Annexation in the Maritimes? The Butler Mission to Charlottetown

“The agricultural produce of the fertile Island found a ready market in industrial New England between 1854 and 1865. Exports to the United States fell from £120,928 in 1865 to £21,633 in 1866, while imports only slipped slightly.16 The cheap food that fed immigrant workers in New England mill towns during the Civil War now came from other sources. Stagnation gripped the Island economy, in spite of minor illicit trading with American fishermen. While Canada had been able to open some alternate markets after the collapse of reciprocity,1 7 Prince Edward Island had virtually no place to turn. Canadian farmers produced many of the same staples as did the Island. Prohibitive transportation costs and uncertain communication with Canada’s population centres made the Dominion an unimportant market.”

“The only hope seemed to be a renewal of reciprocity with the United States. The Island slowly strangled; there was no outlet for its farm produce; its population was being drained by the attractions of New England. Islanders thought reciprocity would be a panacea for the colony. They hoped to achieve some form of reciprocal trade with the United States, either with or without the cooperation of Canada.”

Tallman, Ronald D. “Annexation in the Maritimes? The Butler Mission to Charlottetown” Dalhousie Review, Volume 53, Number 1, 1973 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/59582/dalrev_vol53_iss1_pp97_112.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

The Halifax Press and B.N.A. Union 1856-1864

“However, our chief interest in this matter lies not in the practical actions of statesmen but rather in the editorial opinion on this subject as expressed by the Halifax newspapers. Of these the Acadian Recorder was one of the first and most persistent champions of inter-provincial consolidation.”

“By 1864 the question of B. N. A. Union had not yet become a strong political issue between parties. Both Liberal and Conservative party organs favored the scheme in principle, realizing that it was “pregnant with weal and woe to the people of British America.” As to the difficulties involved in the achievement of such a project, the Recorder tended to minimize them while the Morning Chronicle, the Novascotian and the Weekly Citizen were inclined to become increasingly pessimistic.”

Heisler, John “The Halifax Press and B.N.A. Union 1856-1864” Dalhousie Review, Volume 30, Number 2, 1950 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/63842/dalrev_vol30_iss2_pp188_195.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

Political Experiences in Nova Scotia, 1867-1869

In 1867, Nova Scotia faced a crucial decision on whether to join the proposed Canadian Confederation. Initially hesitant, Premier Dr. Tupper decided against a dissolution of the House of Assembly and instead sought its approval for the plan. Despite protests from various constituencies, the Resolution in favor of Confederation was passed, leading to the formation of the Dominion of Canada on July 1st. However, the subsequent general election revealed overwhelming opposition to Confederation, with only one out of fourteen representatives supporting it in Ottawa and merely two out of forty in the local House of Assembly.

The Anti-Confederate movement gained momentum. The attorney-general passionately defended their cause in the Assembly, expressing confidence in their appeal to the Crown but hinting at seeking assistance from another nation if necessary. The lieutenant-governor condemned disloyal rhetoric as treasonous, reflecting the intense polarization and uncertainty surrounding Nova Scotia’s decision on Confederation.


“It now rested with Nova Scotia to give her decision. When Mr. Tilley’s government were first defeated at the polls, it seemed to Dr. Tupper, the Nova Scotian premier, impolitic and unnecessary to press the question in the sister province. Now, however, that New Brunswick had accepted the principle of union, it became incumbent on Nova Scotia to deal with the matter. For reasons which, no doubt, were in his opinion sufficient, Dr. Tupper decided and Sir Fenwick Williams, the lieut.-governor, acquiesced in the decision-that no dissolution should take place, but that the existing House of Assembly should be asked to pass the requisite Resolution in favour of the plan. Against this course many protests were lodged, and many addresses were sent in from towns and constituencies in the province, but without avail. The Imperial Government accepted the Resolution as that of the legislature of Nova Scotia, and as such representing the people of the province, and declined to go behind the record. Accordingly the Queen’s Proclamation confederating the several provinces was issued, and on the 1st July, 1867, the “Dominion of Canada” came into existence. The Nova Scotian legislature, however, which had passed the Resolution in favour of Confederation with almost its dying breath, now expired by efflux of time, and a general election became necessary. It took place on 17th September/ the same day on which the first elections were held in that province for the House of Commons at Ottawa. The result was startling and dramatic. Of the fourteen members elected to the House of Commons in Ottawa, Dr. Tupper was the only one returned in favour of Confederation, whilst of the forty members constituting the local House of Assembly only two were in favour of that measure! The Anti-Confederate party, as they were called, pledged themselves to use every means in their power to release their country from “the hated yoke of Canada”.”

