Monthly List

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Monthly List New and Revised Headings on CSH on the Web LAC Control numbers are included December 2005 New Headings 1016E1282 Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site (Baddeck, N.S.) 1016K1024 Ausable River (Ont.) 1016F1036 Ausable River Watershed (Ont.) 1016D1372 Beauport, Lake (Québec : Lake) 1016D1585 Buhler Versatile Inc. Strike, Winnipeg, Man., 2000-2001 1016F1583 Canada$vPosters 1016A0913 Canadian literature--Caribbean Canadian authors 1016J1327 Cascade Recreation Area (B.C.) 1016C0997 Couchiching, Lake, Region (Ont.) 1016A1316 E.C. Manning Park (B.C.) 1016A1014 Erie, Lake, Region 1016L1465 Factory Island Indian Reserve No. 1 (Ont.) 1016D1380 Froid, Lake (Saint-Guillaume-Nord, Québec) 1016D1542 Indians of North America$zCanada$vCensus 1016k1571 Longwoods, Battle of the, Ont., 1814 1016F1370 Malartic, Lake (Québec) 1016B1447 Moose Factory Indian Reserve No. 68 (Ont.) 1016H1387 Moose Factory Island (Ont.) 1016K1016 Myers Road Site (Cambridge, Ont.) 1016G1574 Posters, French Canadian 1016C1578 Posters, French Canadian--Québec (Province) 1016C1322 Recreation areas--Canada 1016K1466 Sharon Temple (Sharon, York, Ont.) 1016J1335 Sharon Temple National Historic Site and Museum (Sharon, York, Ont.) 1016K0974 Wascana Centre (Regina, Sask.) Revisions Revision to Headings Former Heading New Heading 0200E4769 0200E4769 Indians of North Indians of North America$zCanada$xHistory$xChronology America$zCanada$xHistory$vChronology 0200A3308 0200A3308 Indians of North America$zCanada$xLiterary Indians of North America$zCanada$vLiterary collections collections 0200G3396 0200G3396 Italian-Canadian children Italian Canadian children 1001H9327 1001H9327 Italian-Canadian families Italian Canadian families 1001G9328 1001G9328 Italian-Canadian students Italian Canadian students 1002E2045 1002E2045 Inuit--Canada--Games Inuit--Games--Canada New and revised headings on CSH on the Web -- December 2005 http://www.collectionscanada.ca/6/23/s23-300-e.html page 1 Revision to Headings (cont'd) Former Heading New Heading 1002A2049 1002A2049 Inuit$zCanada$xPoetry Inuit$zCanada$vPoetry 0200H1376 0200H1376 Japanese-Canadian children Japanese Canadian children 1010K5108 1010J5109 Mowachacht Indians [error] Mowachaht Indians [existing heading] Revision only to References and/or Notes 0200G2454 Canada--History--War of 1812--Campaigns 1009E5441 Canada$xPosters 0200D0551 Canadian literature--Minority authors 1001J7633 Caribbean Canadians 0200A3499 Children--Canada 0200L3511 Children of minorities--Canada 0200H3522 Children’s periodicals, Canadian (Italian) 1002F1994 Church buildings--Canada 1002L1760 Cookery, Canadian--New Brunswick style 0200H2941 Excavations (Archaeology)--Canada 1001B8385 Family--Canada 1010E9930 Fantasy fiction, Canadian (French)--Québec (Province) 0200D3194 Historic buildings--Canada 0200B3196 Historic sites--Canada 1010B6225 Indian reservations--Ontario 0200J3254 Indians of North America--Anthropometry--Canada 0200K3261 Indians of North America--Boats--Canada 0200D3267 Indians of North America--Civil rights--Canada 1005B0831 Indians of North America--Crimes against--Canada 0200C3276 Indians of North America--Diseases--Canada 0200A3278 Indians of North America--Drug use--Canada 1005A0913 Indians of North America--Funeral customs and rites--Canada 1005H0917 Indians of North America--Land tenure--Ontario 1005G0977 Indians of North America--Study and teaching--Canada 1005G1760 Indians of North America--Study and teaching (Elementary)--Canada 0200G3264 Indians of North America$zCanada$xCensus 0200B3285 Indians of North America--Canada--Finance 1005L1953 Indians of North America--Canada--Finance, Personal 0200B3293 Indians of North America--Canada--Government relations--1830-1860 1006G5087 Indians of North America--Canada--Residential schools 1002G1780 Indic literature (English) 0200G3361 Inside Passage 1002H2034 Inugaq (Game) New and revised headings on CSH on the Web -- December 2005 http://www.collectionscanada.ca/6/23/s23-300-e.html page 2 Revision only to References and/or Notes (cont'd) 1007A1716 Inuit--Canada--Social life and customs 1002J2041 Inuit dance--Canada 1003J4198 Inuit mythology--Canada 1001H9319 Inuvik Region (N.W.T.) 1004G8034 Islands--Canada 0200H3395 Islands of the Arctic 0200G3396 Italian Canadians 0200K4772 Jamaican Canadians 0200G1377 Japanese Canadians 0200E1433 Lakes--Recreational use--Canada 0200G1431 Lakes--Canada 1010C6887 Mountains--Recreational use--Canada 0200C1702 National parks and reserves--Canada 1014B8211 Native peoples--Canada--Residential schools 1016H0720 