[.9
[Lawson] 1877-1878: 'Miminegash region's ’pine grew larger [here] than elsewhere’.
’Alberton’. was once covered with 'immense’ pines.
' Lawson 1851: 'Savage lsland [i.e. Oulton Island]
/"" 3% . is covered with pine wood’. r,’ M ’ r1; , Prendergast 1835: f c ¢ l / / " [Lawson] 1877-1878: Lot 11: pine ’prevailed’ in the original forest. ( j}- ; I _ , " Craswell 8. Anderson c. 1856: L0! 17-' ’spaces [with1pine'
Lots 10 and 12'.
[Cutting] ’pine on /
[Gray 1793: ‘lofty pines'.
Morris 1769: 'pine'.
Ready 1899: 'pine’: [an element of the original forest along the l coast of Lot 20] ’extending nearly two miles inland'.
\ Curtis 1775: 'in parts pine of different quality'.
l . “ Chappe||1776; 'cut down pine'.
Palmer 1816: / [Lawson] 1877-1878: 'plenty of pine timber’. l ’pines’: an element of the ohgina/ Stewart 1831' . . // / forest at New London, Marryat 1829: Lot 46: ’the woods most/y firs'. ' Seymour 1340' . ‘ . , Ea \ ‘;Tfég§’/-\_\ . , . 4 4 [somewhere along the coast of Lot 561: 7. Lot 4 7: ’there are few firs'. ' ‘a few pines still standing and traces 41/ ,1 ‘ -. 2/9 ‘2 7’ 1363‘ E PINES -‘ an element of the orlglnal ’pine trees the almost exclusive - of mine having been plundered'. l} ’ 1' 2H?“ ‘1 f. l 1 if 7 *r:‘\\_ forest at Brack/ey Paint. natives of the wood’ A: \ (1 *4 7: ‘1 , \ J‘ .“ ‘l ’. . )3 s.” " X “4’ l ‘47:“- ,1 ‘ m: 3 Lawson ost-1777: WWI/7 W [Lawson] 1877-1878: r B , ' f 3 \ flux? :y )1 7 -. (EA * f3: ‘ ’pine ngar the mill’. 'the country around Porthill 7‘1 ' % “tr/'71 ’i‘xi Yak 7% . . was originally covered with L 307-. \¥//-/* A») x { 5 , ' . -V1 /[7\ large and lofty pines'. '77xV//’ , ( ‘) ’ ~ ‘ «' Holland 1765 (March): / Xe: / {Land Commission 1875: ‘one of the best places for [mast] // f) /’ /, At the north end of a \\\\M' timber [is].. about Malpec'. //'/ T cg / /' ,. _ \ , farm: ’scrubby pines. \\ J: / ‘1\ L Lg 7' g: Anon. 1762: Schurman 1824: ” r: / it [Watson7] (post 1904): ‘”~\s’e 'plenty of fine ship timber’ Along the Wilmot River. ’fine groves of plne é a 7/ Q} 'some fine red pine in A : [re pine implied]. Bain 1868-1884: / ’ f 3M}: g’oves O” B’Ude”e” Road' .34 \ -_ V Holland 1765 (March): ’[At] Springfield: noble pines (P, strobus) g’ r); 1 5&7- \ ’one of the best places for [mast] grow solitary among the hardwood.‘ ‘ l\ w: timber [is] about the Three Rivers', " ”’3’ Land Commission 1875: / .- Macphall 1939- ‘ \ /\\Lawson (POSt 1777)‘ A farm' ’the front was pine land’ / 7 7 :19 . pine trees pine tree[s] cut f or - - 4 .' , Stewart 1783. . /fl loading the vessel [re in 1770]. Harris c.1865: 'pines’. ’ 'plenty of excellent pine. ff:- .-. 23/ Smethurst 1774: " ’the finest groves of white pine \ . that America could boast of'. Selkirk 1303; 'a considerable proportion of pine’. if- ’ .. ‘ ’some pine here and there [in the hardwood forest]’. 3< . /- - #4: Holland 1755 (March): a : f. 5—:- -//v— *~/ , Selkirk 1809; ‘a [contract] to cut pine on Lots 58, 60 & pan of 62’. ’ Anon. 1762; One 0’ ”’9 095’ 9/3065 ’0’ [mas‘]
timber [is] about Bear Harbour
’the best ship timber in the [I- e. Murray Harbourj’.
:‘onceco d'l ' ' ’. . .. . Sutherland 1861 vere With arge pine timber Island’[i.e. pine/mplled].
F'GURE 14- The geographically-Iocatable references to pine species in the records of the British period. ( * The ‘fir' of Stewart (1831) may actually refer to pine - see the main text.)