ; and what- ever sea our vessels ploughed, victory followed in their wake, and wrote the history of their achievements. Whenever vanity betrayed the enemy into action, de- feat invariably humbled his vanity ; and when a re- petition of losses taught him prudence, we imprisoned him on his stations, until his ships rotted in the har- bours of Bologne and Brest. Without foreign possessions, Great Britain never could have arrived, in the scale of nations, to a higher rank, than that of a second or third rate power. Coop- ed up within a very moderate extent, and not particu- larly distinguished, either for the rarity or richness of her natural productions, the utmost stretch of her com- merce, would have been but a barter with her opulent neighbors ; or at best, a dearly bought, but limited and precarious intercourse with their dependencies. Nor is it altogether beyond the range of possibility, that she might not have been, at this very day, a Colony her- self. Without extraneous resources she would have had no commerce, and wanting that, she would have had neither her wealth nor her Navy. When we think of the injustice of some men, and the ambition of others ; when we reflect upon the con- INTRODUCTION. 11 duct and politics of Louis XIV. and Charles XII. Napo- leon, and other inordinate spirits, we are almost sus- tained in saying, that instead of being what she now is, the Emporium of the world, and the Mistress of the Na- tions, England might have been, at this very day, but a wretched Province, either basely hugging her chains, or gallantly striving to break them. It should ever be remembered, that to the Colonies do we owe much of our present greatness. Our inter- nal resources have been developed to their utmost capa- city ; they had been stretched almost to cracking ; and hence there hardly remained a possibility of either ex- tending our trade, or increasing our strength. There appeared no reasonable grounds to suppose, that we should ever become, either a very rich, or a very pow- erful nation ; indeed, but the moment before our first discoveries were made, our whole maritime force, so extravagantly praised by Sir Edward Coke, consisted of only thirty-three ships, indifferently equipped. Such, about three hundred years ago, was the boasted navy of Great Britain, and such, in all probability, would it still be, if she had not acquired Colonies. But suddenly new worlds leapt into life, and stood be- fore us. Then did the pale and flickering light of our present glory, sparkle through the broken vapours of the west ; then, and not till then, did the wealth and power of England commence. The genius of com- merce, at once exciting and rewarding the enterprize of the nation, flung the proceeds of its zeal into her lap, 12 INTRODUCTION and then, every wave that washed her cliffs, came load- ed with wealth; and every wind that blew, wafted tri- bute to her shore. In a short time so rapidly did our shipping multiply, that the whole carrying trade of Europe tell into our hands ; and this great and enriching privilege, not only convinced us of the necessity of securing it, but also enabled us to erect the force requisite for- so desirable an end. To be more explicit : that we might engross the golden current that flowed upon us, it became ab- solutely necessary to increase our- Navy, a measure, which in half a century after its adoption, enabled us to dictate Navigation Laws, that not only controuled the sea, but encouraged, nay rendered unavoidably neces- sary, the regular and constant increase of both our Trade and Shipping Nothing can more strongly prove the importance of Colonies, if proof were necessary, than the astounding rise and progress of Great Britain. Here we see a[.small Island, that had been the alter- nate prey of every Northern incursion; that was for- merly plundered by the Picts, harrassed by the Danes, and conquered by the Romans, surpassing in power, wealth and greatness, even Imperial Rome itself. Here we behold a mere speck in the Channel, enlarged into a colossal dominion, that has oceans for its highways — kingdoms for its outposts, and who.se boundaries ex- tend to every quarter of the globe. Here we admire INTRODUCTION. 13 an enterprising and spirited People, alike familiar with the tropics and the poles, and equally intimate with the frozen regions of the North, and the sultry latitudes of the South, springing from the loins of a few Islanders. Here we see a great and mighty government, embrac- ing within its rule every diversity of climate, of creed, and of complexion, growing out of one solitary spot, and blended into an harmonious whole 4 by the Consti- tution that overarches and protects it. Is there an Englishman, alive to one virtuous feeling, illumined by one ray of patriotism, whose heart does not glow with gratitude, and swell with triumph, when he surveys the career, and contemplates the character of his nation. Europe owes its independence to her magnanimity; the fervor of her clemency melted the chains of the African ; Christendom has been enlarged by her piety ; her auspices have created new. Worlds in the South ; and liberty of conscience has been re- born from her Code. In a word, honorable has been her course, and exalted is her position. Through centu- turies of Fame has she travelled ; and now she stands upon a column of her own architecture, around whose pedestals is written the history of its erection. We are Englishmen : some of us by birth ; others by lineage ; all of us in principles ; and the avowal is our pride— the connexion our glory. CHAPTER I. First establishment of the Province of New Brunswick — its si- tuation and general description. The Province of New Brunswick formerly constituted a part of Nova Scotia, the first European settlement on the Continent of North America. The early history of that Province, involves a serried alternation of proprie- torship between the French and English, — the former claiming it by priority of possession, the latter by disco- very. The first grant of land in it was given by King James the First, in 1621, to his Secretary Sir William Alex- ander, who called it Nova Scotia, or New Scotland. It was then considered by the English, as a part of Ca- bot's discovery of Terra Nova; but the first settlers, however, were French emigrants, who arrived hither GENERAL DESCRIPTION. 15 in 1604, with, and under the auspices of one Monsieur De Monts, who called the country Acadia, or New France. Sir William being unable to colonize his grant, sold it to Claude De La Tour, a French nobleman ; and the treaty of St. Germain's, ratified in 1632, ceding Acadia to France, the French became possessors of it by both convention and purchase. In the year 1654, it reverted to the English ; in 1667 it was again ceded to the French, by the treaty of Bre- da ; but in consequence of their violation of the com- pact, it was retaken by Sir William Phipps, in 1690. The British remained sole masters of Acadia, until 1697, when, by a treaty made at Ryswick, in Holland, during the reign of William the Third, it was once more restored to the French. By this treaty, the com- fort of the exiled family of the Stuarts, was liberally consulted ; for it was particularly stipulated, that the English King should pay an annual pension of 50,000?. to Queen Mary D'Este. Scarcely had King James breathed his last at Saint Germain's, when Louis the Fourteenth acknowledged the claims of the Chevalier de St. George. This un- expected declaration created a temporary alarm; and the almost sudden death of King William, considerably increased the apprehensions of the people. Queen Anne, however, having ascended the Throne without 16 GENERAL DESCRIPTION. any interruption, she commenced her reign by a spi- rited declaration of war against France. During this struggle, which lasted nearly ten years, her Majesty's arms were remarkably successful, both by sea and land ; and towards the close of the war, to such a degraded and humiliating state was the French King reduced, by the repeated defeats he sustained from the Duke of Marlborough, and Prince Eugene, that he was obliged to sue for peace in the most abject manner. Negociations were accordingly opened at Utrecht, in the year 1712, and by a definitive treaty made at the same place, in the following year, Nova Scotia was restored to Great Britain, in whose possession it has re- mained ever since. The French Government, never very remarkable for their scrupulous observance of treaties, were not long in finding a pretext for evading the "Definitive Treaty" of Utrecht. Ere the ink was dry with which this cove- nant was written, they again resorted to that unmanly and petty warfare, by which they had so often disturbed the tranquility of the New Colony. Hostilities were commenced; and along with several rich prizes, made by Admiral Rowley, in the Mediterranean, and Com- modore Barnett, in the East Indies, the important Is- land of Cape Breton, fell in to our hands. Had we retained our last acquisition, we would have held the key of the whole Gulf of St.. Lawrence, which OF NEW BRUNSWICK. 17 would have given us exclusive possession of the fisheries of North America. This signal advantage, however, then worth two millions annually, we foolishly resign- ed. by a disgfaceful peace made at Aix la Chapelle, in 1748. The growing prosperity of Nova Scotia, increasing the jealousy of the French, they determined to provoke us to another war ; vainly imagining, that as our hands were tolerably well occupied by our affairs in India, and the meditated invasion of the Chevalier, they would be able to filch our North American possessions from us. To accomplish this end, they adopted the most dis- honorable means ; they openly intruded within the limits of Nova Scotia ; erected fortifications in the very heart of the Province ; endeavoured to corrupt the neu- trals ; and excited the hostility of the Indians against the Settlers. They, moreover, extended a chain of forts, connecting their settlements on the Mississippi, with their possessions in Canada ; and along the great Lakes of Erie and Ontario. They also penetrated from the Banks of the Saint Lawrence, across Lake Cham- plain, entered the territory of New York, and built the fort of Crown Point. Extending their insolent and dangerous encroachments, they also annoyed our set- tlements on the Ohio, and arrested, and sent prisoners to France, some English residents of that river. These arid many other similar atrocities did Great 3 18 GENERAL DESCRIPTION Britain bear with exemplary patience, until the extent and wantonness of the insults she endured were con- demned by every Cabinet in Europe. At length war was declared ; and an expedition, commanded by Ad- miral Boscawen, sailed from Plymouth, for the banks of Newfoundland, while another, under the direction of M. Bois de la Moth, proceeded from Brest for the same destination. A general engagement was prevented by the thick fogs usually prevalent on this coast ; but the intercepting part of the British squadron gave the first decisive blow, by capturing two French ships, the Al- cide, of 64 guns, and the Lys, of 52 guns. This earnest of future success, was rapidly followed by the conquest of Cape Breton; of the Canadas; of Saint John's Island ; and the final extirpation of the French power in America. These events occurred in the years 1758 and 1759 ; until when, it may be affirmed, Great Britain never had peaceable possession of the present Province of New- Brunswick. In the year 1785 the present limits of New-Brunswick were divided from Nova Scotia, and erected into a sepa- rate Province, by a special constitutional charter, the administration of which, was confided to Colonel Carle- ton. In the autumn of this year, the first General Elec- tion of representatives took place : and in the January following, the first Legislative Assembly was held at St. John. OF NEW BRUNSWICK 19 Shortly after his appointment, Governor Carleton judiciously selected the present scite of Fredericton, for the seat of Government ; and the most unequivocal proof of the propriety of this choice is, that it has ever since been, and is very likely to continue to be, our metropolis. It is unnecessary here to re-capitulate the privations endured, and the difficulties surmounted by the first settlers ; these are daily occurrences with the founders of a country, and therefore, in the present instance, there was no singularity. If their sufferings were great, so ■were their merits ; if they forfeited their property, it was to preserve their principles ; if they sacrificed every consideration to their duty, the value of the offering was an amiable proof of their sincerity. Of sorrow and suf- fering they had sufficient ; but of consolation and re- compence they were not destitute. If they were dis- franchised by the Republicans, the proscription was their honor; if they were driven from home to seek a refuge in the wilderness, they carried with them the virtue they inherited from their ancestors. The pre- cious pear) of political integrity was theirs ; and theirs also, was the exalted dignity of Citizenship to an English King. Fredericton, that can now boast of its Palace, its University, Courts of Justice, Public Halls, Legislative Chambers, spacious Barracks, and various Churches, • • was then composed of a few irregularly built huts ; and Saint John, now a rich commercial town, governed by 20 GENERAL DESCRIPTION municipal authority, endowed with corporate privileges, and containing 10,000 inhabitants, was, at the same period, of similar extent. After having governed the Province with prudence, benignity, and justice, for nearly twenty years ; after having watched over it in childhood, and cherished it into adolescence; after having seen it rise from a wil- derness into an important Colony; — after having en- deared himself to the people, as their Father — their Friend — their All ; Governor Carleton was, in 1803, removed to England, where he still continued to hold his situation until his death. Were I allowed to eulogise the dead, I would quote the Latin interrogatory of the Poet, "Si quyxris monumentum circumspice te ?" If you want a memorial of Carleton, look all round j ou. From the removal of Colonel Carleton until his death, the government of the Province was administered by the following persons, under the style and title of Presi- dents : — G. G. Ludlow, Esq. Edward Window, Esq. Ma- jor General Hunter, Lieutenant Colonel Johnstone, Major General Balfour, Major General Smyth, Major General Sau- marez, and Lieutenant Colonel Hailes. Immediately after the above event, which happened, I believe, in 1816, Major General George Stracey Smith, was appointed Governor, and he dying in March, 1823, the administra- tion devolved upon Ward Chipman, Esq., who discharg- ed it until the February following, when it was assumed by John Murray Bliss, Esq. During the Presidency of this gentleman, Major General Sir Howard Douglas re- OF NEW BRUNSWICK. 21 eeived the appointment. His Excellency being called home to England, the Government descended to Wil- liam Black, Esq. who administered it until the appoint- ment of Sir Archibald Campbell, the present Represen- tative of His Majesty in this Colony. New Brunswick is situated between the 45th and 49th degrees of North latitude ; and between the 64th and 68th degree of West longitude. It is above 200 miles in length and 180 in breadth, and contains about 22,- 000 square miles. It is bounded as follows : — on the North by the River St. Lawrence, and Canada ; on the South and South-east by the Bay of Fundy and Nova- Scotia ; on the East by the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and Bale Verte ; and on the West by the State of Maine. It is divided into ten Counties, viz. Saint John, Westmore- land, King's, Queen's, Charlotte, York, Sunbury, Nor- thumberland, Kent and Gloucester. The respective re- presentation of these Counties, in the Provincial Assem- bly is thus : — COUNTIES. MEMBERS, Saint John 4 Westmoreland 4 King's 2 Queen's 2 Charlotte 4 York 4 Sunbury 2 Northumberland 2 Kent 1 Gloucester 1 City of Saint John 2 Total number 28. 22 GENERAL DESCRIPTION The Province is well watered by several magnificent Rivers, and an almost countless number of tributary streams; and these intersecting the country vicinally, lay open its inmost recesses, irrigate the soil, and fa- cilitate the transfer of it productions and manufactures to the sea board. It also abounds with Lakes, Springs and Rivulets, so that there are but few places that do not enjoy the advantage of water communication. The appearance of the country along the Bay of Fun- dy, is rather unpromising. The coast is rugged and broken ; in some places it is closely serrated with fis- sures ; in others irregularly scolloped by large cavities, and in general seems to have suffered considerably by erosion. The Gulf shore is low and sandy, covered with a stunted growth, and skirted with extensive marshes, large deep mosses, and long sand beaches, formed by the conflicting currents of the Gulf, and the different Rivers that pierce the shore. The whole line of sea board, as well as the different Harbours, Bays and Inlets, that indent it, contain a rich and inexhaustible Fishery, which, if judiciously encou- raged by conservative laws, would be of the most signal advantage to Great Britain. In the interior, the soil is generally good ; and in some places the land is very high and precipitate, and impressed with magnificent features of primitive formation ; in others, it swells into an easy and gentle acclivity ; while in several districts it is of a very monotonous character. As but a small part of this extensive Province is under cultivation, the OF NEW BRUNSWICK 23 natural resources of the interior are very imperfectly known. The intrusion, however, of some of them in different parts of the country, may afford us a tolerably correct idea of their characrer and extent. A good des- cription of Goal, Granite, Slate, Freestone, and Argillace- ous earths, are very abundant ; and specimens of Lime Stowe,Iron,Lead and Copper Ores,have obtruded upon us. Some <:f the Rivers are very rapid, and flow over cal- careous formations ; others run over soft muddy bot- toms ; and a few creep lazily over sandy beds into the different places whence .they discharge. Most of these Rivers are interspersed with large fertile Islands, formed by the force of the aqueous agent removing portions of the soil from one place, and depositing them in another. Their banks are generally fringed with rich alluvial tracts produced by the same cause ; and some of them pursue a course exceedingly irregular and fantastic, in consequence of the interruptions they receive from pre- cipitate cascades, and a violent collision, between impe- tuous freshets and strong lateral resistances. All the principal Rivers are intimately connected with each other, either by small streams or short portages. Thus, the Restigouche approximates to the Saint John, by an eight mile portage leading to the Grand River. The Miramichi is connected with the Nipisiquit by a still shorter route ; and the latter approaches' the Res- tigouche by an Indian road leading to the Upsalquitch. The Saint John is also linked with the Miramichi and the Nipisiquit, by the Lakes that supply the main and 24 GENERAL DESCRIPTION. little Tobique, and the Miramichi mingles with the Ri- chibueto by two or three of its tributaries, while the latter approaches the Saint John, by Salmon River, along the Grand Lake, and thence down the Jemseg. — The same route inverted leads from the Saint John to the Miramichi, by a portage connecting Salmon River with the Etienne. There is also a route from the Ma- dawaska to the Bay des Chaleurs ; and the Chicktacook falls into the Saint John near the Presque Isle, and runs by a short vista upon a branch .of the Miramichi, while the Buctouch rises near the New Canaan, a River dis- charging into the Washademoak Lake, which empties itself about 30 miles above the city. It may here be observed, that nearly all the Rivers in this Province are designated by Indian names, either significant of a personal right, or expressive of some pro- minent locality. Thus the Etienne, the Barnaby, the Bartholemew, Renous, and others, are called after the respective Chiefs to whom they originally belonged ; while the Looshtork (now Saint John) signifies Long River; the Restigouche, Broad River; the Miramichi, Happy Retreat ; the Nepisiquit, Noisy or Foaming Ri- ver ; the Tootooguse, Fairy River ; the Taboointac, the place where two reside ; the Magaugudavic, the River of Hills ; and the Richibucto, the River of fire. COUNTY OF NORTHUMBERLAND. CHAPTER II. Geographical position — early history — original trade between the French and Indians — some account of the first settlers ; and the cause of their dispersion. The County of Northumberland is seated in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence; and originally comprehended an area of nearly 8,000 square miles, having a river fron- tier,' from the source of the Restigouche to Dalhousie harbour ; and a sea board, thence along the south side of the Baie des Chaleurs, and along the Gulf Coast, on to Shediac Island. It formerly contained eleven pa- rishes; — viz. Newcastle, Alnwick, Wellington, Carle- ton, Glenelg, Chatham, Nelson, Ludlow, Saumarez, Beresford, and Northesk. In consequence of its unwieldy size, and the increase of its population, it was trisected by an Act of the Ge- 28 COUNTY OF neral Assembly, passed in the 7th year of the reign of his Majesty King George IV. By this Act, the Parishes of Wellington and Carleton, with their unappropriated rear, were erected into a new County, called Kent; while those of Saumarez, and Beresford, were formed into another, styled Gloucester. Northumberland is therefore, bounded on the south by Kent, on the north by Gloucester, on the east by the gulf ; and on the west by the county of York. But neither the precise limits of this county, nor of its dissevered portions, have been yet defined ; and therefore no correct extent, or exact boundaries, can be assigned to any of them. This suspended demarcation is an evil that should be obviated as expeditiously as possible, for many serious inconveniences result from it : Road work, Poor Rates, and other Parochial responsibilities are evaded by some ; while neither the performance of the one, nor the pay- ment of the other, has been able to screen many from the consequences of petty and vexatious law suits. It also creates a doubt as to the exact locality of freeholds, a circumstance which, coutrouled by the vibration of opposite interests, during the late contested elections for Gloucester and Kent, became occasionally an ad- vantage or an evil, a sophism, or an argument. When we consider thai this country is but of recent discovery ; and that although the object of the French Court was dominion, that of the people was gain, we cannot suppose that any very extensive or flourishing settlements, ever previously existed in any of the coun- NORTHUMBERLAND. 