INDEX
Annexation movement of 1849, the, [133-6].
Arthur, Sir George, his severity, [30].
Assembly: the first election after Union, [57-8]; composition of parties, [58]; the Baldwin incident, [59-61]; measures passed, [61], [63-4]; majority rule principle, [62-3]; the Draper government defeated, [76], [115-17]; -- LaFontaine-Baldwin (Reform) Administration, [76-7], [79-80], [84], [85-7]; placemen removed from Assembly, [87]; the Common Schools Act, [88]; University of Toronto, [89-90], [106-7]; the Metcalfe Crisis, [90-3]; -- Draper (Tory) Administration, [93-4], [101]; -- LaFontaine-Baldwin (the Great) Administration, [101-3], [106], [109-12]; [142-3]; Municipal Corporations Act, [107-9]; Rebellion Losses Bill, [117-18], [119-27]; a breeze in the House, [119-120]; Clergy Reserves, [139]; Seigneurial Tenure, [141]; -- Hincks-Morin Administration, [143]; a business man's government, [144-5], [155-6]; -- MacNab (Liberal-Conservative) Administration, [157].
Bagot, Sir Charles, governor-general, [74-5], [79]; forms a coalition government, [75-6]; his death a reproach to Canada, [80-1].
Baldwin, Robert, [68-9]; a Moderate Reformer, [40], [69-70], [71-2]; his cool proposal to Sydenham, [60-1]; his association with LaFontaine, [66], [74], [77-8], [101-2], [118]; his first administration, [77-8], [85], [80-90]; the Metcalfe peerage, [95]; the Great Administration, [101-2], [106-8], [118], [120], [139]; resigns the leadership, [142]; retires from public life, [143].
Baldwin, W. W., [68-9]; president of Constitutional Reform Society, [71].
Blake, W. H., causes an uproar in the House, [119-20]; burned in effigy, [120].