Notice of death of
Father Casot, last
Jesuit in L.C., notes his charity toward poor people and calls his loss "a public calamity"[10]
Assembly asks British government to dedicate former Jesuit property to education in order to preserve population's attachment to
Constitution[11]
George Heriot, deputy
postmaster general for British North America, announces and seeks support for monthly winter postal link with Upper Canada[12]
Partners bringing
spring water to Montreal area seek charter, supported by Montrealers who find
St. Lawrence River water "impure in the extreme"[13]
Death of shipbuilder
Patrick Beatson "will be severely felt by a great number of
Mechanics as his extensive concerns[...]are as yet unrivalled"[14]
Any man suing another man for latter's "
criminal conversation" with former's wife does not need to prove latter man guilty of
adultery[15]
Christians: "[...]examine your thoughts, words, and actions [for faults], especially after much business, speaking, &c.[....]"[16]
New York medical journal says Quebec man plans to publish on "how far the laws of Chemical Action" explain "
Phenomena of organic matter"[17]
Every
6th Regiment soldier must have permission to sell any clothing, equipment or arms, and anyone buying from one or his wife will be prosecuted[18]
"Very great rise in the price of paper, wages and the necessaries of life" since
Gazette's 1764 debut means subscription rises from $3 to $4 annually[19]
Guilty of
grand larceny, "the old offender, Martha Malone, [is sentenced to] 39
lashes in presence of a female only," and 2 years
hard labour[36]
John McKinnon has "prevailed with his Wife Ann to return to him under an engagement on his part that she shall not have any
cause of fear"[37]
"The
Coroner's Inquest sat on the body of Mary Austin, an unfortunate woman, found dead in the street - Verdict, accidental death"[38]
A. Paddock and two others, "informed that there is a very great probability that the
Small Pox will soon appear" in Saint John, offer inoculations[39]
Physician
John Caleff describes outbreak of smallpox in
St. Andrews in last two months affecting more than 500 people but with only 3 deaths[40]
Patent medicine: "Vermifuge Lozenges for destroying worms[,] Volatile Tincture; An immediate Cure for the TOOTH ACHE[,] Infallible German Corn Plaister"[41]
Cornerstone of
Assembly and law courts building laid; it will combine "the principles of utility, œconomy and elegance in the highest degree"[44]
Fashions: "Small round caps with very narrow lace borders [–] a
peculiar appearance of
buxom beauty[,]" scarlet
cashmerecloaks, short-waisted coats[45]
Newfoundland
"The Newfoundland Fishery has been highly successful last season; the Venus navigated by five men, caught 80,000
Cod"[46]
France's Newfoundland fishery, once four times bigger than England's, is now nearly gone and "almost exclusivly in possession of the English"[47]
Labrador
Missionary makes chart of coast as far as Hudson Bay from Inuit accounts, including "dwelling places, rivers, bays and woods" and
anchorages[48]
Solomon says "[...]I cannot regain that state of mind I enjoyed, when I was
baptized. There is[...]a dark shadow between me and our
Savior"[49]
Hudson's Bay Company
Indigenous woman and 5 children walk 9 days to
York Factory after losing her husband; she reports others unable to walk, but no one at Y.F. can help[50]
^"July 6. The following[....]," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1848 (September 25, 1800), pg. 2. Accessed 10 April 2024
^"London, June 1," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1843 (August 21, 1800), pg. 2. Accessed 9 April 2024
^"Paris, October 3," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1857 (November 27, 1800), pgs. 1–2. (See also
update ("New York, 15 Nov." pg. 4) that treaty postpones settlement of past differences "till peace in Europe") Accessed 10 April 2024
^"London, October 23," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1820 Cahier 1 (March 13, 1800), pg. 1. Accessed 4 April 2024
^"A Petition of divers inhabitants of the District of Montreal[....]" (read April 18, 1800), Journal of the House of Assembly of Lower-Canada from the 5th March to the 29th May 1800, pgs.
pgs. 150, 152, 154, 156. Accessed 3 April 2024
^"On Sunday last[....]," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1821 Cahier 1 (March 20, 1800), pg. 3 (bottom). Accessed 4 April 2024
^"The order of the day being read[....]" (April 18, 1800), Journal of the House of Assembly of Lower-Canada from the 5th March to the 29th May 1800, pgs.
pgs. 162, 164, 166. Accessed 3 April 2024
^"Notice is hereby given[....]," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1856 (November 20, 1800), pg. 2. Accessed 10 April 2024
^"Tuesday, 18th March, 1800; A Petition of certain Maitres de Poste(....), Journal of the House of Assembly of Lower-Canada from the 5th March to the 29th May 1800, pgs.