29 ties we are about to describe. We know that the French who came hither were actuated by pecuniary motives ; and that hunting and fishing were more re- munerative, and less fatiguing, than the cultivation of a wilderness. Then, considering the hostile feelings of the Indians ; their aversion to any encroachments, upon what they considered their natural inheritance ; the" pursuits and habits of a people emigrating from the sea- board of one country, to that of another ; the predis- position such habits not only inspire, but engender in favor of desultory avocations ; the disparity of soil and climate between France and a bleak northern forest ; the love of home, to which all are subject; and above all, the oscillating proprietorship, which occasionally shifted the country to a different owner, every ten or twelve years ; we cannot for a moment, entertain the belief, that the early history of the French, in these parts, was distinguished by any thing remarkable, or important. The facts that the history of Nova Scotia proper though that country occupied a very prominent position contains very few remarkable incidents ; that Halifax is little more than seventy years old ; and that the French government could never permanently establish its authority in the province, impressed me, ere I com- menced my researches, with an opinion, that our early history, would not, at this approximate period, afford any thing particularly interesting. I thought, however, that by collecting the most authentic information with- in my reach, I might do some service, were it only to pi- 30 COUNTY OF oneer the way for others, and furnish historical ele- ments for future writers. To attain these ends, I have sustained a good deal of personal fatigue ; and in arranging and revising the materials procured by my enquiries, I have carefully weighed the authenticity of every statement, determin- ed, that although there might be no merit in the com- position, there should be truth in the narrative. It is a little remarkable, that the first French settlers were from the north of France ; and the first English ones from the North of Britain. The former being from Lunaire, Saint Maloes, and other sea ports of Nor- mandy ; while the latter generally came from Aber- deenshire, Bamffshire, and other parts of Scotland. The northern part of Nova-Scotia, said to have been purchased by the King of France, from Sir David Kirk, is supposed to have been no other than the old County of Northumberland. This transaction appears to have taken place, about the same time as the ratification of the treaty of St. Germains, namely in 1632. It is plau- sibly, and I think candidly related, that about the years 1642, 43, and 44, a Monsieur Jean Jacques Enaud. a native of Basque, in the lower department of the Pyre- nees, in France, and of whom I shall speak more fully in my account of Gloucester, occasionally traded with the Indians of Miramichi ; and it is conjectured that he had an establishment on Baie des Vents Island, where he collected all his furs and peltries ; and another on Por- NORTHUMBERLAND. 31 tage Island, where he prosecuted Walrus, or Sea Cow fishing. These accounts appear entitled to credibility, when we consider that this country, at that time, be- longed to the French, both by purchase and treaty ; and that it is an historical fact, that one Daunley, also a Frenchman, obtained a- large grant ia Nova-Scotia, from his government, cotemporaneous with the period ■ which tradition assigns to the arrival of Mon. Enaud. I have been told by several of the oldest, and most in- telligent of the Indians, that this gentleman's sores were all demolished by their ancestors ; and that he himself was driven to Nipisiquit, where he had his per- manent residence. Nothing further- is noticed of the arrival of any French emigrants hither, until the year 1672, or 1673, that is, six years after the treaty of Breda, when, it is said, some French families from St. Maloes arrived here, and settled on the present scite of Baie des Vents Village. About the year 1702, we find the French pretty thick- ly established on different parts of the Mirdmichi, as well as along the Gulf shore towards Miscou ; and about the entrance of the Richibucto. About this time they appear to have cultivated an intimacy with the 'Indians, whom they partially instructed in the rudiments of Christianity. They moreover secured the sympathies of the natives by intermarriages; and this alliance, strengthened by a similarity of religion, secured them in the peaceable possession of the country. 32 COUNTY OF During the regency of the Duke of Orleans, which lasted from the death of Louis the Fourteenth in 1715, until his successor was declared of age in 1722, the French interest made little progress in any part of No- va-Scotia, in consequence of the Regent's honorable observance of the treaty of Utrecht. Under the new Administration, however, of which Cardinal Fleury was the head, eveFy means were used to diffuse French set- tlements even in the remotest parts of the country. This circumstance accounts for the former existence of a French Village at Baie des Vents, another at Neguack, a larger one at Canadian Point ; and a Town comprising upwards of two hundred houses, including a Chapel and Provision Stores, at Beaubair's Point. This Town is said to have been the head quarters of the French ; and the residence of a Monsieur Pierre Beaubair, their superintendent, after whom it, as well as Beaubair's Island, was called. On the east end of Beaubair's Island, where Messrs. Frasers now have their Establishment, it is said the French had a tolerably strong battery ; and also ano- ther, mounting sixteen guns, at French Fort Cove, near the present Mill seat of Mr. Patrick Henderson. They moreover had a manufactory for arms, as well as a ship yard and Commissariat Store at Fawcett's Point, now owned by Joseph Cunard & Co. but then called after the French Commissary. There can be no doubt but the French had settle- NORTHUMBERLAND. 33 ments in all the places I have mentioned, for in the im- mediate vicinity of each there are memorials of the fact. On Bate des Vents Island, the Village opposite to it, at Neguaak, and on Beaubair's point, the remains of cellar walls, wells, and chimnies are visible. In some of these places the soil still retains the traces of remote cultiva- tion ; while in others, culinary articles, old gun barrels, Antique stirrup irons, plough shafts, and other tangible proofs of occupation, have been frequently found. It does not appear that their trade was very conside- rable, or that they made any advances up the rivers ; but neither, nor indeed both of these circumstances, should surprise us. We know that the French are not a commercial people ; that they are strongly imbued with a military penchant : that they are, consequently fonder of building Garrisons and Stockades than of erecting Warehouses and Wharves ; and that hunters and fishermen make but indifferent farmers. Hence we may credit the report, that their whole commerce was confined to an exportation of Fish, Furs and Moose Skins, to Saint John's Island, Cape Breton and Quebec, whence they obtained the necessary supplies of manu- factured goods, West India Produce, &c. In this state we find them on the Miramichi, from the year 1740 to 1757. During the latter year, they suffer- ed very much from some interruption in their trade, and a failure in their crops. In the winter they were re- duced to great extremity ; they endured much from hun- ger, and more from disease; and the ensuing year, in 5 34 COUNTY OF stead of alleviating their misery by relief, terminated it by aggravation. In the spring and winter of 1758, the distress and mi- sery of these poor people being increased by the capture of two French transports, destined to their relief, with Previsions, Clothing, &c. more than Eight Hundred of them died of famine and pestilence ; and were buried chiefly at Beaubair's Point It is said the disease, thus superinduced by their impoverished condition,' was communicated by the L'Indenne of Morlaix, a vessel wrecked near the entrance of the harbour, and whose remains are still lying a short distance from the mouth of Baie des Vents River. Here we might enquire why were the French, if either Aliens or Neutrals, allowed to garrison and occu- py the territories of Great Britain, or if Lieges, why were they permitted to trade directly with the Colonies of a fo- erign state ? The most zealous advocates of unrestrain- ed commerce never yet carried their principles of "Free Trade" to such an unqualified extent as this. I have introduced these seeming anomalies, in order that they may be explained. Although by the "Definitive Treaty" of Utrecht, the French relinquished all Acadia, or rather Nova Scotia, to Great Britain, yet tney always occupied that part of it lying to the North West of Fort Cumberland. Whe- ther this arose from its being a remote part of the Pro- vince, and therefore not entitled to the particular' consi" NORTHUMBERLAND. 35 deration of our government ; or from an inability on their part to bestow the necessary solicitude on it; or from whatever other cause, I shall not presume to de- cide ; but such is the fact, that all the above district, and which now constitutes the Province of New Bruns- wick, never was enjoyed by the British, till after the conquest of Cape Breton. Of this statement the cap- ture of the French transports, and some other circum- stances we have mentioned, are corroborative. The affecting calamities which involved the French settlers in such extensive misery, fell with almost con- centrated violence on Beaubair's town ; and one of the iirst victims of its malignity was Beaubair himself. The other settlements being more extensively cultivated, felt it less severely ; but their surviving inhabitants, ei- ther dreading the hostility of the English, who had al- ready taken Louisburg, or terrified by the character of the visitation from which they had escaped, fled to the Baie des Chaleurs, Saint John's Island, Memramcook, and wherever else they could find refuge. A great number of the Indians had also died, and many of the surviving ones, entertaining the same fears as the French, accom- panied them in their flight. In short every place was deserted but Canadian point, Neguaak and the Batte- ry at French Fort Cove, at each of which a few persons still remained. After the conquest of Quebec, by the British, a ves- sel that had been sent to England with the official des- patches, and the remains of General Wolfe, was, ow- 36 COUNTY OF ing to a stress of weather, or some other adverse cir- cumstance, driven into Miramichi. The Captain, conceiving this to be a favourable op- portunity for replenishing his stock of water, ordered a boat to be manned for that purpose. Six men were ac- cordingly despatched on that duty : they proceeded up the river; landed nt Henderson's cove, where Messrs. Gilmour & Rankin now have their Saw Mills ; and after having loaded their boat, carelessly rambled within the edge of the forest. While indulging their innocent cu- riosity, they were surprised by a party of armed Indi- ans, who had been secretly watching them. The pour fellows were dragged into the woods, and there inhu- manly murdered, by the infliction of all those refined and excruciating tortures peculiar to savage executions. — For the honor of humanity we hope it is untrue, but it is nevertheless confidently asserted, that two or three French soldiers, stationed at French Fort Cove, were present at, and assisted in the performance of this cruel and unprovoked butchery. The Captain, growing alarmed at the prolonged ab- sence of his men, put such enquiries to the Pilot as the nature of his fears suggested. These elicited re- piles that at once confirmed his apprehensions, and de- termined his retaliation. He proceeded with his ves- sel up the river ; silenced the battery, at French Fort Cove, and coming abreast of the settlement at Canadian Point, razed it to the ground, and killed almost every one of the half famished creatures in it. Haying taken NORTHUMBERLAND. 37 the water on board, he proceeded to sea, but on his way out, again wreaked his vengeance on a small Chapel at Neguaak. At his approach the few inhabitants fled ; and then executing his reprisal upon the Church, he set it in flames, from whence the settlement has ever since been distinguished by the name of Burnt Church. In the year 1759, the few French remaining at Mira- michi, along with those at Richibucto, Buctouche, Pet- ticodiac and Memramcook, made their submission to Colonel Frye, of Fort Cumberland. And in the January following, the Rev. Mr. Manack, one of the Roman Ca- tholic Missionaries of these Districts, attended by the principal French inhabitants, and four Indian Chiefs, repaired to the same place and formally subscribed to their submission ; thereby binding themselves, and those whom they represented, to come to Bale Verte, with all their effects, as early in the spring as possible. In the course of the winter, and after the hunting sea- son was over, eight other Indian Chiefs, making in all twelve, tendered their submission. The following is a list of their names ; and of the res- pective districts they governed : Louis Francis, Chief of Miramichi. Dennis Winemowet do of Tobogunkik. Eienne Abchabo do of Pohoomoosh. Claud Atanage do of Gediaak. Paul Lawrence do of La Have. Joseph Algemoure do of Chignecto. John Newit do of Pictou. 38 COUNTY OF Baptist Lamorne do of St. John's Island. Rene Lamorne do of Nalkitgoniash. Jeannot Piquidatjduet of Minas. Augttstin Michael do of Richibucto. Bartlemy Aungualett of Keshpugowitk. As a little glossary is required for some of the names of these places, I shall stop to observe, that Tobogun- kik is the original name of Taboointac;— that Poohoo- moosh alludes to Pugniouehe ; that Gediaak represents Shediaek ; that Chignecto is intended to signify Cum- berland ; that Nalkitgoniash, is meant to express Anti- goneeshe ; and that Keshpugowitk refers to Kishou- buguaak. The above persons are supposed to have been the most distinguished men of the Eastern or Micmac nation, at that time estimated about five thousand souls. The Indian Chiefs were sent to Governor Lawrence at Halifax, who allowed them, after having received a renewal of their submission to his Britannic Majesty, to retain their respective dominions, and exercise their usual prerogatives. The French totally abandoned Mi- armichi, and dispersed themselves through the Counties of Westmoreland and Cumberland ; and thus, in the brief space of three years, did the whole Northern part of this Province relapse into almost original solitude. CHAPTER III. First settlement by the British — daring outrages committed on them by the Indians— rencontre between the Indians and part of the crew of a British sloop of war — the consequences of this struggle — some account of the origin of the Timber Trade and the success that attended it. Although Great Britain obtained peaceable posses- sion of the Province of New Brunswick in the year 1760; the northern part of it may be said to have re- verted to the Indians. No notice being taken of it, for the first four years, by its new masters, the Micmacs again became the lords o£ their paternal wilderness. The authority of the French King this people had never acknowledged ; they always considered the country to be their own ; and the few French settle* ments established in it, as institutions that they tole- rated, because they were convenient. The proud 40 COUNTY OF and indomitable spirit of the Red Man, had never bowed to the foreigner; his uncompromising soul had never learned subjection ; nor had his neck ever submitted to a stranger's yoke. Hence we may reasonably suppose that the submission they were now called upon to make to the British King, was exceedingly repugnant to their feelings ; and that in their profession of allegiance, they were influenced by fear, not by affection. Nor can it be imagined that mere Neophytes could be so familiar with the nature and obligation of an oath, as to contemplate the prostrate subjection such an act involved, or under- stand the responsibility it imposed. In the days of their deepest barbarism, long before science discovered them, or revelation enlightened them, each tribe considered the respective country, or tract they occupied, as the inheritance nature had bestowed upon them. And in the nickering light of religion that now dawned in their souls, they beheld a supreme Being clothed in Justice and Equity; infinite in power: m glory overwhelming ; whose dominion was boundless ; and whose presence pervaded the immensity of space. Their slender acquaintance with Christianity, being obtained through the ministry of a religion peculiarly ceremonial and impressive, only confirmed the senti- ments nature had inspired ; and the Country being left wholly to themselves for four or five years, seemed to be a tacit admission of their right. These circumstances may explain some of the rea- sons why the Indians were so jealous of the first NORTHUMBERLAND. 41 English settlers ; and also account for the frequency of the conspiracies, which they concerted against them. In the preceding chapter we have seen that a Mr. Enaud, from Basque, was the first European that ever visited Miramichi ; that the first British ship that ever cleft its bosom, was the vessel that bore the honoura- ble burthen of Wolfe's remains ; and we shall now see, who was the first English settler that landed on its banks. In the summer 1764, Mr. William Davidson, a gen- tleman from the North of Scotland, and lather to the present Chief Magistrate of this County, arrived here. His was the distinction to be the first English settler in the County of Northumberland ; his the honor, 67 years ago, to engrave the first impression of his foot upon our soil. Of this worthy man's contemporaries but very few, I believe, are now in existence ; but although we cannot, without committing a slight indelicacy, produce many evidences of his character, it is gratifying to know that tradition has preserved a lively recollection of his virtues. Mr. D. is universally represented to have been a man of considerable attainments, of amiable disposi- tion, of enlarged views, and enterprising spirit. At this time there was not a single house standing in the present county of Northumberland ; nor a single European residing wiohin its verge. The abandoned houses of the French, had been industriously destroyed by the Indians ; and the shattered remnant of their for- 6 42 COUNTY OF mer owners, deterred by the recollection of the calami- ty that dispersed them, had neither the inclination nor the courage to revisit the scene of it. Accordingly poor Davidson found himself alone and in a wilderness ; or what was worse, surrounded by sa- vages, whose language he knew not, and with whose customs he was unacquainted. To speak of the difficul- ties this enterprising man must have endured were need- less ; — he left the land of his fathers in search of a trans- atlantic home; he had travelled over the mountain wave, and found a residence in the forest. I shall say nothing of the powerful magnetism of home, for while I write the agonizing syllable, I feel its attractive influ- ence enter my very soul ; nor shall I say any thing of the painful separation from relatives and friends — not a word concerning the anguish that rends the heart, when it is about to be divorced from all that is near and dear to it — not a single remark on the privations, hardships and perils, consequent upon emigration from a popu- lous and flourishing country, into an uninhabited and gloomy forest, where the Micmac ruled by menace, and the Savage legislated by the bloody statutes of the to- mahawk and the knife. In the following year, Mr. Davidson, obtained a grant of 100,000 acres, upon the Elm Tree tract, on the south west branch of the Miramichi. Here, about the year 1772, or 73, he and a Mr. Cort, then lately arrived from Aberdeen, set a cross net, with NORTHUMBERLAND. 