Native peoples in art 1009H5961 Ontario--Antiquities 0200K1978 Outdoor recreation--Canada 0200F0738 Pacific Coast (B.C.) 0200A1992 Parks--Canada 1015A9710 Phantom Lake (Sask. and Man.) 1009D3865 Posters, Canadian 0200G1180 Prime ministers--Canada--Family 0200A1267 Provincial parks and reserves--Canada 1002A0690 Railroads--Canada 1016G0810 Riddles, Canadian (English) 1016F0811 Riddles, Canadian (French) 0200C0188 Rivers--Canada 1015D9971 Steam locomotives--Canada 0200A0384 Strikes and lockouts--Canada 0200K0386 Students--Canada 1011H5792 Watersheds--Canada Modification of tagging and/or subfield coding 1014J3930 Immigrants--Employment--Canada Cancelled Records 0200F3249 Indians of North America--Mixed bloods 0200F3249 Indians of North America--Mixed descent [remains valid LCSH heading] New and revised headings on CSH on the Web -- December 2005 http://www.collectionscanada.ca/6/23/s23-300-e.html page 3 .
Recommended publications
  • Redress Movements in Canada
    Editor: Marlene Epp, Conrad Grebel University College University of Waterloo Series Advisory Committee: Laura Madokoro, McGill University Jordan Stanger-Ross, University of Victoria Sylvie Taschereau, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières Copyright © the Canadian Historical Association Ottawa, 2018 Published by the Canadian Historical Association with the support of the Department of Canadian Heritage, Government of Canada ISSN: 2292-7441 (print) ISSN: 2292-745X (online) ISBN: 978-0-88798-296-5 Travis Tomchuk is the Curator of Canadian Human Rights History at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, and holds a PhD from Queen’s University. Jodi Giesbrecht is the Manager of Research & Curation at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, and holds a PhD from the University of Toronto. Cover image: Japanese Canadian redress rally at Parliament Hill, 1988. Photographer: Gordon King. Credit: Nikkei National Museum 2010.32.124. REDRESS MOVEMENTS IN CANADA Travis Tomchuk & Jodi Giesbrecht Canadian Museum for Human Rights All rights reserved. No part of this publication maybe reproduced, in any form or by any electronic ormechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the Canadian Historical Association. Ottawa, 2018 The Canadian Historical Association Immigration And Ethnicity In Canada Series Booklet No. 37 Introduction he past few decades have witnessed a substantial outpouring of Tapologies, statements of regret and recognition, commemorative gestures, compensation, and related measures
    [Show full text]
  • Immigration, Immigrants, and the Rights of Canadian Citizens in Historical Perspective Bangarth, Stephanie D
    Document généré le 30 sept. 2021 19:58 International Journal of Canadian Studies Revue internationale d’études canadiennes Immigration, Immigrants, and the Rights of Canadian Citizens in Historical Perspective Bangarth, Stephanie D. Voices Raised in Protest: Defending Citizens of Japanese Ancestry in North America, 1942–49. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2008 Caccia, Ivana. Managing the Canadian Mosaic in Wartime: Shaping Citizenship Policy, 1939–1945. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2010 Champion, C.P. The Strange Demise of British Canada: The Liberals and Canadian Nationalism, 1964–68. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2010 Iacovetta, Franca. Gatekeepers: Reshaping Immigrant Lives in Cold War Canada. Toronto: Between the Lines, 2006 Kaprielian-Churchill, Isabel. Like Our Mountains: A History of Armenians in Canada. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2005 Lambertson, Ross. Repression and Resistance: Canadian Human Rights Activists, 1930–1960. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2005 MacLennan, Christopher. Toward the Charter: Canadians and the Demand for a National Bill of Rights, 1929–1960. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2004 Roy, Patricia E. The Triumph of Citizenship: The Japanese and Chinese in Canada, 1941–67. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2008 Christopher G. Anderson Miscellaneous: International Perspectives on Canada En vrac : perspectives internationales sur le Canada Numéro 43, 2011 URI : https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1009461ar DOI : https://doi.org/10.7202/1009461ar Aller au sommaire du numéro Éditeur(s) Conseil international d’études canadiennes ISSN 1180-3991 (imprimé) 1923-5291 (numérique) Découvrir la revue Citer cet article Anderson, C. G. (2011). Immigration, Immigrants, and the Rights of Canadian Citizens in Historical Perspective / Bangarth, Stephanie D.
