The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 6John Holland Rose University Press, 1929 - Great Britain |
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Page 238
... supply . The provincial treasury received funds from two sources : first , the proceeds from the Quebec Revenue Act and from the Crown revenues of the province ; second , the taxes levied by the provincial parliament . By 1818 the ...
... supply . The provincial treasury received funds from two sources : first , the proceeds from the Quebec Revenue Act and from the Crown revenues of the province ; second , the taxes levied by the provincial parliament . By 1818 the ...
Page 239
... supply ; it involved the ascendancy of the French - speaking majority over the English - speaking minority . With the growing conviction that the entire control of supply belonged of right to the Assembly , its leaders began to take ...
... supply ; it involved the ascendancy of the French - speaking majority over the English - speaking minority . With the growing conviction that the entire control of supply belonged of right to the Assembly , its leaders began to take ...
Page 241
... supply . The Civil List should be separated from the provincial ex- penditure proper ; the latter only should be detailed annually at the discretion of the Assembly . If Dalhousie had been inclined to take high ground against the ...
... supply . The Civil List should be separated from the provincial ex- penditure proper ; the latter only should be detailed annually at the discretion of the Assembly . If Dalhousie had been inclined to take high ground against the ...
Contents
CHAPTER I | 1 |
The Cordillera | 7 |
Relations of the Aborigines to the Settlers | 13 |
150 other sections not shown
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administration American appointed Assembly attack banks became Britain British Columbia British North Brunswick Cabinet Canada West Canadian Government Canadian Pacific Railway Champlain CHBE Church coast colony Confederation Conference constitutional Council Crown defence despatch Dominion Durham economic election Empire England English established favour federal fisheries fishing force France French Canadians Governor Governor-General granted Halifax Hudson's Bay Company Ibid Imperial important increased Indians industry interest Iroquois Lake land later Laurier legislation Legislature Liberal Lieutenant-Governor London Lord Lower Canada Loyalists Macdonald Mackenzie Manitoba Maritime Provinces ment Montreal naval Newfoundland North America North West North West Company Nova Scotia Ontario organisation Ottawa Pacific Papers Parliament party political population ports prairies Prince Edward Island Quebec railway Report responsible government River Saskatchewan schools seigneurial settlement settlers ships Sir John St John's St Lawrence tariff territory tion Toronto trade treaty union United Upper Canada western