User:Derek Andrews/sandbox

Townships in Nova Scotia

 * 1825 map showing townships
 * Bluepete.com history of NS
 * township records
 * Township Records at the Nova Scotia Archives
 * The Fault Lines of Empire: Political Differentiation in Massachusetts and Nova Scotia, Ca. 1760-1830
 * British Dominions in NA Table of counties, districts and townships; Vol II, ch1-7
 * An Historical and Statistical Account of Nova-Scotia, Volume 2 1829
 * Local Government in Nova Scotia CB Fergusson - 1961
 * Cumberland Township: A Focal Point of Early Settlement on the Bay of Fundy
 * The Struggle for the New England Form of Township Government in Nova Scotia D. C. Harvey

Establishing and settling the townships
Townships were created when a proprietor had a sufficient list of prospective settlers. In July 1759 Joseph Scott submitted a list of names to the Council of Nova Scotia who resolved to create the Township of Onslow and issued two hundred shares. By October of that year Scott had


 * Provincial troops in the French and Indian Wars
 * Captain Silvanus Cobb
 * Governor Jonathan Belcher
 * Richard Upham
 * Charles Morris (surveyor general)

sfnp demo
The Chard and Taunton Railway.

Bristol and English Channels.

Somerset.

raise the money required.

broad gauge.

$15 1/2$

Early life
Hierlihy was born in Ireland in 1734. In 1753, at the age of 19, he moved to America and settled in Middlefield, Connecticut.

On the 26 April 1755, at the beginning of the French and Indian War, Hierlihy enlisted as a private in the 2nd Connecticut Regiment. On May 10 of that year he was married to Miss Elizabeth Wetmore, the daughter of a trainband officer. Their first son Timothy William was born in July. On September 15 he was promoted to ensign, the lowest commissioned rank. On the basis of his administrative abilities, on November 27 he was promoted to acting lieutenant serving as adjutant to Col. Jonathon Bagley at Fort Edward where he spent the winter. The following summer he was at Fort William Henry preparing to attack Crown Point, but the campaign was cancelled after the loss of Fort Oswego, and the regiment returned home and was disbanded. In the following March he purchased land and a house adjacent to his father-in-law.

In 1758 he got his first command as Captain of No.7 Company of the 1st Connecticut Regiment. He took part in the Battle of Carillon and despite a terrible defeat with the loss of over 2000 men, Hierlihy survived unharmed. By the end of the war he held the rank of Major.