43 which they annually caught from 14 to 18 hundred tierces of Salmon. In order to meet the requisitions of an extending trade, Mr. Davidson huilt a large schoo- ner of 300 tons, called the Miramichi. This vessel was lost a couple of years after, while attempting to enter the harbour of New London, on her voyage hence, to the Island of Grenada. Nothing particular occurred, except the occasional hostilities of the Aboriginals, until the year 177-5, when an open rapture commenced between Great Britain and her North American Colonies, now United States. The Indians, who had hitherto been prevented from using open violence, by' a passive submission to their authority, a compliance with their exactions, and the unremitting exertions of the Missionaries who occasion- ally visited them ; now shook off every restraint, and exhibited themselves in their true colours. They com- mitted the most daring outrages ; burned two or more houses ; appropriated the people's cattle to their own use, and plundered what few stores there were ; parti- cularly Mr. Cort's, from which they took upwards of 700 Moose skins ; and whatever else they considered valuable. They openly declared in favor of the Re- volted Americans ; and regularly corresponded with them by delegates sent to the lines. Nothing was heard but their deafening shouts and war yells ; as they pro- ceeded up and down the river, displaying flags and other symbols of their disaffection ; and breathing the most sanguinary denunciations, against the terrified and unoffending settlers. 44 COUNTY OF The arrival, in this year, of a Mr. Alexander Hen- derson, two persons named Murdoch and Malcolm, and a few others, from Saint John s Island, although it in- fused a little vigour into the harrassed settlers, was unable to check the overbearing arrogance, or restrain the increasing cruelty of the natives. As the American interest advanced in the war, the Indians became commensurately vindictive; and the people, in order to preserve their lives and property, were obliged to represent their perilous situation to the government at Halifax. Early in the summer of 1777, when the people had given up all hopes of relief from Halifax ; and were ac- tually preparing to fly from a murderous fiat, which they were assured would issue against them from an Indian conclave, then sitting at Bartibog Island, the Viper Sloop of War, Captain Harvey, appeared oft Oak Point. This vessel, on her way hither, had captured an Ame- rican Privateer, called the Lafayette ; and that he might the more easily seize the Indians, Captain H dispatched her up the River under American colours. In order more effectually to insure the success of this stratagem, a Mr. Ross, of Perce, who had been on his way hence, homeward bound with a cargo of salt, and who had ac- quainted Captain Harvey with the state of Miramiehi, was, at his own request, put on board the prize. Not- withstanding these deceptive measures, and the addi- tional one of the crew hailing as Bostonians, the rwse'did not succeed. NORTHUMBERLAND. 45 After some parley, however, so fond of plunder had the fellows become, by their repeated robberies of the people, that they determined to go on board and take the vessel, no matter to what nation she belonged. A - bout 30 or 35 of them were allowed to co'me on board, when spme, finding resistance to be useless, peaceably submitted ; while the ringleaders, after a desperate struggle, were overcome, put in irons, and carried to Quebec. The two following incidents, connected with this transaction, exhibit the ferocity, as well as natural bra- very of the men, with whom the early settlers had to deal. Pierre Martin, an Indian of remarkably large stature, and athletic make, made, when two English marines at- tempted to put him in irons, a most desperate resist- ance. In the course of the contest he particularly dis- tinguished himself; but on this occasion, all the haugh- tiness of his soul came tp nerve the energy of his arm. It is said that he absolutely strangled the two men in the scuffle ; and that after he had received two or three se- vere wounds from some others who attacked him, that he wrenched a bayonet from one of the sailors, and by the force of a blow which he aimed at the disarmed man, drove the weapon through one of the stanchions of the vessel. Being at length overpowered by numbers, he fell apparently dead, and literally riddled with wounds. But the Micmac's spirit, was not yet extinguished ; lin- gering existence still fluttered in his bosom ; for when 46 COUNTY OF the almost inanimate corpse lay bathed in blood, gash- ed with wounds, and quivering with agony, Martin ral- lying the dying energies of his soul, sprang to his feet, and fastening upon the throat of one of his companions, whom he upbraided with cowardice, had nearly suc- ceeded in strangling the poor wretch, when lie received his death blow from one Robert Beck, an Irishman. This is the first incident ; the second one is as fol- lows: After the Indians had been some time in custody in Quebec, the authorities there, thought proper to re- move a part of them to Halifax. Seven or eight were accordingly put on board an armed vessel, which on her voyage encountered one of the enemy's cruisers- While the officers and crew were preparing for the en- gagement, Etienne Barnaby, one of the Indian prison- ers, requested leave to fight for King George, stipula- ting at the same time, that he should have a place on the quarter deck. His request, although strongly tinc- tured with pride, was complied with. His fetters were removed ; a musket placed into his hands ; and so judiciously did he use it, that he shot two men who were successively placed at the wheel of the American ship. The English flag obtained the victory ; the prize was brought into Halifax, and Etienne received his liberty as the recompence of his valour. It may also be added that Mr. Ross, of whom I have spoken, lost his arm in the affair with the Viper ; and was afterwards made King's pilot between Quebec and Gaspe. NORTHUMBERLAND. 47 Of the eighteen Indians, thus taken, not more than five or six ever returned ; among these, however, were the two truculent villians, Kives and Tax, who shortly after, availing themselves of the panic, created by Mc Lean's conspiracy * renewed the apprehensions of the people, and committed many atrocities, of which the authenticated murder of two men and a boy, was not the greatest. Up to this period, as there were but a few settlers, and not a very large capital, our trade was necessarily limited. It consisted principally, of an exportation of Salmon and Alewives, to the Spanish and West India markets ; an inconsiderable business in Furs ; and a trifling barter with such trading vsssels, as came hither from Halifax, and the circumjacent ports. In 1786, an additional feature was introduced into our trade, while an accession of numbers was added to our population. This year, Mr. Davidson commenced working two saw-mills, he had erected on one of the tributrries of the North West ; and several loyalists and disbanded soldiers settled on lands they ©biainedrfrom Government. At this time, and indeed for several years after, large pines were so abundant, that the very edges of the rivers were fringed with them ; no one, however, was acquainted with the manufacture of timber; but the * This unfortunate and deluded man, was executed at Quebec, for conspi- ring with some Vermontese Raftsmen, to surprise the garrison, and deliver up the city to the Americans. 48 COUNTY OF period was rapidly arriving when we were to be initiated into its mysteries — When our trade was to be enlarged by the introduction of a very important branch of domes- tic industry. In 1790, agreeably to a contract made between him and Messrs. Hunter and Robertson, of Greenock, Mr. Davidson shipped three cargoes of masts and spars for his Majesty's Dock Yards, on board of the Achilles, Capt. Pike, the Admiral Parker, Captain Skinner, and the Queen, Captain Dawson. After the death of Mr. D. which happened in the course of this year, the mast contract was taken by Messrs. Fraser & Thorn* a firm, then lately established on Beaubair's Island. For the five or six succeeding years, the whole trade of the country, then embracing a very brisk and profitable exportation of fish, furs, peltries, and sawed lumber, fell into the hands of these Gentlemen. The head, of this respectable firm Commenced life in humble circumstances ; and by a course of indefatiga- ble and honourable industry, realized a considerable for- tune. He Was a man of strong mind, extensive infor- mation, and inflexible rectitude. Amiable and social in private life, he ruled his dependents with clemency ; punctual and upright in his professional intercourse, he acquired influence by his integrity, and accumulated a fortune by his honesty. For several years was he the talented and uncompromising representative of this county, where his name and his virtues are still che- rished with respect and attachment. So deservedly NORTHUMBERLAND. 49 great was the confidence reposed in this Worthy man, by the electors of Northumberland, that even long after his removal from it, they continued to make him the de- pository of their rights and privileges ; nor would they liave relieved him of his distinguished "solicitude, had not a greater dignity interposed between their attachment and his inclination. A few years before his deafti, Mt. F. was appointed a Privy Councillor of Nova-Scotia, in which Province, the name of the Hon. James Fraser, is now as dear, as it was then familiar. Thus, by the path of honour, did he arrive to the highest colonial distinction, leaving behind him a name and a deputation, alike creditable to himself, and grateful to his posterity. Like the opening blossom that gradually discloses its sweets, and unfolds its beauties, the latent resources of Miraraichi, now began to germinate ; — and as the fra- grant exhalation of the flower conciliates our admiration, by charming our senses ; so by the prospect of making money, promising wealth and independence, many were allured hither, from Great Britain, the United States, and other places. Population began to thicken, a few additional houses and stores sprung up ; and these circumstances, shadowing the outline of an anticipated improvement, the measures such expectations would naturally suggest, were very prudently adopted. The present county lot was purchased ; a town reserve laid off; a temporary gaol erected ; and different other in- stitutions founded. 7 50 COUNTY OF It may afford a little interest, here, briefly to advert to the origin and early progress of our timber trade. Two cargoes, the Friends' Adventure, and the Black - itt, shipped by Messrs. Fraser and Thom, in 1792, con- tained the first square timber ever exported from Mira- michi. Such was the humble beginning of a trade, that has since acquired so extensive a character. The timber being good, and easy to be obtained, a rather extensive, lumbering now commenced ; and pro- bably it would have been very remunerative, had not the French Republic, just then organized, declared war against Great Britain. In consequence of this event, the manufacturing in- terest became greatly depressed at home ; — Ships, pro- visions, seamen's wages, insurance, and freights rose; while the Colonial timber suffered a great depreciation. The subjoined statement shows how 7,000 tons of timber, brought to market in the summer of 1793, were disposed of. Brought to Market in 1793. 7,000 tons. Tons. Shipped in 1797, 1,150 in 1798, - - 800 in 1800, - 650 in 1801, - 200 Quantity shipped 2,800 NORTHUMBERLAND. 51 Brought over— Quantity brought to Market, 7,000 tons. Quantity shipped 2,800 Sawed into lumber, and \ 1 nrin split into lathwood J 1,UUU Reduced by re-hewing 400 Lost by the ice - - - 600 4,800 Quantity accounted for on 1 ■ onn contra side • - J 4,8 °° Sunk, rotted, purloined, &c. 2,200 7,000 Thus we see, that of these 7,000 tons of timber ; but 2,800 tons were shipped ; and that so low as 10s. per ton, and not until 8 years after it had come to market. About this time, the fur trade, which had been for some years declining, now almost totally failed ; and of the Moose, formerly so plentiful, not one was now to be seen. The mast contract also ended this year ; and hence, our trade may be said to have settled down into an almost typical minature of its present character. The following statement exhibits the different articles of commerce, with thejr average prices up to this period. Salmon, per tierce of 300 lbs. £2 10 Alewives, per barrel - - - 15 Herrings, per do. - . - - 12 6 Moose Skins, each - - - 7 6 Beaver Skins, per lb. - 6 Red Fox Skins, each - - - 6 Otter Skins, each - - - 12 6 52, COUNTY OF Loupcervier Skins, each, - " 1.2 6> Fisher Skins, each. - - 0- 6 Martin Skins, eaqh - 2' 6 Minx Skins, do. - 2 Musqwash Skins, do - 0, 10- White Pine Timber,, per ton - - 10 Red Pine, - do. - - 12 6 Black Birch do. - 15 White Pine Lathwood, per cord, - 16 White Pine Masts, f rota 16 to. 23 "I 0/ g inches in diameter ; — per inch / Spruce Spars, 6 to. 13 inches ; per inch 6 Merchantable, W. P. Boards ; p. m. 1 5 Clear Bpards, and Planks ; do, 1 1.2, 6. Merchantable Shingles; do. 7 6 I have, already, said; that the sedition; of a,Mp?. M'Lpanj w,hp suffered at Quebec,, for conspiring against, the go- vernment, and whose execution took place*. I believe, in the fab of 1793, afft>r,ded an opportunity to- the Indians for renewing fcbfciil outrage.. It is sajd thafc thisman was here; that he usgd every means- to. excite, a-,- revolt ar mong them, and that, he secretly supplied thein. with arms and ammunition.. It is. also, stated^ thajfc ,. for some tiifte,, a£ter he,wemVfrQmjthis,,the Indians frequently, as- semble^ in gfeat numbers,, at Buunt. Church, and, Moo- dy's point*. On one occasion, up.wacds of. tw,o.hundied of them met at the former place,, andy had conatrted measures; f ©f, the total extirpation, of the: people,, when the timely auriyal of. the Rev. Ma?. Cassinje.tte,ia Roman Cathqjjcj priest,. from.Gaspe, put an eod. to ( the confer- ence, by, informing them of the fate of. the. man, who iiad NORTHUMBERLAND. 53 sedueed, them from fcheir'allegiance. On receiving- this disagreeable intelligence,, they all returned to their du- s ty ; and the people, who had been obliged toi abandon their homes, and concentrate themselves at Mr, He'n- derson's, in Chatham, and in other places of defence, returned to their respective houses, and enjoyed a tran- quility, which has never since been disturbed by the Indians. While arraigning the guilty, we should discriminate a little, least the innocent-should be involved in their cen- sure.. It. is,, therefore*, but justice t® add,, that, during this commotion,, the. Zwlian tribe* not. only conducted themselves with, exemplary forbearance, but even, fre- quently interposed their influence in behalf of the people. Having now traced the progress of this settlement for the first thirty years, I shall" leave it to the reader's re- flection, to consider the circumstances of the country, and the nature of the numerous obstacles and difficul- ties, the people must have encountered. There were then, neither Churches, nor Schools, Roads, or Bridges, Ferries, or Highways. Every one travelled by water ; communication was tedious and uncertain ; travelling dangerous and fatiguing ; supplies extravagantly dear, and very precarious ; delicacies unknown and priva- tions familiar. Nor were there either Balls, or Routes, or Assemblies ; the intricacies of the dance were forgot- ten in the perplexities of life ; the pleasures of festivity seldom sweetened the bitterness of fatigue. With lux- uries they were unacquainted ; and their enjoyments were as few, as their hardships were numerous. 54 COUNTY OF Here let the reader pause for a moment, while I pro- ceed to close this chapter, by noticing the first act of blood, that ever stained the British Annals, in the Coun- ty of Northumberland. In the year 1 797, Duncan McDonald, a resident of Bai des Vents village,having had some misunderstanding with a neighbour of his, named Donald McVicar, shot him dead, under the most aggravating circumstances of Seliberate malice. McDonald was executed at Newcas- tle, on a temporary gallows, erected a short distance from the present Court House. For the trial of this un- fortunate man, was the first commission of Oyer and Ter- miner held in this county ; on which occasion, the Hon. John Saunders, now Chief Justice, presided, while the present Judge Bliss conducted the prosecution. CHAPTER IV. Gradual improvement of the Country — rapid increase of Trade -state of Miramichi before the fire — visit of his Excellency Sir Howard Douglas — description of the Fire. The man who writes of a Country almost covered with forests, and but recently emerged from semi-bar- barism, cannot be supposed to have much to relate. — He is like the Eastern traveller, who having wandered over the deeerts of Arabia, and the plains of Hindostan, can supply little other than an account of the fatigues he endured, and a catalogue of the dangers from which he escaped. At the period when our last chapter closed, the mast contract ended, and the fur trade declined. About the same time, a few settlements were made on different parts of the Miramichi ; but although population in- 56 COUNTY OF creased, farmers did not multiply. Most of the new settlers contented themselves with living on their land without cultivating it. Nearly all were employed, either in manufacturing timber, or in the fisheries. In the absence of official information, which, owing to the numerous alterations made in the Custom House business, I found it impossible to obtain, we cannot be far wide of the truth, when we affirm, that the fur trade for the ten or twelve years it was followed, seldom ex- ceeded from £1,800 to £2,000 a year ; that our timber exports were often as low as 3,000, and rarely exceeded 6,000 tons annually ; but that our fisheries were gene- rally very productive, often varying in the catch, or quantity cured for exportation, from 3,000 barrels to 5,000 tierces of salmon ; and sometimes of alewives, from considerably above that amount to double the number. Such may be considered the extent and character of our trade, until about the year 1813 or 1814. During all this time, though Europe writhed in the agonies of war, we reposed in the arms of peace. Nei- ther the conflagration that consumed the Jerusalem of the Czars, nor the hurricane that swept away the fading glories «f the Escurial, ever reaehed us. Living in a retired nook, time with us wended its way undisturbed by a ripple. We neither indulged fears, nor entertained apprehensions) for though our venerable parent had volunteered to be the World's Forlorn Hop&,ihe pre-emi- nency of her danger suggested no alarm. Convinced NORTHUMBERLAND. 