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You searched for: quebec with filters: Recipient="Madison, James" AND Period="post-Madison Presidency"
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...sister Stevenson will stay some days to consult Dr. Physick &c &c—and then our movements will be controled perhaps by the Doctors—If not we propose to go on to Ballston Springs, and perhaps Boston—& possibly Quebec.
[…] (2 vols.; New York, 1828). He lived in Quebec, 1838–44, and subsequently returned to New York. A rheumatic attack in 1850 left him an invalid, and he died at his son’s home in Boston Highlands, Massachusetts (Dexter,
...Madison, hoping that my Son Robert would have returned by that time from his Tour thro’ upper and lower Canada. But a few days ago I received a letter from him, dated at Kingston, on his way from Quebec to York, to Niagara, and so on through Gennessee and by the great Canal to newyork. He was detained at Quebec to attend the Obsequies of the late unfortunate Duke
marines and seamen on the lakes.” In 1819 work began on a new fort at Isle aux Noix and plans were made for improvements to fortifications at Kingston and Quebec. Measures were also taken to increase British troop levels to 13,500 men. For these and other developments to defend the Canadian–U.S. boundary, see Kenneth Bourne,
...pair of prints; for which, if you have no better Copies, I hope you will find room at Montpellier. They are Impressions, for which I was an early subscriber, of the Battles of Bunker’s Hill and Quebec; and have had the honor, if it be one, to grace the Walls of a student at Oxford; where such subjects are not often studied; and I have held them since to adorn any Hall of State...
The Death of General Montgomery in the Attack on Quebec
No 1 containing the Prints of the Battles of Bunkers Hill & Quebec, and the two Volumes Esprit Revolutionaire &ca., of which I wrote you;
Tomorrow I shall set off on a tour of five or six weeks to Quebec, and the classic regions on the Lakes, chiefly with the view of examining minutely the battle grounds and other localities of historical note. With the greatest respect and sincere regards. I have the honor to be, Sir,...