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159
equally great. The object having been gained, of showing
that the Indians were amenable to the law, the matter
was allowed to drop.
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From Mr. Irwin
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Charlottetown, P E Island
March 20th. 1843.
Hon Sir,
By the public papers, I have seen the reports
you laid before the Executive on the Indian Affairs, And I was
very much rejoiced to see the praise worthy efforts you have made
for the purpose of ameliorating the Condition of those too-long
abandoned people. During the present Session of our Legislature,
I petitioned the House of Assembly to grant me pecuniary aid
in order to enable me to publish a Manuscript of an Elementary
book in Micmac, in order to lay the foundation of their
future education. These are one hundred and forty
closely written pages of foolscap, it consists of the usual, elementary
matter found in all elementary book's then progressive reading
lessons &c. A committie [committee] was appointed a few days ago to
whom was referred my petition together with the report
of the Board of Education and a recommendation from the Catholic
Bishop of the Diocess, [Diocese] both recommending the work.
The Committie reported to the House that they would
Date: 1843
Retrieval no.: Commissioner of Public Records — Mi'kmaq and Government Relations series Nova Scotia Archives RG 1 volume 432 pp. 157-159
Nova Scotia Archives — https://archives.novascotia.ca/mikmaq/archives/?ID=432
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