48, 50, 52. Accessed 28 March 2024
^"Quebec, December 11, 1800," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1859 (December 11, 1800), pg. 2. Accessed 10 April 2024
^"Necessary Rules for a Christian" The Sincere Catholick's Companion (Quebec, 1800, Second edition; unpaginated), image 13. Accessed 27 March 2024
^"Quebec, Wednesday, 25th June, 1800; Extract[....]," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1835 Cahier 1 (June 26, 1800), pg. 2. (See also
notice of publication (in French; pg. 4) of this work) Accessed 9 April 2024
^"Notice is Hereby Given," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1846 Cahier 1 (September 11, 1800), pg. 4. Accessed 10 April 2024
^"Notice" (April 25, 1800), The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1827 Cahier 1 (May 1, 1800), pg. 4. Accessed 5 April 2024
^"Treaty No. 12" (September 11, 1800), Treaty Texts - Upper Canada Land Surrenders. Accessed 11 April 2024
^"York, (Upper Canada) Saturday, June 7; Tho' I have called you together[....]," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1837 Cahier 1 (July 10, 1800), pg. 4. Accessed 9 April 2024
^"VI. What is the law of this Province respecting the slavery of Negroes?; When this shall be proved, the next inquiry will be in the legality of it.[...]," Brief; Supreme Court, New Brunswick[...]1800, George III, quoted in
The Loyalists and Slavery in New Brunswick (1898; unpaginated), Provincial Archives of New Brunswick. Accessed 27 March 2024
^"Letter from Sir John Wentworth to Richard Molesworth" (January 15, 1800),
pg. 2 Nova Scotia Archives. Accessed 15 April 2024
^"Halifax, June 5," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1840 (July 31, 1800), pg. 2. Accessed 9 April 2024
^"Saint John, Friday, December 19, 1800; The Coroner's Inquest[....]," The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XV,
No. 91 (December 19, 1800), pg. 3 (3rd column). Accessed 3 April 2024
^"Saint John, Sept. 19; The Annual Circuit Court[....]," The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XV,
No. 78 (September 19, 1800), pg. 3 (3rd column). Accessed 1 April 2024
^"Notice" (August 22, 1800), The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XIV,
No. 65 (August 29, 1800), pg. 3 (4th column). Accessed 1 April 2024
^"Saint John, Friday, December 12, 1800; The Coroner's Inquest[....]," The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XV,
No. 90 (December 12, 1800), pg. 3 (3rd column). Accessed 3 April 2024
^"Small Pox" (June 13, 1800), The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XIV,
No. 65 (June 13, 1800), pg. 3 (4th column). Accessed 1 April 2024
^The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XIV,
No. 59 (May 9, 1800), pg. 3 (4th column). Accessed 1 April 2024
^The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XIV,
No. 60 (May 16, 1800), pg. 3 (2nd column). Accessed 1 April 2024
^"Proposals[....]," The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XV,
No. 89 (December 5, 1800), pg. 3 (2nd column). Accessed 3 April 2024
^"The St. John Gazette; We hear from Fredericton[....]," The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XIV,
No. 65 (June 13, 1800), pg. 3 (3rd column). Accessed 1 April 2024
^"Fashions - London," The Saint John Gazette, and General Advertiser, Vol. XIV,
No. 62 (May 30, 1800), pg. 4 (2nd column). (See also
list (pg. 3, 3rd column) of walking dresses and head dresses, and
report (pg. 3, 3rd column) that 18 ladies wearing muslin undresses have caught fire and 18,000 caught cold) Accessed 1 April 2024
^The Royal Gazette and Nova-Scotia Advertiser (July 1, 1800),
Number 647 pg. 2, 3rd column. Accessed 26 March 2024
^"London; Oct. 19," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1815 Cahier 1 (February 6, 1800), pg. 2. Accessed 4 April 2024
^"From Okkak, September 5, 1800; Among our visitors last winter(....)" "Letters from Labrador[....]," Periodical Accounts Relating to the Missions of the Church of the United Brethren Established among the Heathen, No. XXX, pg. 468, Memorial University of Newfoundland. Accessed 11 April 2024
^"Boston, April 14; The union of Ireland with Great Britain[....]," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1828 Cahier 1 (May 8, 1800), pg. 2. Accessed 5 April 2024
^"House of Common - Feb. 22; Committee of Supply," The Quebec Gazette,
Num. 1830 Cahier 1 (May 22, 1800), pg. 1. Accessed 5 April 2024
^"Tues. 1st Jan'y 1800," "Journal of the Rocky Mountain Fort / Fall 1799,"
Image 31 University of Saskatchewan Libraries. (See also
James McKenzie's list of celebration expenses) Accessed 11 April 2024
^James McHenry and 2 others,
"Report" (May 8, 1800), Letter from the Commissioners[...]for the Relief of the Refugees from the British Provinces of Canada and Nova Scotia, image 9. Accessed 26 March 2024