'Patriotes\' Of
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Canada Needs You Volume One
Canada Needs You Volume One A Study Guide Based on the Works of Mike Ford Written By Oise/Ut Intern Mandy Lau Content Canada Needs You The CD and the Guide …2 Mike Ford: A Biography…2 Connections to the Ontario Ministry of Education Curriculum…3 Related Works…4 General Lesson Ideas and Resources…5 Theme One: Canada’s Fur Trade Songs: Lyrics and Description Track 2: Thanadelthur…6 Track 3: Les Voyageurs…7 Key Terms, People and Places…10 Specific Ministry Expectations…12 Activities…12 Resources…13 Theme Two: The 1837 Rebellion Songs: Lyrics and Description Track 5: La Patriote…14 Track 6: Turn Them Ooot…15 Key Terms, People and Places…18 Specific Ministry Expectations…21 Activities…21 Resources…22 Theme Three: Canadian Confederation Songs: Lyrics and Description Track 7: Sir John A (You’re OK)…23 Track 8: D’Arcy McGee…25 Key Terms, People and Places…28 Specific Ministry Expectations…30 Activities…30 Resources…31 Theme Four: Building the Wild, Wild West Songs: Lyrics and Description Track 9: Louis & Gabriel…32 Track 10: Canada Needs You…35 Track 11: Woman Works Twice As Hard…36 Key Terms, People and Places…39 Specific Ministry Expectations…42 Activities…42 Resources…43 1 Canada Needs You The CD and The Guide This study guide was written to accompany the CD “Canada Needs You – Volume 1” by Mike Ford. The guide is written for both teachers and students alike, containing excerpts of information and activity ideas aimed at the grade 7 and 8 level of Canadian history. The CD is divided into four themes, and within each, lyrics and information pertaining to the topic are included. -
THE SPECIAL COUNCILS of LOWER CANADA, 1838-1841 By
“LE CONSEIL SPÉCIAL EST MORT, VIVE LE CONSEIL SPÉCIAL!” THE SPECIAL COUNCILS OF LOWER CANADA, 1838-1841 by Maxime Dagenais Dissertation submitted to the School of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the PhD degree in History. Department of History Faculty of Arts Université d’Ottawa\ University of Ottawa © Maxime Dagenais, Ottawa, Canada, 2011 ii ABSTRACT “LE CONSEIL SPÉCIAL EST MORT, VIVE LE CONSEIL SPÉCIAL!” THE SPECIAL COUNCILS OF LOWER CANADA, 1838-1841 Maxime Dagenais Supervisor: University of Ottawa, 2011 Professor Peter Bischoff Although the 1837-38 Rebellions and the Union of the Canadas have received much attention from historians, the Special Council—a political body that bridged two constitutions—remains largely unexplored in comparison. This dissertation considers its time as the legislature of Lower Canada. More specifically, it examines its social, political and economic impact on the colony and its inhabitants. Based on the works of previous historians and on various primary sources, this dissertation first demonstrates that the Special Council proved to be very important to Lower Canada, but more specifically, to British merchants and Tories. After years of frustration for this group, the era of the Special Council represented what could be called a “catching up” period regarding their social, commercial and economic interests in the colony. This first section ends with an evaluation of the legacy of the Special Council, and posits the theory that the period was revolutionary as it produced several ordinances that changed the colony’s social, economic and political culture This first section will also set the stage for the most important matter considered in this dissertation as it emphasizes the Special Council’s authoritarianism. -
Potton Heritage Association the Trouble In
VOLUME 6 – NUMÉRO 2 – AUTOMNE 2018 | TIRÉ À PART HISTOIRE POTTON HISTORY Canada found eager sympathizers among the The Trouble in Potton “Sons of Liberty” on both sides of the border, By Audrey Martin McCaw and Potton Township was dismayed to find itself uncomfortably close to the centre of the Yesterdays of Brome County – Volume Four, storm. Daily alarms kept the populace in a The Brome County Historical Society, state of panic: dispatch riders were shot at, Knowlton, Quebec 1980, pages 28-36 worshippers gathering at the Potton school house for their Sunday service were shocked It is 150 years since sparks from the Papineau to find a cache of gunpowder hidden in the Rebellion flared into scattered eruptions and ashes of the stove. Challenges for the hastily short-lived battles in south-western Quebec. formed Potton Guard came to a head on the When students of Canadian history think of evening of February 27th, 1838, a date which “the troubles of 1837-38”, they are apt to E. C. Bamett said: “must go down in history in recall the confrontations between the rebels, red letter.” or “patriotes” and government forces at St. Charles and St. Denis on the Richelieu River But first, some background. In 1837, many of east of Montreal, the rout at St. Eustache and the inhabitants of Potton were sons and the Battle of Moore's Corners in Missisquoi daughters of original settlers from the U.S. County. However, here in Brome County who had been loyal to the Crown during the feelings reached a fever pitch too and there American Revolution, and they inherited the was the odd skirmish that might very well political sympathies of their parents. -
