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Confederation Introduction
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In 1763 (The Conquest)- Britain defeated France and the Royal Proclamation of 1763 declared all Britain’s territory in North America
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In 1783, the United States won its independence from Britain Britain lost all of the original 13 territories and the Ohio River Valley 1846- Oregon treaty extended the border along the 49 th parallel
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1841- Act of Union united Upper Canada and Lower Canada into one colony: the Province of Canada
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British Held Territory: The West Coast Both Britain and the US had laid claim to the Pacific Northwest during the 1820s and 1830s 1846- Oregon Treaty came into law Set the US-Canada border at the 49 th Parallel British officials tried to forestall further American presence in the region by requiring the HBC to establish a colony in the region. Colony of Vancouver Island was declared in 1849 and the colony of British Columbia was founded in 1858
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Rupert’s Land 1670-1870- Exclusive commercial domain of the Hudson’s Bay Company After the decline of the fur trade, people began looking at the West differently Home to a large number of Aboriginal peoples and the Metis (mixed European and Aboriginal heritage) Pressure to annex Rupert’s land into the dominion before the US had a chance to do the same
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5 Colonies of BNA Province of Canada (Canada East and Canada West) New Brunswick Nova Scotia Prince Edward Island Newfoundland Each colony had a separate legislature and governor and reported to the British government with little interaction between the provinces.
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Differences Colony- A body of people living in a new territory but retaining ties with the parent state Territory- A geographic area belonging to or under the jurisdiction of a governmental authority Province- A territory governed as an administrative or political unit of a country (more power than territories) Dominion- Realms and territories under the sovereignty of the British crown (status maintained until 1931)
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