Upper Canada Preserved — War of 1812 6-Book Bundle. Richard Feltoe

Upper Canada Preserved — War of 1812 6-Book Bundle - Richard Feltoe


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than 30 years, many wide spread forests still defy the settler’s axe….[1]

      Agriculture

      Trade

      This situation is not really surprising when Gourlay reported that the hard currency of the province included the use of more than a dozen different coinages, derived from no less than eight different foreign mints, and each having its own rate of exchange.

      One of the region’s principal exports was furs, derived from the Native hunting or trapping of: beaver, bear, fox, otter, martin, mink, lynx, wolverine, wolf, elk, deer, and buffalo, to name but a few. In exchange for these furs:

      … the Indians receive coarse woolen cloths, milled blankets, arms and ammunition, tobacco, Manchester goods, linens, and coarse sheetings, thread, lines and twine, common hardware, cutlery, and ironmongery, kettles of brass and copper, sheet iron, silk and pocket handkerchiefs, hats, shoes and hose, calico and printed cottons &c.

      In addition to furs, the bountiful forests provided a wealth of timber resources including:

      Climate

      Social Life

      CHAPTER 2

      Beating the Drums for War

      For Great Britain, the first years of the nineteenth century were extremely turbulent and troubled. The kingdom had been at war with France since February 1793 (except for the illusory Peace of Amiens of 1802–3); and this “Long War,” as it was called, had, by 1812, brought the nation to the brink of bankruptcy as it sought to pay for its on-going military policies. These included:

       Constructing, maintaining, supplying, and crewing the world’s largest navy in order to dominate and control the world’s shipping lanes.

       Expanding its army to some 207 battalions of full-time “Line” regiments. On top of which were the seven battalions of The Brigade of Guards, three regiments of The Household Cavalry, forty-three corps of “Heavy” (Hussar) and “Light” (Dragoon) cavalry, ten Royal Artillery battalions, The Royal Horse Artillery, three battalions of The Royal Marines, The Rocket Troop, The Corps of Royal Artillery Drivers, The Field Train of the Ordnance, The Royal Engineers, The Royal Sappers and Miners, The Commissariat Corps, The Royal Waggon Train, thirteen “Royal Veterans” battalions, nine “Garrison” battalions, and more than twenty foreign “Allied” regiments. Plus an entire additional strata of military formations, under the auxiliary militia system that raised and maintained an uncounted number of “Colonial,” “Fencible,” and “Yeomanry” militia regiments or battalions, “Volunteer” corps or companies, “Armed Ward Associations,” “Sharp Shooter,” and “Independent” companies of infantry, cavalry, and artillery. To name but a few.

       Undertaking the construction, repair, maintenance, garrisoning, and supplying of a worldwide inventory of more than ten thousand military depots, fortifications, camps, and posts of various sizes and function.

       Fighting in a series of military campaigns of dubious strategic value that frittered away vast stocks of weapons and military supplies, not to mention the lives of tens of thousands of its


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