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Events from the year 1799 in Canada.
Incumbents
Federal government
Governors
Events
- David Thompson marries Charlotte Small
 - North West Company establishes a fur post at Rocky Mountain House, Alberta. The nearby Hudson's Bay Company fur post which is also established at this time is called Acton House.
 - Alexander Mackenzie resigns from North West Company
 - George Vancouver's Journeys to the North Pacific Ocean published in London
 - Handsome Lake, a Seneca chief, founds the Longhouse religion
 - Russian-American Fur Company chartered; launches aggressive policy in Aleutians and on Northwest Coast.
 - American competition for West Indies trade kills Liverpool, Nova Scotia's merchant fleet.
 - Alexander Baranov establishes Russian post known today as Old Sitka; trade charter grants exclusive trading rights to the Russian American Company.
 - Vermont answers Indian chiefs, in Canada, that their claims were extinguished by treaties of 1763 and 1783 between France, Great Britain and the United States.
 - Two cases are filed challenging slavery in New Brunswick: R v Jones and R v Agnew.
 
Births
- September 8 – Sir William Young, Premier of Nova Scotia (d.1887)
 - October 30 – Ignace Bourget, bishop of the Diocese of Montreal (d.1885)
 
Full date unknown
- Joseph Cunard, merchant, shipbuilder and politician (d.1865)
 
Deaths
- January 15 – Alexander McKee, agent for the Indian Department (b.1735)
 
Full date unknown
- Philip Turnor, HBC inland surveyor (b.1751)
 
Historical documents
Chief Joseph Brandt gets intelligence from Delaware about French attempts to recruit "Southern and Western Indians" to invade Canada[2]
Joseph Brant explains how former Lieut. Gov. Simcoe obstructed rights promised Six Nations by Gov. Haldimand, and asks for redress[3]
References
- ↑ "Kings and Queens of Canada". aem. 11 August 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
 - ↑ Letter of Joseph Brandt to Peter Russell (January 27, 1799), Indian Affairs; Lieutenant-Governor's Office - Upper Canada; Correspondence, 1796-1806, pgs. 261-3 (HTML pgs. 298-300). Accessed 25 January 2021
 - ↑ Letter of Joseph Brant to Lieut. Gov. Peter Hunter (September 6, 1799; damaged, and page missing), Indian Affairs; Lieutenant-Governor's Office - Upper Canada; Correspondence, 1796-1806, pgs. 268-9, 271 (HTML pgs. 305-7). Accessed 25 January 2021
 
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