Title: Introduction to Canadian History 30s
1Introduction to Canadian History 30s
2History of Canada
- Europeans settled along the Atlantic to the banks
of the St. Lawrence. - Many of these Europeans were fishers and traders.
- Earliest colonists came around 1600, mainly
French and English. - Colonists referred to this distant land as the
new world.
3Beringia
During the last ice age, Beringia was a vast
expanse of unglaciated terrain stretching from
eastern Siberia to the Yukon. At its heart lay
the Bering Land Bridge. When sea levels dropped
during the last ice age the shallow sea bed west
of Alaska was exposed connecting North America
and Asia. Beringia is known as the gateway to
North America.
4Aboriginal Perspective
- Aboriginals were present long before the
colonists came, and welcomed the newcomers. - Because of disease, war, and other events the
aboriginal population declined drastically until
about the 1920s. - Today the aboriginal population is growing at a
rapid rate.
5North America Before Europeans
6Origin of Canada
- The name Canada originated from the aboriginal
word Kanata,a Huron-Iroquois word meaning
settlement. - When Jacques-Cartier came to the St. Lawrence,
specifically Stadacona (presently Quebec) the
colonists began to use this word to describe the
entire land.
7Cartiers travels
8- Until 1763, France and England laid claims to the
land that is Canada. - New France was located on the valley of the St.
Lawrence and at times extended to the Bay of
Fundy in Acadia, across the Great Lakes, into the
Mississippi and all the way north to the Hudson
Bay.
9- At the same time English-speaking settlers
occupied Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. - Britain and France competed for control of these
colonies until the Seven Years War (1756-1763). - The British prevailed and took control of New
France.
10- However, since the colony was mostly
french-speaking the English needed to guarantee
that the culture of the French would be
preserved. - By 1800 BNA (British North America) was divided
into several colonies. - The Atlantic included NFLD, Nova Scotia, New
Brunswick, and PEI.
11- St. Lawrence/Great Lakes region
- Upper Canada (Ontario)
- Lower Canada (Quebec)
- The vast territory westward was known as Ruperts
Land. It was occupied by different first nations
groups and few fur traders.
12- The different colonies were different there were
similarities in Government and economics. - One of the most shared ideas was to remain
separate from the USA. - Americans had twice invaded Canada (1775) during
the American War of Independence and again during
the War of 1812.
13- In the end, the British were victorious of the
American invasions. - Confederation 1867
- During this time many of people of BNA wanted to
unify because of Free Trade, their economies no
longer enjoyed the protection of the Mother
Country.
14Political Change
- The colonies thought it would be a better idea to
remain separate. - At the same time relations between the French and
the English were breaking down. - The push forward with transportation with the
first steamboat and the railway in the 1850s,
contributed to the feeling that unification was
needed. - It didnt help that the USA had become a growing
military threat. - The idea of Manifest Destiny (The USA would rule
all of North America).
15- Because of the latter, the four colonies decided
to join together in 1867 as the Dominion of
Canada. - In 1870, the Dominion purchased Ruperts Land
from the HBC, and used in part to create
Manitoba. - A year later (1871) British Columbia joined with
the promise of the Transcontinental railway. - 1873 PEI joined.
- 1905 we have the emergence on Alberta and
Saskatchewan. - 1949 NFLD became the 10th province.
16Economic Change The great transformation
- Huge factories replaced small workshops.
- Steam powered machinery replaced muscle power.
- Consumer goods bought at the store replaced
home-made items - An industrial, commercial economy replaced one
based primarily on farming and trade.
17- These changes attracted vast amounts of
immigrants in 1896. They were given cheap land
and became farmers.
18The Great War (1914-1918)
- Over 665, 000 Canadians served in the armed
forces. - By the time the fighting stopped 60, 661
Canadians were dead and another 172, 000 were
wounded. - WW1 was followed by a recession, returning
soldiers were unemployed, rising food prices were
not matched with wages.
19- Labour unions began to expand and fight for
better working conditions and wages. - In 1918 and 1919 were known as labor revolt.
- The unrest culminated and led to the General
Strike of 1919 in Winnipeg. - In May-June 30, 000 workers went on strike and
government troops were sent in to restore order.
20Roaring 20s and the great depression 1929
- By the mid-1920s the recession had lifted, but
would be hit hard in 1929 with the collapse if
the stock market, leading to the Great
Depression. - The depression hit Western Canada the hardest
with drought and falling grain prices and did not
end until the onset of WW2 (1939-1945).
21- The second world war marked a turn around in the
economic fortunes of the country. - Incomes rose and opportunities expanded.
- Governments had revenue to expand social
assistance such as Health and unemployment
insurance, family allowance, and workers
compensation. - The west was reborn with grain prices, the
discovery of oil, uranium, potash, and nickel.
22The Quiet Revolution 1960s
- Quebec had its own Quiet Revolution, which was a
period of rapid economic and social change. - The French felt a new pride in being Quebeckers
and were taking control over the main
institutions of Quebec society, long controlled
by the British.
23- Some Quebeckers began to think of themselves as a
distinct nation and a separatist movement arose. - Prosperity began to peter out in the 1980s and
Canada entered a period of downturns and
cutbacks. - Governments at all levels were saddled with large
debts. - Unemployment increased, many industries closed or
moved.
24- Grain prices began to fall and fisheries
collapsed on the east coast. - But today many Canadians live better than any
previous generation. - Canada is a nation built upon three founding
peoples- the First Nations, the French, and the
English.