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Seite 9 - Ontario - pioneer experience — customs — mode of living — prices — wages — boundaries — areas cultivated — homes, etc. (7) The collection and preservation of correspondence — letters from and to settlers, documents in private hands pertaining to public and social affairs, etc., reports of local events and historic incidents in the family or public life. (8) The...
Seite 8 - Departments, and shall receive papers and documents of historical interest, not in current use, from all branches of the public service. When possible these documents shall be classified and calendared. The Bureau shall devote attention to : — (2) The copying and printing of important Ontario records lying in the Canadan Archives at Ottawa, in the State Departments there and elsewhere.
Seite 13 - Clerks under him. Inter alia, the following matters are dealt with by the Department : 1. The supervision of the Administration of Criminal Justice in the Province. 2. Recommending the appointment of and advising Sheriffs, Registrars, Judicial Officers, Justices of the Peace, Coroners...
Seite 9 - Archives can be easily classified and catalogued, viz. : To divide the history of Ontario until Confederation, 1867, into its political periods, arranging the material secured in chronological order, and giving each period a series of Reports. Thus, the work can be carried on in all the divisions simultaneously, and when sufficient material...
Seite 45 - County is to be bounded on the east by the westernmost line of the County of Northumberland, on the south by Lake Ontario, until it meets the westernmost point of Long Beach, thence by a line running north 16 degrees west, until it intersects the southern boundary of a tract of land belonging to the Mississaupa Indians, thence along the said tract, parallel to Lake Ontario, until it meets the north-westernmost boundary of the County of Northumberland.
Seite 9 - In the period between 1763 to 1791 the feature is the Loyalist immigration, with its accompanying settlement, and the conditions a"nd circumstances influencing the form of government adopted for Upper Canada. . ^3) From the organization of the Province to 1841. Here we have the real commencement of our Provincial history, the introduction of constitutional government; the work of the Legislature, some of whose early records are lost ; the outbreak of the War of 1812 : the progress of settlement,...
Seite 9 - In carrying out this plan the bureau aims at the collection of documents having, in the widest sense, a bearing upon the political or social history of Ontario, and upon its agricultural, industrial, commercial, and financial development; the collection of municipal, school, and church records; the collection and preservation of pamphlets, maps, charts, manuscripts, papers, regimental muster rolls, etc., bearing on its past or present history; the collection and preservation of facts illustrative...
Seite 9 - ... Confederation, 1867, into its political periods, arranging the material secured in chronological order, and giving each period a series of Reports. Thus, the work can be carried on in all the divisions simultaneously, and when sufficient material shall have accumulated in any one of them, it can be utilized either by the publication of documents or calendars in the annual reports without undue delay. From Confederation onward, the larger quantity of material to be dealt with, and the probable...
Seite 45 - That the eighteenth of the said counties be hereafter called by the name of the county of Essex; which county is to be bounded on the east by the county of Suffolk, on the south by Lake Erie, on the west by the river Detroit to Maisonville's Mill, from thence by a line running parallel to the river Detroit and Lake St. Clair...
Seite 45 - Durham ; which county is to be bounded on the east by the westernmost line of the county of Northumberland, on the south by lake Ontario until it meets the westernmost point of Long Beach, thence by a line running north sixteen degrees west until it intersects the southern boundary of a tract of land belonging to the Mississague Indians, thence along the said tract parallel to lake Ontario until it meets the northwesternmost boundary of the county of Northumberland.

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