“One of the first matters that came before me was a formal Memorandum from the attorney-general, gravely advising the governor to order the collectors at Halifax and at all other ports to pay the customs duties into the local treasury!”

“Meetings were held all over the province, at which inflammatory addresses were delivered, a systematic agitation was organized, the Imperial Government, the Canadian Government, and the Confederate party were abused and denounced without stint, and the whole country was in a ferment. The lieut.-governor, as a soldier, waxed more and more indignant at the disloyal and even treasonable utterances in the press and on the platforms.”

“The attorney-general, who was a very clever though eccentric man and by far the best speaker in the House, addressed himself to this point in an impassioned Anti-Confederate speech which he delivered in the Assembly. He professed to believe that their cause was so good and their appeal to the Crown so reasonable that it could not fail of success; “but”, raising his voice for the benefit of the public in the gallery, “if the Imperial Government should”, (he said) “refuse our prayer, we shall then have to appeal to another nation to come to our aid.”

Moody, H. “Political Experiences in Nova Scotia, 1867-1869” Dalhousie Review, Volume 14, Number 1, 1934 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/58419/dalrev_vol14_iss1_pp65_76.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

Halifax Newspapers and the Federal Principle, 1864-1865

“…in the Maritimes Confederation was the remedy for no particular evils, and it was an issue to be decided on its merits. It promised practical benefits of course, but it offered few practical solutions for Maritime problems. Confederation raised new problems: it did not solve old ones. In Nova Scotia these new problems erupted quite suddenly in public debate in August, 1864, with the first appearance of the Canadian visitors. The debate thus begun filled the pages of the newspapers. In Halifax four of the major newspapers carried an editorial on Confederation in virtually every issue from that time on for over three years. It is the purpose of this paper to discuss this debate with reference to the ideas about federal government that developed out of it. Although economic issues were important, they were not the first to be considered. Nor perhaps is there much profit in exploring the arithmetic that every Halifax newspaper and politician juggled to suit his own argument. What are interesting–in some ways remarkable- are the constitutional and political views that the Halifax newspapers expounded with intelligence and vivacity. These views were developed between October, 1864 and January, 1865.”

“In 1864 Halifax had eleven newspapers for its population of some 25,000. There was one daily, the Morning Chronicle, and seven tri-weeklies. The other three were weeklies of a religious bent, one Baptist, one Methodist and one Presbyterian. The Roman Catholic paper was a tri-weekly”

Waite, Peter B. “Halifax Newspapers and the Federal Principle, 1864-1865” Dalhousie Review, Volume 37, Number 1, 1957 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/58751/dalrev_vol37_iss1_pp72_84.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

Joseph Howe and the Anti-Confederation League

THE HON. JUDGE PATTERSON

“UNDER the above title Mr. Laurence J. Burpee has edited and published a series of letters written by Howe while in England in 1866-7, opposing the passage of the British North America Act, to William J. Stairs, one of the Vice Presidents of the League. Howe was himself the President, and its Constitution which Mr. Burpee gives in an Appendix is unmistakably his work. In expressing his thought in crisp sentences, where every word tells, there was in Nova Scotia no one aut similis aut secundus to the great Tribune.”