Bishop's Gambit: the Transatlantic Brokering of Father Alexander
Bishop’s Gambit: The Transatlantic Brokering of Father Alexander Macdonell by Eben Prevec B.A., The University of British Columbia, 2018 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL STUDIES (History) THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver) July 2020 © Eben Prevec, 2020 The following individuals certify that they have read, and recommend to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies for acceptance, the thesis entitled: Bishop’s Gambit: The Transatlantic Brokering of Father Alexander Macdonell submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements by Eben Prevec for the degree of Master of Arts in History Examining Committee: Dr. Michel Ducharme, Associate Professor, Department of History, UBC Supervisor Dr. Bradley Miller, Associate Professor, Department of History, UBC Supervisory Committee Member Dr. Tina Loo, Professor, Department of History, UBC Additional Examiner i Abstract This thesis examines the transatlantic life and journey of Father Alexander Macdonell within the context of his role as a broker in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. While serving as a leader for the Glengarry Highlanders throughout the British Isles and Upper Canada, Macdonell acted as a middleman, often brokering negotiations between his fellow Highlanders and the British and Upper Canadian governments. This relationship saw Macdonell and the Glengarry Highlanders travel to Glasgow, Guernsey, and Ireland, working as both manufacturers and soldiers before they eventually settled in Glengarry County, Upper Canada. Once established in Upper Canada, Macdonell continued to act as a broker, which notably led to the participation of the Glengarry Highlanders in the colony’s defence during the War of 1812. -
Martin Valerie I 201809 Phd.Pdf (2.587Mb)
The Honest Man/L’Homme Honnête: The Colonial Gentleman, the Development of the Press, and the Race and Gender Discourses of the Newspapers in the British “Province of Quebec,” 1764-1791 By Valérie Isabelle Martin A thesis submitted to the Graduate Program in History in conformity with the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Queen’s University Kingston, Ontario, Canada September, 2018 Copyright © Valérie Isabelle Martin, 2018 ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the new public world of print that emerged and developed in the “Province of Quebec” from 1764 to 1791. Using discourse analysis, it argues that the press reflected, and contributed to producing the race and gender privileges of the White, respectable gentleman, also called the “honest man,” regardless of whether he was Canadien or of Anglo-descent. A British colony created by the Royal Proclamation of 1763, the Province of Quebec existed until 1791 when it was divided into the separate colonies of Upper and Lower Canada by the Constitutional Act. The colony’s development and dissolution corresponded with a growing population and changing demographics in the Saint Lawrence Valley, a brief increase in racial slavery in Montreal and Quebec City, and altered political and economic alliances between the White settler population and Native peoples of the North American interior after the defeat of the French in 1763 and following the emergence of the American Republic in 1783. Internally, changes brought about by the conclusion of the British Conquest in 1760, such as the introduction of British rule and English law in Quebec, were implemented alongside French ancien régime structures of legal and political governance that persisted mostly unhampered and fostered the preservation of an authoritarian-style government in the new “old” colony. -
La Bataille De Saint-Denis
L A S É R I E D E S B A T A I L L E S C A N A D I E N N E S La bataille de Saint-Denis par Elinor Kyte Senior L A S É R I E D E S B A T A I L L E S C A N A D I E N N E S La bataille de Saint-Denis L A S É R I E D E S B A T A I L L E S C A N A D I E N N E S La bataille de Saint-Denis par Elinor Kyte Senior Musée canadien de la guerre La série des batailles canadiennes no 7 BALMUIR Musée canadien de la guerre BOOK PUBLISHING LTD. ©1990 MUSÉE CANADIEN DE LA GUERRE Balmuir Book Publishing Limited C.P. 160, Succursale postale B Toronto (Ontario) M5T 2T3 ISBN 0-919511-45-7 L A S É R I E D E S B A T A I L L E S C A N A D I E N N E S Au fil de son histoire, le Canada a vécu des moments fort difficiles, des luttes d'une envergure variable mais qui eurent toutes un effet marquant sur le développement du pays et qui ont modifié ou reflété le caractère de son peuple. La série présentée par le Musée canadien de la guerre décrit ces batailles et événements au moyen de narrations faites par des historiens dûment qualifiés et rehaussées par des documents visuels complétant très bien le texte. -
