Source notes from Chapter 3 continued:

since 1858; the terms excluded purchase of 1 land that had been improved before the immediate lease began, or land containing a stream of water capable of being used for a mill; and finally the terms

did not obligate a proprietor to sell unless the buyer has paid the full price.

13. Report on the proceedings of the Land Commission in; Examiner, December 10, 1860.

14. From report of proceedings of the House of Assembly, 22 Examiner, April 23, 1861.

15. Summary of remarks of James C. Pope in the House of Assembly, in Examiner, July 22, 1861.

16. See for example the testimony given by delegates from the estate of Robert B. Stewart before the Land Commission, in Abstract of the Proceedings Before the Land Commissioners' Court Held During the Summer of 1860. Charlottetown, 1862, The "Protestant" Office. The other proprietor of the southern half of Lot 27 was Samuel Cunard. In a summary of the writs issued by proprietors between May 1, 1860 and March, 1861, both Messrs R. B. Stewart and Cunard are listed as issuing writs against tenants; Mr. Pope is not on the list;rin Examiner, June 24, 1861.

17. Journal of the House of Assembly Proceedings, Friday, April 11, 1862.

18. Summary of House of Assembly Proceedings, in Examiner, June 16, 1862.

19. Ibid.

20. Summary of House of Assembly Proceedings, in Examiner June 23, 1862.

21. Ibid.

22. Support for this conclusion is found in the remarks of parishioners at Montague concerning the transfer of Father James Brady from that parish, remarks that suggest the Bishop was acting against the wishes of the parish and even acting in a punitive fashion; see Examiner, November 14, 1861.

23. This conclusion is based on the fact that the mother of Father De Langie, Mrs. Magdelaine Frigon De Langie, moved from Quebec to Sou' West in 1864 and stayed with her son there until her death in December, 1865; see notice of her death in Examiner, January 15, 1866.