Nova Scotia Archives

New Ross: From Family to Community

Results 251 to 264 of 264 from your search:

Diary of Edward Ross, Kentville

Date: 1 January 1881 – 25 December 1881

Extent: 59 pages of textual records; 20 x 13 x 1 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 142

Note: Diary is unbound but has been hand sewn. The exterior pages are no longer affixed, although in good shape. There is a newspaper clipping glued into one of the page.


Diary of Edward Ross, Kentville

Date: 1 January 1882 – 29 December 1882

Extent: 52pages of textual records; 20 x 13 x .5 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 143

Note: Diary is unbound but has been hand sewn. Several of the exterior pages are no longer affixed, and several interior pages have been removed.


Diary of Edward Ross, Kentville

Date: 1 January 1884 – 25 December 1884

Extent: 47 pages of textual records; 20 x 13 x .5 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 144

Note: Diary is not bound, but has been hand sewn. Several of the exterior pages are no longer affixed and there are several newspaper clippings pressed in between the pages.


Diary of Edward Ross, Kentville

Date: 8 January 1885 – 31 December 1885

Extent: 59 pages of textual records) ; 20 x 14 x .5 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 145

Note: Diary is unbound, but has been hand sewn. Several of the exterior pages are no longer affixed.


Diary of Edward Ross, Kentville

Date: 8 February 1886

Extent: 3 pages of textual records; 21 x 12 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 146

Note: Pages removed from a diary, they are in poor shape, they are stained and torn.


Diary of Edward Ross, Kentville

Date: 7 January 1887 – 31 December 1887

Extent: 54 pages of textual records; 20 x 12 x .25 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 147

Note: Diary is not bound and has been sewn, diary is in good condition with only minor tears.


Diary of Edward Ross, New Ross

Date: 1890 and 1891

Extent: 1 page of textual records; 16 x 9 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 148

Note: Page removed from a diary. On the backside of the page are two dates; 10 January 1890 and 10 January 1891.


Diary of Edward Ross, New Ross

Date: 2 January 1891

Extent: 70 pages of textual records; 21 x 14 x .5 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 149

Note: Diary is not bound, but has been sewn. The front page has been ripped.


Diary of Edward Ross

Extent: 6 pages of textual records; 14 x 14 cm.

Reference: Ross Family Nova Scotia Archives MG 1 volume 795 item 150

Note: Pages have been torn in half with the top half missing. There is no date given, but 1880 is mentioned and the text indicates that it was winter time.


Return of military settlers located at Sherbrooke

Date: 24 September 1819

Reference: Land Papers Nova Scotia Archives RG 20 Series A volume 78 – 1819 Ross, William and others

Note: “Return of military settlers located at Sherbrooke, who having complied with the required regulations are entitled to free grants of land since June last.”

With the conclusion of the European wars against Napoleon the Nova Scotia Fencibles were disbanded on July 24th 1816. Many accepted the offer of land in the settlements along the planned road through the center of the province from Halifax to Annapolis. In August William Ross started at Gold River with 172 disbanded soldiers and made his way into the interior where the settlement was planned about Lakes Lawson and Darling.

When land grants were prepared in 1819 this list, made on 24th September, showed only 68 families remained at the settlement. The size of the lots they would be granted was based on their former military rank. 5 days later, on 29th September 1819, Lord Dalhousie approved of the allocation of land.


Warrant to Survey, 1819, William Ross and 67 others

Date: 3 October 1819

Reference: Land Papers Nova Scotia Archives RG 20 Series A volume 78 – 1819 Ross, William and others

Note: “By his Excellency Lieutenant General the Right Honorable George Earl of Dalhousie….”

After approving in principle of the land grant, and with the advice of his Council, an order or warrant would be issued to the Surveyor-General of Lands, (Charles Morris), that provided the authority to survey and lay out lands to satisfy the proposed grant. In this case the Warrant repeats the names and land allocation by rank to the disbanded soldiers as outlined in the “Return of military settlers…”.


Draft land grant, 1819, William Ross and 67 others

Date: 26 October 1819

Reference: Land Papers Nova Scotia Archives RG 20 Series A volume 78 – 1819 Ross, William and others

Note: “Nova Scotia. George the Third by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great-Britain and Ireland…..”.

The draft land grant links each grantee to a numbered lot and identifies the size of the lot. In some cases, the lot is further described in terms of its bounds. The process for granting land in Nova Scotia included a draft grant which set conditions of settlement and agricultural improvement that would have to be met prior to the grant being finalized. Although in this instance settlers had been on the lands since the summer of 1816, delays in escheating unclaimed Loyalist land grants in the area had delayed the process of grants to the disbanded soldiers.


Land grant, 1819, William Ross and 67 others

Date: 22 December 1819

Reference: Land Papers Nova Scotia Archives RG 20 Series A volume 78 – 1819 Ross, William and others

Note: “Nova Scotia. George the Third by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great-Britain and Ireland…..”.

This document is the actual land grant as signed by the Secretary of the Province, Rupert George, and Richard John Uniacke, on behalf of the Receiver General, to indicate the payment of the appropriate fees. Like the previous document, the land grant names each person receiving land, the amount of the land and its general bounds, additionally this document has been annotated to make the lot numbers more prominent.


Map of land grant made by Charles Morris

Date: 22 December 1819

Reference: Land Papers Nova Scotia Archives Map 2015-038

Note: This map was transferred from the Ross Farm Museum to the Archives in 2015. It, and an original land grant, would have been given to William Ross at the time the land grant was officially made in December of 1819. It clearly shows that the settlement was arranged with each lot having frontage on the Gold River or on the “Public road one hundred feet wide heading thro Hammonds Plains from the Town of Halifax to Annal 100 foot wide road from the Town of Halifax to Annap[olis]”. The scale of the map is 40 chains (half a mile) to one inch. The road from Chester to Windsor appears on the left edge of the map.


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