From Lower Canadian Colonists to Bermudan Convicts – Political Slavery and the Politics of Unfreedom
“By What Authority Do You Chain Us Like Felons?”: From Lower Canadian Colonists to Bermudan Convicts – Political Slavery and the Politics of Unfreedom Jarett Henderson, Mount Royal University At 3:00 PM on 2 July 1838, Wolfred Nelson stepped, for the first time since his arrest in December 1837, outside the stone walls of the newly built Montreal Gaol. Iron shackles hung from his wrists and ankles. Heavy chains bound him to Robert Bouchette, who, like 515 other Lower Canadian reformers, had been arrested under the auspices of leading an insurrection against the British empire. That July day Nelson, Bouchette, and six other white British subjects – often identified as patriots – began a journey that took them from Montreal to Quebec to Hamilton, the capital of the British penal colony of Bermuda. Their procession from the gaol to the Canada steamer moored in the St. Lawrence provided these eight men one final opportunity to demonstrate their frustration with irresponsible colonial government. The rhetoric of political enslavement once used by Nelson to agitate for reform had been replaced with iron shackles. This symbol of unfreedom was both personal and political. Furthermore, it provides a vivid example of how Nelson, Bouchette, and their fellow compatriots Rodolphe DesRivières, Henri Gauvin, Siméon Marchesseault, Luc Masson, Touissant Goddu, and Bonaventure Viger’s ideas about the reach of empire had encouraged their political engagement and transformed them from loyal to disloyal, from free to unfree, and from civil to uncivil subjects. Though there is little record of the removal of these men from Lower Canada, we must not take this as an indication that their transportation to Bermuda went unnoticed. -
London Journal of Canadian Studies Article
London Journal of Canadian Studies Article The Canadian Civil Wars of 1837–1838 Phillip Buckner1,* How to cite: Buckner, P., ‘The Canadian Civil Wars of 1837–1838’. London Journal of Canadian Studies, 2020, 35(1), pp. 96–118. DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444. ljcs.2020v35.005. Published: 30 November 2020 Peer Review: This article has been peer-reviewed through the journal’s standard double-blind peer review, where both the reviewers and authors are anonymized during review. Copyright: © 2020, Phillip Buckner. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence (CC-BY) 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited • DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.ljcs.2020v35.005. Open Access: London Journal of Canadian Studies is a peer-reviewed open-access journal. * Correspondence: [email protected] 1 University of New Brunswick, Canada © 2020, Phillip Buckner. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY) 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited • DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.ljcs.2020v35.005 The Canadian Civil Wars of 1837–1838 Phillip Buckner Abstract Canadian historians have traditionally stressed that the rebellions of 1837 and 1838 in Upper and Lower Canada were revolts against British imperial authority. Less stressed has been the fact that the rebellions were also civil wars and that British troops were aided by substantial numbers of loyalists in defeating the rebels. -
The 1837-1838 Rebellions
The 1837–1838 Rebellion: Consolidating Settler Colonialism in Canada Poster by Orion Keresztesi Introduction by Jarett Henderson In the 1830s the struggle to abolish irresponsible colonial rule in Upper and Lower Canada, and replace it with a form of government controlled by local settlers rather than by imperial rulers or their appointed representatives, involved significant debate, public protest, threats of violence, and outright rebellion. While the 1837-1838 Rebellion is often celebrated as a defining moment in Canadian history when oppressed settlers fought for a voice in their own gover- nance, it is important to remember that what resulted from this struggle was the imposition of the political frame- work necessary for settler colonialism to take hold in northern North America. Wolfred Nelson, one of the leading advocates of political reform hinted at this in 1836, when he charged, “we cannot continue to be subjects if we will not be treated as such, but rather as slaves.” Nelson, along with Louis-Joseph Pap- ineau in Lower Canada and William Lyon Mackenzie in Upper Canada, mobilized masses of settlers—men and wom- en, francophone and anglophone, young and old, rural and urban, rich and poor—with their demands for political freedom and liberté. By the summer and fall of 1837 public meetings of thousands, many of whom were encouraged to attend by a rhetoric that drew on the language of American and French revolutionaries and British reformers, were being held across the countryside. These meetings culminated on 23 October 1837 with a 4,000-person rally at Saint-Charles, Lower Canada, where Nelson and Luc Côté delivered passionate speeches calling for open revolt. -
