61L
Seymour 1840:
'much hemlock’.
Craswell & Anderson c. 1856:
Bird 1856
8am 1868 1884
‘[At] Springfield: hemlock occurs in hollows’, M "wk? Wjfigxw
FIGURE 1-4.
' // of? . I I /‘ Near St. Eleanors. hemlocks, Bain 1868-1884
Lot 11: ‘spaces with hemlock'.
[Lawson] 1877-1878: ’great huge hemlocks’: [an element of the original forest of Lot 11].
Ready 1899: ’hemlock': [an element of the original forest along the coast of Lot 20] 'extending nearly two miles inland’.
g\ \ Land Commission 1875: ‘\ A tenant farm of 50 acres ’about 15 acres was \ . ”A“ D be \ softwood and hemlock, most/y hem/ock’. (N \ [Lawson] 1877-1878: W ’hem/ocks': [an element of the original forest at New London].
[Lawson] 1877- 1878.
JEN“; {€89 fl» 2*: an.
V 73$ ’Hemlock’ [at or near York Point]
‘ i: 1V / 7 Selkirk 1803: U” ’Hemlock is prevalent on the east 7\ , . branch of Plnette River.’ 7
’Some hemlock trees' [among hardwoods etc, south of the Plnette River. ]
Selkirk 1809: ’a [contract] to cut two shiploads of hemlock on Lots 58, 60 & part of 62’. /'
The geographically—Iocatable references to hemlock in the records of the British period.
Stewart 1831:
Lot 4 7: 'some hemlock’,
i g 'hemlocks'. [an element of the ir- / Fj‘f‘fi /or/'glnal forest at Brackley Point] (W l” W