Napoleon Series Archive 2017

New Brunswick's Challenge to the Militarization

"Their unalienable right and privilege": New Brunswick's Challenge to the Militarization of the British Empire, 1807-1814
Elizabeth Mancke, David Bent, & Mark J. McLaughlin
Acadiensis: Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region/Revue d’histoire de la region atlantique/Volume 46, Number 1, Winter/Spring 2017 pp. 49-72 |

Between 1807 and 1814 the New Brunswick Legislative Council and House of Assembly engaged in a protracted struggle with imperial officials over the renewal of militia legislation and, particularly, the constitutionally appropriate balance of power between civil and military authorities. Occurring during the Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815), which engendered an unprecedented militarization of the British world, this struggle demonstrates New Brunswick had a self-consciously assertive colonial government willing to challenge imperial policies that it thought were contrary to the needs of the colony while underscoring the importance of North American settler colonies in maintaining civil government in the empire during those years of war.

https://muse.jhu.edu/article/662513/summary