A continuation of an amendment to an act first passed in 1801, which divided the town of Halifax into wards for the purposes of repairing and maintaining roads. The amendment requires residents to keep the streets and gutters in front of their houses clean of any sort of filth or nuisance.
This act changes the day on which the courts of common pleas and general sessions of the peace are held in Cumberland county, from the last Tuesday in April and the first Tuesday in November, to the last Tuesday of June and the first Tuesday in January.
This act allows for the division of Cape Breton into three separate districts which will each have its own inferior court and general sessions of the peace.
The continuation of an act first passed in 1778 and amended in 1798, which prevented the sale of cord wood for any price over fifteen shillings per cord. The amendment loosens the restrictions around the sale of cordwood in the town of Halifax.
A continuation and amendment of an act first passed in 1812 which imposes a duty on ships entering Liverpool Harbour in order to support a lighthouse on Coffin's Island.
This act amends an 1801 act which originally only applied to Halifax, extending the reach of the original act to also apply to the towns of Pictou and Annapolis Royal. The 1801 act has been amended to extend to other towns within Nova Scotia in a similar fashion prior to this amendment, in both 1821 and 1822.
This act amends a 1788 act, expanding the duties paid by vessles to support the lighthouse at Patridge Island to all ships, not just those based in the port of Saint John.
This act amends an 1816 act allowing for the foundation of grammar schools in several counties, so that provincial financial support is no longer contingent upon the locals raising 100 pounds; support will now be given if local officials can attest to having procured a school building and a Master.