Click to edit Master subtitle style 2/4/10 Charlottetown Conference 1864 Quebec Conference 1864 London Conference 1867.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Why Do We Need a Constitution?
Advertisements

Canadian Confederation Timeline Presented by the awesome students of Block G.
Canadian Confederation. French Indian War Britain takes over French speaking areas of Canada Britain takes over French speaking areas of Canada Creates.
The Road to Confederation Upper and Lower Canada: The Roots of Discontent In the wake of the Constitution Act of 1791, people in Upper and Lower Canada.
Confederation Timeline
Confederation Achieved
Confederation. Atlantic Colonies The Atlantic Colonies – Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Nova Scotia– were starting to have a down.
Path To Confederation.
Pathway to Confederation Charlottetown Conference.
Canada became a country in 1867 when the Province of Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick joined together.
Confederation!!..for Most. The Lead up to Confederation, who wanted it, who hated it, and finally the BNA Act.
The Charlottetown Conference Steps Towards Confederation.
 The Union Act of 1841  Upper and Lower Canada were united under one government  Equal representation in the Assembly  Upper Canada’s.
CONFEDERATION. WHY CONFEDERATE? -Unstable Government -Divided by English and French loyalties, the government could never agree on new laws, government.
Confederation Won! With the first dawn of this summer morning, we hail the birthday of a new nation. A united British and America takes its place among.
Canada’s Constitution
The Formation of the Canadian Federation. The two party system Conservatives: John A. Macdonald (Canada West) and George-Étienne Cartier (Canada East)
 Confederation means a group of communities or colonies, who have signed or entered into an agreement to work together as one.
The Drive to Nationhood Group Rep by Pop Definition: the number of elected members of legislated assembly (LA) based on the number of.
The Deal is Made.... The Quebec Conference October, 1864 – approximately a month after the Charlottetown Conference Many of the issues that were introduced.
Unit 3: Building A Nation
REPRESENTATION BY POPULATION Rep-by-pop: Who was in favour of this? Clear Grits # of representatives in the Legislative Assembly depends on the # of people.
Why Unite? 1860s Confederation of Canada Chapter 7 Mid-1800s.
Chapter 7: Confederation Was Confederation a democratic process by today’s standards?
Political Empowerment. Shaping of Canada Today Canada is the second-largest country in the world. It has an area of almost square kilometres.
In Summary the 5 major points that led to Confederation. 1.Changing attitude of Britain towards BNA. 2.Fear of invasion with regards to the American Civil.
Creating a New Country. Government: the way people organize themselves and make decisions Canada is a democracy: the people hold the power and elect their.
Fathers of Confederation
Internal Political Problems Page 92. Internal political problems What political problems arose in United Canada in the late 1850s What possible solution.
Confederation October 26th, Union of Canada In 1940, Ontario (Upper Canada) and Quebec (Lower Canada) joined forces. Each area retained its.
Government & Statute Law ► Does the law apply to all people in all situations? ► Would there be any exception, and if so, what would they be? ► How would.
Moving Towards Confederation. Coalition George Brown’s idea in 1864 The only way for the government to move forward was to create a coalition where “all.
1. PRE-CONFEDERATION 2. CHARLOTTETOWN CONFERENCE 3. QUEBEC CONFERENCE 4. BRITISH NORTH AMERICA ACT 5. SHAPE AND CHARACTER OF NEW GOVERNMENT 6. GROWING.
The Drive to Nationhood: Group # Group #
Chapter 7 topic 4 Confederation Discussions Pages
CONFEDERATION. THE FIGHT FOR RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT After years of unrest and rebellions, Britain suspended civil rights, dissolved the assemblies of.
Starter: With the person next to you I want you to discuss: 1.What counts as History? 2.Why is History important/why do we study it? WHAT IS HISTORY?
Confederation Making a Country. Charlottetown Conference September 1864 In September, representatives of the Maritime colonies went to Charlottetown to.
CONFEDERATION Mr. Sharp Socials 10. The Conferences Mind Map the first two conferences leading to Confederation – The Charlottetown Conference and the.
Chapter 2 Review December 2015 Politics Famous People Confederation America Science and Technology Victorian Life.
Towards Confederation All 5 colonies had earned responsible government, yet they still had political problems Add in growing economic concerns.
Formation of a Canadian Federation: Confederation
ConfederationConfederation Confederwhat?!!Confederwhat?!!
Conferences Province of Canada Maritime Colonies Quebec Conference
A Brief Overview of Canadian Confederation
Setting the Stage for Confederation
Key Ideas to Know What does confederation mean? A confederation is a group of people or organizations brought together for a common purpose What came.
The Road to Confederation Upper and Lower Canada: The Roots of Discontent In the wake of the Constitution Act of 1791, people in Upper and Lower Canada.
Seeking Political Solutions
PATH TO CONFEDERATION SS 10: MS. PASICHNYK.
Confederation Achieved
Confederation.
Confederation Making a Country.
Confederation Achieved
Confederation.
Confederation Results
British North America Act
The Road to Confederation Upper and Lower Canada: The Roots of Discontent In the wake of the Constitution Act of 1791, people in Upper and Lower Canada.
The Road to Confederation
Welcome to The London Conference
Path to Confederation Notes
Canadian Confederation Overview July 1, 1867
What did the Maritime Colonies want?
Key Ideas to Know What does confederation mean? A confederation is a group of people or organizations brought together for a common purpose What came.
The Road to Confederation
Confederation: The Emergence of Canada
Quebec Conference 1864 By Isabel Cu.
Canadian Independence
The Road to Confederation Upper and Lower Canada: The Roots of Discontent In the wake of the Constitution Act of 1791, people in Upper and Lower Canada.
EARLY CANADA Nir, Zach, Ted.
Presentation transcript:

