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The Agrarian Ideal: Wilderness, Farmland, and the "Other" in Colonial New Brunswick

Published on Nov 19, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

The Agrarian Ideal: Wilderness, Farmland, and the "Other" in Colonial New Brunswick

Michael T. Perry

Aroostook "War" (1839)

Abraham Gesner (1797-1864)

Jonathan Bouchette, "Mars Hill" (1832)

"A Map of the Provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia" (1825)

Richard Levinge, "St. Lawrence River in Winter" (1837)

Henry Crealock, "How the Guards Crossed New Brunswick" (1862)

"18th Company, Grenadier Guards" (1862)

John A. Munroe, "Landscape" (1859)

William Wolfe, "Portage, Eel River" (c.1854)

"Having Difficulties Lighting a Match in the Rain" (c.1854)

"A Distant View of Government House, Fredericton" (c.1854)

William P. Kay, "On the Royal Road" (1836)

"View of Sugar Loaf Mountain, Restigouche County" (1865)

George Neilson Smith, "View of St. John" (c. 1848)

Robert Petley, "Fredericton from the Oromocto Road" (1837)

Robert Petley, "Indian of the Mi'kmaq Tribe" (c.1836)

Robert Levinge, "Malecite Indians Spearing Salmon" (c.1837)

James Thomas Stanton, "Going to Market" (1845)

Cornelius Kreighoff, "Going to Market" (1855)

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"Canada East, or Lower Canada and New Brunswick" (1855)

IMAGE CREDITS:
Slides 1, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 14, 17, 18, & 23 from the Collections of the Library and Archives Canada.
Slides 7, 9, 13, 15, 16, 19, & 20 from the Collections of the New Brunswick Museum.
Slides 2, 3, 4, & 22 from Wikimedia Commons.
Slide 21 from the Collections of the University of Maine.