AND THEIR REMAINS. — PIERS. IIO' 



1758. [Maillard (Abbe Anthony S.)]. — Account of the Customs and 

 Manners of the Micmakis and Maricheets, Savage Nations, 

 now dependent on the Government of Cape Breton. By a 

 French Abbott. Lond., 1758. 138 pp. 



1815. Bromley (Walter). — Two addresses on the Deplorable State of 

 the Indians; one delivered August 3, 1813, the other March 

 ■ - 3, 1814, at Halifax. (Published for the benefit of the 



Indians). London, 1815. 71 pp. 



1820. Bromley (Waiter). — An appeal to the virtue and good sense of 

 the inhabitants of Great Britain, in behalf of the Indians 

 of North America. Halifax, 1820. 57 pp. 



1823-25. [Bromley (Walter)]. — A General Description of Nova Scotia. 

 [Anon.] Halifax, 1823. New edition: Halifax, 1825. 

 200 pp. — Chapter v. (pp. 44-58) deals with "The Indians 

 (two tribes), attacks on Canso, treaty, customs, manners, 

 civilization, and specimens of their language." Bromley, 

 who was on the half-pay of the 23rd Regiment of Foot, 

 established the Acadian School at Halifax on 31st July, 

 1813, and took a deep interest in the Micmacs, their cus- 

 toms, language, etc., he being apparently the first English- 

 man to do so to any extent. 



1827. West (John). — Journal of a Mission to the Indians of the British 



Provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, and the 

 Mohawks on Grand Eiver, Upper Canada. Lond... 1827. 



1829. Haliburton (Judge Thomas Chandler). — Historical and Statis- 

 tical Account of Nova Scotia. 2 vols. Halifax, 1829. — 

 Contains miscellaneous historical references to Micmacs. 



1836. Bromley (Walter). — Vocabulary of the Micmacs. In Gallatin 

 (A.), Synopsis of Indian Tribes, in Am. Ant. Soc. Trans., 

 vol. ii, pp. 305-367. Cambridge, Mass., 1836. 



1850. Rand (Rev. Silas Tertius). — A Short Statement of Facts relating 

 "to the History, Manners, Customs, Language, and Litera- 

 ture of the Micmac Tribe of Indians in Nova Scotia and 

 P. E. Island. Halifax, N. S., 1850. 40 pp.— This is a most 

 valuable account of- our modem Micmacs, .written by one 

 . __ whose knowledge of them- was very intimate. See also 1894. 