    [Show full text]
  • Cultural Considerations in the Delivery of Homecare Services
    Cultural Considerations in the Delivery of Homecare Services: "Beyond 2 kitchens and a disability/ più di due cucine e disabilità". by (Hedy) Anna Walsh A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work University of Toronto © Copyright by (Hedy) Anna Walsh (2014) Cultural Considerations in the Delivery of Homecare Services: "Beyond 2 kitchens and a disability/ più di due cucine e disabilità". Doctor of Philosophy (Hedy) Anna Walsh Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work University of Toronto 2014 Abstract This study explored the experiences, interpretations and cultural beliefs of older Italian immigrants who were receiving culturally specific formal homecare services through an assisted living facility in Ontario, to examine how their identity and life history influenced their experiences of receiving care. The current study builds on the existing body of knowledge about Canada's older Italian immigrants, in particular their caregiving traditions and current need for formal care. This research study employed phenomenology to explore the subjective experiences of Canadian Italian older immigrants who were receiving formal homecare services to capture the personal meanings and interpretations of their immigration experiences, as they related to their need for formal homecare services. Interviews were conducted with 25 older Italian immigrants over the age of 75 that were receiving culturally specific homecare services. The participants shared their immigration stories, fears, work history, healthcare challenges and descriptions of arrival, family, losses, and life in Canada. The Life Course Framework was selected to guide this research study, to represent the process of aging and human development that ii continuously occurs across the life span.
    [Show full text]
  • Slavic and Italian Canadian Attitudes Towards Authority
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 085 773 CS 500 484 AUTHOR Ryan, Michael G. TITLE Slavic and Italian Canadian Attitudes towards Authority. PUB DATE Apr 73 NOTE 14p.; Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Communication Association (Montreal, April 25-29, 1973);1 See ED 072 480 for a related document EDRS PRICE MF-$0.65 HC-$3.29 DESCRIPTORS *Anxiety; *Attitudes; College Students; Communication (Thought Transfer); *Cross Cultural Studies; Cultural Differences; *Cultural Interrelationships; Hostility; Intergroup Relations; *Power Structure; Social Influences IDENTIFIERS Canada; Italian Canadians; Slavic Canadians ABSTRACT Predicting that Italian Canadians would hold attitudes of greater hostility and anxiety toward authority than Slavic Canadians, this study, using 58 part-time summer students (29 Italians and 29 Slays) at three universities in Canada, analyzed the subjects, responses to the five-response option Likert type scale. Results confirmed the early predictions. When compared to the attitudinal positions of French and English Canadians on the same scale, the results revealed that Italian Canadians shared with the French Canadian majority in Quebec a high level of hostility toward authority, while the Slavic Canadians shared with English Canadians, the majority Canadian language group, a low level of hostility toward authority. It was also noted that Italian Canadians shared with English Canadians high scores on attitudes of anxiety toward authroity. (HOD) FILMED FROM BEST AVAILABLE COPY Ly DEpARTN,E..T OF HEALTH EDuCATiON &WELFARE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF e DUCAT ION 0(' NT HAS .EN F TEY AS RICE,i4 TEQPI .E P(,ANIZAT,ONORIGiN 1r..7Eo NE CF.SSARILY PEPI4tr sENTor I.,1; 1.A1N57.