Download 1 File
QNADA NATIONAL LIBRARY BIBLIOTHEQUE NATIONALE <>> H I STORY OF THK MONTREAL PRISON KROM A. D. 1784 TO A.D. 1556 CUMAIN1N<; A Complete Recofil of Ihe Troubles of 1fl3/-li3B, Surning of llie Parllamenl Boiliiings, in 1849. THE ST. ALBAN'S RAIDERS, 1864. THE TWO FENIAN RAIDS OF 1866 AND 1870. AND A Chronolo'^ical Digest of all the principal events for the past hundred years. Valuable statistical tables from the Police and Recorder s Courts. Cu ions Proclamations, Warrants and other docu- ments ncier before printed, relating to the Patriots of '37, and the administration of justice from the commenccvtent of the Courts in 17 84. Willi descriptions of Brasdmsioii tbe hand, standing on tbe Pillory, tlie Stocks, wmpping, &c. REV'D J. DOUGLAS BORTHWICK IWi'.NI V YKAK> (11 Al'l AIN tliilliot v-ij '*v?i)ctopa6ui ."Vijtoiil ^ini'' v:^,v-o.j:viplii|, 'vHi-l.^: ij J>v.otli,>l'i *v<ii.j. -^f ..-^f MONJKEAL A, FERIARO, BcoAseller, Publisher i\(h lipporler, 23 l\ James Street «• f<54*5 40500 60^ 1 ^ c^ ?oaTv(u\cK,^^^P Entered according to Act of rr.rliament of Canada l)y John Douglas BORTHWICK, in the office of the Minister of Agriculture. DEDICATION TO THE HONBLE SIR A. A. DORION Chief yuitice, Court of Queen' s Bench, Province of Quebec, Canada. SIR, I have very nuich pleasure in being able to dedicate this xvork THE HISTORY OF THE MONTREAI PRISON, to you. * The high position to which yon liave attained by your o^cn sterling worth and perseverance, commends itself to every right minded man in the Province of Quebec, of whatever religious denomination or political sect, and should be an in- centive to tlie younger members of the Bar to follow in your illustrious footsteps. -
Analyzing the Parallelism Between the Rise and Fall of Baseball in Quebec and the Quebec Secession Movement Daniel S
Union College Union | Digital Works Honors Theses Student Work 6-2011 Analyzing the Parallelism between the Rise and Fall of Baseball in Quebec and the Quebec Secession Movement Daniel S. Greene Union College - Schenectady, NY Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalworks.union.edu/theses Part of the Canadian History Commons, and the Sports Studies Commons Recommended Citation Greene, Daniel S., "Analyzing the Parallelism between the Rise and Fall of Baseball in Quebec and the Quebec Secession Movement" (2011). Honors Theses. 988. https://digitalworks.union.edu/theses/988 This Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Work at Union | Digital Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of Union | Digital Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Analyzing the Parallelism between the Rise and Fall of Baseball in Quebec and the Quebec Secession Movement By Daniel Greene Senior Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for Graduation Department of History Union College June, 2011 i Greene, Daniel Analyzing the Parallelism between the Rise and Fall of Baseball in Quebec and the Quebec Secession Movement My Senior Project examines the parallelism between the movement to bring baseball to Quebec and the Quebec secession movement in Canada. Through my research I have found that both entities follow a very similar timeline with highs and lows coming around the same time in the same province; although, I have not found any direct linkage between the two. My analysis begins around 1837 and continues through present day, and by analyzing the histories of each movement demonstrates clearly that both movements followed a unique and similar timeline. -
CHRONICLES of CANADA Edited by George M
CURRICULUM 0jc IIBBIS (Inimal Bindery Ltd. 9850 - 60 Avenue Edmonton, Alberta f Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/chroniclesofcana25wron ! CHRONICLES OF CANADA Edited by George M. Wrong and H, H. Langton In thirty-two volumes 25 THE ‘PATRIOTES’ OF ’37 BY ALFRED D. DECELLES Part VII The Struggle for Political Freedom 1837 DENTS, ST OF VILLAGE THE ON TROOPS RRITISFI TllJi OF ADVANCE THE PATRIOTES’ OF ’37 A Chronicle of the Lower Canadian Rebellion BY ALFRED D, DECELLES TORONTO GLASGOW, BROOK & COMPANY 1922 Copyright in all Countries subscribing to the Berne Convention UM \ ALBERTA LIBRAHT PREFATORY NOTE The manuscript for this little book, written by me in French, was handed over for transla- tion to Mr Stewart Wallace. The result as here presented is therefore a joint product, Mr Wallace, himself a writer of ability and a student of Canadian history, naturally made a very free translation of my work and intro- duced some ideas of his own. He insists, however, that the work is mine; and, with this acknowledgment of his part in it, I can do no less than acquiesce, at the same time expressing my pleasure at having had as collaborator a young writer of such good in- sight. And it is surely appropriate that an English Canadian and a French Canadian should join in a narrative of the political war between the two races which forms the subject of this book. A. D. DECELLES. Ottawa, 1915. 1 ^ X JL U U ^ a) vii CONTENTS Page I. CANADIANS, OLD AND NEW . l II.