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Canada’s Ethnic History

Canada’s Ethnic History. In Stages. Canadian Settlement. SIX DISTINCT PHASES: 1. Pre European/ Contact 2. Pre 1812 3. 1812-1867 4. 1885 to WW1 5. WW1 to Post WW2 6. 1960s 7. 1970 and Beyond. Pre European Settlement Before 1608. Indians of the Great Plains Inuit

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Canada’s Ethnic History

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  1. Canada’s Ethnic History In Stages

  2. Canadian Settlement • SIX DISTINCT PHASES:1. Pre European/ Contact • 2. Pre 1812 • 3. 1812-1867 • 4. 1885 to WW1 • 5. WW1 to Post WW2 • 6. 1960s • 7. 1970 and Beyond

  3. Pre EuropeanSettlementBefore 1608 • Indians of the Great Plains • Inuit • Survival linked to geography/topography • Distinctive cultural patterns • Little hierarchy and subordination

  4. Contact • 1608-1763-Established New France • 350,000 Natives vs. 5000 Europeans • Some trade, more claiming • Voyageurs move inland S. • de Champlain, Brule. • Fur Trade

  5. Pre Conquest • 1660-Two thousand settlers in New France • By 1760- as many as 70,000 settlers • Estate System=Aristocracy, Peasantry, Clergy • Strip Farming • Uni-geniture as opposed to primogeniture.

  6. Pre-Confederation Pre-1812 • Plains of Abraham 1759 • Wolf defeats Montcalm • French aristocracy deserts French peasantry • La Survivance Begins • Upper Canada 55% English and Lower Canada 85% French • Two Solitudes

  7. 1763-1812 • British became the colonizers • Combined with UEL-United Empire Loyalists • Upper Canada-economic immigrants attracted by Lord Simcoe. • Multiple occupations-lawyers, teachers, soldiers, clergyman and mostly farmers (grid pattern) • Yonge Street-road to establishment

  8. 1812-1867 • UPPER CANADA-the bulwark of the British Empire in North America • Lower Canada-French practiced la survivance-resist English, stay on the land, followed the Roman Catholic Church • La Survivance-Fatalism, acceptance of hierarchy, resist English materialism.

  9. 1812 • Underground Railroad-Black and White slave owners • Government initiative to attract immigrants: • Letters from successful settlers • Colonizing companies- Hudson’s Bay, The North West Company

  10. Post-Confederation/Western Settlement/ Post 1867 • Influx of Russian, Ukrainian, Chinese, • Workers on the CPR completed 1885 • Anglo-centric Orange Order predominant • Nativism= Prejudice and discrimination

  11. New Ethnicities • 1881-1884-15,700 Chinese • 1901-23,700 Chinese, 4700 Japanese, 1,700 East Indians • 25% of Labour force in 1901-was from China. • Russian Jews-16,000 • 50,000 Mennonites, Hutterites, Amish- Ana Baptists Hungarians, Ukrainians.

  12. The North-West Rebellion 1885 • The North-West Rebellion was brief and unsuccessful • Uprising by the Métis people under Louis Riel against the Dominion of Canada • Hanging of Louis Riel, • Increased tensions between British Canada and French Canada.

  13. Early Uniculturalism • Metis Rebellion 1885 an illustration of early Uni-culturalism • Crushed largely by the Orange Order • Pro-British • Pro-Protestant • Anti-Catholic • Nativistic

  14. 1885 to WW1 • 1885 CPRs Last Spike • New immigrants from Eastern Europe and Asia • National Policy-John A. Macdonald-initially more interest in British immigrants-less selective when CPR was complete. • Clifford Sifton (Min of Interior under Laurier) sought universalism.

  15. Early 20th centuryto World War 2 • The rapid influx of many newcomers and outsiders result in xenophobia and nativistic movements such as Orangeism. • Canada was a colony of British Imperial power-more British than the British. • The equivalent US movements=Know Nothings, APA..

  16. Post World War Two • Restrictions lifted • More Italian, Jewish, Greek, Northern European immigration • 1946- Italians 731,000, Germans 1.3 million, 385,000 Scand. • Still few visible minorities.

  17. 1960’s • Introduction of the Points System 1967 • Points for occupation, education, family in Canada. • Immigration Policy became less Anglo-centric • Bi & Bi Commission 1963, Multicultural Official 1972.

  18. Refocusing the Cultural Mosaic-1970’s and Beyond • Three levels of immigration -points, family reunification, refugee status • Increasing numbers of visible minorities South Asia, Caribbean and Asia • 250,000 immigrants per year

  19. Summary • Canadian settlement has at least five phases • From relatively homogeneous, spare pop to diverse and tolerant society • Patternslead to Multiculturalism over two centuries • Mosaic the result of accommodation and acculturation.

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