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Upper Canada: An American Community?

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Battle of Lundy's Lane. The Arrival of the British ... A Tory/Anglican elite vs. Reformer/Evangelical opposition ('two worlds' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Upper Canada: An American Community?


1
Upper Canada An American Community?
  • I. Intro
  • II. Constructing Britishness
  • III. American
  • a. The Arrival of the Loyalists
  • b. An American Community?
  • c. The War of 1812
  • IV. British
  • a. Immigration
  • b. Methodists Anglicans
  • V. Canadian
  • a. People place
  • b. Making Old Ontario
  • c. The Society of Upper Canada

2
Discussion Questions
  • Week 1
  • Why was it easier, until the 1960s, to write a
    history of colonial America (and Canada)?
  • Week 2
  • The problems of French-Canadian farmers derived
    more from a lack of land and capital than from
    something in their culture. Discuss.
  • OR
  • Are you convinced by Igartuas suggestion that
    the failure of French-Canadian merchants to
    retain control of the fur trade can be explained
    by a mood of uncertainty and pessimism among the
    Montreal Merchants? What other aspects of
    Igartuas argument might be more convincing?

3
Constructing Britishness
  • How are cultural identities made?
  • Cultural construction
  • Hegemony (Gramsci)

4
The Arrival of the Loyalists
  • How loyal were the loyalists?
  • Fall of New France (1760) -- American Revolution
    (1775-1783)
  • 30,000 to Nova Scotia -- 14,500 in what is now
    New Brunswick
  • Will Ferguson the original boat people

5
Loyalists react to Nova Scotia (Saint John, NB)
  • Nothing but wilderness before our eyes. The
    women and children did not refrain from tears.
  • I climbed to the top of the hill and watched
    the sails disappearing in the distance, and such
    a feeling of loneliness came over me that,
    although I had not shed a single tear through all
    the war, I sat down on the damp moss with my baby
    in my lap and cried.

6
Loyalists in Quebec
  • 10,000 in 1783 -- 30,000 by 1791
  • Constitutional Act creates Upper Canada, 1791
  • Types of loyalists

7
A Model British Colony
  • How was Britishness constructed in early Upper
    Canada?
  • John Graves Simcoe
  • Institutions
  • Constitutional Act
  • Crown Reserves
  • Clergy Reserves

8
Simcoe on an Established Church
  • in regard to Upper Canada, every
    establishment of Church and State that upholds
    the distinction of ranks, and lessens the undue
    weight of the democratic influence, must be
    indispensably introduced that church
    establishment I consider so necessary to
    promote the national religion, and to maintain
    the true and venerable constitutions of my
    country.

9
An American Community?
  • What was the effect of Simcoes policies?
  • Land policy
  • American settlers
  • 75,000 Upper Canadians by 1812

10
The War of 1812
  • What was the effect of the War of 1812 on Upper
    Canadas Britishness?
  • Tecumsehs confederacy
  • General Sir Isaac Brock
  • Thomas Jefferson A mere matter of marching
  • Fort Detroit
  • Queenston Heights
  • Battle of Moraviantown
  • Battle of Lundys Lane

11
(No Transcript)
12
The Arrival of the British
  • How did post-war British immigrants shape Upper
    Canadas British character?
  • 1 million immigrants to BNA, 1815-40
  • 1/3 of population of UC British by 1842
  • Irish -- Protestants Catholics
  • Orange Order

13
Reformers the Family Compact
  • How did Britishness social power cohere in
    postwar Upper Canada?
  • Family Compact
  • Bishop John Strachan
  • Robert Gourlay
  • Moderate Reformers -- Baldwins
  • Radical Reformers -- William Lyon Mackenzie

14
John Strachan William Lyon Mackenzie
15
Anglicans Methodists
  • Evangelicalism
  • Egerton Ryerson
  • The two worlds of Upper Canada

16
Immigrant Societies
  • 1 Society ? place
  • 2 Only fragments of societies immigrate
  • 3 Fragments encounter novel circumstances
  • 4 Above leads to social change

17
Buildings and Structures
  • Georgian
  • Victorian

18
Georgian Houses
19
Victorian Gothic Styling
20
LandscapeFarms
21
LandscapeSmall Towns
22
Georgian StyleKingston City Hall (1844)
23
Classical (Georgian) Style for Legal
BuildingsOsgoode Hall, Toronto (1832)
24
Market Square, Kingston
25
Conclusion
  • Pre-industrial -- household at center
  • A rural economy based around wheat exports and
    household self-reliance
  • A Tory/Anglican elite vs. Reformer/Evangelical
    opposition (two worlds)
  • Presence of Native peoples
  • The British, the American, and local influences ?
    the society of Upper Canada

26
Discuss
  • In what ways was the border between UC the USA
    real, and in what ways was it not? What forces
    worked to separate UC from the USA?
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