1 / 40

Early Canada to Rebellions of 1837

Early Canada to Rebellions of 1837. New France - Lower Canada. League of the Iroquois. Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayugas, Seneca Eventually joined by Tuscaroas Six Nations “people of the longhouse”. Missionaries arrival in Huronia. Huronia (Ontario region)

ranit
Télécharger la présentation

Early Canada to Rebellions of 1837

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. Early Canada to Rebellions of 1837 New France - Lower Canada

  2. League of the Iroquois • Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayugas, Seneca • Eventually joined by Tuscaroas • Six Nations • “people of the longhouse”

  3. Missionaries arrival in Huronia • Huronia (Ontario region) • Iroquois & Huron at war in early 1600s • Hurons became economic partners with French fur-traders by 1620, along with the Algonquians • Jesuits arrived in 1615 – part of deal • Spread disease from village to village • Efforts to convert to Christianity

  4. Smallpox Outbreak • 1639 – raged throughout Huronia • Killed ½ population • Killed young and old first – lost folklore and future • Fear of Jesuits increased • Economic partnership with French mandated Jesuit presence

  5. Iroquois vs Huron • Weakened by disease, Hurons in trouble • Iroquois given guns by English and Dutch settlers in modern American colonies • March 1649 – Defeat of Huron by Iroquois • Jesuits were tortured by Iroquois

  6. French and Iroquois • Truce • Ended by 1680 • War between France/Algonquians and Iroquois/English • Iroquois originally victorious, but later defeated by French Army • Iroquois converted to Christianity • English-French peace in 1701

  7. 1744 – English-French war…..again • Lasted 4 years • English captured French fort Louisbourg, but eventually gave it back • French maintained alliance with Mi’kmaq and Maliseet • October 2, 1749 – English governor Cornwallis ordered destruction of Mi’kmaq peoples – willing to pay for scalps • Measure never went into effect – London advised milder policy

  8. Britain’s growing anxiety about Acadians • Mi’kmaq raids increased • Cornwallis doubtful of Acadian’s loyalty • 1749 – demanded unconditional oath of loyalty to Britain • Acadians officially neutral • Some left – most stayed • New governor – 1753 • 1754 – war broke out between France and Britain • 1755 – ordered expulsion of Acadians – 13,000 • Continued until 1762

  9. Peace & Friendship treaties • With aboriginal peoples – Mi’kmaq and Maliseet • Attempt to maintain loyalty/neutrality of aboriginal people • Currently being interpreted by SCOC

  10. Treaty of Paris • New France becomes a British colony in 1763 • Ends British military rule of area (1759-1763)

  11. Royal Proclamation of 1763 • Creates Province of Quebec (Lower Canada) • Recognizes land rights of aboriginal peoples around Great Lakes • British goal – assimilation of French settlers

  12. Quebec Act of 1774 • Guarantees continuation of French civil law and Roman Catholicism • Extends boundaries of Quebec to include the Great Lakes all the way to the Ohio Valley (between Ohio and Mississippi rivers) • Angered English settlers to the south

  13. Urban Life In Lower Canada • Population rose from 160,000 in 1790 to 650,000 in 1850 • Smallpox & Cholera • Immigration • Rural life of subsistence farmers • Crop failures • Economic decline

  14. Seigneural System • 1627 – 1854 • Inspired by the feudal system • Seigneurs (land owners) and Habitants (tennant farmers) • Hated by most • Supported by Church

  15. Seigneural System

  16. Church versus State • Ongoing rivalry between professional elite and the Roman Catholic Church in Lower Canada • Colonial government’s power dwindled • All tried to influence the Habitant population • Professional elite turned to politics as nationalists • Framed arguments in support of French-Canadian nation • Aspired to replace the Seigneurs and compete with the Church as the leaders of French Canada • Seigneurs often collaborated with British in exchange for lucrative appointments and pensions

