January 18 – This notice appears in the Quebec Gazette: "A mail for the upper counties, comprehending Niagara and Detroit, will be closed, at this office, on Monday, 30th instant, at four o'clock in the evening, to be forwarded, from Montreal, by the annual winter express, on Thursday, 2 February next."[citation needed]
July 21 – AmericanDavid McLane, being convicted of high treason, is hanged on a gibbet on the glacis of the fortifications at Quebec.[2]
Wet, cold weather has made growing "Indian corn" not practical, so farmer advises growers to plant buckwheat on sandy soil for almost as good profit[19]
Lt. Gov. John Wentworth reports on "extremely distress'd and perishing State of the Indians," who have lost both potato crop and hunting grounds[20]
Wentworth reports Maroons in Nova Scotia are undisciplined complainers, but can be taught to be productive and successful[21]
After many years on land not granted them, 8 Acadians petition for "Lands + small Marshes" in Guysborough; move is allowed "until further orders"[22]
Joseph Colen describes low stock of food at Fort Severn from "scarcity of game," which necessitates rationing and threatens "Natives" with starvation[29]
^Galarneau, Claude (1979). "McLANE, DAVID". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. University of Toronto. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
^"Boston, August 5," The St. John Gazette and Weekly Advertiser, Volume XII, Number 587 (August 18, 1797), pg. 2 of 2 (lefthand page, 3rd column). (See also poem describing this border and rest of boundaries with U.S.A.) Accessed 26 January 2024
^Letter of Edward Winslow (August 17, 1797), Winslow Papers; A.D. 1776-1826, pgs. 424-5 (PDF pg. 434). (See also letter (pg. 427; PDF 437) from fellow Loyalist who misses his "good old friends") Accessed 7 February 2024
^"Turney, George; Undated[...]Petition of George, Jeanny and Nancy Turney[....]" (received February 4, 1797), Land Petitions of the Niagara Settlers "Turney to Tyler" (See also successful petition of their mother, Mary Turney (on this page)) Accessed 6 February 2024
^"For the Centinel; To Farmers," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VIII, No. 463 (June 13, 1797), pg. 3 (left column). Accessed 31 January 2024
^"To be had of the Printer[....]," The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VIII, No. 446 (February 14, 1797), pg. 3 (right column). Accessed 29 January 2024
^"Extract of a letter from a Gentleman at Annapolis[....]" (June 16, 1797), The Royal Gazette: and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser, Vol. VIII, No. 465 (June 27, 1797), pg. 3 (centre column). Accessed 31 January 2024
^"To the Printer of the Saint John Gazette," The St. John Gazette and Weekly Advertiser Volume XII, Number 595 (October 13, 1797), pg. 4 of 11 (righthand page). Accessed 29 January 2024
^"Dancing School" (August 18, 1797), The St. John Gazette and Weekly Advertiser, Volume XII, Number 587 (August 18, 1797), pg. 2 of 2 (lefthand page, 3rd column). Accessed 26 January 2024
^John MacDonell, Some Account of the Red River, ca. 1797 (Contemporary Copy transcript), Page #18 of 34 McGill Library. Accessed 6 February 2024
^Letter of Joseph Colen (April 3, 1797), "Severn - Post Journal (1796-7; 1809-10), PDF frames 29–31, Archives of Manitoba. Accessed 7 February 2024
^"Letters(...)from the Settlements on the Coast of Labrador" (Okkak, August 7, 1797), 1797-1800, vol. 02: Periodical accounts relating to the missions of the Church of the United Brethren established among the heathen, pgs. 123-4 (frames 129-30), Memorial University of Newfoundland. (See also similar news from Nain (frames 135-6)) Accessed 5 February 2024