It is taken from a French Canadian journal of talent and resources, and agrees with the published authorities on this subject.
Population of Lower Canada in 1831 and 1844.—The following table of the comparative population of Lower Canada at the periods above-mentioned first appeared in the Canadien.
| 1831. | 1844. | |
| Saguenay | 8,385 | 13,445 |
| Montmorency (1) | 8,089 | 8,434 |
| Quebec | 36,173 | 45,676 |
| Portneuf | 13,656 | 15,922 |
| Champlain | 6,991 | 10,404 |
| St. Maurice | 16,909 | 20,594 |
| Berthier | 20,225 | 26,700 |
| Leinster (2) | 22,122 | 25,300 |
| Terrebonne | 16,623 | 20,646 |
| Deux Montagnes | 20,905 | 26,835 |
| Outaouais | 4,786 | 11,340 |
| Montreal | 43,773 | 64,306 |
| Vaudreuil | 13,111 | 16,616 |
| Beauharnois | 16,859 | 28,580 |
| Huntingdon (3) | 29,916 | 36,204 |
| Rouville | 18,115 | 20,098 |
| Chambly | 15,483 | 17,171 |
| Vercheres | 12,819 | 12,968 |
| Richelieu | 16,146 | 20,983 |
| St. Hyacinthe | 13,366 | 21,734 |
| Shefford | 5,087 | 9,996 |
| Missisqoui | 8,801 | 10,875 |
| Stanstead | 10,306 | 11,846 |
| Sherbrooke | 7,104 | 13,302 |
| Drummond | 3,566 | 9,374 |
| Vamaska | 9,495 | 11,645 |
| Nicolet | 12,509 | 16,280 |
| Lothiniere | 9,191 | 13,697 |
| Megantic | 2,283 | 6,730 |
| Dorchester (4) | 23,816 | 34,826 |
| Bellechasse | 13,529 | 14,540 |
| L'Islet | 13,518 | 16,990 |
| Kamouraska | 14,557 | 17,465 |
| Rimouski | 10,061 | 17,577 |
| Gaspé | 5,003 | 7,458 |
| Bonaventure | 8,109 | 8,230 |
| ———— | ———— | |
| Total | 511,919 | 678,590 |
| In 1844 | 678,590 | |
| In 1831 | 511,919 | |
| ———— | ||
| Augmentation in 13 years | 166,671 |
The increase during the interval between the years cited is about 32½ per cent. It would no doubt have been more considerable but for the cholera, which in 1832 and 1834 decimated the population. The troubles of 1837-8 likewise contributed to check any increase; as, at those periods, numbers emigrated from this province to the United States, and the usual immigration from Europe hither was also materially interfered with.
Assuming 1,500,000 as the present actual population of the Canadas, we shall examine the strength of British North America from published returns in 1845, or the best authorities.
| CHIEF | POP'N | |||
| POPULATION, 1845. | CITIES. | OF 1845 | ||
| { | Montreal | 60,000 | ||
| { | Quebec | 30,000 | ||
| Canada | 1,500,000 | { | Kingston | 12,000 |
| { | Toronto | 20,000 | ||
| { | Fredericton | 6,000 | ||
| New Brunswick | 200,000 | { | St. John | 6,000 |
| Nova Scotia, including | { | Halifax | 16,000 | |
| Cape Breton | 250,000 | { | Sydney | ----- |
| Newfoundland | 100,000 | St. John's | 20,000 | |
| Prince Edward's | ||||
| Island and the | 45,000 | Charlotte Town | ----- | |
| Magdalen Isles | ||||
| ————— | ||||
| Total Population | 2,095,000. |
A serviceable militia of 80,000 young men may, therefore, without distressing the population, be easily raised in British North America, with a reserve sufficient to keep an army of 40,000 able-bodied soldiers in Canada always in the field; and, if necessary, 100,000 could be assembled at any point, for any given purpose.
The Great Gustavus said that he would not desire a larger military force for defensive purposes than 40,000 men fit for actual service, to accomplish any military object, as such a force would always enable him to choose his positions. Two such armies of effective men could be easily maintained in the two Canadas, and concentrated rapidly and with certainty upon any given point, notwithstanding the extent of frontier; and the Canadians are much more essentially soldiers than the people of the United States, without any reference to valour or contempt of danger: whilst they would be fighting for everything dear to them, and the aggressors for mere extension of territory, and to accomplish the fixed object of destroying all monarchical institutions.
I have already said that there is no sympathy of the Irish settlers in Canada with the native Americans, and the best proof of this is the public demonstrations upon St. Patrick's day at Montreal, Kingston, and Toronto, where the two parties, Protestant and Catholic, exhibited no party emblems, no flags but loyal ones, and where the ancient enmity between the rival houses of Capulet and Montague, the Green and the Orange, appeared to have vanished before the approaching arrogant demands of a newly-erected Imperium.
Independence may exist to a great extent in Canada. Gourlay figured it, twenty years ago, by placing the word in capitals on the arch formed by the prismatic hues of the cloud-spray of Niagara. He could get no better ground than a fog-bank to hoist his flag upon, and the vision and the visionary have alike been swallowed up in oblivion.