“True to its claim to represent the Maritime Provinces, the League did not limit its interests to Nova Scotia. There was an election, well do the Anti-Confederates know it, in New Brunswick in 1866. Elections then were not, any more than now, won by prayers alone. A Macedonian cry came from that province.”

Patterson, G. “Joseph Howe and the Anti-Confederation League” Dalhousie Review, Volume 10, Number 3, 1930 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/58341/dalrev_vol10_iss3_pp397_402.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

The Cradle of Confederation: Some Reflections

“In Nova Scotia only the clever political footwork of Charles Tupper kept his province from vetoing the plan. But as soon as the new Dominion was formed Nova Scotians expressed themselves in no uncertain terms. Of 18 men elected to the House of Commons in Ottawa all but one, Tupper himself, were pledged to break away from what Joseph Howe called the “Botheration” Scheme. In a provincial election 35 of 37 elected members were anti-Confederationist.”

“And while secession never found such an organized voice as in Nova Scotia where elections were won on it, it is still a word which one hears in political circles in P.E.I. Speaking on the Throne Speech Debate during the 1956 session, the Leader of the Opposition, R. R. Bell, raised the old cry. He denounced The Hon. Mr. Pickersgill for having said in Newfoundland that that province could not secede. Said Mr. Bell, “Let him come here and say that and we will give him that famous answer of his senior colleague, Mr. Howe. ‘If we want to; who’s going to stop us?’ Mr. Bell asked if the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration would send the Canadian Army or Airforce against the Island in such an eventuality. Apart from any constitutional bar to secession it is of course a move which will never be taken…”

MacQuarrie, Heath N. “The Cradle of Confederation: Some Reflections” Dalhousie Review, Volume 37, Number 1, 1957 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/58748/dalrev_vol37_iss1_pp57_62.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

An Unexpected Incident of Confederation in Nova Scotia

During the 1866 session, Nova Scotia faced a critical decision regarding Confederation after New Brunswick’s rejection of the Quebec scheme. William Miller unexpectedly proposed a resolution supporting a federal union, catching Dr. Tupper off guard. Tupper swiftly introduced a similar resolution, leading to its adoption by the House of Assembly. Miller’s support, along with others, secured the resolution’s passage, despite initial opposition. However, suspicions arose regarding Miller’s motives, with accusations of bribery and betrayal circulating.

Miller defended himself, claiming he acted on information that Anti-Confederate leaders were considering accepting Confederation. Samuel MacDonell corroborated Miller’s account, suggesting Annand’s potential involvement in negotiations. Yet, there is uncertainty about the truth of Miller’s claims and Annand’s intentions. While Annand faced insinuations of betrayal during the debate, there is insufficient evidence to support the allegations. Ultimately, Miller’s proposition played a crucial role in Nova Scotia’s path towards Confederation, highlighting the complex political dynamics and personal motivations at play during this pivotal period.


“It will be remembered that while the Canadian parliament adopted, by large majorities in both Houses, the scheme of Confederation agreed upon by the delegates from the several provinces at the Quebec Conference, the parliament of Prince Edward Island rejected it; and the people in New Brunswick, to whom it was submitted by the Government of that province, by an enormous majority voted against it. Without New Brunswick the proposed union was for Nova Scotia impossible.”

