Chaudière Falls: A Novel of Dramatized History

Fiction & Literature, Historical
Cover of the book Chaudière Falls: A Novel of Dramatized History by David Mulholland, David Mulholland
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Author: David Mulholland ISBN: 9781370270125
Publisher: David Mulholland Publication: July 15, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: David Mulholland
ISBN: 9781370270125
Publisher: David Mulholland
Publication: July 15, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

On March 7, 1800, Philemon Wright, a farmer from Woburn, Massachusetts, arrives on the north shore of the Ottawa River in Hull Township in Lower Canada. On September 1, 1860, on the south side of the river in the united province of Canada, Queen Victoria’s son, Prince Albert Edward, lays the cornerstone for Canada’s Parliament Buildings on Barrack Hill in Ottawa.

While the novel dramatizes the real events that unfold between those two dates---Wright’s determination to establish a community of farmers, the political scheming that results in Ottawa becoming Canada’s capital---it’s also the story of immigrants struggling for survival in a new world. Among them, Jedediah Jansen, who is ten years old when his family arrives with Wright’s party. Jed marries, enters the volatile timber business, is overwhelmed by both, and his life spirals out of control.

The settlers’ attempts to establish a peaceful community are further exacerbated when the government in York (Toronto) refuses to confer legal status on Bytown (Ottawa). And because its inhabitants resent the civil authority of Lieutenant-Colonel John By, Commanding Royal Engineer for the Rideau Canal, the lawless settlement is rampant with self-serving politics, religious bigotry, and barbaric violence.

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On March 7, 1800, Philemon Wright, a farmer from Woburn, Massachusetts, arrives on the north shore of the Ottawa River in Hull Township in Lower Canada. On September 1, 1860, on the south side of the river in the united province of Canada, Queen Victoria’s son, Prince Albert Edward, lays the cornerstone for Canada’s Parliament Buildings on Barrack Hill in Ottawa.

While the novel dramatizes the real events that unfold between those two dates---Wright’s determination to establish a community of farmers, the political scheming that results in Ottawa becoming Canada’s capital---it’s also the story of immigrants struggling for survival in a new world. Among them, Jedediah Jansen, who is ten years old when his family arrives with Wright’s party. Jed marries, enters the volatile timber business, is overwhelmed by both, and his life spirals out of control.

The settlers’ attempts to establish a peaceful community are further exacerbated when the government in York (Toronto) refuses to confer legal status on Bytown (Ottawa). And because its inhabitants resent the civil authority of Lieutenant-Colonel John By, Commanding Royal Engineer for the Rideau Canal, the lawless settlement is rampant with self-serving politics, religious bigotry, and barbaric violence.

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