[The Romantic Settlement of Lord Selkirk’s Colonists by George Bryce]@TWC D-Link book
The Romantic Settlement of Lord Selkirk’s Colonists

CHAPTER XI
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He was patient and kind and just.

Though he had come to the Colony prejudiced against Lord Selkirk, he found his Lordship so fair and reasonable that he became much attached to the man represented in Montreal and the far East as a destructive ogre.
The Commissioner's report covered one hundred pages, and it was in all respects a model.

He thoroughly understood the motives of both parties, and his decisions led to a perfect era of peace, and moreover in the end to the union of the Hudson's Bay and Nor'-West Companies.
Lord Selkirk's coming was like a ray of sunshine to the Colonists of Red River.

Being of an intensely religious disposition, the people reminded him that the elder who came out in 1815, who was able to baptize and marry, had been carried away by main force by the Nor'-Westers to Canada in 1818, so that they were without religious services.

They always continued to have prayer meetings and to keep up the pious customs of their fathers.


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