57 that she would triumph, the assurance became the bond of our security. Although the extraordinary coalition which Buona- parte projected against Great Britain, in the North of Europe, was of considerable advantage to the Canadas, and even to some of the ports in the Bay of Fundy, nei- ther Miramichi, nor any of the other settlements along the gulf derived any benefit from it, until the year 1815. They were then, as they are now, neither known, nor appreciated. The Country bordering on the gulf, and indeed the whole Province, has always been slandered, by every pamphleteer and scribbler that has written about the Colonies. The ignorance of one class has misrepresent- ed it ; a second has reviled and caricatured it ; and the knavery of a third, has endeavoured to deprive it of its resources, and plunder it of its acquisitions. Altho' possessing a valuable sea coast, and a fertile soil ; en- riched with large forests ; blest with a salubrious cli- mate ; and inhabited by British subjects ; it has been almost universally represented, as a country covered with swamps, enveloped in fogs, as cold as the arctic circle, and peopled by savages. This inverted descrip- tion reminds me of Basil Hall's satire on the hydrogra- phy of the Chinese seas. "I thought it the safer way," says the Captain, "to trust to lead, latitude, and look out ; and shut up my maps and charts altogether, for according to them, I found myself sailing across mighty forests ; scudding under bare poles in the interior of Chi- 8 58 COUNTY OF na; and creeping over shoals, in places where I could find no bottom. But as the Alchymist reclaims the precious metal from the dross that disfigures its excellence, and conceals its beauty ; so the discerning eye of speculation, perceived our resources through the fogs and mists of the gaze- teers. About the year 1814, or 1815, the timber trade be- came a favourable and profitable pursuit, both here, and in Great Britain. Our usual commerce increased ; and ship-building added another branch to our industry. Every thing began to wear a new aspect. A tide of emi- gration flowed upon us ; and our population rapidly in- creased. Villages and settlements, Churches and Schools, with other corresponding features of improvement, shooting as it were from the wilderness, announced the rapidity of our progress. The ministry, dreading the hostility of the Northern Powers of Europe ; and driven from the Baltic, by the secret treaty of Tilsit, were obliged to resort to the Co- lonies, in order to obtain the necessary supplies of timber for naval purposes. Thus thrown upon their own hither- to uncultivated resources, the government wisely afford- ed every encouragement for the manufacture of Colonial timber. By special acts of Parliament, it was admitted duty free, while the permanent war duties on foreign growth, were considerably increased. These favoura- ble circumstances, backed by the solemn assurances of NORTHUMBERLAND. 59 the government, that the same liberal policy which ne- cessity had dictated, should henceforward be strictly observed, created a strong predilection in favour of the new -trade. Accordingly a great number of persons embarked in it ; and in a few years, upwards of One Million sterling, became invested in Saw Mills, Wharves, Booms, &c. The trade of the Canadas, now assumed a very extensive character ; while that of New Bruns- wick, may be said to have commenced. Not only Quebec, but St. John, St.. Andrews, and even Miramichi, henceforth became the annual resort of a great number of trading vessels, as well as of large bodies of emi- grants. In the pressing exigencies of the British Nation, did the colonial timber trade originate ; and to these exigencies may we ascribe its subsequent progress and extension, as well as our own immediate local import- ance. From this period until the year 1824, trade generally increased, checked however by those casualties, to which commerce is liable, and which no human pru- dence can avert. In this year, as the following tables exhibit, the commerce of this' county, seems to have attained its greatest magnitude. The Imports and Exports of the County of Northum- berland, in the year 1824;— the number of vessels, ex- clusive of coasters, therein entered and discharged; also an account of their registered tonnage and seamen. 60 COUNTY OF Arrived from the United Kingdom and Foreign Eu- rope, 327 vessels registering 94,601 tons, manned by 4,274 seamen, and bringing the following goods and merchandize. Barrels of Flour, . 17,285 do. of Bread, . 1,063 do. of Meal, . 11,598 do. of Beef and Pork, 6,016 do. of Peas and Beans, 1,204 do. of Naval Stores, 0,218 do. of Onions and Seeds, 0,710 Bushels of Corn 17,262 do. of Barley, 0,200 Cwts. of Rice, 0,160 do. of Coffee, 0,126 do. of Sugar, 2,462 do. of Tobacco, . 0,727 Gallons of Wine, 6,493 do. of Brandy and Gin, 23,533 do. of Rum, 86,9 h <7 Pounds of Pimento, 0,224 Tons of Salt, 0,410 do. of Iron and Copper, 0,125 do. of Mahogany and Logwood, . 0,042 Chests of Tea, 0,280 Coils of Cordage, 1,144 Chaldrons of Coal, 1,063 Number of Hides, 0,034 Thousands of Bricks, . 0,082 do. of Staves, . 0,034 61 NORTHUMBERLAND. Pieces of Stone Ware; . . 60,300 Packages of Merchandize, . 3,600 . The probable amount of these Imports, in Currency, adding costs and charges to the difference of exchange, may be estimated at about £180,000. Exported in 331 vessels, registering 94,800 tons, and manned by 4,341 seamen, viz : Timber, tons, 141,384 Pine Boards and Plank, M feet, 1,256 Thousands of Staves, 0,304 do. of Shingles, 0,008 Pieces of Masts and Spars, . 1,400 do. of Oars and Rafters, . 0,702 do. of Handspikes, 0,888 Cords of Lathwood, ', 3,080 Barrels of Pickled Fish, 0,580 do. of Flour, 0,737 do. of Bread, 0,007 Quintals of Dry Fish, 0,263 Boxes of smoked Herrings, 0,070 Gallons of Rum, 8,627 Barrels of Navai Stores, . 0,045 Cwts. of Tobacco, 0,106 Assuming the general rates of Invoice in our estima- tion of these exports, we cannot rate them very far above £160,000 currency. By this scale, our Imports would exceed our remittances by £20,000 ; and conse- quently leave the country in debt for that amount. Dis- agreeable, however, as such a situation would be, ours 62 COUNTY OF was still worse. When our shipments arrived in Great Britain, the timber market, in that country was very dull ; but as the greater part of them was consigned to pay remittances, sales had to be effected, though at a very depreciated price. Of this year's trade, we soon ascertained the result by feeling the consequences. After paying Freight, Insu- rance, Commission, and all the Incidental charges of Agency, &c. it was found that the Nett Proceeds arising from our consignments, did not collectively, average more than one half of the prime cost. That is: for most of the timber sent home, in 1824, the shippers did not receive more than from 9s. to 9s. 6d. per- ton. This arose, chiefly, from our excesses, and from the facilities we afforded the manufacturer. The merchants here, having imported rather largely, had as a matter of course, to credit rather liberally. Hence the timber trade became an exclusive pursuit ; and consequently, the only means by which our com- merce could be sustained. The lumberers, in many in- stances, were men of little property and less integrity. The supplies afforded them , were highly priced ; and this circumstance, coupled with the facts, of their hav- ing little to lose, and hardly a probability of gaining, in- duced an extravagance in their habits, and a careless- ness in their business, which generally involved them with the merchant. The latter, suffering from repeated losses of this kind, superadded to those accruing from high freights, and other disadvantages of chartering, a very sensible diminutiop^of real property succeeded. NORTHUMBERLAND. 63 Notwithstanding these disheartening circumstances, the trade of the following year was nearly the same ; — but who, when adverting to 1825, can assume the calm- ness and deliberation, necessary for the discussion of commercial subjects. In this year, we were visited by a calamity, which making us popular by our misery, in- troduced us to a sorrowful intimacy with most of the ci- vilized nations of the earth. However comparatively insignificant the country may be, of which I have presumed to be the historian, or however desirable it were to avoid the charge of having endeavoured to attire my effort in the furbelows and flounces of extraneous drapery ; I cannot refrain de- voting a few pages to the consideration of an event which has introduced a new era into this pro- vince. A few months before that visitation, of which we shall speak anon, and we were happy and cheerful. Our trade was looking up ; and brightening were our prospects. The bosom of our river sustained a large fleet loaded with the productions of many climes ; its sloping banks were enamelled with the beauties of expanding vegeta- tion, and the edge of each flowery belt was fringed by the luxuriant foliage of the surrounding forest. Our Wharves and Warehouses groaned under the weight of the wealth they contained ; the market was well stocked with its staple commodity ; ships clustered on our sea board ; commerce flourished in our towns ; and plenty filled our hamlets. Health sat on every cheek ; gladness beamed 64 COUNTY OF in every eye. Our late excellent Governor, too, Sir Howard Douglas, came to fill the cup of our pleasure, by favoring us with his presence. The visit of so distinguished a personage was exceed- ingly nattering ; and the solicitude his excellency evinced for our prosperity, seemed to promise a continuance of it. The interview between the Governor and the Go- verned was an exhibition of the most amiable feelings. Respect and attachment distinguished the conduct of the people ; affability and condescension marked the de- portment of the magistrate. The order of the day was harmony ; the only rivalry, who should pay most res- pect to a man, that deserved it from every one. In short, we enjoyed all the blessings of a Jubilee, without enduring any of the fatigues of it ; while a sumptuous entertainment, alike creditable to the distin- guished guest, and his hospitable entertainers, closed the ceremony of the festival. Heaven seemed to smile upon us ; and, as if to acknowledge its benignity, by an act that would hallow our thanksgiving, and purchase future blessings, the foundation of a Presbyterian Church, was personally laid at Newcastle, by Sir How- ard himself. Every heart throbbed with pleasure ; present enjoy- ment inspired coeval happiness ; and future prospects opened a pleasant way before us. But appearances are often deceitful ; some of the most beautiful flowers grow among briers ; and a hidden NORTHUMBERLAND. 65 thorn lurks under the rose. The zephyrs that frisk on the surface of the sea, are often followed by the gale that distracts it ; the breeze that fans the ocean's cheek, is succeeded by the hurricane that . convulses its bowels ; — the evening's tempest frequently arabuscadee behind the balmy stillness of a summer's morn ; — the setting rays of the sun occasionally light the path of a Tornado ; and all the undefinable horrors of a dark and tempestuous night, sometimes tread upon the retiring steps of a mild and 'beautiful day. In the midst of our enjoyments, the cause of our ap- proaching calamity had already commenced its opera- tion. The summer of 1825, was unusually warm in both hemispheres, particularly in America, where its effects were fatally visible, in the prevalence of epidemical dis- orders. During July and August, extensive fires raged in different parts of Nova Scotia, especially in the east- ern division of the Peninsula, but the country being ge- nerally cleared for a considerable distance round the settlements and villages, little injury was sustained. In Miramichi, and throughout the northern part of New Brunswick, the season had been remarkably dry ; scarcely any rain had fallen ; and considerable appre- hensions were entertained for the crops. Very exten- sive fires were observed in a north westerly direction ; along the south side of the Baie des Chaleurs ; in seve- ral parts of the District of Gaspe ; in the neighborhoed 9 66 COUNTY OF of Richibucto, and thence in a southerly direction to- wards "Westmoreland. These fires, however, being rather ordinary circum- stances, as burning the trees and roots is the common system of clearing land, no danger was anticipated. But however reluctant I feel to scatter tears over our history, I shall no longer seek an evasion, by dwelling on preliminaries. From the first to the fifth of October, 1825, a season generally very cool, an extraordinary and unnatural heat prevailed. The protracted drought of the summer, act- ing upon the aridity of the forests, had rendered them more than naturally combustible ; and this facilitating both the dispersion and the progress of the fires that ap- peared in the early part of the season, produced the un- usual warmth. On the sixth, the fire was evidently approximating to us ; at different intervals of this day, fitful blazes and flashes were observed to issue from different parts of the woods, particularly up the north west, at the rear of Newcastle, in the vicinity of Douglastown and Moor- fields ; and along the banks of the Bartibog. Many also heard the crackling of falling trees and shrivelled branch- es ; while a hoarse rumbling noise, not unlike the rush- ing of distant thunder, and divided by pauses, like the intermittent discharges of artillery, was distinct and audible. NORTHUMBERLAND. 67 On the seventh the heat increased to such a degree, and became so very oppressive, that many complained of its enervating effects. About 12 o'clock, a pale sickly mist, lightly tinged with purple, emerged from the fo- rest, and settled over it. This cloud soon retreated be- fore a large dark one, which occupying its place, wrapt the firmament in a pall of vapour. This incumbrance, retaining its position, till about three o'clock, the heat became tormentingly sultry. There was not a single breath of air. The atmosphere was overloaded ; — an irresistible lassitude seized the people ; and a stupifying dullness seemed to pervade every place but the woods which now trembled, and rustled, and shook, with an incessant and thrilling noise of explosions rapidly fol- lowing each other, and mingling their reports with a discordant variety of loud and boisterous sounds. At this time, the whole country appeared to be en- circled by a Fiery Zone, which gradually contracting its circle by the devastation it made, seemed as if it would not converge into a point while any thing remained to be destroyed. A little after four o'clock, an immense pillar of smoke rose in a vertical direction at some distance N. W. of Newcastle, for a while, and the sky was absolutely blackened by this huge cloud; but a light northerly breeze springing up, it gradually distended, and then melted into a variety of shapeless mists. About an hour after, or probably at half-past 5 o'clock, innume- rable large spires of smoke, issuing from different parts 68 COUNTY OF of the woods, and illuminated by flames, that seemed to pierce them, mounted to the sky. A heavy and suffo- cating canopy, extending to the utmost verge of obser- vation, and appearing more terrific, by the vivid flashes and blazes that wriggled and darted irregularly through it, now hung over us in threatening suspension, while showers of flaming brands, calcined leaves, ashes and cinders, seemed to scream through the growling noise that prevailed in the woods. All these palpable indications of the approaching ruin were unheeded, probably, because the people had never yet experienced the dreadful effects of fire, or had not sufficiently considered the change, wrought in the fo- rests, by the protracted heat of the summer. Nor could any other reasons have betrayed them into a neglect of the warning, which Mr. Wright and others endeavour- ed to propagate. Had the timely admonition of these gentlemen, received the attention it merited, many are of opinion, that a considerable part of the calamity might have been averted. It would be cruel, however, to harrow the recollection now ; experience makes wise men of us all ; after having endured evils, we become astonishing clever in prescribing antidotes. About 9 o'clock, or shortly after, a succession of loud and appalling roars thundered through the woods. Peal after peal, crash after crash, came bellowing the sentence of destruction. Every succeeding shock crea- ted fresh alarm ; every clap came loaded with its own destructive energy. With greedy rapidity did they ad- NORTHUMBERLAND. 69 vance to the devoted scene of their ministry; nothing could impede their progress ; they removed every ob- stacle by the desolation they occasioned. Several hundred miles of prostrate forests and smitten woods marked their devastating way. They came rushing with awful violence, devouring at every step, and hewing a frightful avenue to the spot where their fury was to be consummated. The tremendous bellowing became more and more terrific. The earth seemed to stagger as if it had reel- ed from its ancient foundations. The harmony of crea- tion appeared to have been deranged ; and about to revert into original chaos. .Earth, Air, Sea, and Sky ; all visi- ble creation seemed to conspire against man; and to tot- ter under the weight of some dreadful commission they were charged to execute. The river, tortured inco vio- lence by the hurricane, foamed with rage, and flung its boiling spray upon the land. The thunder pealed along the vault of Heaven ; the lightning rent .the firmament in pieces. For a moment, and all was still, a deep and awful silence reigned over every thing. All nature ap- peared to be hushed into dumbness ;— when — suddenly a lengthened and sullen roar came booming through the forest, and driving a thousand massive and devouring flames before it. Then Newcastle, and Douglastown, and the whole- Northern side of the river, extending from Bartibog to the Nashwaak, a distance of more than 100 miles in length, became enveloped in an immense sheet of flame, that spread over nearly 6,000 square miles. 70 COUNTY OF That the stranger may form a faint idea of the deso- lation and misery no pen can describe, he must picture to himself a large and rapid river, thickly settled for 100 miles, or more, on both sides of it. He must also fancy four thriving towns two on each side of this river ; and then reflect, that these towns and settlements were all composed of wooden houses, stores, stables, and barns ; that these barns and stables were filled with the crops ; and that the arrival of the fall importation had stocked the warehouses and stores, with spirits, powder, and a variety of combustible articles, as well as with the ne- cessary supplies for the approaching winter. He must then remember, that the cultivated' or settled part of the river, is but a long narrow stripe, about a quarter of a mile wide, and lying between the river, and almost in- terminable forests, stretching along the very edge of its precincts ; and all round it. Extending his conception, he will see these forests thickly expanding over more than 6,000 square miles, and absolutely parched into tinder by theprotracted heat of a long summer.and by the large fires that had streamed through almost every part of them. Let him then animate the picture by scattering countless tribes of wild animals ; hundreds of domestic ones ; and even thousands of men through the interior. Having done all this, he will have before him, a feeble description of the extent, features; and general circum- stances of the country, which, on the night I have men- tioned, was suddenly buried in fire. What shall we say cf the inconceiveably awful and terrific scene that now presented itself ? Who shall at- NORTHUMBERLAND. 71 tempt to describe the condition of a country, tortured and agonised by a hurricane, on every blast of which a messenger of vengeance seemed to ride. Unpardonably vain would that man be — exceedingly high should he stand in his own esteem, who would for a moment, think himself capable of describing the situation of a country, overwhelmed by a conflagration, whose every blast re- sembled the emissions of hell, and whose every billow appeared to sustain a demon. What eye can follow the impetuous course of a raging and consuming fire, sweeping over forests, towns, vil- lages, and hamlets, rooting up trees, ploughing the earth, and destroying every thing ? What shall we say of the tremendous howling of the storm, dashing broken and burning trees, scorching sand, and flaming houses through the air? What of the boiling surges of the river and its different tributaries, flinging their maddened foam all around them, and smashing every thing that came within their fury? What of the indescribable confusion on board of 150 large vessels imminently exposed to danger; many of them frequently on fire; some burning, and others burned ? It is painful to dwell on the agonized feelings and in- describable terrors of the wretched and miserable inha- bitants. But painful however, as such a task would be, to overcome the aversion, is not half so difficult, as to acquire the competency. Even now, the shrieks, 72 COUNTY OF screams, and cries, of a wretched and beggared people involved in ruin, desolation and despair,ring their mourn- ful cadences upon the ear. Oh God ! merciful and just, how shuddering were the frantic cries, the wild expres- sions of horror, and the despairing groans of hundreds upon hundreds of poor houseless creatures, flying from their smoking habitations, they knew not whither ; and mingling the thrilling echoes of their anguish, with the yells, roarings, and bellowings, of wild beasts, and do- mestic animals, perishing by fire and suffocation. Who can gauge the misery, or estimate the agony of poor industrious people suddenly stript of their all : and exposed, almost without a hope, to the dreadful alternative, of being either consumed by fire, or famish- ed by hunger ? What tongue can express the intensity of anguish ; what mind can contemplate the poignancy of that sorrow, which must have wrung the bursting hearts of men, and women, running half naked ; and in wild disorder, deploring their loss, and anticipating their end ? Of children looking for their parents ; parents looking for their children; and mothers encumbered with their infants, urging their way through lakes of fire, and volumes of smoke ? The more I endeavour to contemplate this awful dis- pensation, the more convinced am I of my inadequacy to do so. When I strive to raise my mind to a full con- sideration of it, its overwhelming magnitude crushes the attempt. Every step I make to approach it, the farther am I flung from it ; and the more intensely I NORTHUMBERLAND. 