Title: Post-WW2 Canada
1Post-WW2 Canada
2Exploring Canada and Canadian Identity
- After WW2 the attempts to establish an identity
that is uniquely Canadian becomes quite the focus
for Canadian government - Therefore, the focus of our unit will be to
identify, to analyze and to assess the ways in
which Canadas identity was altered and/or formed
in the years after World War 2
3How would you describe this country and its
inhabitants?
- You are travelling to a country somewhere outside
Canada, you meet a native of said country. They
ask you about Canada and Canadians - Using the sticky note provided, write down as
many things as you can that you would tell this
person about Canada and/or Canadians. - Next step
- When given the signal, pair up to create a Top 5
list from the info you wrote on your sticky
notes. - Be prepared to share your list with the class.
4How would you describe this country and its
inhabitants?
5How do some people describe Canada and its
inhabitants?
- Canada was a country with "not enough history,
too much geography. _ Prime Minister Mackenzie
King
A Canadian is someone who knows how to make
love in a canoe without tipping it. _Pierre
Burton
A Canadian is an American with healthcare and no
guns. _ The Economist
Canada was built on dead beavers. _ Margaret
Atwood
Canada is the essence of not being. Not
English, not American, it is the mathematic of
not being. And a subtle flavour - we're more like
celery as a flavour. _ Mike Myers
6Questions to guide viewing
- List all of the things the video indicates were
created/developed in the 1950s to create a
Canadian identity? - Why do people in the clip say these were
necessary? - Who is Vincent Massey?
7The Fifties Video
- http//www.cpac.ca/forms/index.asp?dsptemplateac
tview3pagetypevodhleclipID5234 - (watch to 1345)
8Debrief Answers
- List all of the things the video indicates were
created/developed in the 1950s to create a
Canadian identity? - Why do people in the clip say these were
necessary? - Who is Vincent Massey?
9From Massey Report Nature of the Task
- "That it is desirable that the Canadian people
should know as much as possible about their
country, its history and traditions and about
their national life and common achievements that
it is in the national interest to give
encouragement to institutions which express
national feeling, promote common understanding
and add to the variety and richness of Canadian
life, rural as well as urban."
10Life in Canada after 1945
- What happens before 1950s to lead to this need
for a Canadian identity? - Soldiers return from war
- Arrival of War Brides
- Displaced Person Movement
- New Immigration Policy
- The Baby Boom
11The Return Home
- Local officials and volunteer agencies organized
civic welcome ceremonies. - Citizens were urged to give every soldier a
hero's welcome and many did, often armed with
coffee, sandwiches and apple pies.
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14Opportunities Available
- Veterans Charter (1944) provided clothing
allowances, war-service gratuities and one year's
medical treatment. - Disabled soldiers received pensions, ongoing
treatment for their disabilities and special help
in finding jobs. - Veterans' Land Act offered low-interest loans to
buy farms. - Another program paid for vocational training or
university - Law guaranteed servicemen their prewar jobs but
not pay raises/promotions they might have missed
out on. - Between 1946 and 1950 the single largest
government expenditure went to rehabilitation for
former servicemen.
15Extension ActivityOpportunities Available to
All?
- Read the handout that outlines the story of James
Nahanee - Respond to the questions on the flipside of the
page. - Be prepared to share your responses with the
class.
16War Brides
- Canadian Wives' Bureau was set up by the
Department of National Defense in 1944 to arrange
for war brides and their children to travel to
Canada by ship and to their husbands' homes by
train. - Some 48,000 War Brides came to Canada after
meeting and marrying Canadian servicemen. Most
brides were from Britain but there were also some
from Holland, Belgium, France, Italy and Germany.
17Elizabeth Rae and her daughter Ann on the train
from Liverpool to the S.S. Mauretania (below)
bound for Canada (April 2, 1946)
18- To help familiarize war brides with Canadian
practices, the Canadian government distributed
booklets such as Welcome to War Brides, Canadian
Cook Book for British Wives and How to Deliver
Your Own Baby.
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20Displaced Person (DP) Movement
- In 1946 the Canadian Citizenship Act is adopted
- In November 1946 the PM calls for measures to
help resettle European refugees - However, it is not until April 1947 that Canadas
doors open to those without relatives in Canada - Between 1947 and 1952, 186,154 displaced persons
come to Canada
Source Alan G. Green. Immigrationand the
Postwar Canadian Economy.Canada Maclean-Hunter
Press, 1976.
21Immigration
- Prime Minister Mackenzie Kings directive from
the House of Commons on May 1, 1947 - The policy of the government is to foster the
growth of the population of Canada by the
encouragement of immigration. The government will
seek by legislation, regulation, and vigorous
administration, to ensure the careful selection
and permanent settlement of such numbers of
immigrants as can advantageously be absorbed in
our national economy.
22Discrimination(?)
- King
- Canada is "perfectly within her rights in
selecting the persons whom we regard as desirable
future citizens. - On the other hand, "the people of Canada do not
wish, as a result of mass immigration, to make a
fundamental alteration in the character of our
population. Large-scale immigration from the
Orient would change the fundamental composition
of the Canadian population."
23Chinese Immigration Act repealed
- At the same time, the government, following
pressure (e.g. by the Committee for the Repeal of
the Chinese Immigration Act, formed by church and
labour groups), repeals the Chinese Immigration
Act (Head Tax Exclusion Act 1923). - Chinese immigration was henceforth regulated by
the 1930 rules for Asiatics which allowed only
the sponsorship of wife and children by Canadian
citizens.
241951 Census
- TOTAL Population 14,009,429
- 14.7 were immigrants (i.e. born outside Canada)
- 47 female, 80 in Canada 10 years, 29 rural
- 44 UK-born, 13.7 U.S., 9 USSR, 8 Ireland
- There were 37,145 immigrants from "Asiatic
countries" of whom 24,166 were from China. - There were 18,020 "Negroes" reported (fewer than
in 1921, 1931, 1941 censuses). - About 97 of the population was of European
origin.
25Baby Boom
- Between 1940 and 1965, the Baby Boom produced
about 1.5 million more births than would
otherwise have occurred (about 8.6 million), an
increase of more than 18 - In 25 years, the annual number of births in
Canada rose from 253,000 in 1940 to 479,000 in
1960, but dropped to 419,000 in 1965
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27- Next class 1950s then now significant
cultural elements (and pop culture!)