The Riot that Never Was: Difference between revisions
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{{title|The Riot that Never Was<br />The military shooting of three Montrealers in 1832 and the official cover-up|[[James Jackson]]| | {{title|The Riot that Never Was<br /><br /><small>The military shooting of three Montrealers in 1832 and the official cover-up</small>|[[James Jackson]]|Montréal : Baraka Books, 2009, 360 p.}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:31, 9 February 2013
The military shooting of three Montrealers in 1832 and the official cover-up
SUMMARY: "As a by-election eventually won by Irish immigrant and newspaper editor Daniel Tracey drew to a close in May 1832, magistrates supporting his opponent, loyalist Stanley Bagg, called in the British troops from the local garrison... In this historical “whodunit,” James Jackson is a one-man investigative commission, combining the moral indignation of an Émile Zola and the writing talent and historical perspective of a Pierre Berton. Although the names of François Languedoc, Pierre Billet and Casimir Chauvin have been forgotten, their story deserves to be known.[1]" ON THE BOOK: Dan Horner, The Canadian Historical Review, Vol. 92, No. 3, Sept. 2011, pp. 553-555. BOOK PREVIEW: entrepotnumerique.com BUY ONLINE: barakabooks.com, amazon.ca, etc.
