Planters, Paupers, and Pioneers. Lucille H. Campey

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Planters, Paupers, and Pioneers - Lucille H. Campey The English in Canada

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of every means of religion.” Their community, “spread over 30 miles,” was increasing, “amounting to 1,000 souls.”97 Described as “extremely poor” fishermen living along the coast, they could not support a minister themselves, and hoped that the London Missionary Society would be able to provide financial help.98

      The London Missionary Society also provided funding in 1815 for the Reverend John Mitchell, who was based at River John (Pictou County) but served the people in nearby Tatamagouche, as well. Intriguingly, he described the inhabitants as being “almost entirely French, but [they] always call themselves Protestant,” possibly indicating that many had Channel Island ancestry. The Reverend Mitchell had a gruelling life: “The place where I preach in Tatamagouche every fortnight is 13 miles from my house on River John … [each year] I travel upwards of 600 miles on very bad roads.” 99

      By 1823 there were sufficient Anglicans in the town of Pictou for it to have its first Anglican church, which was completed in 1827 with funds provided by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel and by Samuel Cunard, the local shipbuilder. But it was not until 1851 that the first Anglican church was built at Albion Mines.100 The Reverend Joseph Forsythe had “much difficulty” in dealing with newly arrived immigrants from Britain: “They have not been accustomed to religious or even moral habits.” As far as he was concerned they were “worthless demoralisers” who were “sunk in poverty.”101

      The Reverend William Elder, the Anglican missionary based at Sydney Mines a decade earlier, reported that there were forty-six families (about three hundred people), living at or near the mines, who supported the Church of England.102 However, his successor, the Reverend Robert Arnold, found that few of the new arrivals “professed themselves to be of the Church of England” and felt that “the paucity of the clergy was a barrier to conversion.”103 He presumably agreed with the Reverend Forsythe!

      Meanwhile, the Reverend William Young Porter, based at St. George’s Anglican Church in Sydney, had a more positive outlook but had to endure a staggering work schedule, as he travelled far and wide in Cape Breton County.104 His preaching commitments brought him to Sydney Mines, Baddeck, Northwest Arm, Coxheath, Glace Bay, Bridgeport, Cow Bay, Main-a-Dieu, Louisburg, Gabarus, Catalone, Mira, and the Forks of Sydney River. His claim that “members of other denominations seldom attended services” suggests that he mainly attracted people with English ancestry, who were clearly scattered along these coastal communities.105 The fisheries and coal mines were probably their principal sources of employment.106

      Apart from mining industries, the province had little to attract immigrants, since most of the good farming land had long been settled by the earlier arrivals. About 174 immigrants arrived from Britain in 1850 and only about half that number the year before. The United Kingdom Commissioners of Land and Emigration concluded that “it did not seem that the people of Nova Scotia wanted any emigration.”107 The reality was worse than that, since not only was the province failing to attract immigrants, but much of its population was draining away to Upper Canada and the United States. The issue of prime concern to the province’s administrators was how to direct the outflow to Upper Canada rather than have people lost to the United States. Rising to the challenge, the Canada Company108 issued advertisements urging people “who may contemplate leaving Nova Scotia” to go to Upper Canada

      rather than that they should proceed to the United States…. In Upper Canada they will find a most healthy climate, the soil very fertile, and abundance of excellent land to be obtained on easy terms from the Government and Canada Company. The great success which has attended settlers in Upper Canada, is abundantly evidenced by the prosperous condition of the farmers throughout the Country, and also shown by the success of many natives of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia who have settled in many townships of the country.109

      Anxious to attract further immigrants, the provincial government organized an assisted emigration scheme in 1857 for some 350 Germans who arrived at Halifax in the Golconda: “During the afternoon crowds of these strangers could be seen on the streets…. There are many fine athletic fellows among them who bid fair to make good settlers.”110 The group, which included many tradesmen, had been recruited to work either in the Acadian Charcoal Iron Company’s iron mines at Nictaux Falls (Annapolis County), “which are now in active operation,” and at the smelter in Londonderry (Colchester County). But the initiative prompted an irate response from a Halifax resident, who criticized the government for being overly concerned about the needs of industry while neglecting the agricultural development of the province, since large areas of the interior still remained unsettled.111

      Around seventy immigrants, mostly single miners, labourers, and domestic servants, arrived at Halifax from Liverpool in 1862,112 while more couples and families came in 1864, when seventy-eight English immigrants landed113 (see Table 1). Two years later nearly seven hundred assisted English immigrants arrived at Halifax from Liverpool expecting to find work in the mines and the Pictou Railway.114 The 260 or so Cornish miners included in the group headed chiefly for the gold-mining districts,115 while the other miners went to the coal mines at Cape Breton, Pictou, and New Glasgow.116 However, a sudden downturn in the province’s coal trade with the United States depressed employment prospects, and, feeling disappointed, most of the newly arrived coal miners either moved to the United States or returned home. But some of the Cornish men did well from contracts “for work in sinking shafts in the gold districts.”117

      1. British Queen, Aylward master, April 1, 1862 [NSARM RG1 Vol. 272 Doc. 142]

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Name Age Occupation/Other
Barrett, Henry adult Labourer
Condon, Mary adult Spinster
Fitzgerald, Mary adult Spinster
Foxe, Cathe adult Spinster
Griffiths, Margaret adult Spinster
Hodgson, Robert P. adult Farmer
Holmes, Robert adult Labourer; plus 1 m. adult.
Hornsby, John adult Labourer
Jones, Chas adult Labourer
Lyons, Bridget adult Spinster
Mason, Mrs. n/k n/k
Matthews, John adult Labourer
Moyahan, Cathe adult Spinster
Price, Josh adult Labourer
Sahegan, Mary