history of Canada
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Assorted References
- major treatment
- In Canada: History of Canada
North America’s first humans migrated from Asia, presumably over a now-submerged land bridge from Siberia to Alaska sometime about 12,000 years ago, during the last Ice Age; it has also been argued, however, that…
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- In Canada: History of Canada
- Afghanistan War
- In Afghanistan War: Iraq takes centre stage
Both Britain and Canada stationed their troops in Afghanistan’s south, where fighting had been most intense. More than 20 other countries also lost troops during the war, though many—such as Germany and Italy—chose to focus their forces in the north and the west, where the insurgency was less…
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- In Afghanistan War: Iraq takes centre stage
- American Revolution
- In American Revolution: Washington takes command
…of 1775 the Americans invaded Canada. One force under Gen. Richard Montgomery captured Montreal on November 13. Another under Benedict Arnold made a remarkable march through the Maine wilderness to Quebec. Unable to take the city, Arnold was joined by Montgomery, many of whose troops had gone
Read More - In United States: The American Revolutionary War
Richard Montgomery invaded Canada in the fall of 1775, captured Montreal, and launched an unsuccessful attack on Quebec, in which Montgomery was killed. The Americans maintained a siege on the city until the arrival of British reinforcements in the spring and then retreated to Fort Ticonderoga.
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- In American Revolution: Washington takes command
- Columbia River Treaty
- In Columbia River Treaty
17, 1961), agreement between Canada and the United States to develop and share waterpower and storage facilities on the Columbia River. The treaty called for the United States to build Libby Dam in northern Montana and for Canada to build dams at three locations in British Columbia. Hydroelectric power…
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- In Columbia River Treaty
- conservation
- In North America: The human imprint on the landscape
When the United States and Canada became industrialized, they used coal, oil, iron, other metals, and wood with extravagance and often with great waste. The waste products of the factories of these countries started to pollute air, land, and water, and, as cities with enormous populations began to appear, most…
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- In North America: The human imprint on the landscape
- Constitutional Act
- In Constitutional Act
Canadian history, the act of the British Parliament that repealed certain portions of the Quebec Act of 1774, under which the province of Quebec had previously been governed, and provided a new constitution for the two colonies to be called Lower Canada (the future Quebec)…
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- In Constitutional Act
- Distant Early Warning Line
- In Distant Early Warning Line
United States and Canada that could detect and verify the approach of aircraft or intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) from the Soviet Union.
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- In Distant Early Warning Line
- gold rush
- governor-general
- In governor-general
…course of developing events in Canada, it was decided that the functions of the governor-general should be limited to representation of the crown, unless any dominion preferred that the governor-general should also perform any functions on behalf of the British government. In 1930 the Imperial Conference declared that appointment of…
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- In governor-general
- interpretation by Groulx
- In Lionel-Adolphe Groulx
…informal, his interpretation of French-Canadian history as a struggle for survival against the continuing dominance of British Canada had wide and prolonged influence. He published two novels (1922 and 1932) under the pseudonym Alonie de Lestres. His most important work was the four-volume Histoire du Canada français depuis la…
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- In Lionel-Adolphe Groulx
- Jesuit Estates controversy
- In Jesuit Estates controversy
…1773, its extensive landholdings in Canada were transferred to the British government, with any revenues derived from them to be applied to educational programs. Popular demand for the educational and missionary services of the Jesuits forced Pope Pius VII to restore the order in 1814. In 1842 a number of…
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- In Jesuit Estates controversy
- Métis
- In Métis
The Métis resisted the Canadian takeover of the Northwest in 1869. Fearing the oncoming wave of settlers from Ontario, the Métis established a provisional government under the leadership of Louis Riel (1844–85). In 1870 this government negotiated a union with Canada that resulted in the establishment of the province…
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- In Métis
- police system
- In police: The development of police in Canada
Canada’s earliest legal traditions can be traced to both France and England. Quebec city followed the early models of French cities and created a watchman system in 1651. Upper Canada, later renamed Ontario, adopted English traditions and established both a constabulary and a watch-and-ward…
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- In police: The development of police in Canada
- radio broadcasting
- In radio: Radio’s early years
Another early station appeared in Canada when station XWA (now CFCF) in Montreal began transmitting experimentally in September 1919 and on a regular schedule the next year. (The first commercially sponsored stations in Canada appeared in 1922.) The first British station offered two daily half-hour programs of talk and music…
Read More - In radio: Pressures on public-service radio
By the 1990s Canada’s government had severely cut funding for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), thereby weakening the role of that network and making commercial stations with their advertiser-supported music formats more important to Canadian listeners.
