- 
[GANONG | HISTORY OF NEW BRUNSWICK 101 
time has brought his revenges, and the Acadian people to-day are heaping 
the coals of fire upon the heads of their ancient enemy, for they form a 
large and loyal part of the people of the province, and are a bulwark 
and not a menace to it. An important part of this section is the discussion 
of the subsequent history and present status of the Acadian people. 
Critical notes. 
Appendix 1.—Bibliography of the period. 
Appendix 2.—Place-nomenclature of the period. 
Appendix 3.—Cartography of the period. 
Appendices 4 and 5.—List of seigneuries, etc., etc. 
Section V.—THE NEW ENGLANDERS AND THE ENGLISH, 1760-1783. 
The New Englanders at St. John and Maugerville ; the Scotch on 
the Miramichi; the Pennsylvania Germans in Albert County ; Admiral 
Owens’s Colony at Campobello ; the Yorkshire men in Westmoreland ; 
the English along the St. John; movement back to Maine at close of the 
Revolution; their effect upon later history. 
Critical notes. 
Appendices on bibliography, place-nomenclature and cartography. 
SECTION VI.—THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AND THE COMING OF THE 
Loyauists. THE FOUNDING OF THE PROVINCE oF NEw BRUNS- 
WICK. 
The most important epoch in our history, and one difficult to treat 
impartially. The Loyalist movement, the true foundation of the pro- 
vince—the movement meant more to New Brunswick than to the other 
provinces—it is truly “The Loyalist Province”; state of the country on 
their arrival ; character of the Loyalists; men as free of spirit as those 
who drove them forth, and with the advantage over them of recognizing 
authority; how they faced their conditions; a grand subject for the 
historian. 
Critical notes and Appendices, the latter including lists of Loyalist 
families and where they settled. 
SECTION VII THE PROGRESS OF THE PROVINCE OF NEw BRUNSWICK 
DOWN TO CONFEDERATION. 
Peculiar condition of the Loyalists; their education and character. 
Problems to be solved by them; their progress in the development of 
education, religious bodies, settlement, laws, means of transportation, 
literature, newspapers and periodicals, political parties, manufacturing, 
agriculture and other industries; definition of boundaries, ete, and, in 
general, progress in civilization, 
Critical notes and Appendices. 
