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Settling the Canadian Colonies: A Comparison of Two Nineteenth-Century Land Companies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2011

Anatole Browde
Affiliation:
ANATOLE BROWDE is adjunct professor at theJohn E. Simon School of Business of Maryville University in Saint Louis.

Abstract

Two British land companies, the Canada Company and the British American Land Company (BALC), were active during the nineteenth century in settling what are now Ontario and the Eastern Townships of Quebec. Both purchased large tracts of land from the British government, with two goals: to provide funds for the governors of Canada and to relieve Britain of its surplus population. The Canada Company worked closely with the government to meet these objectives, whereas BALC indulged in land speculation and made immigration a secondary priority. One was successful, and the other struggled throughout its existence. Their success or failure was the directresult of how well they dealt with both the changing economic climate and the British and Canadian political situation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 2002

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References

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24 London Times, 15 June 1831. This meant that a stockholder who was asked to pay additional capital of £1 10s. per share in return received £1 8s. in interest and dividends, for a net outlay of only 2s. per share.

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35 The list of proprietors and their holdings shows conclusively that such an investment was never made.

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51 This would become an issue in 1839 and 1840, when both Lord Durham and Poullett Thompson would reject the BALC claim that it was experiencing local opposition that could not be foreseen when the company was formed.

52 Hansard Parliamentary Debates, 3rd ser., vol. 25 (9 Mar. 1835).

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54 Gosford to Glenelg, 17 Mar. 1836, NAC, RG 7 G 12, vol. 50A.

55 Extracted from Parliamentary Papers, Canada, vol. 33 (1847).

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72 The act called for cessation of these payments, which presumed that they were continuing through 1847. However, an additional £2 10s. was to be paid in July 1840 and seems to have been collected. By the time the 1871 Act was passed, the capital per share paid in was £44.

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80 Ibid., 4 Sept. 1838.

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82 Implied in Bruyeres proposal is that BALC really would make no further expenditure for improvements during the year. So much had been spent in past years that, by bookkeeping adjustments, it would be made to appear that the expenditures had been made in the current year.

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