Read More - In radio: The global sound of radio
For example, the Canadian government, building upon a history of regulation, passed broadcasting acts in 1991 that required a certain percentage of programming to be exclusively Canadian and in turn restricted the importation of foreign (usually meaning American) radio programming. Designed as part of a larger process of…
Read More - In radio: Canada
Canada’s huge landmass, relatively small population, and proximity to the United States combined to create a struggle for those seeking a separate identity for Canadian radio. The eventual result was a four-way system of commercial, government, and both French-speaking and English-speaking stations. By the…
Read More - In radio: Pirates and public-service radio
The first Canadian FM stations were developed as part of a continued expansion of the CBC. In the late 1950s a dedicated service to indigenous people in Canada’s north was begun, and in the next decade it was expanded to use shortwave. Resisting American commercial counterpressure in…
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- In radio: Radio’s early years
- Saint Albans Raid
- In Saint Albans Raid
…War, a Confederate raid from Canada into Union territory; the incident put an additional strain on what were already tense relations between the United States and Canada.
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- In Saint Albans Raid
- ships and shipping
- In ship: Commercial steam navigation
…geographic expansion under way in Canada and the United States that would be more quickly advanced by steamboats than by land transportation. North American transportation before the late 1850s was by river in most regions. This was not a unique situation: most areas subject to 19th-century colonization by Europeans—such as…
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- In ship: Commercial steam navigation
- War of 1812
- In War of 1812: Major causes of the war
…augment his meagre regular and Canadian militia forces with Indian allies, which was enough to confirm the worst fears of American settlers. Brock’s efforts were aided in the fall of 1811, when Indiana territorial governor William Henry Harrison fought the Battle of Tippecanoe and destroyed the Indian settlement at Prophet’s…
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- In War of 1812: Major causes of the war
European colonization
- Arctic peoples
- In Arctic: Canada and northern Alaska
The region from the Bering Strait northward and east to the Mackenzie River was untouched by Russians, but after the mid-19th century it was visited by great numbers of European and Euro-American whalers, who imported both disease and alcohol; the Indigenous…
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- In Arctic: Canada and northern Alaska
- British Empire
- In British Empire: Origins of the British Empire
…itself in what became northwestern Canada from the 1670s on. The East India Company began establishing trading posts in India in 1600, and the Straits Settlements (Penang, Singapore, Malacca, and Labuan) became British through an extension of that company’s activities. The first permanent British settlement on the African continent was…
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- In British Empire: Origins of the British Empire
- British North America Act
- In British North America Act
…America—Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Canada—were united as “one Dominion under the name of Canada” and by which provision was made that the other colonies and territories of British North America might be admitted. It also divided the province of Canada into the provinces of Quebec and Ontario and provided…
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- In British North America Act
- dominion status
- In dominion
…the British Commonwealth countries of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, Eire, and Newfoundland. Although there was no formal definition of dominion status, a pronouncement by the Imperial Conference of 1926 described Great Britain and the dominions as “autonomous communities within the British Empire, equal in status,…
Read More - In Statute of Westminster
…and the then dominions of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland, and Newfoundland.
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- In dominion
- expedition of Wolseley
- In Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley
Wolseley was then sent to Canada to improve that colony’s defenses in case of war with the United States. In 1870 he led the Red River expedition through 600 miles (950 km) of wilderness to suppress the rebel Louis Riel, who had proclaimed a republic in Manitoba. Success in the…
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- In Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley
- Quebec Act
- In Quebec Act
…make the French colony of Canada a province of the British Empire in North America. Among these were whether an assembly should be summoned, when nearly all the inhabitants of the province of Quebec, being Roman Catholics, would, because of the Test Acts, be ineligible to be representatives; whether the…
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- In Quebec Act
- role of Durham
- In John George Lambton, 1st earl of Durham
…and lord high commissioner of Canada, Durham arrived at Quebec in May 1838 in the aftermath of political rebellion. Faced with French-Canadian hostility, virtual anarchy in Lower Canada (the modern province of Quebec), and possible expansion of the United States into Canada, he was given almost dictatorial powers.
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- In John George Lambton, 1st earl of Durham
- United Kingdom
- In United Kingdom: Conflict abroad
… in 1759, British control of Canada was effectively secured. The island of Guadeloupe was captured in the same dramatic year, as were French trading bases on the west coast of Africa.
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- In United Kingdom: Conflict abroad
explorations of
- Cartier
- In Jacques Cartier
…also is credited with naming Canada, though he used the name—derived from the Huron-Iroquois kanata, meaning a village or settlement—to refer only to the area around what is now Quebec city.