73 strain my aching eyes to observe it, the less I see of it, for its multiplied and various horrors intervening be- tween the vision and the picture, wrap the whole in impenetrable gloom. Resting on the indulgence of those who have been kind enough to patronize this work, it may not be im- proper to state, that I was, at the time of the "Great Fire," residing within a mile of Newcastle. If my opi- nion be entitled to any consideration, this is its candid expression. — A greater calamity, than the Fire, which happened in Miramichi, never befell any forest country, and has been rarely excelled in the annals of any other : and the general character of the scene was such, that all it required, to complete a picture of the General Judgment, was the blast of a Trumpet, the voice of the Archangel, and the resurrection of the Dead. 10 CHAPTER V. Condition of the People, and appearance of the Country after the Fire.— Statement of lives lost and property destroyed. — Amount of contributions received for the sufferers ; and an account of its disposal. If it be difficult to consider the action of the fire, it is no less painful to describe its effects. The elements had warred against us, and the Country bore the dread- ful impress of their hostility. A night of unexam- pled terror had come upon us ; and sad and sor- rowful was the morning that succeeded it. After a long and weary vigil of anxiety and travail, the slowly returning day faintly glimmered upon our misery. It approached tardily and heavily, insinuating a dim and shadowy light, scarcely perceptible through the thick and steaming exhalations, Hat issued from the boiling NORTHUMBERLAND. 75 streams and rivers. The morning of the 8th came ; but it was dull, and dreary, and comfortless ; nor did the languidly rising sun bring any relief to a wretched and withering people. Like the weary sentinel, who ex- hausted after a long night's watching, reluctantly leaves his bed, so did the jaded luminary, sluggishly rise from its hazy couch. Jaundiced and livid was its disk ; pale and blanched were its rays ; and vainly did it toil and struggle to escape from its murky prison. Notwithstanding its having rained heavily during the night, the fires still blazed in tlie woods ; but, though we heard their almost exhausted fury moaning through the leafless trees, we could not see them till between 8 and 9 o'clock. From the sombrous dawning of the day, until then, it might be said that we lived in a mist. The drowsy and moistened sun, now feebly twinkling through several interstices self-cleft in the clouds, by the irregular violence of their motion, shed a sickly light, which partially revealing the desolation only served to increase it. A more ghastly, or a more revolting picture of hu- man misery, than the country now exhibited, cannot be well imagined. The whole district of cultivated land I have already described, was shrouded in the agoni- zing memorials of some dreadfully deforming havoc. — Of all its former comeliness, not a single vestige of a single lineament remained. The tornado had poured its many wrathful vials over it ; and in the irrepressible fury of its rage, had swept from its surface, every thing 76 COUNTY OF that had either enriched or beautified it. Of the towns, villages, and hamlets, that lately enamelled it, nothing was now visible, but embers, ashes, and smoke. A mil- dew had fallen upon its ripening flowers, and blasted were all its fruits. The songs of gladness that formerly resounded through it were no longer heard, for the voice of misery had hushed them. Nothing broke upon the ear, but the accents of distress ; the eye saw nothing except ruin, and desolation, and death. ; Newcastle, yesterday a flourishing town, full of trade and spirit, and containing nearly 1,000 inhabitants, was now a heap of smoking ruins, and Douglastown, nearly one third of its size, was reduced to the same miserable condition. Of the 260 houses and stores that composed the former, but 12 remained ; and of the 70 that com- prised the latter, but six were left. Moorfields, an old and populous settlement, near Douglastown, was a pile of ashes; and the whole cultivated Parish of Ludlow was changed into a waste. But what did the madden- ed elements know of bounds and limits ? Was their wild and boisterous march to be regulated by the un- ruffled tranquility of a line, or the scientific precision of a course ? No. Having gone forth in the terrific majesty of excited fury, they scattered their blasting and wither- ing energies with desultory profusion. Hence Bartibog, Nappan, Black-River, and several other surrounding settlements became involved in the general ruin. More thsm four hundred square miles of a once settled coun- try, now exhibited one vast and cheerless panorama of desolation and despair. NORTHUMBERLAND. 77 The forests disrobed of their verdure, resembled a country once covered with corn-fields, but now smitten, blasted, and beaten down by an unusually violent thun- der storm. As far as the eye could reach through the almost innumerable lanes and avenues the fire had made, the trees were charred, crisped, and leafless. — Some were standing in the mockery of erection, stretch- ing their gaunt and shrivelled limbs to the wind ; many lay flat on the ground ; others reclined in a supplicating posture ; and all were the naked, scathed, and burned monuments of the night's destruction. The few persons who had escaped from the visitation, sighed as they viewed the melancholy scene ; and those who had suffered grew pale at the contemplation of their own misery: Dispersed groups of half famished — half naked — and houseless creatures, — all more or less in- jured in their persons ; — many lamenting the loss of children, relations and friends; — and all deploring the loss of some property, were wandering through the country. Nothing was heard but the most shuddering recitals ; no language was spoken but that of misery and woe. Every hour brought the most distressing accounts from the woods ; not a moment elapsed that did not furnish some fresh illustration of the extent of the cala- mity. Newcastle, Douglastown, and every thickly settled place resembled ravaged burial grounds. The half -burn- ed and mouldering cellars looked like- violated graves ; and the tottering and shattered' chimnies were a strik- 78 COUNTY OF ing picture of broken and mutilated tomb stones. Could a few deceptions have been practised, a stranger would have believed, that succeeding armies of Goths, Huns, and Vandals, had wreaked their indiscriminate fury upon the country and its inhabitants. But a few hours had elapsed, and hundreds were hurled from comparative affluence into utter destitution. By one fell swoop, all that agriculture had reclaimed, all that art had erected, and all that commerce had a- massed, were flung in shattered fragments through the blazing air. What mind can analyze, what pen can des- cribe, what tongue can pronounce the feelings of indis- trious people, suddenly stript of their all, and thrown, with their helpless families, upon the measured bounty of promiscuous charity. What could be more distress- ing — what more heart-breaking, than to see infants, sensible of their condition, though unconscious of its cause, shivering with cold, and nestling their little heads in the bosom homes of their homeless mothers. I am not ambitious of harrowing the recollection of many of my readers, by telling them what they remem- ber, or of sickening their reverting sight, by acquaint- ing them with what they have seen. We all know that the distress and misery, hoth in reality, and appearance, outreached description and almost exceeded endurance ; and that the country wore an aspect, far more appalling and desolate, than the most lively imagination, horrified by a vivid remembrance of this event, and a desire glow- ingly to pourtray it, could conceive. NORTHUMBERLAND. 79 I shall therefore say nothing of the human bodies, gome with their bowels protruding, others with the flesh all consumed, and the blackened skeletons smoking. Of the headless trunks, and severed extremities ; of some bodies burned to cinders ; others reduced to ashes ; of many bloated and swollen by suffocation ; and of se- veral lying in the last distorted position of convulsing torture. Such was the bitter destiny of families and in- dividuals ; such were the heart-rending spectacles, scat- tered through the streets, and along the highways of our ravaged country. Brief and violent was their pas- sage from life to death ; and rude and melancholy was their sepulture. They died by fire, and were buried unhouseled and unanealled. Thousands of wild beasts, too, had perished in the woods ; and from their putre- scent carcases, issued streams of effluvium, and stench i that formed contagious domes over the dismantled set- tlements. It would be useless to speak of the domestic animals of all kinds, that lay dead and dying in different parts of the country ; of the myriads of Salmon, Trout, Bass, and other hsh, which poisoned by the alkali, form- ed by the ashes, precipitated into the river, now lay dead, floundering and gasping on the scorched shores and beaches ; or of the countless variety of wild fowl and reptiles that shared a similar fate. We have already said, that the night of the 7th of October,- in order to complete a picture of the eve of the General Assize of Mankind, required but the blast of a Trumpet, the voice of the Archangel, and the resur- rection of the Dead; — let us now dismiss the painful 80 COUNTY OF consideration, by adding, that the morning of the 8th confirmed the appearance, only that some were still living, and that those who died had not arisen. Never were the tender offices of charity more indis- pensably necessary than on this occasion : and never perhaps, were they more promptly and seasonably ex- ecuted. The piercing cry of suffering humanity, ring- ing far and wide, had penetrated through the glades of , the forest, and into the splendours of the city. Its wailing echo resounded through the neighboring Pro- vinces ; at the extremity of the Federal States ; and be- yond the waves of the Atlantic. Wherever its suppli- cating voice was heard, its prayer was granted. Never was sympathy more active— never did human benevo- lence appear more amiable. The queen of the virtues arrayed in the exalted insignia of her Samaritan embas- sy, came with the eagle's rapidity to relieve us. '-Her bosom throbbed with pity ; philanthropy filled her heart; and while by her holy ministry, she fed the hungry, clothed the naked, and sheltered the homeless, the fer- vour of her benignity melted down all the petty dis- tinctions of country and of sect. Although it be impossible to enumerate the multiplied instances of individual charity, I could easily select a few particular cases, were it not, that I esteem the vir- tue too highly, to depreciate it by elevating eulogy into its recompense. As the anniversary of this calamity is religiously com- NORTHUMBERLAND. 81 memorated ; and as every thing connected with it is ''Written in hearts that have suffered too much to forget." any further remarks from me, would be like go- ing to the waters of Babylon to weep. Be it enough then, to add, that every ameliorating measure which prudence and sympathy would suggest, were here promptly adopted and liberally dispensed ; and that the paternal Governor, who had witnesed our prosperity, came to alleviate our misery. When we consider Sir Howard's conduct on this occasion :— his anxiety, his solicitude, and his zealous endeavours, under the most embarrassing circumstances, to mitigate the present dis- tress, and promote the future prosperity of the coun- try, the fervent prayer that he may never know sor row or affliction, gushes warmly and spontaneously from the heart. The following statements exhibit an account of the lives lost ; the property consumed ; the contributions received ; how they were disposed of ; the number of persons relieved ; and a classification thereof. PERSONS BURNT AND DROWNED, 160 BUILDINGS DESTROYED, 595 HEAD OF CATTLE DESTROYED, 875 Loss of Property estimated £204,323 Of which was insured 12,050 Net loss £192,273 Value of Provisions, Clothing and other stores, received from different parts of Nova-Scotia : Fkom HALIFAX £2,567 18 LUNENBURG 378 3 PICTOU 350 11 82 COUNTY OF ANTIGONISH YARMOUTH AMHERST 100 70 35 From different parts of New Brunswick ; City of ST. JOHN, ST. ANDREWS, RICHIBUCTO, SHEDIAC, BATHURST, MIRAMICHI, £4,300 350 103 11 50 40 603 3,501 8 From THE UNITED STATES, THE CAN ADAS* NEWFOUNDLAND, PRINCE EDWARD'S ISLAND, £15,845 CASH SUBSCRIPTIONS. From NOVA-SCOTIA NEW BRUNSWICK GREAT BRITAIN UNITED STATES and other places } 17 ' 863 15 266 17 8 2,941 2 9 779 8 11 5,446 11 8 8,947 12 8 693 7 4 5,334 4 7 700 170 4 7 21,851 4 4 £37,696 8 11 There were also collected at GLASGOW, BRISTOL N. SHIELDS, and SUNDERLAND, and accounted for to the Committees in these places 1,662 18 11 *This includes a Legislative grant of ,£2,500 from Lower Canada. NORTHUMBERLAND. 83 o X 1—1 I—l f~ ■<* 1—1 1—1 CO "* CO CO 3 . i— 1 -* O o CM 1—1 1 — 1 t- CO *o o <"3 i—l OS OS :* 1— 1 CO CM 1-^ CM o CM CO ^ j* CM OS GO CO GO CO i^ CO OS CO ~5 00 oc r~ CO lO CD CO ■* »o CO OB o T— 1 CM" co" i— r co" co" i—i co" io" «8 H i— i CO , CO -* i— i X i—l ^ i— t © * 'O 3 'S o 1—1 CM «# 30 CO r~ OS ra CM CO CO CO o GO GO ' in OS o u CM •* 1—1 fc-i > CM t» CO CO o os CM ■* I—l 1—1 I— 1 «3 C £2^ o i—i CO CO T— 1 CO US OS 1— 1 OS CO 1—1 CO CM CM CO CM © © r-H CO c» •■ a a o 2:20 a - < ** OS lO os I—l CO (N CO CO ■* 'a US ©_ CO_ 1^ >fS l-v 00 1— 1 "* 3 1—1 i>-" 1—1 cm" i—T m" C4-I 1—1 - |9 o o co CO o o o © CO CO ■+3 3 S 3 _t~ CO o CO 1—1 GO r^ CO CO OS 1—! C^3 . ^^ 1—1 1— 1 i— § O h. £ «S Oa CM OS CO CN o GO »o J^ 5 s ^-r o ■* 1—1 GO GO CO t^ CO US I—l r-H •<£ M "1 GO GO OS !>• CO t~ ©„ © I—l -£ J5 ±2 S CO GC co" cm" co" r-T o" co" CO" cm" jg CO 1—1 i—t I—l I—l CO t~ tt £ S 1—1 o CO o © © co Zj „ * bjc W 1_ CO ^H lO © © CM — .2i I—l "-£ o * « CO m CO OS © i—i 15 o>— CO r~ i~- © lO ■# "£ icM tP IQ CO 1— lO X O U CM co os JO S3 CO CO o o O CO o o O o © CO © « CO o OS CO CO !>• CO co OS ■* l-H rH rH I—l - >o Ol »o ■# CO CM o GO »o CO ce o ■* ^p CO >o CO *~ OS © • <0 m 1—1 GO CM »o X 5© t~ CO (M CO O "3 CO go" cs CO CO i— r o lO CM 1—1 hi o co 1 — 1 i— H i — i I—l 1^ I—l 'U-i H CM o fi c < gS-3 £ to CM m CO 1— 1 o •* GO I—l © &* §s.s £~ CD 1—1 t- 1—1 CO I—l US co © a SI CM CO 1—1 CO OS 1— 1 I—l ■<* COO0 iH r-J i-H rH r-t rH rH tH lO 0» 001>H-*onOiO O TjICOCSCCOSr-l-^CO r-1 02 OHNHCJIOS US * CO CO T-l 00 iO (M H (M r^ CO ^ . bo u CO S » .2 " ■sJ -M O *- rH ^^ I- 5- O 5 © C w <= 43 © W ^ 7- 6£ t- c '3,3-e -a ££,5(5 "-P a -fl ^ w , — . 5* »co r§«2 gg 5 * o £ S Tl o on q b - £.- ~- ~ OQ -u t3 a X t> Pud. HO "as -tv3 o 2r5 « x .!*= = — > o =3 . .■a (B >> a 2 is a ■S o o $ =- O ^3 oo w ■5 & ft o WP3 -° S s c -" -3-° s S S o | a o ChP3 86 COUNTY OF The following gentlemen composed the Local Com- mittee, for the distribution of relief, and the manage- ment of all other business connected with the Fire : — ALEXANDER RANKIN, THOMAS C. ALLAN, JOHN FRASER, WILLIAM ABRAMS, THOMAS H. PETERS, FRANCIS PEABODY, JOHN A. STREET, ALEX. FRASER, Jun. CHRISTOPHER CLARKE, JOHN CLARKE, JOSEPH CUNARD, R. BLACKSTOCK, WILLIAM JOPLIN. Perhaps the principal sufferers in this calamity were Messrs. Gilmour, Rankin & Co. and William Abrams & Co. The extensive warehouses of the former, with nearly all they contained, were consumed ; while every thing belonging to the latter, as well as two large ves- sels on the stocks, were literally swept away. Three ships loading in the river, the Concord, Canada, and Jane, were also burnt ; and it grieves us to believe, that there has been a greater Sacrifice of both life and property, than even the rigid enquiries of the committee have been able to ascertain. Some are disposed to attribute this calamity to super- human agency ; while others, with pious horror, unhe- sitatingly pronounce it to have been, "A Judgment from God." Now, although I entertain the most profound , respect for these two classes of opinionists, I beg leave to differ with them both ; and therefore do I now, by recording ray dissent, adopt the belief of those who ascribe it to natural and familiar causes. But what have NORTHUMBERLAND. 87 we to do with analytical investigations, who have an indefinitely higher duty to perform.than either the anato- my of syllogisms, or the solution of problems ? Pseudo Philosophers may wrangle about the causes of the fire ; but we, who both saw and felt its effects, use this op- portunity, as well to bow down before the inscrutable wisdom that permitted the visitation, as to adore the Almighty power that sustained us under it. Let us now relieve the mind, by turning from the consideration of past misfortunes, to the contemplation of present enjoyments. The only lingering traces of the ruin now visible, are the leafless trees, and they at once serve for an admonition and a memorial, while, by contrast, they heighten the natural beauties of increas- ing cultivation. A great deal of the scorched and burnt land, saved by the timely application of grass seeds, and other semenal reclaimants, is re-invested with a smiling sward. Newcastle, like a Phoenix, has risen from its ashes ; and now blossoms over its original site with renewed beauty. A larger, as well as handsomer Douglastown, has emerged from the ruins of the old one ; and Moorfields, Bartibog, Nappan, &c. also display an equal share of the general renovation. The zeal and perseverance of the people have triumphed over the influence of debilitating casualties ; and under the guid- ance of prudence, a resuscitated enterprize has sprung from the late depression of trade. A salutary variety has invigorated our commerce; and the sphere of our manufacture has been enlarged by the erection of Saw Mills. Agriculture is rapidly advancing ; every day ex- 88 COUNTY OF tends the diffusion of its benignity ; and while.by the ex- ercise of its embellishing and provident genius, it labors to reclaim the wilderness, clothe the soil with verdure, and provide a granary for future exigency, it also mildly reproves us for our former negligence. The following list of the Representatives of the Coun- ty, whose early history, and prominent vicissitudes I have endeavoured to trace, closes this Chapter. Names of the members by whom the County of Nor- thumberland, has been represented in general Assembly, since its formation, together with the dates and occa- sions of the different elections, &c. — First Returned — Elias Hardy, and Win. Davidson. 1791 ) ELIAS HARDY, & HARRIS, W. HAILES, vice Da- March J vidsori, deceased. 1793 | General Election:^ JOHN BLACK, and WARD Jany. ] CHIPMAN. 1795 / Dissolution of the Souse.— JAMES ERASER, and Oct. ( SAMUEL LEE. 1802 ) General Election —JAMES ERASER, and ALEX- Oct. \ ANDER TAYLOR. 1809 ) General Election— JAMES ERASER, and ALEX- Oct. ] ANDER TAYLOR. 1816 ) General Election.— JAMES FRASER, and RICH- Sept. )' ARDSIMONDS. \ RICHARD SIMON DS, and I J 1819 \ Death of his Ma jest i? | JOSEPH SAUNDERS, vice Jany. \ King Georgb III. f JAMES ERASER, promoted j to H. M. C. of Nova Scotia. 1820. RICHARD SIMONDS, and HUGH MUNRO. NORTHUMBERLAND. 89 1827 | RICHARD SIMONDS and ALEXANDER June. \ RANKIN. 1R9q | ALEX. RANKIN, and JOSEPH CUNARD, vice R. ( SIMONDS, appointed Provincial Treasurer. 1830 ) Death of His Majesty ) ALEXANDER RANKIN & Oct. \ King George IV. ) JOSEPH CUNARD. 12 CHAPTER VI TRADE AND REVENUE. General Abstract of the Trade of this County in the years 1828. — 29, and^-ZO ; the amount of Imperial and Provincial Revenue collected during thai •period ; and the Register Tonnage belonging to the Port of Miramichi, at the conclusion of each year. 1828. BRITISH VESSELS INWARDS. From the United Kingdom, From British North America, Foreign Europe United States, No. Tons. Men. 221 68,790 3,062 168 12,641 729 1 365 11 3 917 38 393 82,713 3,84.0 NORTHUMBERLAND. 91 IMPORTS Sterling. From the United Kingdom, £68,846 From the British North Amer. Colonies, 51,797 £120,643 BRITISH VESSELS OUTWARDS. No. Tons. Men. To the United Kingdom, 245 75,365 3,363 To the British West Indies, 2 339 19 To the British North A.Colonies 120 5,469 355 367 81,173 3,737 EXPORTS. Sterling. To the United Kingdom, £108,159 To the British North American Colonies, 10,150 £118,309 STAPLE ARTICLES EXPORTED. Timber, 114,458 Tons. Boards, 789 M, Feet. Lathwood, 2,420 Cords. Deals, 1,703 M, -Feet. Oars, 2,415 Pieces. Shingles, 1,229 % Handspikes. 