“What would the Legislature of Nova Scotia do during the session of 1866, now that New Brunswick’s position had changed? It was notorious that a majority of the House of Assembly were strongly, perhaps I might say irreconcilably, opposed to the Quebec scheme. Adroit and able as Dr. Tupper was, he was unable to discover any method by which he could secure a favorable vote. From February 22nd, when parliament opened, until April 3rd, so far as the records show, the question of either the larger or the smaller union was never mentioned. On that memorable day William Miller, member for Richmond County, afterwards Senator Miller, rose in his place; without any previous notice of motion, but bringing himself within the rules of the House by making an enquiry of the Government, he made a long speech in which, while still affirming his determined opposition to the Quebec scheme, he promised the Government his cordial support, (Debates, House of Assembly (1866) page 189) “if they will publicly abandon the Quebec scheme and introduce a resolution in favour of a Federal Union of British North America leaving the details of the measure to the arbitrament of the Imperial Government properly advised by delegates from all the provinces.” Miller was supported by Samuell MacDonell, one of the members for Inverness County, whose opposition to Confederation in any form had previously been most pronounced. Dr. Tupper, though-as he afterwards solemnly deposed-taken completely by surprise at this volte face on the part of Miller and MacDonell, was not slow to take advantage of it. Within a few days he introduced a resolution along the lines suggested by Miller. It read as follows:

Resolved that His Excellency the Lord Governor be authorized to appoint delegates to arrange with the Imperial Government a scheme of union which will effectually secure just provisions for the rights and interests of this province; each province to have an equal voice in such delegation, Upper and Lower Canada being for this purpose considered as separate provinces.

(Curiously enough, this resolution does not appear in the official reports of the Debates for 1866; but it will be found on page 5 of the Debates for 1867) …

It was the fateful resolution for Nova Scotia; its far reaching effect cannot be overestimated. Howe once referred to it as, “the resolution brought in by Dr. Tupper at Mr. Miller’s instance which led to the English convention and the passage of the Act of Union.” (Letter to Men of Hants Chisholm’s Speeches and Letters of Howe. Vol. 2, page 586.) Miller himself wrote of himself; “while a member of the Nova Scotia Assembly he rendered signal service to the cause of Union, being in favour of Confederation, but opposed to the financial scheme of federation. I t was on his initiative and with his assistance that the compromise was effected, whereby the delegation to England was appointed in 1866 in order to secure, under the auspices of the Imperial authorities, such modification of that scheme as would make it more acceptable to the people of Nova Scotia; to this action was really due the acceptance of the union by the Legislature of Nova Scotia at a time when the project appeared to end in inevitable failure.” (Morgan’s Canadian Men And Women of our Times, page 805.) It was adopted by the House of Assembly by a vote of 31 to 19 in the majority appear the names of at least four, besides Miller and MacDonell, who had previously expressed their opposition perhaps not to union in the abstract, but to that union formulated by the Quebec scheme. Even so, as a certain staunch admirer of Dr. Tupper, though one differing from him politically, wrote: (Longley’s Howe. in “Makers of Canada,” page 188.) “Only by the extensive exercise of the patronage of the Government, and by every bold measure which it was possible for an indomitable man to exercise, he secured the passage of this resolution.” But not by patronage nor promises nor appeals to party loyalty could all his followers be induced to support it. The· name of such an encrusted old Tory as James Fraser (Downe)” one of the members for East Pictou, will be found in the minority.

Howe was occupied with his duties as Fishery Commissioner till midsummer of 1866, and Miller up till this time, while never considered or named as the leader of the Anti-Confederates, was their most convincing and powerful speaker. It was he that was chosen, along with Messrs. A. G. Jones and W. J. Stairs, to lay their case before the great demonstration in Temperance’ Hall, Halifax. It was he that they sent into Lunenburg County in a by-election to conduct the campaign for their candidate, and to win a very handsome victory even against the doughty Dr. Tupper himself. Miller was not a strong party man; he boasted that he recognized no leader, and had never attended a caucus in his life; but no one had more often broken lances with the Government. He was not what nowadays would be called “a good mixer”; he dwelt apart, and prided himself on his aloofness; he was regarded by none with great liking, not to say love or devotion. Possibly this accounts for the fact that few, if any, gave him credit for sincerity in his conversion write “conversion” though Miller always maintained there was no change in his opinion or conduct in offering his support to the Government in the way he did. At once it was assumed that he had fallen under Dr. Tupper’s influence and had made a corrupt bargain with him. He was hardly in his seat when William Annand, an outstanding figure among the Anti-Confederates, from his seat said, referring to Miller do not know the influences that are at work, but I can imagine them” a remark which Dr. Tupper rightly interpreted as an insinuation that Miller had been bribed. Some years later Annand stated in the Morning Chronicle, which he then owned and controlled, that Miller had been bought by Dr. Tupper. Miller sued for libel, and Dr. Tupper was called as a witness. Both he and Miller swore positively that not a single word had passed between them on the subject, and Dr. Tupper went on to say that no man in the House was more astonished than he when Miller made his proposition. At the time, on the floor of the House in the most solemn manner he had made the same statement 7, and it shows the deep-rooted nature of the suspicion attaching to Miller’s action that it became necessary to repeat it.

