Notes on North America, Agricultural, Economical, and Social, Volum 1W. Blackwood and Sons, 1851 - 415 sider |
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Side xii
... emigrants from different countries . - Influence of New England on the development of the new States . - Demo- cratic party . - Principles of the Old Hunkers and the Barn- burners , 192 CHAPTER VIII . BUFFALO AND THE NORTH - WESTERN ...
... emigrants from different countries . - Influence of New England on the development of the new States . - Demo- cratic party . - Principles of the Old Hunkers and the Barn- burners , 192 CHAPTER VIII . BUFFALO AND THE NORTH - WESTERN ...
Side 37
... emigrants , as they arrived , followed their example : and thus not only was the progress of farming discouraged and retarded , but a belief began to prevail that the colony was unfitted for agricultural pursuits . The occasional large ...
... emigrants , as they arrived , followed their example : and thus not only was the progress of farming discouraged and retarded , but a belief began to prevail that the colony was unfitted for agricultural pursuits . The occasional large ...
Side 43
... emigrants , with money to purchase farms at two to four pounds an acre , might settle comfortably here . This alluvial land has been long famed for its grass and its produce of hay . In this country , where hay has hitherto been the ...
... emigrants , with money to purchase farms at two to four pounds an acre , might settle comfortably here . This alluvial land has been long famed for its grass and its produce of hay . In this country , where hay has hitherto been the ...
Side 67
... emigrants . - Wild raspberry.- Raspberry hay . - Mare's - tail cut for hay . - Boistown . - Great fire of 1825. - Gloomy landscape . - Fires in the forest . - Nakedness of the cleared land . An Irish settler . - Evil of farmers engaging ...
... emigrants . - Wild raspberry.- Raspberry hay . - Mare's - tail cut for hay . - Boistown . - Great fire of 1825. - Gloomy landscape . - Fires in the forest . - Nakedness of the cleared land . An Irish settler . - Evil of farmers engaging ...
Side 88
... emigrants make of the first place they settle upon , they will find at once a permanent family freehold and a happy home . Aug. 24th . - I remained at Fredericton only for a single day , during which I visited , among others , the farm ...
... emigrants make of the first place they settle upon , they will find at once a permanent family freehold and a happy home . Aug. 24th . - I remained at Fredericton only for a single day , during which I visited , among others , the farm ...
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Notes on North America, Agricultural, Economical, and Social, Volum 1 James Finlay Weir Johnston Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1851 |
Notes of North America: Agricultural, Economical, and Social, Volum 1 James Finlay Weir Johnston Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1851 |
Notes of North America: Agricultural, Economical, and Social, Volum 1 James Finlay Weir Johnston Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1851 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acres agricultural already appears Atlantic average banks Bay of Fundy beautiful beds British Brunswick buckwheat Buffalo bushels Canada West cent chiefly clay cleared colony considerable crops cultivated culture descended distance district emigrants England English Erie Canal Europe export Falls farm farmers feet fertile flat flour forest French Canadian grain hitherto horses important improvement increase Indian corn interest intervale Island Kamouraska Kingston labour Lake Erie Lake Ontario land less limestone Lower Canada manure miles Montreal mountains mouth natural neighbourhood Niagara North America Nova Scotia oats population potatoes produce profitable province quantity Quebec region rent Restigouche rich ridges Rimouski river road Rochester rocks rocky Roman Catholic rural salt sandstone seed seen settled settlers shales shores soil St John St Lawrence surface tion town trees turnips upland Upper Canada valley western New York wheat whole winter
Populære avsnitt
Side 419 - Every step in Scotland Is historical; the shades of the dead arise on every side; the very rocks breathe. Miss Strickland's talents as a writer, and turn of mind as an individual, in a peculiar manner fit her for painting a historical gallery of the most illustrious or dignified female characters in that land of chivalry and song."— Mtackwwid'e Mayasiite.
Side 196 - Having provided himself with a home, he commenced translating the record, by the gift and power of God, through the means of the Urim and Thummim ; and being a poor writer, he was under the necessity of employing a scribe to write the translation as it came from his mouth.
Side 195 - a curious instrument, called by the ancients the Urim and Thummim, which consisted of two transparent stones, clear as crystal, set in the two rims of a bow.
Side 421 - An extraordinary work, which has earned for itself a lasting place in the literature of the country, and within a few years found innumerable readers in every part of the globe. There is no book extant that treats so well of the period to the illustration of which Mr Alison's labours have been devoted. It exhibits great knowledge, patient research, indefatigable industry, and vast power.
Side 419 - Miss Strickland has not only been fortunate in the selection of her subject, but she has sustained to the full the high reputation for research which her previous writings have acquired. Her choice has indeed been evidently directed to that period when Scottish history assumes the highest interest, and connects itself most closely with the sympathies of the present day.