Nova Scotia -- Politics and government -- 1784-1867
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Nova Scotia -- Politics and government -- 1784-1867
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Nova Scotia
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- An examination of the proposed union of the North American provinces, by Judge Marshall [id est John G. Marshall]
- Secret inquisitions, or, Nova Scotia as it was, is, and may be, by One of the people
- The statutes at large passed in the several general assemblies held in His Majesty's province of Nova-Scotia, from the year 1817 to the year 1826, inclusive : with an index and table of the laws, expired, repealed, executed, and disallowed, during the above period, by William Hill and W.B. Bliss
- Speech delivered by the Hon. J.W. Johnston, in the House of Assembly, on the 19th March, 1850, on introducing resolutions for defining the nature and foundation of the self-government of Nova Scotia in her local affairs, and in favor of an elective legislative council, reported for the British Colonist, by J.H. Crosskill
- Speech on the union of the colonies, delivered in the Assembly, by A.W. McLelan
- The letters of "a constitutionalist"
- The speeches and public letters of the Hon. Joseph Howe, edited by William Annand
- Confederation considered on its merits, being an examination into the principle, capabilities, and terms of union as applicable to Nova Scotia, by a Nova Scotian
- The statutes of the province of Nova-Scotia, volume the fourth from A.D. 1827, 8 George IV to A.D. 1835, 5 William IV : both inclusive, with tables of the acts expired, repealed and executed during that period : and a copious index, by John Widden and James F. Gray
- Memoir of Sir Brenton Halliburton, late chief justice of the province of Nova Scotia, by G.W. Hill
- Observations upon the doctrine, lately advanced, that His Majesty' s Council have no constitutional power to control individual appropriations, or to amend or alter money bills, with a few remarks upon the conduct of that body on the questions of granting encouragement to common schools, and a permanent provision to the Pictou Academy
- Speech of the Hon. Joseph Howe delivered before the Provincial Assembly, on 9th February, 1857
- To the people of Nova Scotia, [Joseph Howe]
- To the inhabitants of Londonderry, [G.W. McLellan]
- Speech of the Hon. Joseph Howe on inter-colonial railroads and colonization, delivered at Halifax, Nona [sic]-Scotia, May, 1851
- Confederation examined in the light of reason and common sense, and the British N.A. Act shewn to be unconstitutional, by Martin I. Wilkins
- Copy of an address of the House of Assembly to Her Majesty, with copies of several addresses, which have been presented to His Excellency the lieutenant-governor, in consequence thereof, from various parts of the province
- Dawn of a new empire, being a reply to "Remarks upon the proposed federation of the provinces, by a Nova-Scotian", by a British American
- The speeches and public letters of the Hon. Joseph Howe, edited by William Annand
- Papers relative to the re-annexation of the island of Cape Breton to the government of Nova Scotia
- Speech delivered by the Honorable Joseph Howe, House of Assembly, March 31, 1858
- A letter to the electors of Annapolis, being a reply to "Confederation considered on its merits", by an Acadian [i. e. Edouard Richard]
- A letter to the electors of Nova Scotia, being a reply to "Confederation considered on its merits", by an Acadian [i. e. Edouard Richard]
- Remarks upon the proposed federation of the provinces, by a Nova Scotian [id est John George Marshall]
- Canadian confederation, information in relation to petition of Nova Scotia delegates
- The Petition of the inhabitants of Nova Scotia humbly sheweth, that the province of Nova Scotia is one of the oldest colonies of Great Britain .
- Reply to the speech of the Hon. Joseph Howe, of Nova Scotia, on the union of the North American provinces, and on the right of British colonists to representation in the Imperial Parliament, by Francis Hincks
- Information for the people, review of the Attorney-General's speech at Bridgetown, [Joseph Howe]
- An address to the people of Nova Scotia, [J. McCully]
- Information for the people, Mr. Howe's speech
- Facts and reasons against New Brunswick and Nova Scotia confederating with Canada, addressed to the electors of New Brunswick, by Judge Marshall [id est John G. Marshall]
- Duty of the Legislature of Nova-Scotia with respect to collegiate education, by Alexander Forrester
- Creelman's address to the electors of the constituency of Truro
- Speech of the Hon. Joseph Howe, in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly on the twenty-first of February, in opposition to the prohibitory liquor law
- Information for the people, the Solicitor General's speech, to the people of Nova Scotia, [Joseph Howe]
- The statutes at large passed in the several general assemblies held in His Majesty's province of Nova-Scotia, from the sixth session of the eighth General Assembly, which met at Halifax, the twenty-eighth day of November, in the forty-sixth year of His Majesty' s reign, A.D. 1805, being the fifty-fifth session of the General Assembly, to the fifty-sixth year of His Majesty's reign, inclusive; with an index, by Henry H. Cogswell
- Ross's review of McLellan's pamphlet and great liberal policy of Colchester
- A letter to the Right Honorable Earl Russell, principal secretary of state and foreign affairs, advocating the removal of Lord Mulgrave from the government of Nova Scotia, by Dr. Tupper
- Hyde's address to the electors of the south riding of Colchester
- Information for the people, heads of departments : Mr. Howe's reply to Mr. Wilkins, Feb. 1846
- Lord Falkland's government
- Information for the people, the despatches : Mr. Doyle' s speech
- Railway correspondence, Nova-Scotia delegation, despatches laid before the Legislature in the session of 1851, on the subject of the Halifax, Quebec, and Portland railroads
- [Letter], my attention has been called to a speech ..., [Joseph Howe]
- Epitome of the laws of Nova-Scotia, by Beamish Murdoch
- Union manifesto
- Journal and proceedings of the House of Assembly of the province of Nova-Scotia ...
- Creelman's address, with Hyde's notes, for the elector' s of the district of Truro
- Speech of the Hon. Joseph Howe, provincial secretary of Nova Scotia on the importance and value to Great Britain of her North American colonies, delivered at Southampton, on the 14th of January, 1851
- To His Excellency Lieutenant-General Sir John Harvey, Knight Commander of the Most Honourable Military Order of the Bath, Knight Commander of the Royal Hanoverian Guelphic Order, Lieutenant-Governor and Commander in Chief, in and over Her Majesty's Province of Nova Scotia and its Dependencies, &c. &c. &c., the humble address of the Legislative Council and House of Assembly of Nova Scotia
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