  17. Professional Elite • Formed backbone of the Parti-canadien (later called Parti-partiote) and had increasingly hostile relationships with British merchants • Supported some aspects of seigneural system as rampart against English-speaking farmers who wanted to acquire land • Deny women the right to vote

  18. Constitutional Act of 1791 • Elected legislative assembly • Taxes • Strong executive authority • Legislative council • Executive council

  19. Rebellion of 1837 • Failure of Constitution Act of 1791 as a system of government in Lower Canada • French and Parti-canadien dominated assembly wanted to strengthen their hand and decrease “foreign” influence of the Executive branch • English speaking minority dominated the executive council and elected assembly was dominated by French-speaking canadiens

  20. Rebellion of 1837 • Struggle between haves and have-nots – change and the status quo • Some English-speaking Quebecers supported patriotes • Irish immigrants

  21. A question on $$$$$ • Assembly wanted control of colony’s finances • Assembly could initiate money bills – Executive could refuse them • Prisons – French wanted to pay for it with higher import duties, British wanted to tax land

  22. Legitimacy of elections • When Governor Sir James Craig annoyance with Assembly grew, he dissolved it and called new elections • Nearly identical body elected and again dissolved • French papers criticized him – jailed for treason • Craig recommended increasing immigration of British people to assimilate French and abolition of elections.

  23. Louis-Joseph Papineau • Leader of Parti-patriote • Speak of the assembly in 1815 • Became increasingly republican

  24. Increasing Radicalization • British attempted compromise – Assembly could control all expenditures IF they agreed to pay the civil service and administration each year • Patriotes were not willing to compromise • 92 Resolutions – demands of the Assembly • Governor views it as a declaration of independence

  25. Increasing Radicalization • London interested in compromise, but they took too long • Commission appointed to study problem • March 1837 – 10 Resolutions by Lord John Russell • Refused all 92 Assembly resolutions • No elected Executive Council • Executive Council continues to pay administrative costs without approval of Assembly • Executive Council would be responsible to the Governor alone – NOT Assembly • Governor would continue to report to London – NOT the elected Assembly

  26. Patriote response • Legal agitation, then revolt if needed • Organized boycotts of imported goods and British merchants • Public meetings – one in Richelieu Valley called for revolt – adopted resolution included a declaration of independence • Developed plans to take Montreal and Quebec by force • Warrants were issued for the arrest of Patriote leaders – including L-J Papineau who fled to the countryside

  27. Violent rebellion • November 1837 – violent battles between Patriotes and British troops. Close to 150 Patriotes were killed, British lost 3 • Patriote “Army” was poorly armed and trained civilians • Prisoners were rounded up and sent to jail in Montreal • British torched 20 houses and barns (terror)

  28. Violence continues… • British turn attention to the other Patriotes living in other parts of Quebec • British kill or burn 70 more – 250 total • British continue to burn – entire town of St-Eustache and St-Benoit • A year later (1838) Patriotes try to take Mohawk community of Kahnawake – raid failed • Mohawks capture 60 Patriotes and turn them over to the British - Jailed

  29. Violence continues… • British troops crush Patriote rebels

  30. Ambitions abound • Patriotes – French-speaking merchants and professionals who wanted political power in the colony • Church – Speak for French Quebecois • Seigneures – Keep what they already had • English-speaking merchants – wanted to keep control of colony’s economy • British administrators & Parliament – Colony could be useful to mother country • Habitants – who wanted to improve their situation and supported the Patriotes

  31. Consequences of the Rebellion in Lower Canada • In response to the rebellion, Britain established a Special Council in 1838 made up of some English-speaking Quebecers and some strongly loyalist French Quebecers • Colony lost its own government altogether • Establishment of police force in Montreal and countryside to pacify habitants • Got rid of seigneural system on island of Montreal

  32. Long term… • Lord Durham’s visit – Royal Commission • English merchants wanted union with Upper Canada to save them from French factions • Durham hoped that with union the British would outnumber the French and they would give up nationalistic dreams and assimilation would begin

  33. Monday • Rebellion in Upper Canada

More Related