November 3: John Molson's steamboat, PS Accommodation, starts for Quebec City. It is 85 feet (26 m) overall, has a 6 horsepower (4.5 kW) engine, and makes the distance in 36 hours, but stops at night and reaches Quebec on November 6. The Accommodation is the second steamboat in America, and probably the world.
Gov. Gen. Craig tells L.C. parliament to extend benefits from U.S. embargo by ending "causeless jealousies and suspicions amongst yourselves"[13]
After controversy in 1808, Assembly resolves "that Ezekiel Hart, Esquire, possessing the Jewish religion, cannot sit, nor vote in this House"[14]
Craig orders election to replace current Assembly, citing members' "fruitless debates" and "private and personal animosities"[15]
"The pertinacious obstinacy and deep rooted prejudices of the lower classes" against smallpox vaccination are crimes against their children[16]
Models are being made in Trois-Rivières for iron machinery for steamboat that is to begin service from Montreal[17]
"The [ice] road across the river was hardly made when the streets of Montreal were crowded with American sleighs," with 500 more bringing farm products[18]
Road to Quebec City from head of Connecticut River would allow supply of beef that would drive down price "one or two pence on the pound"[19]
Obituary of Jean Baptiste Lahaille says his teaching in Seminary of Quebec "enabled his young auditors to follow him[...]almost without effort"[20]
L.C. resident has vision of three golden carriages, three angels and God's warning[35]
Upper Canada
"[In] Soil, Climate and Government, Upper Canada may vie with any part of the globe [and will soon] become one of our most flourishing Colonies"[36]
Quaker Timothy Rogers notes epidemic of typhus that on and near Yonge St. kills "about thirty[...]and considerable numbers in other places"[37]
Six Nations chiefs tell William Claus that "the cause of our misfortune" is land and "we have been very foolish & parted with our lands"[38]
Petition of 8 justices of the peace for remission of 7 jailed men's fines which they can't pay, or "they must suffer a perpetual imprisonment"[39]
Watertown, N.Y. report that 50 "Canadian Tories" came over from Kingston, U.C. and forcibly took 80 barrels of potash seized by officials[40]
Salt storage offered along Niagara because "carriers[...]on the British [and] American side of the river[...]leave salt exposed to the weather"[41]
Quakers' right to affirm or declare (instead of swear) in any case where oath usually is required is extended to "Menonists and Tunkers"[42]
John Strachan's lectures on natural philosophy are for "young Gentlemen who [want] a knowledge of this, the most[...]interesting of all the Sciences"[43]
Nova Scotia
Anglican minister says he has many congregants but few Church members in Rawdon, but is happy with Newport though "the Baptists are numerous"[44]
Glebe rent is not higher given how much pasture is needed to fatten one ox, how long it is (12 years) before stump land can be plowed, etc.[45]
Commission declares Halifax merchant "a lunatic" and he, his property and his debts are to go under protection of his wife and two others[46]
Minister says new schoolmaster has clear voice, is good reader and "compleat master of psalmody" and has much better education than most[47]
New Brunswick
Jonathan Odell states that no purchase or lease of Indigenous land is allowed unless "with the full consent of every Man of the tribe"[48]
Mi'kmaq Julien, Viense and other families petition government for "vacant" 2-mile stretch of Nipisiguit River near Bay of Chaleur[49]
Charlotte County report notes "great loss of timber" since price rose on greater demand, with 20,000 tons of squared pine amassed[50]
School will teach girls reading, writing, sewing and embroidery, and boys reading, writing, arithmetic and "Merchant's Accounts"[51]
Labrador
Some Inuit maintain Christian habits while out on land, including singing hymns, praying together and saying "what the Lord had done for them"[52]
^"Map of Canada, &c." ("published July 6th, 1809"), in Letters from Canada, Written during a Residence There in the Years 1806, 1807 and 1808[....] Accessed 15 October 2024
^"Quebec, January 9, 1809; From so great a part[....]," The Quebec Mercury, January 9, 1809 pg. 15, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 7 October 2024
^"Congress; House of Representatives; Debate on raising the Embargo, and authorising Letters of Marque and Reprisal--Continued; Thursday, Feb. 2; Mr. Durell's speech concluded," National Intelligencer, & Washington Advertiser (February 17, 1809), pg. 2 (column 2), Library of Congress. Accessed 17 October 2024
^"The Quebec Gazette; The anti-Embargo town meetings[....]" The Quebec Gazette, February 9, 1809 pg. 1 (column 4 bottom), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 10 October 2024
^"Quebec, February 27, 1809; At our last[....]," The Quebec Mercury, February 27, 1809 pgs. 70–1 (bottom of column 3), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. (See also "Reasons of Mr. Randolph for Repealing the Embargo," pg. 83) Accessed 7 October 2024
^"New-York, Feby. 3; It is said in letters from Washington[....]" The Quebec Gazette, February 16, 1809 pg. 2 (column 3 top), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. (See also "Substance of the Non-Intercourse Act" article (pg. 2, column 1) quoting several sections of new law, and also U.S. Treasury circular (in Documents Accompanying the Message of the President (frame 4)) saying embargo will continue) Accessed 10 October 2024
^"Yesterday's Burlington Mail; Washington, May 22" The Quebec Gazette, June 8, 1809 pg. 2, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 10 October 2024
^"Gov. Hull's Address to the Indians, Aug. 1809" (August 29, 1809 text), pgs. 3 and 4 Six Nations Public Library. Accessed 15 October 2024
^"Provincial Parliament of Lower Canada; I might be thought insensible[....]" (April 13, 1809), The Quebec Mercury, April 17, 1809 pg. 125, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 8 October 2024