I knew Senator Miller, but not well enough to examine him about any political matter, let alone one on which he was known, and with reason, to be sensitive. MacDonell during the later years of his life I came to know intimately; and once, while spending an evening with me, he gave me his apologia pro vita sua-his political life, I mean. I particularly asked him how and why on this occasion he had come to Miller’s support, and to use his own expression, had “seconded the resolution that brought Nova Scotia into Confederation.” His reply, to put it mildly, was startling. He said:

Miller came to me one day and told me he had learned on the very best authority that Annand and other leaders of the AntiConfederates were negotiating with the other side and planning to accept Confederation; that in consequence Confederation was bound to come; and we (he and MacDonell) had better get into line or we should be left out in the cold and lose all chance of obtaining any of the good positions. I could not believe him. But two days later Miller again came to me, assured me he knew Annand was making terms with the enemy, and we must move quickly if we were to anticipate him. He told me his plan was to propose that the Quebec scheme be abandoned and the whole matter referred to the Home Government. As that Government was known to be strongly in favour of Confederation, such a pro- position was tantamount to accepting Confederation. I eventually agreed to support him, and did so. Miller made a good speech -he was one of those men who could speak well under any circumstances. I was speaking against my convictions and spoke very badly.

None who knew MacDonell would question his word. For myself, I have no doubt whatever that Miller did approach him as he said, and did tell him that Annand was about to strike his colours. But that does not mean that Annand really had this intention. Miller may have been misinfonned; or worse, may have been stating what he knew to be untrue. I feel quite sure that MacDonell in after years had adopted the latter alternative. If it were so that Annand was about to “rat”, I cannot help thinking he would have been taxed with it by someone in the course of the debate that followed upon Miller’s proposition. I have carefully read the official report of that debate-interesting reading it is, 60 years after-and can find nothing positive of this nature asserted against Annand. The only possible colour to the story from the debate is to be found in two statements of the Attorney-General, Hon. W. A. Henry:

I will only say at present that it looks to me very much as if the hon. gentleman (Annand) all along had this object in view; only wait, says he, until three or four of us who have been opposing Union can be convinced by some means or other, then we are all right. That is the substance of the hon. member’s remarks. If two or three gentlemen could only be induced to assist the friends of Union, then there will be no difficulty about a reference to the people.

I ask the hon. member (Annand) to consider the position he occupies on this question. I am prepared to prove by the most conclusive evidence that the hon. member within the last two or three weeks would have been willing to go for this very resolution without any stipulation as to an appeal to the people.

It would be a strained interpretation of these extracts to say that they charge Annand with being ready to sell out his party and leave it in the lurch, and there is no other evidence against him. We must, I think, exonerate Annand from any suspicion of treachery or bad faith. As for Miller, let us give him the benefit of the doubt, and say he was mistaken.