    [Show full text]
  • Immigrant Spirituality and Canadian Religion
    Immigrants and Canadian Religions SMH 6874/3874 Canada is a nation of immigrants, and Canadian religions are the religions of immigrants. The waves of immigrants to Canada will be studied including the 17C French, 18C Irish and Scottish, 19C German, Polish, Jewish, and Ukrainian immigrants; 20C English, Italian, and Portuguese to the more recent Caribbean, Filipino, Chinese, Tamil, Vietnamese, and Korean religionists. The attitudes of Anglo-Canadians will be examined as they progress from Anglo-Celtic Calvinism to Canadian secular multiculturalism. Source Materials Abella, Irving M. None is Too Many: Canada and the Jews in Europe, 1933-1948. Lester, 1991. Airhart, Phyllis D. Serving the Present Age : Revivalism, Progressivism, and the Methodist tradition in Canada. McGill-Queen's University Press, 1992. Brown, Callum G. Postmodernism for Historians. Pearson Education/Longman, 2005. Fay, Terence J. A History of Canadian Catholics: Gallicanism, Romanism, and Canadianism. McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2002. Hoerder, Dirk. Creating Societies: Immigrant Lives in Canada. MQUP, 1999. Hayes, Alan L. Anglicans in Canada. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2004. Iacovetta, Franca et al. A Nation of Immigrants: Women, Workers, and Communities in Canadian History, 1840s-1960s. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1998. - Writings of English Canadian Immigrant History (CHA: Canada’s Ethnic Groups, 1997). Magocsi, Paul Robert, ed. Encyclopedia of Canada’s Peoples. Toronto: University of Toronto, 1999. McLean, Marianne. The People of Glengarry: Highlanders in Transition, 1745-1820. Montreal: MQUP, 1991. Moir, John. Enduring Witness: A History of the Presbyterian Church in Canada (1987). Perin, Roberto. The Immigrants’ Church: the Third Force in Canadian Catholicism (CHA: Canada’s Ethnic Groups, 1998).
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring Canzone Napoletana and Southern Italian Migration Through Three Lenses
    Exploring Canzone Napoletana and Southern Italian Migration Through Three Lenses John L. Vitale Preamble and Purpose As a first-generation Italian-Canadian, the southern Italian immigrant experience has figured centrally in my upbringing. I have vivid memories of the rich and vibrant conversations that transpired at the dinner table every day. There were countless tales of my parents’ childhood, which included living in impoverished conditions and surviving the devastation of the Second World War. Other common topics of conversation included crossing the Atlantic, being separated from family, and the daily struggles of immigrating to an English-speaking country. At the very core of these conversations, however, was music, particularly the form of popular song that emanated out of Naples in the 19th and 20th centuries, otherwise known as the canzone napoletana. These songs of love, laughter, sorrow, and pain—famous the world over— have always been a genuine and sincere portal into the heart, mind, and soul of the southern Italian immigrant experience in Canada. The purpose of this article is threefold. First, through a biographical lens, this article investigates my own personal experiences as a first-generation Italian-Canadian and explores how post-World War II southern Italian immigrants in Toronto, Canada used the canzone napoletana as a coping mechanism for the daily hardships and struggles of immigrant life. Second, through the lens of the Italian Diaspora, this article investigates how Neapolitan song became the metaphorical voice for the vast majority of southern Italian immigrants around the world. Lastly, through the lens of non-Italians, this article examines how the canzone napoletana influenced non-Italian perceptions about Italy on a global scale.