^"The order of the day[....]" (May 5, 1809), Journal of the House of Assembly, Lower-Canada (1809), pgs. 242, 244, 246, 248 (See also next day's failed attempts (pgs. 250, 252) to amend resolution barring Hart, and letter to the editor ("Mr. Editor," pg. 156) calling for free enjoyment of every religion, and provincial election results (pg. 350) showing Hart lost by wide margin) Accessed 4 October 2024
^"And then His Excellency was pleased to make the following Speech[....]" (May 15, 1809), Journal of the House of Assembly, Lower-Canada (1809), pgs. 302, 304 Accessed 4 October 2024
^"It is with the greatest grief[....]," The Quebec Mercury, March 13, 1809 pg. 87 (left column), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 7 October 2024
^"Extract of a letter from Three Rivers," The Quebec Mercury, February 27, 1809 pg. 71, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. (See also description (pg. 358) of steamboat and its maiden voyage and another on Lake Champlain that serves St. Jean sur Richelieu) Accessed 7 October 2024
^"Montreal, Jan. 9," The Quebec Gazette, January 12, 1809 pg. 1 (right column), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. (See also "Boston, January 14" report (pg. 2, column 2) of 700 sleighs on road between Montreal and western Vermont, and "The Land Embargo; Comment" (pg. 1, column 3) reporting glutted Montreal market) Accessed 10 October 2024
^"Communication," The Quebec Mercury, October 30, 1809 pg. 349, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 9 October 2024
^"Died," The Quebec Gazette, June 1, 1809 pg. 2 (column 4), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 10 October 2024
^"Mr. Young[....]" (January 7, 1809), The Quebec Mercury, January 9, 1809 pg. 15, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 7 October 2024
^"Quebec: Thursday, October 19, 1809; On Friday last[....]," The Quebec Gazette, October 19, 1809 pg. 2 (column 4), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 11 October 2024
^"Major Campbell; There is still another point[....]," The Quebec Mercury, January 16, 1809 pg. 20, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 7 October 2024
^"Quebec Gazette; Two inhabitants[....], The Quebec Gazette, July 20, 1809 pg. 2 (column 4), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 11 October 2024
^"Daring Robbery," The Quebec Mercury, July 24, 1809 pg. 238–9, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 8 October 2024
^"Quebec, July 15, 1809," The Quebec Mercury, July 17, 1809 pg. 227, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 8 October 2024
^"Montreal, March 6" The Quebec Gazette, March 9, 1809 pg. 2 (column 3 bottom), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 10 October 2024
^"Wanted" The Quebec Gazette, February 23, 1809 pg. 3 (column 1), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 10 October 2024
^"Hat Warehouse" (June 27, 1809), The Quebec Gazette, July 13, 1809 pg. 1 (column 1), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 11 October 2024
^"Theatre," The Quebec Mercury, March 13, 1809 pg. 87, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 7 October 2024
^"Theatre," The Quebec Gazette, October 19, 1809 pg. 3 (column 1), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 11 October 2024
^"The Literary Society of Quebec[....]" (April 5, 1809), The Quebec Mercury, April 10, 1809 pg. 120, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 8 October 2024
^"New Museum of Wax Work," The Quebec Mercury, May 8, 1809 pg. 151, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 8 October 2024
^"Communication" (May 4, 1809), The Quebec Mercury, May 22, 1809 pg. 163, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 8 October 2024
^"To the Right Honorable Lord Castlereagh one of His Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, &c. &c. &c." (October 24, 1809), pg. 13 Accessed 3 October 2024
^"Proceedings of a Council with the Six Nations" (March 10, 1809), Records of Niagara; 1805–1811 images 61–2, Niagara Historical Society. (See also details (image 64) of problems with settlers on their land) Accessed 15 October 2024
^"Petitions of Magistrates of Niagara" (June 5, 1809), Records of Niagara; 1805–1811 image 58, Niagara Historical Society. Accessed 15 October 2024
^"British Aggression," The Quebec Mercury, March 13, 1809 pg. 85, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 7 October 2024
^"Portage" Geneva (N.Y.] Gazette (June 21, 1809), Maritime History of the Great Lakes. Accessed 15 October 2024
^"An Abstract of the Proceedings of the Society; The Rev. Dr. Cochran[....]," A Sermon Preached before the Incorporated Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts at their Anniversary Meeting[....] (1810), pgs. 37–38 (Images 42–3). Accessed 28 October 2024
^"Letter from Captain Hatch to Edward Winslow" (truncated; July 23, 1809), University of New Brunswick Library. (See also letter with details of jump in timber market because of Baltic blockade, and letter reporting "a great and destructive havoc [in Westmorland County] Pine timber [for] his Majesty's Use") Accessed 17 October 2024
^"Education," The (Saint John) Times; or True Briton (August 24, 1809), pg. 1 University of New Brunswick Libraries. Accessed 3 October 2024
^Letter from Hopedale (August 4, 1809), 1806-1810, vol. 04: Periodical accounts relating to the missions of the Church of the United Brethren established among the heathen, pg. 447 (frame 495 of 574), Memorial University of Newfoundland. Accessed 16 October 2024
^Letter from Hopedale (August 4, 1809), 1806-1810, vol. 04: Periodical accounts relating to the missions of the Church of the United Brethren established among the heathen, pg. 446 (frame 494 of 574), Memorial University of Newfoundland. Accessed 16 October 2024
^"St. John's, Newfoundland, May 13," The Quebec Gazette, July 6, 1809 pg. 3 (column 1), Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 11 October 2024