... Around 1820, there were a number of print shops in Quebec City. ...

Last French and Indian War (The)
... The British of Lower Canada (Quebec) no longer wanted to be ruled by a House of Assembly composed of a FrenchCanadian majority. Governor Dalhousie supported the union plan, which became reality in 1840. Andrew Stuart 1/20/02, 2:12 PM ...
... In 1823, Louis-Joseph Papineau, leader of the House of Assembly, and John Nielson, representative of Quebec City, were sent to London to protest against the plan to unite the two Canadas, proposed several months before. ...
... He wrote one more for the Hurons, his neighbours of the previous winter in Quebec City. He accepted their surrender as he had accepted those of the Canadiens – and under the same conditions, as he took care to note. ...
... In fact, would he not have done so in his major report concerning the government of Quebec City dated June 5, 1762, in particular when he discussed “the savage tribes residing within the limits of this government”? ...
... The latter surrendered twice: in Quebec City in 1759 and in Montreal the following year. Their Indian allies had put down their arms in Oswegatchie, Les Cèdres, and Longueuil. ...
... Epilogue Oswegatchie, Longueuil, and Caughnawaga On trial before Judge Bruno Cyr of the Court of Quebec for organizing a bingo game without a permit on or around September 23, 1989, the Mohawks of Kanesatake invoked the Sioui ruling of May 24, 1990, ...
... • t h e l a st f r e n ch a n d i n d i a n wa r Johnson assigned his assistant and future sonin-law, Daniel Claus, to see to the “Indians resident” around Montreal, Trois-Rivières, and Quebec City. ...
... Although he moved to comfortable quarters near Albany, Claus remained responsible for the Indians of the “Province of Quebec,” the new British colony created in 1763. Claus was thus responsible for the Hurons of Lorette, who had various complaints. ...
... The Indians of the “Province of Quebec,” for their part, were hesitant to do battle with their brothers. The American revolution raised the Indians’ status temporarily, as both the British and the Americans courted them. ...