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Canada

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In the late 19th & early 20th century most Canadians were of recent British ... In his newspaper 'Le Devoir' he opposed the war and argued for a nationalist ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Canada


1
Canada The British Empire
Kevin J. Benoy
2
What Kind of Nationalism?
3
British Subjects
  • In the late 19th early 20th century most
    Canadians were of recent British extraction.
  • They felt a strong kinship to Great Britain.

4
British Subjects
  • Canada was an integral part of this world empire.
  • We were British subjects and proud of it.

5
British Subjects
  • During the 19th century, Great Britain had the
    largest fleet in the world, maintaining a 2 power
    standard her fleet was larger than the next two
    national fleets combined.
  • Britain was committed to Splendid Isolation
    staying out of international commitments and only
    committing when Britain could force the balance
    of power in Britains interests.
  • British Canadians felt pride in British power

6
British Subjects
  • British subjects were enormously proud of the
    size of the British Empire which was between
    1/6 1/5 of the worlds land mass and contained
    a similar proportion of the worlds people.
  • Like Americans today, the British saw themselves
    as tremendously powerful.

7
Canadiens
  • French Canadians felt no such connection to
    things British.
  • They had been isolated from Europe since before
    the Conquest, beginning in 1759.

8
Canada First
  • Of course there were some English Canadians who
    wanted an independent Canada.
  • However, this Canada First movement was small
    in number and resentful of the Canadiens the
    only other group who supported a distinctly
    Canadian nationalism.

9
Imperial Federation
  • At the end of the 19th century there was even a
    movement to strengthen ties with Britain.
  • In 1884 the Imperial Federation League was
    founded in Britain.
  • Proponents wanted to strengthen, not loosen, ties
    between Britain and its colonies.

10
Imperial Federation
  • The idea was to create a single federal Imperial
    state, with a super-Parliament in London.
  • The Colonies would be mere provinces within this.

11
A British Nation
  • The overwhelming bulk of Canadas population and
    particularly the controlling elite, felt
    themselves British through and through.

12
Imperial Entanglements
13
Imperial Entanglements
  • Even as a self-governing dominion within the
    British Empire, there was the danger of getting
    caught up in conflicts with little or nothing to
    do with Canada.
  • After all, a global empire had to maintain
    itself.
  • Against rebels.
  • Against other imperial powers.

14
Sudan, 1885
  • In 1881 a religious leader in the Sudan, Mohammad
    Ahmed, declared himself the Mahdi the messiah
    of Islam.
  • He set out to clear his country of foreign
    influences including the Egyptians, who he saw
    as impure Moslems and their allies, the British.

15
Gordon of Khartoum
  • A British force, under the command of General
    Charles Gordon, was under siege at Khartoum.
  • Britain called on its colonies to contribute to a
    force to put down the radical Islamic forces.

16
Sudan, 1885
  • Sir John A. Macdonald understood that though
    British Canada might support sending troops,
    Quebec would be strongly opposed.
  • The conflict ended before any Canadian commitment
    was needed. (Though Australian forces were sent.)

17
The Anglo-Boer War
18
The Anglo-Boer War - Origins
  • Another Imperial crisis arose in Southern Africa.
  • In the late 19th century a three power struggle
    took place there between
  • The British
  • The Boers
  • The Zulu

19
Anglo-Boer War - Origins
  • Shaka Zulu led the most powerful African military
    force to ever emerge.
  • After initial set-backs like the complete
    annihalation of the British 24th regiment at
    Isandlhwana - British firepower eventually broke
    the Zulu, who had conquered much of southern
    Africa.

20
Anglo-Boer War - Origins
  • British supremacy in Southern Africa irked the
    Boers (Afrikaaners) descendants of early Dutch
    settlers who had trekked out of the Cape area to
    escape British rule.
  • In 1880-1881 the Boers won the right to
    self-government though theoretically under
    British oversight.

21
Anglo-Boer War - Origins
  • In 1885 gold was discovered in Transvaal, one of
    the Boer republics.
  • Uitlanders flooded in, as did British investment.
  • The Boers feared being swamped by the newcomers
    and restricted their voting rights. They also
    heavily taxed the gold business.
  • Investors and British residents of the Transvaal
    hoped Britain would intervene.

22
Anglo-Boer War - Origins
  • In 1895 a British businessman, Cecil Rhodes,
    financed an attempt to seize control of the
    Transvaal, in what came to be known as the
    Jameson raid.
  • It failed, but convinced the Boers that the
    British would try again possibly using the
    British army in Cape Colony and Natal. After all,
    Lord Milner, the British Governor of the Cape
    publicly favoured annexation.

23
Anglo-Boer War - Origins
  • The Afrikaaner republics of Transvaal and Orange
    Free State spent heavily on modern armaments,
    buying mainly from Germany.

24
Anglo-Boer War
  • In 1899 it looked as though the British were
    seeking war.
  • The Boers struck first.
  • On October 11, the Boers invaded Cape Colony and
    Natal.
  • Ladysmith, Mafeking and Kimberly were encircled.
  • The British suffered one setback after another.

25
Anglo-Boer War
  • Britain called on the Empire to help.
  • Prime Minister Laurier was torn between two
    impossible positions
  • Support Britain and lose all support in Quebec.
  • Avoid committing Canada and enrage British Canada.

26
Anglo-Boer War
  • Laurier had to compromise.
  • He decided to send volunteers, providing that
    Britain paid their expenses.
  • 7,000 Canadian soldiers (including 12 female
    nurses) served in Southern Africa over a 3 year
    period.

