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Setting the Stage: Canada 1900 - 1914

Setting the Stage: Canada 1900 - 1914. Life in this country 100 years ago. What you should know. The Canadian map and population were very different Technological, economic, and demographic changes affected both the country and the lifestyle

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Setting the Stage: Canada 1900 - 1914

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  1. Setting the Stage: Canada 1900 - 1914 Life in this country 100 years ago

  2. What you should know • The Canadian map and population were very different • Technological, economic, and demographic changes affected both the country and the lifestyle • Canadian policy was greatly influenced from outside • English-French conflict is not new

  3. Canada doesn’t even look the same • In 1873, there were only 7 provinces in Canada • Most of the interior of what is now this country was the Northwest Territories, and Newfoundland was directly controlled by Britain • All provinces, except British Columbia, were much smaller than they are now

  4. New provinces are added • Canada starts to look more like itself in 1905, with the addition of 2 new provinces, Alberta and Saskatchewan, and the formation of the Yukon Territory • Quebec, Manitoba, and Ontario also got more territory, but are still not their present size

  5. Life in Canada at the Turn of the Century Work • Most Canadians worked with natural resources and lived in rural areas • In mills and factories in the cities, work was very hard and dangerous • Most women did not work outside the home Transportation • Horses were the most important form • Trains were used for long distances • Bicycles, streetcars, and automobiles were appearing • First powered flight took place in 1903

  6. Life in Canada at the Turn of the Century Communications • First radio signal across the Atlantic in 1901 – messages only • Telephones were becoming common • Long distance communication was done by telegraph Entertainment • “Home made” activities – games, music, sports • Movies were silent • Professional sports were popular Population • Most people were white, western Europeans

  7. Immigration increases Canada’s population by 3 million Push factors (why they left) • Overcrowding, unemployment in Europe • Certain groups were persecuted, had no rights • Overpopulation, natural disasters, political upheaval in Asia

  8. Immigration Pull factors (why come here) • Free land on prairies • Government advertising • Available jobs in mining and manufacturing • Agricultural innovations • New policies regarding who were “desirable” immigrants means Eastern Europeans were now welcome

  9. Immigration The Immigrant Experience • Arrived on overcrowded, unsanitary ships • Had to pass health test • Trip to prairies took a week on the train • “Proving” the free land was very hard, and many failed

  10. Immigration Results of Mass Immigration • 2 new provinces: Alberta & Saskatchewan • Protected against “Manifest Destiny” movement of U.S. • Improved economy • Became the basis of our multicultural society

  11. Changing Technology • Changes in all areas of life: e.g. medicine, communication, transportation • Daily life was made simpler by new inventions, like electric washing machines, and the expansion of the use of electricity • Economy improved as new items created demand, which increased manufacturing jobs

  12. Economic Growth • Rapid population growth created larger cities • Increased industrialization • Rise of the labour movement (Trades and Labour Congress) results in minimum wage, compulsory education, ban on child labour • Canadian Manufacturers’ Association formed to protect Canadian interest, department stores replaced local general stores, large corporations and monopolies created Canadian millionaires

  13. American-Canadian Relations Alaska Boundary Dispute 1871-1903 • Issue of where the border actually was came to a head when gold was discovered in the Klondike • A tribunal was set up to decide the issue, but Britain’s tribunal members gave in to US pressure, giving them more land • Canada decided it would be better off handling its own external affairs

  14. American-Canadian Relations Reciprocity 1911 • A proposed “free trade” agreement with the US • Seen as a way the US would take over Canada • Opposed by many as too advantageous to US • Cost Prime Minister Laurier the 1911 election

  15. French-Canadian Nationalism Schools Questions • Manitoba and Northwest did not want to fund separate French schools • Assimilate new immigrants to English • French felt bitter; being treated like new immigrants Boer War 1899 • England wanted Canada to send troops to fight Boers in South Africa • French-Cdns identified with Boers • French-Cdns saw sending even volunteer troops as caving in to England’s pressure

  16. French Canadian Nationalism Naval Issue 1909 • Britain wanted Canada to contribute to building Britain’s new naval ships; Canada decided to build own navy • French-Cdns believed it would draw Canada into foreign conflicts • These issues were instrumental in keeping French and English Canadians on opposite “sides of the fence”, since they were unable to agree on them, and contributed to continuing bad French-English relations.

  17. Canada before World War I • By 1912, Canada almost looks like it does now. All the provinces are the “right size”. • However, Newfoundland is still not part of this country, and Nunavut has not even been thought of.

  18. This is the Canada that goes to war. • A population of just under 10 million, 3 million of whom had arrived in Canada in just the previous 10 years • A predominantly agricultural and resource economy • No professional army

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