Acadiensis, Volumes 10-111980 |
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Page 123
... French, on being superior to them, they contented themselves with putting them to ransom; and though they sometimes took their fortified places, they did not settle in them. As all their pretension in Acadia was trade, they sometimes ...
... French, on being superior to them, they contented themselves with putting them to ransom; and though they sometimes took their fortified places, they did not settle in them. As all their pretension in Acadia was trade, they sometimes ...
Page 143
... French-Canadian society actually became more and more rural after the Conquest, as demographic growth resulted in a smaller percentage of the habitants taking part in the fur trade. Yet French-Canadian farmers for a time were able to ...
... French-Canadian society actually became more and more rural after the Conquest, as demographic growth resulted in a smaller percentage of the habitants taking part in the fur trade. Yet French-Canadian farmers for a time were able to ...
Page 148
... French Canadians were willing to invest in railroads which were primarily designed to serve Lower Canadian customers. French-Canadian cultural values were not the crucial factor in determining the position that they would take in the ...
... French Canadians were willing to invest in railroads which were primarily designed to serve Lower Canadian customers. French-Canadian cultural values were not the crucial factor in determining the position that they would take in the ...
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