27
Anglo-Boer War
  • In 1900 the tide of battle turned. British forces
    took control of most Boer territory.
  • Superior British forces forced the Boers to turn
    to guerilla tactics.
  • From September, 1900 to the end of the war, in
    may, 1902, a nasty guerilla struggle drained both
    sides.

28
Anglo-Boer War
  • The Boers threw off their uniforms and fought
    asymmetrical warfare.
  • The British adopted a tactic of denying the Boers
    food and supplies.
  • Blockhouses defended rail and telegraph lines.

29
Anglo-Boer War
  • More controversially, the British forced Boer
    civilians into Concentration Camps, so that the
    countryside could be a free-fire zone for British
    forces and Boer farms were burned down to deny
    the guerillas supplies.

30
Anglo-Boer War
  • Poor supply systems and the continuing war meant
    camp conditions were often poor.
  • Women and children were often short of food and
    medicine.
  • A report after the war concluded that 27,927
    Boers and 14,154 Blacks 25 and 14
    respectively died of starvation and exposure.

31
Anglo-Boer War
  • Opposition to the war in Canada was strongest in
    Quebec.
  • Henri Bourassa, a former Laurier supporter and
    Liberal MP, resigned over the war and was
    re-elected as an independent.
  • In his newspaper Le Devoir he opposed the war
    and argued for a nationalist policy for the
    country.

32
Anglo-Boer War
  • The war ended with the Treaty of Veeriningen.
  • 22,000 British Empire soldiers lost their lives
    the majority through disease.
  • Between 6,000 and 7,000 Boer fighters died and
    around 28,000 civilians.
  • A direct result of the war was the founding of
    South Africa a country that came to be
    dominated by the large Boer population.
  • Jan Smuts, a former Boer commander, became Prime
    Minister of the Country.

33
The Anglo-Boer War
34
The Anglo-Boer War
  • The Boer war revealed how isolated Britain was in
    the world.
  • Opposition to British action came from virtually
    all countries. German hostility was particularly
    strong.
  • Britain forged an alliance with Japan to reduce
    her Pacific commitment.
  • Britain sought friends elsewhere too.

35
The Alaska Boundary DisputeBritains Commitment
to Canada
36
The Alaska Boundary Dispute
  • The Klondike gold rush of 1896 made the exact
    location of the border between B.C. and Alaska a
    pressing issue.
  • This boundary and the ownership of territory
    along the coast had been unclear since the United
    States Alaska purchase, from Russia, in 1867.
  • Possession of the land at the head of deep inlets
    would have allowed Canada access to B.C. across
    the Alaska panhandle.

37
The Alaska Boundary Dispute
  • Canadians believed that the boundary followed the
    summit of the mountain ranges near the coast.
  • The Americans claimed a line which followed the
    configuration of the coast but included the heads
    of the inlets.
  • By moving troops to the region the American
    president, Teddy Roosevelt, forced the issue to a
    resolution.

38
The Alaska Boundary Dispute
  • In 1903, an arbitration tribunal, comprised of
    three Americans, two Canadians and one British
    representative, was appointed to end the dispute.
  • Lord Alverstone the British chief justice
    represented Imperial interests.
  • Great Britain had no wish to annoy the Americans
    over the issue and Lord Alverstone was instructed
    to side with them.

39
The Alaska Boundary Dispute
40
The Alaska Boundary Dispute
  • The decision was heavily weighted in the American
    favor and Canada lost all access to the Pacific
    across the Alaska panhandle.
  • What would Britain do to support Canada in future
    disputes with the United States?
  • Some worried about the implications of Britains
    decision.

41
The Tin Pot Navy
42
The Tin Pot Navy
  • In 1906, Britain launched HMS Dreadnought, a new
    class of warship, more powerful than anything
    seen before.
  • However, it also made existing British
    battleships obsolete.
  • When Germany began launching similar vessels, a
    naval arms race followed.

43
Lauriers Tin-Pot Navy
  • Britains colonies, recognizing the need to
    maintain naval supremacy, committed themselves to
    help. Australia, and New Zealand both paid for
    battleships to be added to the Royal Navy.
  • In Canada, a Naval Aid Bill was proposed by the
    Conservatives to send money directly to Britain
    like the other colonies.

44
Lauriers Tin-Pot Navy II
  • Lauriers navy was intended to be placed at
    Britains disposal in time of war.
  • English Canadians scoffed at the prospect of
    Canadas navy being of much assistance to the
    British.
  • French Canadians led by Henri Bourassa were
    outraged at the thought of Canada helping Britain
    in any Imperial conflict.

45
Bordens Failure
  • In the election of 1911, Wilfrid Laurier lost to
    Borden in no small measure due to his lukewarm
    support of Britain in the Naval Arms Race.
  • Borden proposed to build a battleship for Britain
    in a Canadian shipyard, and man it with Canadian
    sailors.
  • Winston Churchill pointed out that no Canadian
    shipyard was capable of handling the job.
  • Borden had the bill passed in the House of
    Commons, but the Senate rejected it, killing the
    project.
  • Canadas contribution remained puny.

46
Conclusion
  • Before World War I Canada was a colony of Great
    Britain.
  • It was self-governing internally, and could even
    make some decisions regarding policy.
  • Bigger military and foreign policy decisions were
    reserved for Britain

47
Conclusion
  • Some Canadians wanted an independent Canada that
    need not risk involvement in Britains Imperial
    struggles.
  • Few were Anglophones.
  • Most were Quebecois Nationalistes.

48
Conclusion
  • Most Canadians, particularly in British Ontario,
    were rabidly British.
  • If there was a Canadian nationalism, it was
    nowhere near the mainstream in English Canada
    though it might be becoming so in Francophone
    Quebec.

49
Finis
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