Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Nine Lectures on the Earlier Constitutional History of Canada: Delivered Before the University of Toronto in Easter Term, 1889
You probably know that seigniorial tenure was abolished in Canada in 1854. What is probably not so generally known is, that in the Empire State, in the midst of all the rush of American business energy, seigniorial tenure was only abolished about eight years before, in 1846 and that until that date it existed over a considerable part of the state. A number of the Dutch families, especially the Van Rensselaers and Livingstons, continued to hold their estates under the feudal conditions. The manor of Rens selaerwyck, we are told, comprised a tract of country extending twenty-four miles north and south, and forty eight miles east and west, lying on each side of the Hudson river. It was held by the tenants for perpetual leases.
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