North American Colonial Association of IrelandMore emigration schemes can be found at The Emigration Webpage This site created and provided by and, | |||
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| The following public notice was printed in the Nenagh Guardian, Co Tipperary in April 1839.The information gives an overview of the plans of the Assocation,and the measures in place to assist migrants to Canada. | |||
North American Colonial Association of Ireland Incorporated and Empowered by Act of Parliament. Capital £300.000 in 15.000 SHARES of £20. With power to the Shareholders to increase the Capital to One Million. Governor The Right Honourable Earl Fitzwilliam Deputy Governor Henry Kingscote Esq. Directors. The Right Hon.Lord Milton. M.P The Hon.Frederick Ponsonby Colonel Henry Bruen John Pirie. Esq. Ald. Edward.H.Chapman. Esq. C.H.Clay. Esq. Captain Forbes.R.N D.Henchy.Esq. Donald Maclean. Esq. Sir Josiah Coghill Coghill , Bart. Sir James Duke. M.P Colonel North Robert Latouche. Esq. John Harman. Esq. W.W.Jameson.Esq. T.L.Murray.Esq. H.Ryan.Esq. The Rev.R.H.Wall. D.D. H Loftus Wigram. Esq. Bankers: Messrs. Ladbrokes, Kingscote, & Co. London. Latouche and Co. Dublin. This Association is formed to promote,superintend,and conduct Emigration from the United Kingdom; and to colonize and settle with a British population the fertile Provinces of North America. To enable the Association to carry out these important objects, their Act of Incoporation confers upon them very valuable and extensive privileges and powers; it authorized them to acquire by purchase,or free grant,Lands in the Colonies to any extent; it enables them to charter or own Steam or other Ships, for the purposes of Emigration and intercommunication between the several Provinces; it likewise empowers the Company to act as Bankers in England, by receiving deposits from persons emigrating with Capital, and giving them Bills on the Colonies; and it authorises the Company to Establish Banks in every place where they have Emigration Stations and Land Settlements. The Capital of the Company is £200,000, divided into 15,000 shares of £20.each upon which £2. per Share is to be paid at the time of subscribing, and the remainder as the Directors may see fit, by calls not exceding £2. per Share, at intervals not less than three months from the date of each call. The individual responsibility of the Shareholders is limited, by the Act of Parliament, to the amount of their respective shares. The Shares already subscribed for have been taken by Land-owners and Capitalists, in about equal proportions; it is desired that the remainder shall be so allotted as to preserve the union of these two great interests; and that the management of the affairs of the Company may be continued, as it now is, in the hands of Directors having a large stake in the Company and fairly representing both classes, so that all the objects contemplated by the Act,may be vigorously and efficiently carried out. The Company have purchased the Seignory of Beauharnois, containing upwards of 200,000 acres, together with large tracts of Land in the adjoining Townships; and the whole (whether considered in regard to climate,soil, or locality) may be said to be situate in the very best part of the Province of Lower Canada. The property is of sufficient magnitude to afford an ample field for the immediate locaion of a large number of Emigrants; and it is so far advanced to a state of Settlement that no persons need be deterred from occupying Land there,by the dread of those privations and difficulties to which early Settlers are exposed in establishing themselves in a desert country. The estate has already upon it a population of 12,000 souls:it is provided with eight Protestant and four Catholice Churches and Chapels, and fifty-one Schools; it has several Grist and Saw Mills, with abundance of water power for others in various parts of the Property,whenever the wants of an increasing population shall call for their erection.The whole property is intersected by good roads, and no part of the Estate is distant more than half a-days journey from the port of the Emigrants debarkation. Beauharnois is in itself admirably adapted for carrying out all the objects of the Act of Parliament with the greatest efficiency, and the smallest expence of Management; it is upon the St.Laurence,the high road of Emigration from Great Britain to the Canadas; it is nearly opposite the Island and City of Montreal, which may be called the Portal of Upper Canada,and is the point whence five-sixths of the Emigrants from this country are distributed over the British Settlements in both Provinces. Montreal has upwards of 30,000 inabitants, and is rapidly increasing in population and wealth; it affords a steady market for the advantageous disposal of the surplus produce of the Company's Estate, and a ready mart for the supply of those articles of convenience and comfort which are required for the wants of a young and growing settlement. It is the intention of the Company,at their Offices in London and Dublin,to organise a system by which they will be enabled to afford to persons about to emigrate, accurate information as to the demand and supply of labor in the various Colonies: and the Company will contract for,or themselves provide,Ships well found in every particular,for the convenient transmission of Emigrants,upon reasonable terms, to the different places where labour may be in demand. By a careful attention to these objects,the evils that have hitherto flowed from spontaneous emigration, without previous regulations,will be greatly mitigated, if not entirely removed. The Company will keep at their head OFfices, at the principal Ports of debarkation, an account of the prices and descriptions of,and the mode of making application for, Crown Lands in the different Colonies: they will likewise keep a register of Lands for disposal, and negotiate the purchase and sale of Colonial Property in various stages of improvement and cultivation; so that an Emigrant with small funds may, even before he quits his native country, fix upon his intended Settlement, and proceed to his place of destination without being subjected to expences and loss of time, or be exposed to the frauds that have been too often practised upon Emigrants, who have taken their little capital to a strange land without any settled plan or fixed spot for their location. Although the North American Colonies offer a wide field of profitable enterprise, it is not the intention of the Company, themselves, to embark in Commercial or Agricultural Speculations; believing that all such undertakings can be more efficiently and economically conducted by private individuals than by public Companies, it will be the province of this Association to encourage all well-founded projects of this description, by infusing into the Colonies where they purchase Lands an adequate supply of the two great elements of prosperity-Labour and Capital. The Revenues of the Company will be derived from the Rent of their fixed property; the Settlement and Sale of Wild Lands,and the profits resulting from their Banking operations in the Provinces. The establishment of New Settlement has long been in the United States the source of profitable speculation to both Companies and individuals. It is well known that many of these speculations have been both directly and indirectly aided by British Capital, and carried out with the assistance of British Labour. In the Canadas, there can be no doubt but that similar undertakings will be attended with the same success; and the superabundant population and unemployed Capital of the Mother Country, when transferred to her own Colonies. will increase their wealth and power, instead of adding to the strength and prosperity of a rival State. Applications for Shares (if by post, postage free) to the Clerk, Mr John More at the Offices of the Assocation, 2 Bank Buildings, London, and 108 Marlborough Street, Dublin; or to the Bankers, Messrs Ladbrokes, Kingscote, and Co, London, and Messrs Latouche and Co, Dublin; or the Solicitors, Messrs Charles Pearson and Wilkinson,Guildhall Yard, London, and Messrs Young and Murdoch, Mountjoy Square, Dublin. Also the Managers of the several Banks at Nenagh. | |||
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