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The Timber Trade in the 1800s

The Timber Trade in the 1800s. Timber. After 1812, England wanted more timber from Canada. Timber = wood / trees Even after the war of 1812 England continued to order timber from Canada This made the timber trade / industry grow within Canada. Timber.

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The Timber Trade in the 1800s

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  1. The Timber Trade in the 1800s

  2. Timber • After 1812, England wanted more timber from Canada. • Timber = wood / trees • Even after the war of 1812 England continued to order timber from Canada • This made the timber trade / industry grow within Canada

  3. Timber • The timber trade had lots of effects on Canada • Timber became the most exported natural resource  less and less attention was given to the fur trade • People invested ($$$) lots of money in the timber trade  new companies, banks, etc. • New places to work and new jobs! • Sawmills, lumber yards, etc. • Lumberjacks, raftsmen, etc. • More jobs  more people moved to Canada to work

  4. Exported wood from the port of Quebec City to England

  5. Logging • Logging means cutting down trees and moving the trees • Most of the time, logging happened in the winter • It was easier to cut trees down when the sap was not moving in the trees • Snow on the ground made it easy to drag the tress

  6. Logging • In the late fall or early winter, men would set up a camp in an area where there were enough trees to cut • They would clear pathways to move the cut trees • They would make sure supplies could be delivered as well • The men spent several months in the camps

  7. Logging • Lots of men who were in good shape were needed for logging • The men used timber axes to cut the trees down and the shape the trees into squares • The men also used cross-cut saws to cut trees down

  8. Logging • Usually, the cut tress were ‘squared’ • This means turning the round tree into a squareshape • Oxen, horses and eventually trains were used to move the cut trees

  9. Logging • Trees were put into a riveror stream to be moved from the logging camp to other places • Trees were put into the water in spring • The water was free from ice • The men used the river to move the trees.

  10. Logging • Most of the time the tress were tied together • This was called a ‘raft’ • Mean would stay on the raft until it got to its destination • Usually, the cut trees were put onto boats and sent to England

  11. The Timber Trade 2 • The timbertradeusedtechnologyin differentways • Sawmills, canals and railwayswere the most important • Sawmillscut the large logs quickerthatcuttingthem by hand • Canals are man made ‘rivers’ to help move the logs quicker • Railwayscould move timber and othergoodsquickerthan water and couldconnectcities • Bankswerealso important  theyhelpedpayfor sawmills, canals and railways

  12. Sawmills • Sawmills were built next to water way with fast currents • They used the current to move a blade that would cut the logs into squares or into boards. • There were very small sawmills that would cut logs for towns close by • There were also large sawmills that would cut lots of logs to ship elsewhere • Men would place logs in a harness and the waterpower would move the blade to cut the logs

  13. Canals • Canalsare man made rivers • They are used for the timber trade and for boats to travel into the continent • Canals connect to natural rivers and lakes • Canals were needed to make shipping faster • This made the economy stronger • The first canals were close to Ottawa • The Rideau Canal is still in Ottawa today. • It is used mainly for recreational (fun) purposes.

  14. Banks • Some of the first ‘established’ banks in Canada were started in Montreal • The Bank of Montreal started in 1817 • Banks were ways for people to borrow money to start sawmills or build railways

  15. CANAUX ET BANQUES CONCLUSION • 1791 – 1840 au Bas-Canada: • Importance: fourrure  bois. • Stagnation ( ) agricole • Développement des transports (canaux) et des banques.

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