    [Show full text]
  • Representations of Race and Italian-Ness in Canada's Printed Media Kr
    CAN ITALIAN-CANADIANS HAVE THEIR CANNOLI AND EAT IT TOO? REPRESENTATIONS OF RACE AND ITALIAN-NESS IN CANADA’S PRINTED MEDIA KRYSTA PANDOLFI A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY GRADUATE PROGRAM IN EDUCATION YORK UNIVERSITY TORONTO, ONTARIO March 2018 © Krysta Pandolfi, 2018 Abstract In 2009, Dina Pugliese, co-host of a popular daily television show in Toronto, stated in an interview that she was hesitant to pursue an on-camera career because she worried that she was “too spicy-Italian.” Her words speak to long-standing stereotypes of Italians, developed out of eighteenth and nineteenth century representations of Italy. Clearly, hers is not an identity that has been uncomplicatedly subsumed into Whiteness. Stereotypes borrowed from Europe mark Italian-Canadians, who mostly come from Southern Italy, and who were seen (both inside and outside of Europe) as ‘swarthy’, ‘hot-blooded’ and ‘short-tempered.’ In this dissertation, I examine the concept of Italian-ness in two culturally specific Italian- Canadian magazines, Panoram Italia and Accenti. Thematic data was collected to explore how the magazines construct the image of the Italian-Canadian in their editorial discourses and how this discourse analysis may serve to reveal existing racialized power relations. I identify parallels between Italy as Europe’s south and the Italian-Canadian community, and the ways they serve to function as a filter to understanding Italian-Canadian migration and ongoing concepts of difference within Canada. Furthermore, I explore how the magazine editorial discourses strove to define the interplay between Italian-ness within Canada’s ethno-racial categorizations.
    [Show full text]
  • ABSTRACT Italian Canadian Women
    ABSTRACT Italian Canadian women "crossing the border" to graduate education BY Josephine Mazzuca Ph.D Dissertation Department of Sociology and Equity Studies in Education Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto 2000 This dissertation examines the educational experiences ofwomen in graduate education whose parents are Italian immigrants. Data are collected through in-depth interviews with Italian Canadian women about schooling, family, ethnicity and relationships. The women's experiences are discussed in the interconnected contexts of the Italian immigrant experience, the education system, and, in particular, graduate education. Although Italian immigrants and their descendants form one of the largest ethnic groups in Canada, their participation in the educational system has gone largely undocumented except as part of large studies on various ethnic groups in the Metropolitan area. The second generation of Italian Canadians has been educated in the Canadian system and raised by immigrant parents who have had little experience with this system. Using qualitative methods, this study examines the educational experiences of Italian-Canadian women. The women are graduate students who were born and educated in Canada and whose parents immigrated to Canada in the post World War Two period. Being raised in an immigrant home has influenced the women's encounters with education and the decisions they have made. Issues of resistance and assimiletion are considered in this study. Findings from this research include the discovery of four roles which the women adopt in order to "survive" graduate school. The women develop these roles in order to find ways to approach their graduate work while maintaining the important relationships in their personal lives.
    [Show full text]
  • When Might the Two Cultural Worlds of Second Generation Biculturals Collide?
    WHEN MIGHT THE TWO CULTURAL WORLDS OF SECOND GENERATION BICULTURALS COLLIDE? ABSTRACT Second generation youth often identify with two cultures (heritage and Canadian). Although these biculturals usually negotiate their lives between two cultural worlds with ease, there are situations where conflicts may arise because of an incompatibility between the norms associated with each culture. Our research has identified some key points where bicultural conflicts can occur for second generation Canadians. econd generation youth in Canada are the children of parents who immigrated to Canada from another country. Although there is a tremendous amount of diversity among individuals Swithin this second generation, they often share the feature of being bicultural. Culture can be defined by the norms and standards of a group that will delineate the appropriateness of behaviour. Bicultural individuals, therefore, have psychological access to two sets of cultural norms that may be tied to geography, ethnicity and/or religion. In the case of second generation Canadians, our research culture, social identity and intergroup relations. that pertain to multicultural societies, namely, His University. at research York focuses on issues Richard N. Lalonde is a professor of Psychology RICHARD N. LALONDE focuses on their heritage culture and their Canadian culture. Heritage norms are typically acquired from parents, extended family and the ethnic community to which parents belong. The basis of “Canadian” norms is much broader because they are acquired through the infrastructure of Canadian society (e.g., schools, media, social services), the neighbourhoods in which they live and from many of their peers. Moreover, Canadian norms are acquired through either a majority English-language or a majority French-language context, while heritage norms may be acquired through a completely different language.