Patterson, G. “An Unexpected Incident of Confederation in Nova Scotia” Dalhousie Review, Volume 07, Number 4, 1928 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/57109/dalrev_vol7_iss4_pp442_446.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

Confederation Debate

In eighteen sixty-six on the floor of the House
Billy Needham said “Mr. Speaker . . . “
and the Union men knew what was coming.
Wary of words, drumming fingers on desks,
their faces went bleaker.
White-haired David Wark called them to action
for the Province’s and the Empire’s good;
admonished the visionless and the factional,
sounding the changes on obstructionism and rejection;
stultification and penury written in ledgers
with statistical precision; the timber shipments
that might last the century out-with prayers:
prayers and a question of hard cash,
a typical New Brunswick contingency.

Or anyone’s contingency, for that matter.
They could not repeat forever identical processes
in a world that would not stand still.
Some said the timber rafts would soon be a
thing of the past:
and the great fleets of sail, the ships,
dolphin-strikers plunging, making way down
the Bay,
in a span of numbered years
would no longer be seen clearing the ports.
Grass and silence, the derelict warehouses,
empty and derelict.
They could listen to the voice of the wind.

But there was more than trade reports that
made men dream.
There were those like old David Wark
I who would
live to be a hundred, and even Mitchell and Tilley,
men who many supposed were shy of the
far-fetched, the grandiose, the insubstantial, who seemed to see something else, something beyond them
that even gave pause to the prophets
of the economically, financially,
and politically disastrous.
Even Billy Needham with his statistics was
ultimately unable to cope with it.
It grew somewhere deep down in the
magma! regions of men’s souls.
It went beyond promises, inchoately glimpsed,
of prosperity, prestige, and the enticements
of power.
Perhaps it was partly a sense of the largeness
of things, of the land;
although they could not actually see
a gull flying over the Strait of Georgia,
another ocean, the roll of the Pacific,
the beaten smoke-stacks and the freight of China;
dimly beyond the Lakes, the summer prairie,
and Palliser’s Triangle, someday to be
celebrated
by those trained to read
the meaning of landscapes.
Perhaps it was something that could not be
put into words
like a railway advertisement
of a sequence of magnificent vistas;
but a way for men to live in peace and
freedom,
with mutual forbearance,
speaking in half the languages of Europe
and Asia,
with rights grounded in law.
Whatever else it was it could have been all of
these things,
but there were not very many who could see this
in the session of eighteen sixty-six,
and not many the year after.

Alfred G. Bailey

Bailey, Alfred G. “Confederation Debate” Dalhousie Review, Volume 48, Number 4, 1969 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/59266/dalrev_vol48_iss4_pp521_522.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

Halifax at the Time of Confederation

“Skating was a favorite pastime with young and old, rich and poor. Besides Chocolate Lake, the Dartmouth Lakes, the Arm, and Bedford Basin there were many ponds near the city, most of which have vanished-Steele’s and the Quarry Ponds at Point Pleasant, the Egg Pond on the Common, two at Fort Needham and on the Rockhead property, and Stanford’s Ponds near James Stanford’s Tannery, and Bone Mill at Three Mile House, now Fairview. Prisoners were sent from Rockhead to clear snow from Griffin’s Pond, where it was the ambition of every boy to strap on the skates of some girl and take her for a spin in the moonlight”

“The fall fishery had been a failure, especially in Halifax County. At Prospect and in the villages around St. Margaret’s Bay the people were confronted with the spectre of starvation during the winter of 1867-68. This destitution was reflected in a further decline of business in Halifax, and in the steady emigration of young men to the United States. The citizens of Ottawa raised funds for the relief of the “Distressed Fishermen” by concerts and solicitations, while in Halifax committees in each ward collected subscriptions to add to the proceeds of a literary and musical concert. The Rev. John Ambrose of St. Margaret’s Bay advertised in the newspapers for work for his parishioners, and asked the merchants of Halifax to buy nets made by hand from the fishermen instead of those manufactured by machine. Just before Christmas fourteen girls from St. Margaret’s were driven from their homes by hunger to look for work in Halifax. The newspapers wasted no sympathy on their plight, for the Acadian Recorder merely commented that “parties in need of domestic servants will now have no difficulty in supplying themselves.”