Click to edit Master subtitle style 2/4/10 Charlottetown Conference 1864 Quebec Conference 1864 London Conference 1867

2/4/10 Charlottetown Conference 1864 For representatives from the colonies of British North America (BNA) to discuss Canadian confederation Planning began in It was originally planned to be a meeting between representatives from the maritime provinces (except for Newfoundland as it had no interest in confederation Britain encouraged confederation so that they could have military power in that region during the American Civil War Province of Canada (now Quebec and Ontario) wanted to be included in the meeting so they asked for it to be expanded Newfoundland also requested to attend the conference in August 1864 but it was too late The meeting took place in Prince Edward Island

2/4/10 Representatives from Province of Canada dominated the conference by ignoring most of the Maritime concerns and trying to benefit themselves 4/5 days were spent outlining the Province of Canada’s position; Maritime representatives did not discuss their plans until September 6th and 7th Canadian delegate George Brown spent two days discussing the details of the proposed constitution which would keep them in the British empire but would have none of the problems that would lead to civil war (i.e. American Civil War) Concluded on Sept. 7th; ball held on Sept. 8th They agreed to meet the next month in Quebec

2/4/10

Important People Involved Sir Alexander Tilloch Galt (Canadian statesman) Sir John A Macdonald (Prime Minister of Canada) William McDougall (Canadian Politician) Possible Solutions Economic Union of British North America : creating their own market for their own goods Build an Inter-Colonial Railway: linking existing colonies A Federal Union: self-governing states united by a central government

2/4/10 Charlottetown Conference Delegates – September 1864 Delegates at Conference New Brunswick Edward Barron Chandler John Hamilton Gray Samuel Leonard Tilley William H. Steeves John Mercer Johnson Nova Scotia Adams George Archibald Robert B. Dickey William Alexander Henry Jonathan McCully Charles Tupper Prince Edward Island George Coles John Hamilton Gray Edward Palmer Andrew Archibald Macdonald William Henry Pope Edward Whelan Province of Canada George Brown Alexander Campbell George-Étienne Cartier Alexander Tilloch Galt John A. Macdonald Hector-Louis Langevin William McDougall Thomas D'Arcy McGee

2/4/10 Quebec Conference – October 1864 Delegates from the Province of Canada, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and PEI Major conflict was between people who wanted a central government (like John A MacDonald who thought that with more powers, more conflict would ensue as seen in the American Civil War) and others who wanted individual provincial rights (representatives from Canada East (now Quebec) and the Maritimes) for fear that they would lose their cultural identity They eventually decided to divide the powers between federal and provincial governments An offered structure was written in the form of the 72 Resolutions was made Afterwards, the delegates returned to their provinces to submit the plan to their provincial legislatures In Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, Joseph Howe and A.J. Smith (respectively) led the opposition to Confederation but both provinces did end up joining Only PEI rejected the resolutions

2/4/10 Delegates at Quebec Conference – October 1864

2/4/10 72 Resolutions Each colony would become a province of Canada (Canada West was renamed Ontario; Canada East, Quebec) A strong central government (as apposed to multiple governments which could lead to civil war) As a country it would be easier to defend themselves from attack Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes were to have 24 members each in the new Senate – Upper House The elected House of Commons/Lower House was to have Representation by Population The new federal government would control the debts of the colonies A new economic market with no tariffs was created Expanding of railroads to better commerce Newfoundland and PEI took themselves out of the talks as they were too isolated and they saw no need for rail roads

2/4/10

London Conference 1866 Final conference that led to Canadian Confederation Representatives from the four BNA colonies (Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick) met to make final arrangements Resulted in the official name (Dominion of Canada) and the capital in Ottawa New provinces were to get more money from the new federal government Division of Powers (defining the powers of federal and provincial government) were settled (sections 91 and 92 in the British North America Act) British North America Act passed in the British Parliament on March 29, 1867 Canada official declared a country on July 1, 1867 Dominion Status - limited independence Result: Constitutional Monarchy, Responsible Government, Two Founding Nations A Federal System: Central Government with Provincial Governments

2/4/10 "The Happy Pair" (John A. Macdonald and Joseph Howe).

2/4/10 Bibliography