[1570] Sparks’s Franklin, i. p. 255; Parton’s Franklin, i. 422. It is also held that Franklin’s connection with this pamphlet was that of a helper of Richard Jackson. Catal. of Works relating to Franklin in the Boston Pub. Library, p. 8. Lecky (England in the XVIIIth Century, iii. ch. 12) traces the controversy over the retention of Canada. Various papers on the peace are noted in the Fifth Report of the Hist. MSS. Commission as being among the Shelburne Papers.
[1571] Among other tracts see Appeal to Knowledge, or candid discussions of the preliminaries of peace signed at Fontainebleau, Nov. 3, 1762, and laid before both houses of Parliament, London, 1763. (Carter-Brown, iii. 1,340.) There is a paper on the treaty in Dublin University Mag., vol. 1. 641. Cf. “The Treaty of Paris, 1763, and the Catholics in American Colonies,” by D. A. O’Sullivan, in Amer. Cath. Quart. Rev., x. 240 (1885).
[1572] The treaty is printed in the Gent. Mag., xxxiii. 121-126.
[1573] It is given in the Annual Register (1763); in the Gentleman’s Magazine (Oct., 1763, p. 479), with a map (p. 476) defining the boundaries of the acquired provinces; in Sparks’s Franklin, iv. 374; in Mills’ Boundaries of Ontario, pp. 192-98, and elsewhere. For other maps of the new American acquisitions, see the London Magazine (Feb., 1763); Kitchen’s map of the Province of Quebec, in Ibid. (1764, p. 496); maps of the Floridas, in Gent. Mag. (1763, p. 552); of Louisiana, Ibid. (1763, p. 284), and London Mag. (1765, June).
[1574] Thomson, Bibliog. of Ohio, no. 838; Sabin, xii. 49,693; Harv. Coll. lib., 4375.29; Rich, Bib. Am. Nova (after 1700), p. 121.
[1575] Brinley, i. 221.
[1576] Rich, Bib. Am. Nov. (after 1700), p. 134.
[1577] Carter-Brown, iii. no. 1,351; Stevens, Bibl. Geog., no. 891.
[1578] Carter-Brown, iii. no. 1,389; Rich, Bib. Am. Nova (after 1700), p. 144.
[1579] Carter-Brown, iii. no. 1,483. Cf. similar titles in Sabin, iv. 15,056-58, but given anonymously.