“In marked contrast to the observance of Natal Day, when all businesses were closed and the newspapers suspended publication, was the first Dominion Day. The majority of Nova Scotians did not want union with Canada and resented the fact that the Legislature had agreed to Confederation without consulting the people at the polls. Three-fourths of the 28,000 people living in Halifax had been born in Nova Scotia, and this would partly explain their strong attachment for the sea-girt province of their birth and the lack of patriotic feeling for the new Dominion. Although 1 July had been proclaimed a provincial holiday nearly one-half of the stores ”were doing business: showing unmistakably that it required something more than a proclamation to compel men to rejoice … over the destruction of the liberties of their country.” Both the Morning Chronicle and the Acadian Recorder appeared as obituary editions with broad black lines between the columns mourning the death of Nova Scotia. Arrangements had been made for special church services at 7 a.m., an oration on the Parade by the Rev. Dr. Richey and a “Procession of the Trades and other Societies and Citizens”, and a grand military display on the Common in the morning. The afternoon and evening were to be employed by sports on the Common and rowing and sailing matches on the Harbor and a torchlight procession and fireworks. The Morning Chronicle gave this ironical description of the procession:

The procession, which we may safely call the principal feature of the day’s rejoicing, was a good one, that is about six hundred people, including a large number of boys and girls, took part in it, and flags were borne, and bands played, and hats of decided rustiness were waved in the air … About six hundred people-as many as have occasionally attended a decent funeral in the city-were all that could be scraped up to join in this great display.

The Acadian Recorder added that Moir & Company contributed a

“bread waggon” gorgeously decorated with spruce etc. Mr. Scrivens’ ditto, from which biscuit was occasionally thrown out to the crowd; the Virginia Tobacco Factory a team, whence issue stray cigars and lumps of tobacco. Symonds’ Iron Foundry, the Nova Scotia Iron Works, Starr’s Nail Factory, had each cars in the procession. The Stonecutter’s and Carpenter’s Societies were represented by a few members from each craft.

I do not want to emphasize the antipathy towards Confederation because until such antagonisms are forgotten it will be difficult for Canadians from all sections of the Dominion to feel that they are the citizens of a united nation owing a common allegiance to it.”

Blakeley, Phyllis R. “Halifax at the Time of Confederation” Dalhousie Review, Volume 27, Number 4, 1948 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/62543/dalrev_vol27_iss4_pp391_402.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

Anti Lyrics No. 1 – from “Some Nova Scotian Poets of Confederation”

Tho’ felon hands have forged a chain,
In slavery to bind us;
We yet shall snap the bonds in twain,
And cast the links behind us.

With lying lips and guileful tongue
They laboured to enslave us;
Until those rights from us were wrung,
Which our forefathers gave us.

Our noble country they would grasp,
With tyranny enthralling;
While we in bondage sore must grasp
Beneath a rule so galling.

To traitors we must bow the knee
In humble supplication –
Shall we who lately were so free
Brook this humiliation?

Forbid it heaven, and all true men
Endowed with powers of reason!
No, we must have our own again
In spite of fraud and treason.

Our cry will reach the mother shore
Against the violation
0f all we held so dear of your,
By this Confederation.

For Britain was by lies deceived
When she did pass the measure
That our escutcheon fair defiled
And robbed us of our treasure

Born freemen, freemen we will die,
Part of a glorious nation
Then let each loyal subject cry
‘Confound· Confederation!’

For felon hands may forge a chain
In slavery to bind us;
But we will snap their bonds in twain,
And cast the links behind us.

Fred. (?) Morning Chronicle, December 24, 1867

Muise, D.A. “Some Nova Scotian Poets of Confederation” Dalhousie Review, Volume 50, Number 1, 1970 https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/59368/dalrev_vol50_iss1_pp71_82.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

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