A. C. Buchanan
A. C. Buchanan (Alexander Carlisle Buchanan, senior) was appointed by Britain as the Chief Agent for Emigration in Quebec, Lower Canada in 1828. Buchanan himself advised the British authorities to appoint only Canadians as emigration agents, not as immigration officers, to ensure that the administration (of immigration to the colony from the mother country) was "free from local prejudice".
References
- Jean Hamelin; Francess G. Halpenny (1976-12-01). Halpenny, Francess G., ed. Dictionary of Canadian Biography. University of Toronto Press. p. 377. ISBN 0-8020-3319-9.
- Robert Grace (1999). The Irish in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Canada and the Case of Quebec. PhD Thesis, Université Laval. pp. 25–26.
External links
- Moving Here, Staying Here: The Canadian Immigrant Experience at Library and Archives Canada
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