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- In Jacques Cartier
- Champlain
- In Samuel de Champlain
…name (1609) and made other explorations of what are now northern New York, the Ottawa River, and the eastern Great Lakes.
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- In Samuel de Champlain
- Drake
- In Sir Francis Drake: Circumnavigation of the world
…a parallel with Vancouver [Canada], to seek the Northwest Passage back into the Atlantic. Bitterly cold weather defeated him, and he coasted southward to anchor near what is now San Francisco. He named the surrounding country New Albion and took possession of it in the name of Queen Elizabeth.
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- In Sir Francis Drake: Circumnavigation of the world
- Hudson
- In Henry Hudson
…strait, and a bay in North America are named for him.
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- In Henry Hudson
- La Salle
- In René-Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle: Early life
…in 1666 set out for Canada to seek his fortune. With a grant of land at the western end of Île de Montréal, La Salle acquired at one stroke the status of a seigneur (i.e., landholder) and the opportunities of a frontiersman.
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- In René-Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle: Early life
international relations
- North American Free Trade Agreement
- In North American Free Trade Agreement
…passing between the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The pact effectively created a free-trade bloc among the three largest countries of North America. NAFTA went into effect in 1994 and remained in force until it was replaced in 2020.
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- In North American Free Trade Agreement
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- In North Atlantic Treaty Organization
members were Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway
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- In North Atlantic Treaty Organization
policy on
- American Indians
- In American Indian: Colonization and conquest
…of the United States and Canada disenfranchised most Northern American tribes of their land and sovereignty. Most indigenous individuals were legally prohibited from leaving their home reservation without specific permission; having thus confined native peoples, the two countries set about assimilating them into the dominant culture. Perhaps the most insidious…
Read More - In Native American: The conquest of western Canada
For the indigenous peoples of the Canadian West, the 19th century was a time of rapid transformation. The fur trade and a variety of large prey animals were in decline, and, with the elimination of government tribute payments, this created a period of economic…
Read More - In Native American: The Red River crisis and the creation of Manitoba
Instead, Canada’s 1868 Act Providing for the Organisation of the Department of the Secretary of State of Canada and for the Management of Indian and Ordnance Lands (sometimes referred to as the first Indian Act, although an act by that name was not passed until 1876)…
Read More - In Native American: Assimilation versus sovereignty: the late 19th to the late 20th century
…the dominant colonial cultures of Canada and the United States.
Read More - In Native American: Termination
Canada’s attempts at promoting these goals tended to focus on the individual, while those of the United States tended to focus on the community.
Read More - In Plains Indian: Syncretism, assimilation, and self-determination
…creation of the Dominion of Canada in 1867. The new Canadian government quickly stated its intent to annex the northern Plains, most of which had until then been part of Rupert’s Land, a territory of the Hudson’s Bay Company; annexation proceeded without consultation with the area’s resident tribes.
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- In American Indian: Colonization and conquest
- Bering Sea Dispute
- In Bering Sea Dispute
…hand, and Great Britain and Canada, on the other, over the international status of the Bering Sea. In an attempt to control seal hunting off the Alaskan coast, the United States in 1881 claimed authority over all the Bering Sea waters. Britain refused to recognize this claim. In 1886 the…
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- In Bering Sea Dispute
- Charlottetown Conference
- In Charlottetown Conference
…formation of the Dominion of Canada. In 1864 a conference was planned to discuss the possibility of a union of the Maritime Provinces. The Province of Canada (consisting of present-day Ontario and Quebec) requested and received permission to send a delegation. Consequently the conference, which convened at Charlottetown, P.E.I., on…
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- In Charlottetown Conference
- Punjabi Sikhs
- In India: Anti-British activity
…from their Punjab homes to Canada but who were denied permission to disembark in that country because of their colour. As British subjects, the Sikhs had assumed they would gain entry to underpopulated Canada, but, after wretched months aboard an old Japanese freighter (the Komagata Maru) in cramped and unsanitary…
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- In India: Anti-British activity
World War II
- Battle of Atlantic
- In Battle of the Atlantic
In addition, Canada built naval and air bases in Newfoundland. By the fall of 1941, the Americans were fully engaged in escorting shipping in the northwest Atlantic alongside the Canadians and British, and the U.S. Navy fought several battles with U-boats west of Iceland, where it had…
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- In Battle of the Atlantic
- Juno Beach forces
- In Juno Beach
…invasion), by units of the Canadian 3rd Infantry Division, who took heavy casualties in the first wave but by the end of the day succeeded in wresting control of the area from defending German troops.
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- In Juno Beach