Skip to content | Main menu | General version

Main sections: History | Stories | Families | Student/Teacher | Search | Help | The Team | In Memoriam | Site Map

Search

Search Results

29 results 1-15  16-29 
1 Apthorp and Hancock accounts sent to Lawrence, 1756
Apthorp and Hancock accounts sent to Lawrence, 1756
in English

Charles Apthorp's and Thomas Hancock's Boston Mercantile Company accounts sent to Nova Scotia's governor, Charles Lawrence, in 1756

2 Charles Lawrence
Charles Lawrence


Illustration of Charles Lawrence, governor of Nova Scotia from 1756 to 1760

3 Charles Lawrence's journal, 1750
Charles Lawrence's journal, 1750
in English

Journal of Charles Lawrence, commander of a detachment sent to the isthmus of Chignecto in order to establish British sovereignty, April 20 to 26, 1750

4 Correspondence between Lawrence, Shirley and the Lords of Trade
Correspondence between Lawrence, Shirley and the Lords of Trade
in French

Correspondence between Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Lieutenant-Governor, William Shirley, Massachusetts' Governor, and the Lords of Trade concerning the Deportation of the Acadians

5 Correspondence between Shirley and Lawrence
Correspondence between Shirley and Lawrence
in French

Summary of the correspondence between William Shirley, Massachusetts' Governor, Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Lieutenant-Governor, and also the Lords of Trade concerning the Deportation of the Acadi…

6 Excerpts of a letter from the Lords of Trade to Lawrence, 1754
Excerpts of a letter from the Lords of Trade to Lawrence, 1754
in French

Excerpts of a letter from Great Britain's Lords of Trade to Charles Lawrence, Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia, concerning the collaboration between the Acadians and the French, October 29, 1754

7 Letter from Amherst to Lawrence, 1760
Letter from Amherst to Lawrence, 1760
in French

Letter from Jeffery Amherst, commander-in-chief of the British army in America, to Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Governor, concerning the Cape Breton Acadians, September 9, 1760

8 Letter from Amherst to Lawrence, 1760
Letter from Amherst to Lawrence, 1760
in French

Letter from Jeffery Amherst, commander-in-chief of the British army in America, to Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Governor, concerning the Acadian resistance, April 5, 1760

9 Letter from Belcher to Amherst, 1761
Letter from Belcher to Amherst, 1761
in French

Letter from Jonathan Belcher, Nova Scotia's chief justice, to Jeffery Amherst, commander-in-chief of the British army in America, concerning the death of Nova Scotia's Governor, Charles Lawrence, Octo…

10 Letter from Lawrence to Amherst, 1760
Letter from Lawrence to Amherst, 1760
in French

Letter from Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Governor, to Jeffery Amherst, commander-in-chief of the British army in America, concerning the Acadians, August 6, 1760

11 Letter from Lawrence to Monckton, 1754
Letter from Lawrence to Monckton, 1754
in French

Letter from Charles Lawrence, Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia, to Robert Monckton, British officer, concerning the attack on Fort Beauséjour, November 7, 1754

12 Letter from Lawrence to Pitt, 1757
Letter from Lawrence to Pitt, 1757
in French

Letter from Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Governor, to William Pitt, William Pitt, Great Britain's Secretary of State, concerning the British fortifications in Acadie, November 9, 1757

13 Letter from Lawrence to Pitt, 1759
Letter from Lawrence to Pitt, 1759
in French

Letter from Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Governor, to William Pitt, Great Britain's Secretary of State, concerning the Cap-Sable Acadians, November 3, 1759

14 Letter from Lawrence to Robinson, 1755
Letter from Lawrence to Robinson, 1755
in French

Letter from Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Lieutenant-Governor, to Thomas Robinson, Lord of Trade, concerning the capture of Fort Beauséjour, January 12, 1755

15 Letter from Lawrence to Robinson, 1755
Letter from Lawrence to Robinson, 1755
in French

Letter from Charles Lawrence, Nova Scotia's Lieutenant-Governor, to Thomas Robinson, Lord of Trade, concerning the neutrality of the Acadians, October 18, 1755

To learn more