904 Pieces. Dry Fish, 200 Quintals. Staves, 334,331 Pieces. Do. Do. 7 Boxes. Spars, 1,827 Piece.s, Pickled Fish, 489 Barrels. Masts, 35 Pieces. Do. Do. 104 Hhds. --oo— 1829. BRITISH VESSELS INWARDS. No. Tons. Men. From the United Kingdom, 154 49,861 2,223 From British North America,, 182 1&122 f 13 92 COUNTY OF No. Tons. Men. From Foreign Europe, 1 241 10 From the United States, 1 280 13 338 62,504 2,959 IMPORTS. Sterling. From the United Kingdom, £59,210 From the British North American Colonies, 56,867 £116,077 BRITISH VESSELS OUTWARDS. No. Tons. Men, To the United Kingdom, 178 56,071 2,503 To the British West Indies, 7 754 43 To British North America, 129 5,956 403 314 62,781 2,949 EXPORTS. Sterling. To the United Kingdom, ' £101,263 To the British North American Colonies, 6,987 To the British West Indies, 4,888 £113,138 STAPLE ARTICLES EXPORTED. Timber, 83,807 Tons. Shingles, 559 M. Lathwood, 1,775 Cords. Furs, 4 Chests Oars, 1,185 Pieces. Alewives, 2,115 Barrels, Handspikes, 489 Pieces. Herrings, 375 Do. Billets, 27,819 Do. Mackarel, 400 Do. Spars, 1,327 Do. Salmon, 565 Do. Staves, 51,678 Do. Cod fish, 2,845 Quintals. Boards, 450 M. FeetHerrings, 194 Boxes. Deals, 1,563 M, Feet. NORTHUMBERLAND. 93 1830. BRITISH VESSELS INWARDS. No. Tons. Men. From the United Kingdom, 19C 64,226 2,936 From the British West Indies, 3 653 31 From British North America, 173 12,486 89\5 From Foreign Europe, 1 194 9 From the United States, 2 833 40 375 78,392 3,911 IMPORTS Sterling. From the United Kingdom, £57,287 From the British N. A. Colonies, 58,421 From the British West Indies, 3,482 £119,190 BRITISH VESSELS OUTWARDS. No. Tons. Men. To the United Kingdom, 216 69,877 3,070 To the British West Indies, 3 418 24 To British North America, 140 6,579 418 359 76,874 3,512 EXPORTS. Sterling. To the United Kingdom, £118,743 O To the British N. A. Colonies, 6,934 To the British West Indies, 2,999 6 128,676 94 COUNTY OF STAPLE ARTICLES EXPORTED. Timber, 102,998 Tons. Lathwood, 2,272 Cords. Firewood, 40 Cords. Oars, 1,254 Pieces. Handspikes, 684 Pieces. Billets, 37,060 do. Spars, 764 do. Staves, 96,660 do. Boards, 554 M. Feet. Deals, 2,607 M. Feet Shingles, 750 M. Furs, 1 Hhd. Alewives, 3,092 Barrels. Salmon, 566 do. Codfish, 2,093 Quintals. Imperial Revenue, collected under Statutes of the British Parliament; 1828.— By Acts prior to 18, Geo, III, 31 18 9 Subsequent to 18, Geo. III. 1702 10 1829.- -Prior to 18 Geo. 11 r. Subsequent to 18, Geo. III. 1830. —Do. Do. Do. Do. 36 1470 9 2 1733 3 7 19 7 40 1203 13 7 1506 5 3 11 10 1,244 8 4,484 498 12 1 5 9 £4,982 17 10 Ex. Total Imperial Revenue, Provincial Revenue, collected under Acts of the General Assembly. 1828, £4,199 14 1829, 4,703 7 6 1830, 5,240 7 4 Total Revenue for 3 years, 14,143 8 10 £19,126 6 8 NORTHUMBERLAND. 95 ARTICLES subject to Provincial duty for i^he year 1831 Rum and Whiskey, Is. Od. per Gallon. Cordials, 1 per Gallon. Brandy and Gin, 1 6 per Gallon. Wine in Bottle, 1 3 per Gallon. Bo. not in Bottle, 1 6 per Gallon. Brown Sugar, 2 6 per Cwt. Molasses and Coffee, 1 per lb. —oo— Ad Valorem duty on Foreign Goods. Household FurnitUfe, 25 per Cent. Soap, Candles and Bread, 10 per do. Tobacco, 15 per do. Non-enumerated Articles, 10 per do. — oo— These rates are fixed by the Legislature in their An nual Revenue Bill ; are the same throughout the Pro" vince ; and are liable", in each Session, to be either increased or reduced, as the exigencies of the Country may Require or justify. PORT CHARGES IN MIRAMlChl. All vessels over one hundred Tons Register, pay as follows >— For the Seamen's Hospital, £0 2 per Ton. For the Buoys and Beacons, 1-2 per Ton. Fof the Harbour Master, 10 each vessel. All Coasters and Vessels under One Hundred Tons Regis* ter are subject to the following rates : For the SeanWs Hospital, £0 2 { ^J^ Buoys ,„d Be W 1-2 { ^Let eac P h ?SX Harbour M&ste? * 5 feach Vessel. * Coasters are exempt from this charge. 96 COUNTY OF Vessels Registered at, at d belonging to the Port of Mira- raichi, in each year respectively. — oo- No. Tons. Men. 1828. 13 1,615 99 1829. 29 2,978 179 1830. 32 2,709 156 — 00 — Vessels built in Miramichi, within the last Ten years. Builders. No. Tonnage. Supposed value. Francis Peabody & Co. 5 1,594 15,940 William Abrams & Co. 12 3,457 34,570 Messrs. Fraser & Co. 8 1,899 18,990 Messrs. Fiddes & Co. 4 878 8,780 Alexander Davidson 1 380 3,800 Joseph Russell 1 387 3,870 Messrs. Alexander, 2 340 3,400 Giles & Thompson 1 250 2,500 Thomas Smith, 2 562 5,620 36 9,747 97,470 The foregoing tables exhibit both our Trade and Re- venue, for the last three years, in rather a favourable and healthy condition. According to them, a steady and decided improvement has distinguished both branch- es. We find the Revenue of 1828, exceded by that of 1829, in the sum of £603 13 5 1-2 while that of the latter, is outreached in the following year, by a further surplus of £536 19 11 : making a total increase in these three years, of £1,140 13 4 1-2. NORTHUMBERLAND. ' 97 We also perceive that our gross Imports for the above period amounted to currency. £395,455 11 1 While our Exports for the same ) , ^ , nn , „ , time are reckoned at } 400 ' 136 1S 4 Leaving a balance in favor of "1 „ , aa , „ Q the Country of f i4 ' bbl l 6 This favourable state of our Trade may be ascribed to the wholesome restraints which circumstances had imposed upon it. For some time before the Fire, the Timber Trade was prosecuted to an unreasonable extent ; and hence, in the same degree as the British Market became surfeited with our commodity, did it gradually decline from a non remunerative, to a losing price. Another prominent evil in our system was, we gave unlimited and indiscri- minate credit, affording supplies without measuring their amount, or considering the character or standing of the person to whom we gave them. All the capital the Lumberer required, was the faculty of lying. Could he unblushingly tell a plausible story, assuring the Merchant that he had found "A capi- tal CHANCE, OR A FINE GROVE,' taking care at the same time, minutely to calculate the number of large trees ei- ther contained, extensive credit was obtained without further ceremony. But that is not all ; so exceedingly fascinating had lumbering become, that I have known some instances, where the report of a discovered chance 13 98 • COUNTY OF or grove, created so brisk a canvass among the merchants, that it placed the fortunate discoverer, in the same situ- ation as a voter at a contested election. It being thus easy to obtain not only all the'necessa- ries of life, but even some of its luxuries, "Master Lum- berers" multiplied with astonishing fecundity ; and hence the woods became swarmed with a variety of men, whose habits and professions essentially disquali- fied them for the pursuit in which they engaged. The Farmer abandoned the Plough, the Cobbler abjured the Lapstone, the Tailor left the Shopboard, and the Fisher- man flung away his Net. All joined in a general crusade against the forests. What was the result of this combination of deception and enthusiasm ? In many instances, "The capital chances and fine Groves" turned out to have the same ideal existence as Mefmaids and Unicorns ; while in other cases, the timber was often so inferior, and so badly manufactured, that the merchant could not ship it, except on his own account, a proceeding which only increased his original loss, and injured his character. Since the Fire, however, things have been better ma- naged. That calamity, associated with other incidents, forced a reformation upon us ; and the general stagna- tion which prevailed in Great Britain, during the years 1826, and 1827, communicating itself to us, it became both unavoidable and necessary that credit should be restricted. This of course, was followed by a diminu- NORTHUMBERLAND. 99 tion of business, which effectually cut off the supera- bundant Lumberers, as well as many other excrescen- ces that had so long disfigured and encumbered our in- dustry. The merchants, having learned wisdom from expe- rience, have become very particular in giving credit and hence, the manufacturing department is now con- ducted by men, who being thoroughly conversant with their business, and holders of property besides, are as deeply interested as either the shipper, or importer. For these reasons, although our timber trade is rather limited at present, (comparatively speaking,) it is less fluctuating and more profitable, because the market is supplied with an article of better quality, while the quantity rarely exceeds the demand. • In looking over these tables, what we have chiefly to regret is, that a larger quantity of Fish does not appear in our exports ; but even in this particular there has been a gradual improvement. In 1824, when our trade was at its greatest extent, we only exported : — - Of Alewives, 580 Barrels. — Dry Fish ; 263 Quintals. — Herrings, 70 Boxes. Now, contrasting this with our shipments in 1830, supposing the prices of both years to have been the samej 100 COUNTY OF we find that in the former year, we received from our Fisheries, £ 658 10 While in the latter, we derived from ) ...» 1ft „ ,, \ o,440 10 the same source, J ' Leaving a balance to the credit of the\ ~. »„„ n n Fisheries, in 1830, of ) **■"" U U As both our sea and river Fisheries, are generally very productive, we hope they will be more extensively cultivated ; and that their fruits, as well as those of the earth, shall, at no very remote period, occupy a respect- able station in our catalogue of exports. CHAPTER VII. A General description of the Miramichi , and of the Towns and Settlements thereon. Having, in the preceding Chapters, detailed all the in- formation I could, respecting the rise and progress of this county, it now .remains for me to describe, as ac- curately as I can, its present appearance, state, and con- dition. On these three heads I shall speak from a knowledge acquired by close observation, during a resi- dence of seven years. The Miramichi, or Happy Retreat, is the principal riverain the county, and one of the largest and most im- portant in the whole Province. In the Micmac lan- guage, the'diminutive noun is formed by the addition of 102 COUNTY OF sis ; and hence was this river formerly called Restigou- chesis, in contra-distinction to the Restigouche, a some- what larger river. It rises in a Lake, a short distance from the Tobique, a river bathing the un-improved, and almost unknown lands of the County of York. Its computed length is 220 miles, flowing pretty equably, but with considerable rapidity, over a shingly and somewhat rocky bed ; and describing an Easterly course, until it rolls into the Gulf through a large and beautiful Bay, in Latitude 47° 5 N. and Longitude 64° 53, W. In its descent this river acquires considerable impe- tus, as well as a multiformity of shapes, owing to the numerous subsidized tributaries and streams that dis- i charge into it. Leaving these secondary rivers for the present, I shall confine my remarks to the main one ; attending afterwards, to such of its branches, as seem to deserve particular description. In the immediate vicinity of its source, are three or four Lakes ; and there, as well as for several miles lower down, has it a very bold and primitive aspect.— Here, the stream is rather dark and turbid ; overhung by projections ; and canopied by deflectent Alders. For a -Considerable distance on both sides, the land appears to be a compositive structure, formed possibly by the bursting of Lakes, or by an extensive disintegration, produced by atmospheric agency. It is abrupt, broken, and mountainous, having at its base large belts of in- NORTHUMBERLAND. 103 tervala ; and in the interior, an interspersion of wild Meadows, Maple Groves, and Pineries. About 90 miles from its v head, it becomes considera- bly developed by a gradual expansion ; and by the con- tributions of a variety of undistinguished rivulets, flow- ing through exceedingly rich land. Ten or twelve miles lower down, it receives Porter's Brook, a small river, now the most remote settlement from the Coast ; and on which there is a Saw Mill. About an equal distance below this, it absorbs two other rivers, the Taxis, and the Burnt Land Brook ; and here it is connected by a Portage of 23 miles, with the Nashwaak, a river dis- charging into the St. John, a little above Fredericton. From this down to the coast, a distance of 108, or 110, miles, each side of the river may be considered one continual settlement, both presenting two uninter- rupted lines of cultivated land, of abput a quarter of a mile in breadth, and fringed by seemingly intermina- ble forests. The land is generally level, but not low ; and may, except within a short distance of the immedi- ate Sea Board, be termed a mean between height aud depression. This space comprises three different kinds of soil : the first, embracing nearly forty miles, is very rich, the elevated part being a mixture of clay and gravel, well wooded, and considerably enriched by alluvial deposits. The second, about fifty miles in length, is a good upland, clothed with a friable, but deep and fertile surface ; and' the third, extending about eighteen, or twenty miles, until it dips into the sea, 104 COUNTY OF although of rather a light and sandy description, gene- rally yields a fair average crop. In the first and e econd district, the rear, or wilderness land, is pretty thickly covered with Pine Groves, and all the different kinds of hardwood, disposed generally, in alternate ridges ; the growth of the third consists principally of cedar, spruce, and fir. Having said this much, in order to afford some idea of the source, length, and general features of the Mira- michi, we shall now invert our route, commencing at its entrance, and noticing as we proceed, whatever is wor- thy of remark. The mouth of the Miramichi, lies between a low curved beach on the north side ; and a sandy Shoal, called Point Eseuminac, on the south. This shoal, as its Indian name implies, extends nearly three miles into the sea ; while the opposite beach, stretching towards Taboointac, also protrudes to a considerable extent. The distance across here is nine miles ; but the ship entrance is on the south side, round Eseuminac, and thence up between Portage and Fox Islands, where there is a good channel of three miles in width, and va- rying from 5 to 7 and 8 fathoms in depth. Thence upwards to where the banks of the river con- verge, as it were, by the approximation of two opposite projections, Oak Point, and Point Cheval, may be consi- dered a spacious Bay of 14 miles long and 9 miles wide, over which are dispersed seven or eight tolerably NORTHUMBERLAND. 105 large Islands. From the number of small shoals and- flats scattered through the Bay, it may be inferred that these Inswlce have been formed by the rise and fall of the tide, or by the reciprocation of the sea and river currents. Most of them yield an unusual crop of wild hay; others are- the ordinary rendezvous of aquatic fowl ; but the principal one for both size and fertility, is called Bale des Vents Island, on the south side of which there is an excellept harbor, having good anchorage in three and four fathoms. Round the Bay are several small settlements, inhabit- ed chiefly by Acadian French, who employ their time in Agriculture and Fishing ; and on the north side, a short ■ distance within its entrance, in the harbour of Nesru- waak, where, though ships sometimes load, there is not much shelter. At the two above points, (Oak Point, and Point Che- val,) where the river may be said to commence, it is four miles wide, thence, gradually and regularly'tapering towards its head. The tide flows nearly forty miles' and is navigable for large vessels more than thirty, the channel to that extent, containing from 5 to 8 fathoms. Schooners and small craft can proceed some miles far- ther ; while scows, boats, and canoes, may go within a short distance of its source. On the north side, eight miles above Oak Point, is the extensive, and elegantly constructed Saw Mill, of Messrs. Gilmour, Rankin & Co. The building itself is 14 10G COUNTY OF composed of an excellent description of hard Freestone, very plentiful in the vicinity. The machinery is con- structed upon the most approved principles, and works twenty eight perpendicular saws, and two circular ones, cutting each day, upon an average, from 18,000 to 20,000 feet, plank measure. This Mill, besides being eligibly seated on a good stream, possesses the additional ad vantage of lying so near the channel, that large vessels can load within pistol shot of it. The out offices apd subordinate works, corresponding in their character and appearance with the principal, preserve a uniformity in detail, illustra- tive of the well arranged system upon which the whole has been formed. This establishment is supposed to have cost £8,000, and is deservedly reckoned the most splendid of the. kind in either Nova-Scotia, or New- Brunswick. In the centre of the river, and nearly opposite to the Mill is a small but fertile Island, the owner of which has avowed his admiration of Cervantes, by facetiously calling it Barratarria.* > For fear some of my readers should be unable to account for this apparently romantic nomenclature, I hope the better informed ones will not be offended, if I observe, that Cervantes was a cele- brated Spanish novelist ; that in that capacity he wrote the history and adventures of a Redoubtable Knight- errant, whom he was pleased to call Don Quixote de la Manclia, and that he represented this hero as having conquered an Island of the above name, over which he * This Island is the property of Mr, A. D. Sheriff, and is commonly called Middle Island. NORTHUMBERLAND. 107 appointed his trusty and well beloved Squire Sancho Panco. Our Barratarria contains about 20 acres of arable land; and on the south side of the river, about 2 miles back, is a lake, so exaetly corresponding with it, in length breadth, and general configuration, that an enthusiast in geology, would be disposed to ascribe its present lo- cality to some of nature's freaks. Between the north side of this Island and the Mill, there is an excellent Gaspereaux and Salmon Fishery ; and on the south side, a large and commodious pond for holding timber. On the south side, about a mile and a half above this, is the town of Chatham. It is pleasantly situated upon a level plain that forms the termination of an easy and gentle declivity proceeding from the interior ; while it is also admirably adapted for shipping, as a deep chan- nel running close into the beach, enables the largest vessels to load at the wharves. This town contains at present, eight mercantile establishments ; some hand- some shops ; a Printing Office, from which issues a weekly newspaper ; a well provided Reading Room, a Post Office, Market House, a Classical Seminary; two Day Schools; and one hundred and seventy dwelling Houses. At the east end of the town, is a very ingeniously de- vised horizontal Saw and Grist Mill, flanking a pictu- resque eminence, on which stands the Presbyterian Church of Saint Andrew; and in the centre is a hand- 108 COUNTY OF some Wesleyan Chapel, near which the Antiburghers have lately commenced building another place of wor- ship. The great Post Road leading to Halifax, com- mences at St. Andrew's Church, and proceeds in a south- erly direction for about forty miles, until it connects the Miramichi, and the Richibucto. This road contains some extensive tracts of good land ; is well watered by several rivers ; and affords the principal channel of in- ternal communication between the two provinces. The population of Chatham, may be rated at 900 souls. Two miles farther up, on the opposite side of the ri- ver, appears Douglastown, cresting the brow of a pro- minent and somewhat elevated projection. Notwith- standing that this settlement was all but destroyed by the Fire, it now contains Fifty four handsome dwelling houses, and some very neat shops. Here is one of the most extensive, as well as best conducted Day Schools in the Province; also the Seamen's Hospital, a very elegant stone edifice, containing several comfortable wards ; and surmounted by a tastefully wrought cupo- la, reposing on Grecian Columns. The only resident merchants here, are Gilmour, Ran- - kin & Co. ; and to the influence and patronage of these gentlemen, may be ascribed, in a very eminent degree, the present improved state of the town, as well as the character and utility of the school, Douglastown enumerates 320 inhabitants, chiefly emi- grants from Dumfrieshire and different parts of the NORTHUMBERLAND. 