SELF-RULE for CANADA, AUSTRALIA, AND NEW ZEALAND - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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SELF-RULE for CANADA, AUSTRALIA, AND NEW ZEALAND

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Government troops put down the uprising and executed ... Australia, in 1788. The men Under the brutal discipline of soldiers, worked to clear land for the settlement. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SELF-RULE for CANADA, AUSTRALIA, AND NEW ZEALAND


1
SELF-RULE for CANADA, AUSTRALIA, AND NEW ZEALAND
  • Bell work 3
  • It states that they bought this century old house
    for there parents which is a national landmark

2
Canada
  • Indigenous- original inhabitants of these regions
    were relatively few in number, and white settlers
    quickly subdued and replace them.
  • These two English speaking colonies, as well as
    Canada, won independence faster and with greater
    ease than Englands territories in Africa or
    Asia.

3
The Canadian Pattern
  • The two Canada's- Canada Act in 1791 created two
    provinces English speaking Upper Canada and
    French Speaking Lower Canada. Each had its own
    laws, legislature.
  • 1800s- The people of Upper Canada resented the
    power held by a small British elite. In Lower
    Canada, too, people felt that British officials
    ignored their needs.
  • 1837, discontent flared into rebellion in both
    Upper and Lower Canada.

4
The Durham Report
  • British learned a lesson from the American
    Revolution, so they sent a able politician, lord
    Durham, to study the causes of the unrest.
  • Durham Report called for the two Canada's to be
    reunited and given control over their own
    affairs.
  • 1840, Parliament passed the Act of Union it gave
    Canada and elected legislature to determine
    domestic policies. Britain kept control of
    foreign policy and trade.

5
Dominion of Canada
  • John Macdonald and George Etienne Cartier, urged
    confederation, or unification, of all Canadas
    provinces. Like many Canadians, MacDonald and
    Cartier feared that the U.S. might try to
    dominate Canada. A strong union would strengthen
    Canada against American ambitions.
  • 1867, the British North America Act was passed,
    creating the Dominion of Canada. It united four
    provinces in self governing nation.

6
Expansion
  • John Macdonald, Canadas first prime minister,
    encouraged expansion across the continent.
  • 1885, the Canadian Pacific Railway opened,
    Linking eastern and western Canada
  • As in the U.S., westward expansion destroyed the
    way of life of Native Americans in Canada. Most
    were forced to sign treaties giving up their
    lands. Some resisted, Louis Riel led a revolt of
    the Metis, people of mixed Native American and
    European descent. Government troops put down the
    uprising and executed Riel.

7
Europeans in Australia
  • The Dutch in the 1600s were the first Europeans
    to reach Australia.
  • 1770, Captain James Cook claimed Australia for
    Britain.
  • The First Settlers- They had reached Australia
    50,000 years ago, probably form Southeast Asia.
  • Aborigines were groups of small hunting and food
    gathering bands, much as their Stone Age
    ancestors.

8
Penal Colony
  • Prisons in London and other cities were jammed
    with poor people arrested for crimes such as
    stealing food or goods to pawn.
  • To fulfill the need for prisons, Britain made
    Australia into a penal colony, a place to send
    people convicted of crimes. The first ships,
    carrying about 700 convicts arrived in Botany
    Bay, Australia, in 1788. The men Under the brutal
    discipline of soldiers, worked to clear land for
    the settlement.

9
The Outback
  • 1851, gold was found in eastern Australia. Gold
    hunters stayed on to become ranchers and farmer.
    They pushed into the rugged interior known as the
    Outback.
  • There too, the y displaced the Aborigines and
    carved out huge sheep ranches and wheat farms.
  • 1800s Australia had won a place in a growing
    world economy.

10
Achieving Self-Government
  • 1901, Britain helped the colonies unite into the
    independent commonwealth of Australia. The new
    country kept its ties to Britain by recognizing
    the British monarch as its head of state.
  • This set up a federal system that limited the
    power of the central government.
  • Australia quickly granted women the right to
    vote. It also was the first nation to introduce
    the secret ballot.

11
New Zealand
  • Far to the southeast of Australia lies New
    Zealand.
  • Maori struggles- Unlike Australia, where the
    Aborigines were spread thinly across a large
    continent, the Maoris were concentrated in a
    smaller area.
  • Maoris were settled farmers. They were also a
    warlike people, determined to defend their land.
  • 1840, Britain annexed New Zealand. The move was
    designed in part to keep out other imperialist
    powers.
  • 1870, resistance crumbled. The Maori population
    had fallen drastically, form 250,000 to less than
    50,000 Only in recent years has the Maori
    population started to grow once more.

12
Self Government
  • White New Zealanders sought self-rule. In 1907
    they won independence, with their own parliament,
    prime minister, and elected legislature. They,
    too, preserved close ties to the British empire.
  • 1893, it became the first nation to give suffrage
    to women.
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