Doors and shutters: pine with oak or yellow birch. Windows and casings: oak. The palisade: pine. No cedar on the island. The partitions will be likewise of planks of pine of two inches thickness, well planed and white-washed on both sides, well fixed with nails . [fo|. 324v] 7th Article — Doors and shutters. The doors and shutters will be made of pine boards of a good inch thickness boxed in at the two ends with wood of oak or yellow birch all well white-washed and put together with tongue and groove well-pegged; all the wood that will be used for this work will be well dried and very sound . 8th Article — Glass frames and casings of oak wood. The frames will be made of oak wood also the casings . [fol. 325] 12th. Article — Palisades. The palisades serving as a fence will be of pine wood very straight, they will be ten feet long and seven inches or more in diameter. They will be placed one next to the other and will be pushed into the ground at least two and a half feet, held by a beam [lambourde] this beam held by hardwood pegs on each palisade . [fol 326] [PAC, AC, CHB, Vol. 14, fols. 323-326] 1734: 6 November | accompanied Monsieurs Saint—Ovide and Le Normant to lie Saint-Jean to establish there the lodgings, store and chapel of Port La-Joie, . [fol. 188] . an enclosure of wooden cedar posts would cost less but there is not any on the island and besides a fort of wood is of little duration. . [fol. 189] [PAC, AC, CHB, Vol. 16, fols. 188-189] 77