109 Clyde. They are almost exclusively Presbyterians ; and are no less distinguished for their attachment to the religion of their fathers, than they are for their regular attendance upon its ordinances. A short distance above Douglastown, is the Mercan- tile establishment and Ship Yard of William Abrams & Co. This place is well adapted for both the export trade and ship-building ; the land has an easy descent, and the channel almost washes the shore. A group of 'comfortable looking houses encompassing two large stores, give this establishment a village cast. After a pleasant walk of two miles upon an excellent road, leading through an extensive grove of sumach trees Newcastle, the Shire town, and the handsomest settle- ment in the county, attracts your attention. When viewed from the river, this town presents a very agree- able prospect. Reposing at the foot and on the brow of a moderate acclivity that spreads into an extensive and open plain ; and environed by a zone of cultivated land, tapestried by the foliage of the surrounding forest, it may be compared to a sort of amphitheatre, or col- lection of reliefs, chastening and beautifying the wild magnificence of nature. Newcastle contains 12 Mercantile establishments ; 2 Public Schools ; a Presbyterian Church ; and a Wes- leyan chapel. Here also are the County Court House, the Jail, and the Record Office ; besides J20 dwelling houses, occupied by a population of 800, souls. 110 COUNTY OF All the houses h°ve a very respectable appearance ; several of them are built of brick ; and many of the wooden ones, furnish good specimens of taste and in- genuity, while the Square in the centre of the town ; the cluster of public buildings occupying the eminence behind it, and a range of wharves extending from the beach to the channel, harmonize with the. general dis- position of the streets. The post road leading to Fredericton, commences at this town, and proceeds along the south side of the river, about 70 miles, thence across the Portage, down' the Nashwaak, and into the Saint John. It is also likely to receive another advantage from a new bye road, about to be opened between its rear, and the bead of the settlements on the north west ; while it is further distinguished by a third and still more important locality, arising from, its connexion with the most cen- trical part of the Baie des Chaleurs, as well as with the capital of Lower Canada. A fine road of 54 miles, pro- ceeding from the east end of the town, thence down the river, and across the Bartibog, and several well bridged streams, conducts you to Bathurst, the Assizes town of Gloucester, from where a continuation is now being made to the Restigouche and thence round the head of the Matepediae river, through Mitis, and into Quebec. On the south side, nearly opposite to Newcastle, is the village of Nelson.' This is but a small hamlet con- taining a Roman Catholic Chapel, two Mercantile estab- lishments, a Parochial School, and 34 dwelling houses, with a population of 200 souls, chiefly Irish. NORTHUMBERLAND. Ill Abreast of the upper end of this settlement, lies Beau- bair's Island, on the east point of which, Messrs. James D. Fraser & Co. have their establishment. This is the oldest mercantile concern in the county, and was for many years, one of the most extensive in the' whole pro- vince. The different spaces between these towns are tilled up with farms and insulated stores, interlaced by some handsome villas, of which the seat of T. H. Peters, Esq. is the most splendid. Proceeding up the river, although there are some fine settlements, there is little requiring particular attention, till we come to where it is connected with the Naas- waak. Here, at the mouth of the Burnt Land Brook, already mentioned, has Mr. Thomas Boies, an active and enter- prising American, lately established a village, popularly called Boiestown, after its founder. This village con- sists of 23 or 24 distinct buildings, embracing two excel- lent Saw Mills; a Grist Mill of the same character; a large Forge with Trip hammers ; a Washing Mill ; a cold and Tepid Bath : a day School and private Chapel ; a respectable Hotel ; two Ware Rooms ; and a requi- site number of Out Offices. All the houses are well finished and neatly painted in the different varieties of white, red, green, yellow, &c, and this diversity of colours, coupled with the essential difference of shapes and figures, imparts an external sprightliness to the 112 COUNTY QF whole group, finely harmonizing with the animating symphony, proceeding from the various pursuits carried on within them. About ten years ago, Mr. Boies settled here : and at that time, the actual site of this minature Colony, as well as a large district of cultivated land that surrounds it, was in a wilderness state. The character of the change, therefore, no less than its rapidity, abundantly prove, that in the formation of so extensive and complicated an establishment, a considerable degree of ingenuity and zeal must have been employed. The standing po- pulation of Boiestown may be estimated at 120 souls, principally adults from the United States. — oo — RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS OF MIR'AMICHI. As the different religious establishments are widely dispersed ; indeed some of them occupying places where they constitute the only depictable feature, I thought it advisable, previously to any notice of the tributary rivers, to group them in one, general descrip- tion. Proceeding then, in the same order as we have ob- served with the settlements, we find three small Ro- man Catholic Chapels, one Episcopalian, and one Pres- byterian distributed through the Bay. At Moody's Point, there is another Chapel of the first denomination, and at the east end of Chatham, a Pres- NORTHUMBERLAND. 113 byterian Church, dedicated to Saint Andrew. This is a large and plain edifice, having a neat Steeple with an inserted belfry ; and is capable of containing about 800 persons. In the centre of the settlement, there is also a very handsome Wesleyan Chapel, commensurate- ly large, with the accommodation of 600. It is a well finished structure of the modern kind ; the lower part containing two ranges of pews, reposing under a quint- agonal gallery neatly embossed, and resting- on crowned pillars. The entrance is a well designed portico sus- tained by Grecian columns, and enclosing a double ves- tibule. Three miles higher up is the Episcopal Church of St. Paul, a very elegant structure of the Gothic order, sur- mounted by a wrought tower and castellated turrets. This church was the first of the established religion, ever built in this county ; as is also the Rev. Samuel Bacon, who has been its Rector for the last ten years, the first Missionary ever sent hither by the Society for . propagating the Gospel. The Presbyterian Church of Saint James, at Newcas- tle, is one of the most graceful and elegant specimens of architecture in the whole province. Though there is in all its arrangements, both within and without, a chas- tity of design, and a fidelity of execution ; it is in the en- trance and the spire, that the skill of the artist is more eminently displayed. The former is a beautiful speci- men of the modern, harmonizing with Grecian Pillars in Alto Relievo ; and the latter is a correct elevation,com- 14 114 COUNTY OF bining a line union of the Doric, Tuscan and Ionic. This church can accommodate about 600 hearers ; — the Wesleyan one, in the same town, is a plain, but neatly finished edifice, capable of holding upwards of 200. The Roman Catholic Chapel, at Nelson, is a build- ing, which for excellence of materials and permanence of construction, is, to say the least, equal to any we have. It accommodates a congregation of more than 800 persons ; and embraces in its general architecture, an agreeable connexion of the Gothic and the Modern. All the Roman Catholic churches on this river, are sup- plied by the Rev. Mr. Dollard, a zealous and pious mis- sionary, under the Jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rosen.* At Beaubair's Point, there is another convenient Presbyterian church associated with the one at New- castle ; and up the north-west, a branch, of which we shall speak presently, there is a Baptist Chapel of some years standing, besides a Roman Catholic one in pro- gressive erection. *Rossen, a town of ancient Palatine was formerly a Bishop's See and is now the legitimate source whence the Rt Rev. Dr McEachem, of Prince Edward's Isluru), derives his Episco- pal dignity. This method of conferring the mitre on English Romfin Catholic Prelates, is the effect of a penal statute, prohi- biting the assumption of Diocesan titles by any other than ecclesiastics of the established church ; and hence it is, that dig- nitaries of this kind, are, by the law of England, denominated "Titular Bishops, or Vicars Apostolic." while by the canons of their own church, they are styled ''Episcopi in partibus infi delium," or Bishops among the Infidels. They are thus constituted for the spiritual advantage of the Catholics among whom they reside ; and over them do they exer^ cise the pastoral sway of Episcopal Jurisdiction ivitliout viola- ting the law that contemplated its abolition. NORTHUMBERLAND. 115 On this head we may conclude our remarks by sta- ting, — that all these places of public worship have been erected by general and voluntary subscription ; that they are respectably and numerously attended ; that they are associated with an equal number of. Sabbath Schools; that they are supplied by clergymen whose zeal and ability would sustain an honorable competition with any of the same number and assortment through- out the Colonies ; and that the evidences of their use- fulness are observable in the improved and improving condition of both old and young. ■ The other public buildings not particularized are, the English Rectory ; the County Grammar School ; the Custom House ; and the Treasury Office. CHAPTER VIII. An account of the- different rioars discharging into the Mirami- chi ; also, a description of the Taboointac, tuith an estimate of the population of the Count;/, and the number and value of the Saw and Grist Mills contained therein. Passing over a number of small streams in the vicini- ty of the coast, we arrive at Bale des Vents, and Black rivers, both of which rise in barrens a short distance from the Richibucto, and after running nearly parallel courses fall into the bay, upon the south side. The computed length of the tirst is 28 miles; that of the se- cond 18. On the former there is an excellent Saw Mill, and a day School ; besides 24 families employed in lum- bering and agriculture. The latter contains a grist NORTHUMBERLAND. 117 Mill, and two Schools ; and is inhabited by sixty Scotch families engaged in husbandry. Nappan River, proceeds from wild meadows in the rear of Nelson village ; and after tracing an easterly course of sixteen miles, disembogues a short distance above the two former. Although this settlement suffered very severely by the Fire, the perseverance of the people, and their stea- dy attention to agriculture, have enabled them to over- come the calamity. It now presents a very pleasing and cheerful appearance. The soil has rallied un- der judicious treatment; a better description of houses occupy the place of their predecessors ; more conveni- ent roads have been formed ; and the renewed industry of the inhabitants, as well as the occasion that required it, may be recognized in the characters of a general re-, novation. The Post Road to Halifax, crosses this river a short distance above the head of the tide, where it is only three miles from Chatham, a circumstance which affords the settlers a ready market for a great portion of their surplus stock. The Nappan contains two schools, and two Grist Mills; and on it reside 340 souls, principally Scotch emigrants and their descendants. Bartibog River. — This river issues from high lands near the Wild Cat Brook, in the north-west ; is about 28 miles long ; and runs into the Miramichi at Moody's 118 COUNTY OF Point. It receives a number of subsidiaries, the chief of which are Green River, and the little Bartibog ; the former rising near the N. W. Mill Stream ; the latter proceeding from two large barrens in the rear of New- castle. Upon the main river, specimens of coal have been found in a variety of places ; and on the two mentioned branches, particularly Green River, are unequivocal in- dications of metallic ores. Before the tire, this river was well timbered with groves of pine, and parallel ridges of hardwood ; but now the whole interior exhibits a frightful and desolate appearance, commemorative of the event that occasion- ed the transformation. What was formerly liveried in green, and attired in foliage, is now a barren and mise- rable heath. The stately pine, the tall birch, and the graceful elm, are no longer visible, for the poplar, the wild cherry, and a variety of degenerate scrubs occupy their place. Where such a succession has not occurred, the intrusion of this dwarfish growth, is either opposed or retarded by large entangled groups of dead,and fallen, and discolored trees ; some standing in gaunt deformity, their scorched and naked trunks, as well as leafless branches, mocked by every wind ; others bowed down as if imploring resuscitation from the sun ; and some prostrate on the ground from which they sprung. In short, this extensive district presents a picture so deso- late, so black, and so gloomy, that disorder and confu- sion are the only animating tints in the portrait. NORTHUMBERLAND. 119 » Twenty three Irish families, engaged in Agriculture, reside on this river, and derive considerable advantage i'rom two good Grist Mills eligibly situated upon it. The North West, formerly called the Minagua, flows into the Miramichi, about a mile and a half above New- castle. This river rises in high lands bordering on the East side of the Nipisiguit, with which it is connected by a short portage leading to the' Falls. It runs over a calcareous and rather rocky formation ; is supposed to be more than 90 miles long ; and receives in its course several large tributaries, of which the most distinguish- ed are, the Little River, the Tomoggonips, Portage Ri-. ver, the Great and Little Sewogle, and the Little South West. Most of these rivers proceed from Lakes ; and all of them are considerable streams tolerably well tim- bered, and navigable for light canoes during the sum- mer months. The tide flows nearly sixteen miles, and is navigable for vessels of 15 feet draught, more than one third of that distance, while schooners of 60 or 70 'tons, may pro- ceed with safety eight miles higher. In the tide way, and for some distance above it, there are large tracts of very rich intervale ; and to this ex- lent the land is finely developed, and in close keeping with the size of the stream ; but thence upwards, as the latter narrows, the other becomes abrupt and ir- regular, until you proceed above Little River. Here the land is elevated, prominent, and much impaired by ero- 120 COUNTY OF sion ; while the water is considerably agitateH by two or three small, but rapid cascades of four or five feet descent. From this point up to its source, the appear- ance of the North-west is rather bold and primitive, the country corresponding in its general features, with se- veral of the rivers in the Baie des Chaleurs. On this river, as well as on most of its branches, has a great deal of very excellent white pine been made ; and it still contains a considerable quantity of the some description mixed with red pine, birch, and juniper, of a similar character. The main river is pretty thickly settled for about twenty miles on both sides ; but its im- provement has been considerably retarded by several extensive reserves held but unoccupied by the Indians. On the West side, about Four miles from. the entrance, there is a neat little Baptist Church, in the rear of which is Williamstown, a new but thriving settlement, estab- lished and owned by Irish Methodists. Eight miles higher up, the Roman Catholics have lately erected the frame of a large chapel. This river contains two Saw Mills, and one Grist Mill ; is well provided with Schools ; and counts an ag- gregate population of 1200 souls. River Barnaby, heads near the source of the Kouchi- bouguac, and together, with several considerable branches, leaves a large tract of tolerably fertile land, until it discharges into the Miramichi, nearly opposite to Barnaby 's Island. NORTHUMBERLAND. 121 On this river there is a Saw Mill, and a Grist Mill ; but although these, conjunctively with the goodness of the soil, present facilities for occupation, there are but few settlers. The Renous, with its principal tributary, the Dun- gar van, after travelling more than forty miles, escapes at the head of the tide, where there is a small settle- ment called Indian Town. On this river there are no settlers, although there is a large tract of land well wooded. The Bartholomew emerges from a beautiful Lake near Porter's Brook ; and after fertilizing a naturally rich, but unoccupied tract of land, obtains a vent ten miles above the Renous. Here there is a good Saw Mill. Fourteen miles above the Bartholomew, the Etienne, commonly called O'Kaine's river, pays its tribute. This is a noble stream emanating from a large plain in the County of York, arshort distance from the sources of the Penneawk. It is nearly 100 miles in length ; bathes rather an unpromising tract of country ; and is cherish- ed by numerous subservients, whereof Savoy's river, on which there is a large Saw Mill, is the most extensive. On the Etienne there are about forty families, chiefly Irish emigrants ; and at its confluence with the main river, a small Township containing 22 houses, inhabited by the same class. * 16 122 COUNTY OF Between this river and the Burnt Land Brook, to which we have already alluded, there is a variety of small streams, but none of them afford a subject of de- scription. — oo — DESCRIPTION OF TABOOINTAG RIVER. The Taboointac, or as it implies in English, the place where two reside, is the only other primary river in the. County. It rises in porous land near Bass river, a stream discharged into the Baie des Chaleur ; is about 50 miles long ; flows over a soft muddy bottom ; and strays in a variety of shapes, through a tolerably rich woodland country, until it mingles with the Gulf, eight miles N. E. of Neguaak. Here it spreads into a small but safe harbour, for vessels of 8 or 9 feet draught. For ten miles up, whither the tide flows, the soil, with a few exceptions on the south side, is rather light and sandy, but thence all the way to the head of the river, it is a, rich clayey loam, with a dispersion of marl, girdled by intervales, and covered with a mixed growth of white and red Fine, Birch and Maple. The banks of this river are, at almost every half mile, seamed by creeks and streams ; but its principal tribu- taries are the Big and Little Escwdillaght,t\i& Maallehagit and the Cowwesigit. At the latter, commences the Indian Reserve, extending five miles up, and'a mile and a half back. To this reservation may be ascribed the present NORTHUMBERLAND. 123 limited settlement of Taboointac. Occupying such a large space of the tide way, it has prevented settlers from going up the river, and will continue to do so until it is broken up ; for such a blank presents little to induce, and a great deal to dissuade any one from residing above it. In addition to the numerous and incontrovertible ar- guments that might be urged for the abolition of Indian Reserves generally, it may be mentioned, that in this particular case, the privileged party are anxious to dis- pose of their immunity. Last winter a few authorized delegates went to Fredericton, and solicited the govern- ment to take their Reserve, and in lieu of it, give them a little money, to enable them to build a Chapel. If the government conclude this bargain, both the Country and the Casual Revenue will gain by it ; for the land will be soon occupied, and the purchase money will ex- ceed what the Indians require. For the last sixteen years, a considerable quantity of the timber shipped at Miramichi, has been made on this river; and notwithstanding these extensive drafts, it still contains a large stock. The Taboointac is connected with the Bale desChaleurs, by a road leading to Tracadie, and thence to Bathurst ; and with the Miramichi, by a portage leading to Ne- guaak. It contains at present, 38 dwelling houses, oc- cupied by as many families ; also two Saw Mills ; one 124 COUNTY OF Grist Mill, and two Day Schools ; besides a small Pres- byterian Chapel, occasionally visited by the Clergyman from Newcastle. Northumberland provides two battalions of Militia, and a corps of sea Fencibles ; sends two members to the General Assembly ; and contains a gross population of 9,250 souls, consisting of Irish and Scotch emigrants, a few English ones, and some natives of the Province, with a small number of Acadian French. The following is a correct table, shewing both the number and value of the Saw and Grist Mills, contain- ed in this County* Where situated. No. Saw Mills. No. GristMills Total Value. Value. Value. Nappan River, 2 Black River, 1 Baie des Vents, 1 Bartibog, 2 Chatham, 1 Moorfields, 1 French Fort \ Cove, J 1 Northwest River 2 River Barnaby, 2 * Not being able to obtain the accurate value, I thought it the more prudent way, to attempt no estimate whatever. NORTHUMBERLAND 125 Where situated. No. Saw Mills. No. GristMills Total. Brought forward 7 6 Black Brook, 1 Savoy River, 1 EC Green River, 1 1 •l-H Mill Brook, 2 1 •r-< O Indian Town, 1 1 00 T— I | Bartholemew \ River, j 1 1 to 1 — 1 1 m 00 I— 1 Porter's Brook, Burnt Land \ Brook, j 1 1 1 1 Taboointac, 2 1 18 13 COUNTY OF KENT. CHAPTER I. Situation and Division — Early history of the French - Charac- ter of the Richibucfo Indians— And an account of the first settlement, by the British. The County of Kent, formerly a part of Northumber- land, is seated in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and com- prehends a sea board of about fifty miles, extending from Point Escuminac, the southern extremity of Mi- ramichi Bay, and thence on to Shediac Island. The coast is thinly covered with small pine, spruce, and fir ; and is so exceeding low, that none of the harbours indenting it, can be descried at ten miles distance. — > We have already observed, in our general view of the Province, that this shore is striped by sand beaches and marshes ; and we may now add, that on the latter, and about the entrance of each harbour, there are small clustered settlements, consisting principally of Acadian French. 