1 / 21

Canada at the Turn of the Century

Canada at the Turn of the Century. Mr. K. Montag CHC2D. “Out with the old … In with the new”. Urban Life vs. Rural Life Life in the City Cities were growing fast Rise of industry and manufacturing Automobiles Electricity – Street lights, telephones Lots of jobs

cheri
Télécharger la présentation

Canada at the Turn of the Century

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Canada at theTurn of the Century Mr. K. Montag CHC2D

  2. “Out with the old … In with the new” • Urban Life vs. Rural Life • Life in the City • Cities were growing fast • Rise of industry and manufacturing • Automobiles • Electricity – Street lights, telephones • Lots of jobs • At this time, 1900, roughly 60% of Canada’s population lived in a rural setting

  3. “Out with the old … In with the new” • The Maritimes • Farmers still created their own clothes, used animals in farming • Montreal • A major port city • Industrial center • A city for the rich – 40 millionaires live on Sherbrooke Street (The Golden Mile) • Rural Quebec – Families still lived on farms owned for hundreds of years

  4. “Out with the old … In with the new” • The Prairies • Land of Immigrants • Sod homes • Farming • Creation of Saskatchewan and Alberta in 1905 • Ontario and Quebec • New industries and manufacturing • New railways built

  5. “Out with the old … In with the new” • British Columbia • Rich farm lands, canning towns • Vancouver – Major port city

  6. New Technologies • The Bicycle • Quickly replaced horses • Cheap and easy to keep • Creation of cycling and social clubs • A great activity for women • Broke social barriers • Both the RICH and POOR could own bicycles

  7. New Technologies • Automobiles • “Horseless Carriages” • 1908 – Oshawa established as a major automobile production town (200 per year) • Sam McLaughlin – Brought Buick to Canada

  8. New Technologies • Flight • 1903 – The Wright Brothers flew the first airplane • 1908 – Casey Baldwin flew the “Red Wing” • 1909 – Douglas McCurdy flew over 32 KM in the Silver Dart • Finest and most easily flown aircraft of its day • McCurdy and Baldwin tried to convince the military of the value of airplanes … they were rejected.

  9. New Technologies • Instant Communications • Telephones • Radio – 1901 – Signal Hill Newfoundland • Marconi received the first wireless radio signal sent across the Atlantic Ocean

  10. Culture Entertainment • Mass entertainment not yet available (movies, radio shows, television, etc.) • Home-made entertainment: piano, theatre, etc. • Phonograph (or gramophone) was introduced

  11. The Role of Women Changing Lifestyles • Indoor toilets • Refrigerators • Electric washing machines • Sewing machines • Major Impact on Women!!

  12. Immigration Boom • Immigration: The movement of people into a country from another country • 1901 – 1911 – Greatest wave of immigration • 2.7 million immigrants • “Open Door Policy” • Introduced by Clifford Sifton • Drawn to the Prairies – farming, high price of wheat • Most immigrants came from: Ukraine, Poland, The Netherlands, Germany and Russia

  13. Why Immigrate to Canada? Positives Negatives Political upheavals Religious persecution Population problems – overcrowding, etc. Industrialization Pollution Hunger Poverty • Availability of land • Prices of wheat • Allowed to follow their own culture and traditions

  14. Discrimination in Immigration • People of African, Italian, Asian, Arab, Greek, and Jewish origins were not allowed in Canada • Anglo-Conformity • Abandon their culture, assimilate into British Canadian Culture • KomagataMaru • Steamship carrying Sihks • Vancouver citizens protested • Upset the Sihks living in Vancouver • Tensions remained HIGH for years!

  15. Your Activity • Pg. 35 in Spotlight Canada • Answer questions #1, 2, 3, 5

More Related