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Life in British North America after the Conquest
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Page 1: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

Life in British North America after the Conquest

Page 2: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

Articles of CapitulationArticle XXVII – Free exercise of Catholicism in

colonyArticle XL – Aboriginal peoples allowed to

remain on the land

British impose a military governorAllow French language to continue, as well as

Seigneurial system

Page 3: Life in British North America after the Conquest.
Page 4: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

1. If the Catholic Church was still in a position of influence, the people of the colony would not come to the British for social assistance when it was needed;

2. To counter-balance the growing discontent in the thirteen American colonies

3. French Canadians were unlikely to get involved in politics of the colony, leaving it to Protestant English. French Catholics were forbidden from voting or

running for office and only Protestants could become lawyers, judges or serve on juries

Page 5: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

One of the most significant documents in Canadian history

“peace, welfare, and good government”

Guaranteed French language, culture, religion

Guaranteed large chunks of land as Aboriginal territory

Page 6: Life in British North America after the Conquest.
Page 7: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

Prevented westward expansion of the colonies

Felt controlled by British

Relationship with Aboriginal peoples

Manifest Destiny

Page 8: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

1996 Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples says it is the defining document, particularly around land ownership

Cornerstone of relationship between the Crown and Aboriginal People

Page 9: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

“It has been the opinion of very many able lawyers, that the best way to establish the happiness of the inhabitants is to give them their own laws, as far as relates to their own possessions.”

British Prime Minister Lord North

Page 10: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

One of the most significant documents in Canadian History

Confirmed that Quebec would retain their language, religion and hierarchical structure in society

They would not have an elected legislature or any representative government

Prevented American attempts to take over more western Aboriginal territory

Page 11: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

Quebec was judged to be unique in North America

Allowed French Civil law to apply, but imposed British Criminal Law

British wanted to keep French on-side and prevent them from joining the rebellious Americans to the South.

Page 12: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

Did not mention Aboriginal Peoples at all – this will have severe consequences in the years to come

Page 13: Life in British North America after the Conquest.
Page 14: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

Concerned that British refused to allow assembly in Quebec (Perhaps theirs could be revoked?)British reminded them that their elected

assemblies were a privilege – not a right

Roman Catholicism was outlawed in British Empire – but allowed in Quebec?

Prevention of westward expansion

Page 15: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

Taxation without representationDefray cost of 7 years war and of keeping a

standing army in the colonies

“Representation” not universalNo women, slaves, Aboriginal Peoples, Jews of

Catholics were allowed to vote or hold officeOnly free male, Protestant landowners had a

right to vote

Page 16: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

July 1775 Continental Congress of Thirteen ColoniesThe Quebec Act demonstrated “a despotism

dangerous to our very existence.”

Propaganda from Thirteen Colonies targeted QuebecTried to convince them to join the Continental

Congress calling them “fellow sufferers of the “fetters of slavery” imposed by British rule.

Quebec religious leaders encouraged neutrality

Page 17: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

1775 – American militia and British troops begin to battle in the colonies.

1776 – Declaration of Independence

1783 – Treaty of Paris

1784 – Arrival of Loyalists to NB, NS, Ontario

Page 18: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

American forces attack Quebec – repelled

Several Aboriginal tribes sided with British – Mohawk, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca of the Six Nations Iroquois Alliance

Ferocity of Iroquois attacks on American forces enraged General George Washington He ordered “the total destruction and devastation of

their settlements and the capture of as many prisoners, of every age and sex as possible.”

“lay waste to all the settlements around with instructions to do it in the most effectual manner, that the country not be merely overrun but destroyed.”

Within two months all settlements were destroyed.

Page 19: Life in British North America after the Conquest.

Not mentioned, represented or thought of in Treaty of Paris

Aboriginal Territory west of Thirteen Colonies ceded to USA – Aboriginal people’s lost land

Weakened by war – Aboriginal Peoples moved north to British North America

British set aside Crown land in Upper Canada colony in 1784, but by 1828 only one third of it was left – lost the rest to land grants, encroaching settlers and sale/lease agreements.