17 130 COUNTY OF KENT. When this County received its local constitution, it was subdivided into the six following Parishes, which it now contains; viz: — Carlkton, Liverpool, Wel- lington, Dundas, Huskisson, and Harcourt. To one of the many dishonorable means, used by the French government, to evade the "Definitive Treaty of Utrecht;" and disturb the peaceable possession of Great Britain, in her North American Colonies, may be attributed the first European settlement of this county. We have, in the course of the first chapter, alluded in general terms, to the disguised perfidies, committed by the French Governors of Canada, and Cape Breton, upon the British settlements on the Ohio, and in dif- ferent parts of Nova Scotia ; and also to the issue of the war which resulted from those proceedings. Every day exhibiting to them in a still clearer light, the im- portance of Nova Scotia, these men, to wrest that Pro- vince, from Great Britain, after having exhausted every stratagem, whose original design, and ultimate end could be concealed by either pretext or subterfuge, re- sorted to open violence. Notwithstanding such a breach of national faith, the British Government still preserved a pacific character ; nor were any retaliatory measures adopted, until after the death of our Ambassador, the Earl of Albemarle, at Paris. Immediately after this event, the unprincipled conduct i of the French became so glaring, that the Marquis de Mirepoix, their Plenipotentiary at London, . COUNTY OF KENT. 131 returned to France, and upbraided the Ministry, for having made him the tool of their dissimulation. They referred him to the King, who ordered him to re- turn to London, with fresh assurances of his pacific intentions. Scarcely had the Ambassador presented his creden- tials, when undoubted intelligence arrived, that a pow- erful armament was ready to sail from Brest and Roche- fort. This roused the government, and accordingly two fleets were dispatched under Admirals Boscawen and Holborne. We shall now advert to the particular instances more immediately the subject of our consider- ation. While the precise limits of Nova-Scotia were yet a subject of conference between the two Nations, the French Governor of Canada detached a Monsieur La Corne, with some regular troops and a body of militia, to fortify a post on the Bay of Chignecto, in the Coun- ty of Cumberland, under the pretence that this, and a great part of the Peninsula, belonged to his government. The establishment of this post was a great annoy- ance to the English Colonists, for being situated on the narrow isthmus that connects Nova Scotia with New Brunswick, it secured to the Indians on the Continent, a free entrance into the Peninsula, as well as a safe re- treat in case of pursuit. It moreover, so effectually awakened th&rsTnmbering energies of original allegi- ance in the French Inhabitants of Annapolis, that they rose in open rebellion against the English Government. 132 COUNTY OF KENT. This people having abandoned .the comfortable homes they were allowed to enjoy upon promises of neutrality, put themselves under the command of La Corne, and with him repaired to the Missaguash River, in, the County of Westmoreland, where he had a fort erected called Beau Sejour, or Handsome Position; but now known as Fort Cumberland. They also built another on the neck of the Peninsula, at the extremity of Bale Verte, or Green Bay, and which was afterwards called Fort Monkton ; a third on the Gaspereaux River ; and a fourth at the mouth of the St. John. These circum- stances seem to confirm the accounts we have, of the former existence of fortified places on the Miramichi. Thus protected by batteries ; influenced by political feelings; and encouraged by their government; the French neutrals, assisted by their Indian Allies, com- mitted many and great enormities, until they were fi- nally dispersed in the summer of 1755. The following is a circumstantial account of both the conflict, and its con- sequences. Early in the summer of 1755, the Assembly of Massa- chusetts Bay, in New England, passed an act, prohibit- ing all correspondence with the French at Louisbourg ; and immediately afterwards sent a large detachment, to assist Lieutenant Governor Lawrence, to drive the French from the encroachments they had made upon Nova-Scotia. The direction of this expedition was con- fided to Lieutenant Colonel Monkton, with whom was associated Captain Rous, with three ' frigates and a COUNTY OF KENT 133 sloop, to give their assistance by sea. The troops, upon their arrival at the Missaguash, found their passage opposed by a large number of Regulars, Rebel Neutrals, and Indians, 450 of whom occupied a block-house, mounted with cannon, on their side of the river, while the rest were posted within a strong stockade or breast- work, built round the block-house. The English Provincials attacked this place with such spirit and energy, that the enemy were obliged to fly, and leave the passage of the river free. From thence Colonel Monkton advanced to Beau Sejour, which he invested, and after four days bombardment, obliged to surrender. This last victory was as creditable to the besiegers, as it was disgraceful to the besieged ; for al- though the French had twenty-six pieces of ordnance, with plenty of ammunition and rations, the English had not a single cannon, but little ammunition, and less provisions. The garrison was sent to Louisbourg, on condition of not bearing arms in America, for the space of six months; and the Acadians, who had joined the French, were pardoned in consideration of their having been forced into that service. Colonel Monkton, after putting a garrison into this place, changed its name to that of Cumberland ; and the next day, attacked and reduced the fort upon Gaspereaux river. In the mean time, Capt. Rous proceeded with his armament up the Bay of Fundy, in order to attack the Fort on the St. John river ; but having arrived there, he had nothing to be- 134 COUNTY OF KENT. siege, for the French had abandoned the place, previ- ously destroying the guns, magazine, and every thing else. In this expedition, which fully accomplished all the ends for which it was designed, the English had but twenty men killed, and about the same number wounded. After the capture of these places, the Acadians who had been pardoned, as already mentioned, dispersing themselves throughout the Country, many of them settled in different parts of Kent, particularly on the Richibucto, and the Buctouche. It may therefore, be inferred, that the first European settlement of this County, was commenced in the year 1756 ; and that that incident may be ascribed to the scandalous and unprincipled conduct of the French Government. It is said, however, that before these events occur- red, there was a French Village, containing upwards of -forty houses, situated a short distance above, or in the immediate vicinity of the present Court House of Liver- pool. It is also maintained that another, but smaller village was, about the same time, seated near the bu- rial ground, at the mouth of the Aldoine, a River dis- charging into the Richibucto. These statements ap- pear to be candid enough ; — indeed, when we consider the contiguity of Miramichi, and the much earlier date of its settlement, we are, at first blush, a little surprised that this county was so far behind it. Perhaps, the ex- traordinary ferocity of the Richibucto Indians, formerly very numerous and exceedingly cruel, coupled with the comparative smallness of the Rivers, and the then inca- COUNTY OF KENT. 135 pacity of the harbours, may account for the apparent discrepancy. However, be the cause what it may, the first settlement cannot be traced to an earlier date, than that which I have assigned. After the taking of Quebec, whatever settlements had been formed by the indulged Acadians, captured with La Corne, were abandoned ; some of the inhabitants re- turning to France, others dispersing themselves through the Baie den Ghrdeurs. Thus, from the year 1760 or 1761 until 1787, a period of twenty-six years, the county of Kent lay in relapsed barbarism. In the latter year, Mr. Powell, an American loyalist, settled on the Richibucto ; at this time there were but four families, Acadians too, in the whole County ; and but eight in all the tract of country lying between Baie des Vents', in Miramichi, and Baie Verte, in Cumberland and from the entrance of the Richibucto, to the head of the Grand Lake. For the twenty two succeeding years, i. e. until 1809, it cannot be supposed that any thing of an historical character could have distinguished the annals of a wil- derness country, containing but a few scattered fami- lies, chiefly Acadians, from Bonaventure, Tracadiash, and other parts of the District of Gaspe, and who came hither in a few years after Mr. Powell, and settled chief- ly, upon the marshes and beaches that skirt the coast. About this period, the trade which had'hitherto been 136 COUNTY OF KENT. confined to an annual exportation, of three or four small cargoes of Alewives and assorted Lumber, to the West Indies, was now increased by the first two shipments of square timber. Although considerably retarded in its progress, by many embarrassing circumstances arising from its lo- calities, and from being formerly, a remote, and much neglected part of Northumberland. Kent has, not- withstanding, steadily advanced, in a comparative ratio, equal to any of the Counties we treat of. During the last ten years, a considerable trade has been carried on in sawed Lumber, and the manufacture of ton Timber ; while both agriculture and the fisheries, have been honoured with a greater share of attention, than has been conferred upon them, by either Northumberland or Gloucester. We have already said, that the early settlement of this County, might possibly, have been prevented, in a great measure, by the ferocity of the Indians. — The fol- lowing instances, while they shew their daring and bravery in war, as well as their summary, and rather mosaical way, of executing punishment among them- selves, supply a strong confirmation of the opiirion. In the year 1723, or 1724, a very general war was commenced against the English, by several divisions of the Micmac, or Eastern Nation, of which the most vio- lent, as also the most sanguinary, were the Bichibuctos. This tribe, assisted by a party of the Penobscots, and COUNTY OF KENT. 137 commanded by a formidable and stalwart fellow, called Argimoosh, or the Great Witch, attacked Canso, and other harbours in its vicinity, whence they took 16 or 17 sail of fishing vessels belonging to Massachusetts. — ■ Governor Phillips, happening to be in Canso, at the time, ordered two sloops to be manned, and sent them under the direction of a Mr. Elliott, of Boston, and a Mr. Robinson, of Cape Anne. Elliot, while cruising along the coast, perceived seven vessels lying in a har- ■ bour, called Winnepaug. As he approached them, he observed the decks to be crowded with Indians, who, when he came within hearing, hoisted their pennants, and cried out, "strike English Dogs, and come aboard, for you are all prisoners." As they had caught a Tartar, an engagement immediately ensued, in which, with desperate bravery, did the Indians maintain their ground, for nearly an hour. Being at length, over- powered, they jumped into the hold, and when driven thence, by the hand grenades Elliot flung amongst them, they plunged into the sea, where nearly all of them were either drowned or shot. In this encounter, Elliot received three severe wounds ; several of his men sustained similar injury ; and five of them were killed. The seven vessels thus captured, were part of the fleet taken from Canso ; but of their former seamen,consisting of thirty eight individu- als, only fifteen were recovered, the Indians having wantonly murdered nine of them, and sent the rest pri- soners to their settlements. Robinson retook two ves- sels, and killed several of the marauders ; and the re- 18 138 COUNTY OF KENT mainder, with their crews, were, after some difficulty obtained by ransom. A few years after these affairs, the ftichibuctos con- demned one of their tribe, convicted of some treasona- ble correspondence with the Mohawks, to be stoned to death. After a regular and formal trial, the criminal was conveyed with a great deal of solemnity, from Sni- der's Point, at the entrance of the harbour, to Piatt's • Point, about three miles further up, and there, being previously bound hand and foot, and fastened upon a rock, still visible at low water, -was the sentence exe- cuted. This mode of execution, so analogous to the Jewish custom, affords some illustration of Penn's theory, wherein he contends that the aboriginies of America, are descended from the Jews. Did an enquiry of this kind correspond with our views, we might, without much difficulty, advance some arguments to sustain it. All these circumstances confirm the opinion, that the sanguinary disposition of the natives, in a great degree, prevented the earlier settlement of this County. And when we consider the date of their attack on Canso, and that they were then, and for some time subsequent- ly, engaged in a predatory war, we are strongly inclined to believe, that settlements had been made on Richibuc- to, a considerable time before the taking of Bale Verte, and that these settlements were destroyed by the Indians. Although it is but four years since this county was COUNTY OF KENT 139 detached from Northumberland, even in that short time it has decidedly advanced. The advantages of local jurisdiction — a resident magistracy — and domestic re- presentation, have already strikingly manifested them- selves, in the improved condition of both the country and the people. Population has increased ; roads have been opened ; bridges erected ; and schools founded.^- Agriculture has also been extended ; an improved breed of cattle has been introduced ; and the fisheries have improved under an enlarged cultivation of them. In addition to these promising traits, the industry of the people has been further employed, in the construction of several large vessels ; and in the erection of some excellent Saw and Grist Mills. CHAPTER II. — •©- — TRADE AND REVENUE. In the year 1824, .the trade of Kent, like that of the whole Province, was highly overstrained. But as both it and Gloucester were-then comprised in Northumber- land, I can hardly be accused of digressing, if I open this short chapter by showing, as far as my information goes, a general view of our Provincial trade during the above year, and likewise the part, which the latter County sustained in it. In 1824, the total number of vessels, exclusive of coasters entered at, and cleared from all the ports in this Province, except those of Northumberland, were as follows : — COUNTY OF KENT. 141 INWARDS. No. Tons. Men. At Saint John, 432 94,248 4,192 — Saint Andrews, 156 29,687 1,406 — Dorchester, 4 841 37 — Shediac, 9 1,890 98 601 126,666 5,733 OUTWARDS. No. Tons. Men. From Saint John, 417 102,300 4,198 — Saint Andrews, 175 33,493 1,543 — Dorchester, 4 841 37 — Shediac, 9 1,890 98 605 138,524 5,876 SQUARE TIMBER EXPORTED. From Saint John, — Saint Andrews, — Dorchester, — Shediac, 114,116 Tons. 25,975 do. 1,246 do. 2,625 do. Total number of Tons, 143,962 142 COUNTY OF KENT. An account of the vessels entered at, and cleared from the different ports in the County of Northumberland exclu- sively. IH WARDS. No. Tons. Men. At Miramichi, 327 — Bathurst, 33 — Restigouche, 13 — Richibucto & Buctouche, 96 94,601 6,143 2,226 19,618 ,4,192 302 118 940 469 122,588 5,552 OUTWARDS. No. Tons. Men. From Miramichi, . 331 — Bathurst, 33 > ■' ' 1 < <- — Restigouche, 14 — Richibucio & Buctouche, 91 94,800 6,143 2,301 19,413 4,341 302 121 930 .469 122,657 5,694 SQUARE TIMBER EXPORTED. From Miramichi, 141,384 Tons. Bathurst, 8,308 ' do. '■'• Restigouche, < 3,062 do. ,,l, Richibucto & Buctouche, 27,544 . do. " ! ' Total number of Tons, 180,298 - What' we principally learn from these, tables is; that of one thousand and seventy vessels, measuring two COUNTY OF KENT. 143 hundred and forty-nine thousand, two hnndred and fifty-four tons, and manned by eleven thousand,two hun- dred and eighty -five seamen, all employed by this Pro- vince, in 1824; 469 vessels, 122,588 tons, and 5,552 seamen, were engaged in the trade of Northumberland alone. And, that of three hundred and twenty-four thousand, two hundred and sixty tons of square Tim- ber, then exported from the Province ; 180,298 tons, were shipped in that County. Thus did the County of Northumberland, in that year, ship 36,336 tons of Tim- ber, more than all the rest of the Provinces besides. — 00 — The following is a statement of the Trade and Re- venue of the County of Kent, for the years 1829 and 1830 ; to which is subjoined the number of vessels built therein, during the last eight years : — 1829. SHIPS INWARDS. No. Tons. Men. the Colonies, Foreign Europe From the United Kingdom the Colonies, ;dom 65 66 1 14,818 748 4,401 268 225 9 132 19,444 1,025 IMPORTS. gdom, Sterling. 19,420 11,055 10 9 30,475 10 9 144 COUNTY OF KENT. SHIPS OUTWARDS. No. Tons. Men. To the United Kingdom, 78 the Colonies, 66 144 EXPORTS. 17,783 4,401 22,184 881 268 1,149 Sterling. To the United Kingdom, 30,432 the Colo nies, 1,712 7 8 32,144 7 8 STAPLE ARTICLES EXPORTED. Timber, 27,899 Tons. Shingles, 18 M. Deals, 64,000 Feet. Treenails, 4,500 Pieces. Lathwood, 640 Cords. Handspikes, 183 -do. Oars, 1,334 Pieces. Ship knees i, 42 do. Staves, 32 M. Alewives, 1,780 Barrels. Spars, 1,320 Pieces. 1830. SHIPS INWARDS. "nited Kingdom, No. Tons. Men. Prom the t 78 18,841 918 From the Colonies, 78 4,026 309 From the United States, 1 296 13 157 23,163 1,240 COUNTY OF KENT. 145 IMPORTS. From the United Kingdom, From the Colonies, Sterling. 5,857 9J912 £15,769 SHIPS OUTWARDS No. Tons. Men. To the United Kingdom, To the Colonies, 92 74 166 22,064 1,043 4,597 313 26,661 1,356 EXPORTS. To the United Kingdom, To the Colonies, Sterling. 32,728 1,227 £33,955 STAPLE ARTICLES EXPORTED. Timber, 32,069 Tons. Spars 1,117 Pieces. Deals, 593 M. Feet. Shingles, 144 M. Lathwood, 809 Cords. Treenails, 900 Pieces. Oars, 979 Pieces. Handspikes, 478 Do. Staves, 31 M. Alewives, 1,218 Bis. Imperial Revenue, collected under Statutes of the British Parliament : Sterling. 1829. By Acts prior and subsequent to Geo. III. £178 18 11 1830. By Do. Do. Do. 169 19 5 348 18 4 Ex. 38 15 4 387 13 8 19 146 COUNTY OF KENT. Provincial Revenue, collected under Act of the General Assembly : 1829, 511 12 6 1830, 806 7 11. 1,318 5 Total Revenue for two years, £1,705 14 1 7 2,222 22,220 7 2,399 23,990 5 1,102 11,020 Vessels built in the the County of Kent, during the last eight years.* Builders. No. Tonnage. Supposed value. Messrs. R. & J. Jardine, James Long & Co., Win. Hannington, 19 5,723 57,230 These tables, for the period they illustrate, speak in a very nattering manner of the Trade of this County. It appears, that a considerable profit resulting to the Country is the consequence of a system, in which a great degree of prudence is discernible. Thus, we see that the shipments of 1829, after providing for the Imports, leave a surplus of £1,668 16 11 ; while the Exports of 1 830 exceed the Imports of the same year, in the sum of £18,186 0. * All the vessels built in this County, as well as those in Northumberland, ai e eminently distinguished for a durability of materials and an elegancy of construction. Many of them sustain a respectable character in the South American Trade, and others have, by sale, been raised to the dignity of East India men ; nor does it afford, us less pleasure to add, that the same remarks may, with equal justice, be applied to the vessels built in Gloucester. CHAPTER III. Rivers — Towns — Settlements — Population,