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History of Canada Integration into U.S. History. Dean June capitalhill@rochester.rr.com Ruth Ann Writer rawriter@comcast.net. Different Points of View Similar History. Why study Canada in U.S. History Class?. United States did not evolve in vacuum!
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History of CanadaIntegration into U.S. History Dean June capitalhill@rochester.rr.com Ruth Ann Writer rawriter@comcast.net
Different Points of View Similar History
Why study Canada in U.S. History Class? • United States did not evolve in vacuum! • By studying Canada, American students will learn additional and different points of view • Natural extension of U.S. History due to ties that bind • Geography • Economy • Cultural • HISTORY
Pre-Contact History • Migration routes—Native, Inuit • Natives knew no borders • Cultural division of Natives result of natural, geographic regions
Food Shelter Clothing Medical Education Transportation Diplomacy Leisure Family structure Gender roles Religion and mythology Study of Native Life Prior to European Contact
Age of Discovery • English • French
English Explorers • Cabot • Davis • Hudson • Baffin • Franklin
French Explorers • Cartier • Champlain • Brule • LaSalle • Marquette and Joliet
Champlain’s World 1567-1635
Two children of New France • Acadia • Bay of Fundy • Small farm communities • Port Royale • St. Lawrence • Saguenay • Quebec City • MontrealVoyageurs • Trois Rivieres, others • Separated by geography
French Colonization • Acadia • St. Lawrence and Great Lakes
More than Fame & Fortune • God • Glory • Gold • Invited to join party of adventures • French getting nervous • English base on Newfoundland--COD • Fishermen from Spain, Basque, England
Problems in Paradise? !#@*^St. Croix Island—1604-5 • Winter weather • No fresh water • Little lumber • Scurvy • 35 of 79 died 1st winter • Isle of Bones • No farmland • Safe from Natives—they KNEW
Seven Periods of Acadia • Acadia ... 1632 to 1653 - the core group of settlers arrive • Acadia ... 1654 to 1670 - French immigration stops under English rule • Acadia ... 1671 to 1689 - more arrivals under French rule • Acadia ... 1690 to 1709 - final days as French Acadia • Acadia ... 1710 to 1729 - Acadians settle in as in Nova Scotians • Acadia ... 1730 to 1748 - peacetime under English rule • Acadia ... 1749 to 1755 - English pressure and Acadian farewell
1755—sent into exile • 2005—Katrina
Summer trip of 1609 • Allied with Hurons • Enemy of Iroquois • Travel to LaChine and Richelieu River • To heart of Iroquois nation—60,000 • Reached Lake Champlain--July
Battle of 1609 • Champlain stepped forward dressed for war in bloomers & a gleaming plume topped metal bonnet on his head. He raised his gun and aimed at the most prominent men standing the length of a football field away. He fired the load, four pellets and 2 Iroquois chiefs dropped dead. Demoralized by the shock of an unthinkable weapon, the Iroquois ran."—[Callwood p. 12]
Rest is History! • Starting Line Up for French and Indian war 150 years later
What destroyed Native Cultures? • More than guns • Disease—no immunity • Small pox • measles • Depression • Diet • Societal changes • Huron lost 50% of people by 1639 • Never regained population
New France • Voyageurs • Fur is king of North America • Urban New France • Quebec City • Montreal • Seigneurial System • Settlement and farming
Voyageurs • Brule • Radisson and Groselliers
1615—Great Lakes Region • Brule—read about him • First white to… • 1622—Sault Ste. Marie--MICHIGAN
Beaver • Prized pelts • Guard hair • Under hair • Worn for winter—THE best [castor de gras] • Easily transported • Easily trapped out—extinct in some areas • BREATHING GOLD!
Economic Issues of Beaver • Supply—60-400 million from Rio Grande to Arctic • 10 million in Canada alone • 155 taken in one day • 5000 in one season • Demand—fad of hats • Cheap labor
Life is a highway—so were the rivers • Rivers were the routes west • No real trails • Portages between rivers and lakes • Paddle at a fast rate—16+ hours a day
Hudson Bay Company’s Birth1670 • Hudson Bay system of trade to North • French—longer supply line • HBC started by Radisson/Groseilliers • Took up 50% of current Canadian territory • Small posts called factories • Operated by factor • STAY ON THE BAY—factory system • Eliminated middle men—direct buying
HBC better deal • Blankets made of wool • Shorter trip • England had 13 colonies south of New France • Competition began
Urbanization • Quebec City • Montreal • St. Lawrence Valley • King’s Daughters
Competing for North America • New England • Hudson Bay Company • New France • Acadia • English v. French • Lesser known
Wars for Empire • European conflicts • French and Indian War • Revolutionary Era • Loyalists • Birth of two nations—not one • War of 1812
STRENGTHS First Nations relationship good Knew interior Control of waterway Unified End run around Eng Forts WEAKNESSES Outnumbered 20:1 Less money Poor transportation Iroquois enemy Only few key cities Montreal Quebec Louisbourg New France
End of New France • Series of 4 wars • Acadian Expulsion—1755 • French and Indian War • Plains of Abraham—1759 • Conquest--1763
Revolutionary Era • Motivation • Quebec Act • Invasions • Why 13 and not 15 colonies? • Why British North America [French speaking] sided with Britain • Only few years since French and Indian War
Invasion of Canada • After Quebec Act • August 1775—invasion begins • Via fur trade route Richielu River • Nov ’75—to Montreal • Siege for 55 days
Not good neighbors • Contempt for Catholics • Stole food • Stole firewood • Imprisoned priests • Urinated on shrine • Sent Ben Franklin—TOO LATE
1776-1783 • Events of Revolutionary War • Saratoga—Burgoyne defeated • Yorktown--1781 • Ours is a history of revolution… • Canada is a history of evolution
Loyalists • Thousands supported British • Called TORIES [1/3] • 50,000 moved to Canada • Why did these colonists emigrate? • Where did they settle? • What was life like for them in new land?