    [Show full text]
  • Italian Linguistic Suicide and the Transmission of the Italian Language in Canada, 1935-1947 Ryan Shadford Ryerson University
    Ryerson University Digital Commons @ Ryerson Theses and dissertations 1-1-2009 "Has anyone seen my ancestral language?" Italian linguistic suicide and the transmission of the Italian language in Canada, 1935-1947 Ryan Shadford Ryerson University Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.ryerson.ca/dissertations Part of the Italian Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Shadford, Ryan, ""Has anyone seen my ancestral language?" Italian linguistic suicide and the transmission of the Italian language in Canada, 1935-1947" (2009). Theses and dissertations. Paper 573. This Major Research Paper is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Ryerson. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Ryerson. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 'HAS ANYONE SEEN MY ANCESTRAL LANGUAGE?' ITALIAN LINGUISTIC SUICIDE AND THE TRANSMISSION OF THE ITALIAN LANGUAGE IN CANADA,1935-1947 by Ryan Shadford, BMus, McGill University, 2006 BA, University of Windsor, 2008 A Major Research Paper presented to Ryerson University in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of Master of Arts in the Program of Immigration and Settlement Studies Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 2009 © Ryan Shadford 2009 PROPERTY Of RYERSON UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Author's Declaration I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this major research paper. I authorize Ryerson University to lend this paper to other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research. I further authorize Ryerson University to reproduce this paper by photocopying or by other means, in total or in part, at the request of other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research.
    [Show full text]
  • The Evacuation of the Japanese Canadians, 1942: a Realist Critique of the Received Version
    The Evacuation of the Japanese Canadians, 1942: A Realist Critique of the Received Version J.L. Granatstein and Gregory A. Johnson The popularly accepted version of the evacuation of the Japanese Canadians from the Pacific Coast in 1941-1942 and the background to it runs roughly like this. The white population of British Columbia had long cherished resentments against the Asians who lived among them, and most particularly against the Japanese Canadians. Much of this sprang from envy of the Japanese Canadians' hard-work and industry, much at the substantial share held by Japanese Canadians of the fishing, market gardening and lumbering industry. Moreover, white British Columbians (and Canadians generally) had long had fears that the Japanese Canadians were unassimilable into Canadian society and, beginning early in this century and intensifying as the interwar period wore on, that many might secretly be acting as agents of their original homeland, now an aggressive and expansionist Japan. Liberal and Conservative politicians at the federal, provincial and municipal levels played upon the racist fears of the majority for their own political purposes. Thus when the Second World War began in September 1939, and when its early course ran disastrously against the Allies, there was already substantial fear about "aliens" in British Columbia (and elsewhere) and a desire to ensure that Japanese Canadians would be exempted from military training and service. The federal government concurred in this, despite the desire of many young Japanese Canadians to show their loyalty to Canada by enlisting. After 7 December 1941 and the beginning of the Pacific War, public and political pressures upon the Japanese Canadians increased exponentially.
    [Show full text]
  • Italian Canadian Experiences During World War Ii
    ITALIAN CANADIAN EXPERIENCES DURING WORLD WAR II he early population of Niagara Falls was largely of government unlimited powers to protect the state from any British origin, but from around the 1880s, this began internal or external threats, to ban subversive political T to change with a new influx of peoples of European organizations and to suspend foreign-language newspapers. It background. The construction boom that created railways, a also allowed for the internment of Canadian residents born in post office, fire hall, street car system, steam electric countries or empires at war with Canada. When Canada generating plant, water works and numerous churches formally declared war on Germany on September 10, 1939, attracted mainly Italian immigrants. Later on, with the turn-of around 850 German-Canadians were interned and over 66,000 -the-century hydro electric plants at the Falls, more Germans, German and Austrian Canadians (naturalized citizens) who had Hungarians, Ukrainians, Polish and others began to arrive as well. arrived in Canada after 1922, were forced to report to the police regularly. Later, when Italy entered the war on the side The growing close-knit Italian community opened of the Germans, the Canadian government gave the Royal new commercial establishments: groceries, barbershops, shoe Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) orders to arrest Italian repairs, etc., to meet their needs. They settled together, Canadians considered to be a security risk. Of the approximate largely according to their areas of origin, in neighbourhoods in 112,625 Italian-Canadian residents in Canada, 31,000 were Clifton, Drummondville and the Glenview area. The first Italian organization came in 1912 with the construction of St.
    [Show full text]