Climate at the Turn of the 20 th Century Culture and Politics
Feb 22, 2016
Climate at the Turn of the 20th CenturyCulture and Politics
CultureMost people lived on farms or in small townsThe minority of middle class people set the standards for morals and mannersVictorian periodRight, wrong and evil were clear for morals- no debateFamilies took care of themselves without the governmentFamilies had to attend church regularly
Women’s MovementWomen were not considered people under the law unless they committed a crime- BNA Act of 1867
Had few rights over property and their children. Divorce was rare.
Woman’s salary was considered to be her husband’s money
Suffragettes fought to get women the right to vote
Nelly McClung- died in Victoria
Canada is still a British Nation
Canada had it’s own government but were not independent from Britain Prime Minister was Wilfred LaurierBritain dealt with all the international disputes and often not in the best interests of CanadaSun doesn’t set on the British Empire
Alaska Boundary Dispute, 1903During the gold rush Canada and the US disagreed as to where the boundaries were between BC and Alaska (Alaska Panhandle)
Canada and the US decided to let the officials vote on it- 3 US judges, 2 Canadian and 1 British
British voted on the side of the Americans
Canada lost the Panhandle
Significance
Canada realized that they needed to have control over their own foreign affairsDidn’t happen until 1931 with the Statute of Westminster
French CanadaFrench didn’t want to be part of the British EmpireConsidered themselves to be Canadien rather than British subjectsSupported independence from Britain- nationalistsIdeas started about French separating from CanadaBelieved that their rights wouldn’t be protected
Creation of Alberta and SaskatchewanCreated in 1905Catch was that they were not given control of their resources- cash payments insteadGrowing population in the region due to immigrationImmigrants weren’t used to a democratic system so this solved the problem
ImmigrationImmigrants- people come to a country
Emigrants- people leave a country
Pull factors- things that made people want to move to Canada
Push factors- Things that made people want to move from their home country
Clifford Sifton- Open door policy for the west
Why Canada?Lots of natural resources- pulp and paper exports, fishing and the Klondike Gold RushOpening of the West- ads all over the world to farm in Canada for cheapNational Policy- Created in the 1870s by John A. MacDonald- protected industries by imposing tariffs on cheaper imported goods. The opposite of free trade.Canadian Pacific Railway- linked the East and the West and new towns developed along the railways
DiscriminationMany different ethnic groups and cultures were living in Canada however, many were discriminated againstEspecially anyone who was East Indian, Black or AsianEx. From the US, Canada only accepted white farmers. No actual law but there were careful procedures
Chinese ImmigrationChinese were originally brought in for the gold rush then were recruited to build the Canadian Pacific RailwayWhen the railway was completed the Canadian government passed a bill for a Head tax that kept increasing. Gov collected $23 millionChinese people couldn’t bring their families over1923- Chinese Immigration Act- excluded Chinese from entering CanadaVictoria has the oldest Chinatown in Canada
Continuous Journey Regulation
Immigration Act amended in 1906Immigrants had to arrive in Canada from the country in which they were natives or citizens of, with a ticket purchased in that country.Catch was that since no shipping company provided direct trips from India to Canada. It indirectly banned Indian immigration.
Komagata Maru•1914, With 400 people on board it anchored in Burrard Inlet in Vancouver•Mostly poor East Indians on board lead by Gurdit Singh•Sat in the harbour for weeks. Deprived of food and water by Canadian authorities•Forced to turn back after two months•Locals cheered on the dock as the ship was escorted out
Further ReadingKomagata Maru: http://www.vancouverhistory.ca/archives_komagatamaru.htmChinese Canadian struggle in BC: http://archives.cbc.ca/society/immigration/topics/1433/
QuestionsImagine you could go back to the Canada of 1914. What attitudes would you fine most difficult to deal with? Why?Describe the situation of women in Canada in the years before World War I.Explain why Canadiens did not share any enthusiasm for Canada’s ties to Britain. Do you think their objections were justified? Why?