Of the sources listed below, three were obtained from the Thompson Rivers University library, while the remaining sources were found online. The most intriguing sources I came across were the passenger list of the vessel The Ann, from 1792, as well as the 1861 Census of Nova Scotia. These sources proved to be incredibly valuable when writing my paper, as they provided further evidence for each of my main arguments.
Campey, Lucille H. “What About the “Coffin” Ships? in An Unstoppable Force: the Scottish Exodus to Canada. Toronto: Dundurn Press, 2008.
Census Office, Nova Scotia. Census of Nova Scotia, taken March 30, 1861, under the Act of Provincial Parliament – – Chap. XIV- – XXII VIC. 1862. Internet Archive. Last modified March 2012. https://archive.org/stream/18619818611862eng#page/n125
Roy, James A. “II. The Scot in Canada,” in The Scot and Canada. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1947.
Shaw, Matthew. “Introduction,” “Scottish Settlements,” “ Scottish Enterprise,” and “The Birth of Banking,” in Great Scots!: How the Scots Created Canada. (Winnipeg: Heartland Associates, 2003.)
Thorburn, Mike. “The University Founders: The Scotsmen that Shaped Canada’s Higher Education.” Scotland.org. 2017. https://www.scotland.org/features/the-university-founders-the-scotsmen-that-shaped-canadas-higher-education
“Canadian Passenger Lists (National Institute).” Family Search. 2015. https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Canada_Passenger_Lists_(National_Institute)