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Canada's initial
inhabitants originated in Asia; as they
searched for food, people from that continent
crossed the Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia.
Over an indefinite period of time, a
wide variety of unique Indian cultures and nations developed and
prospered
across most of North America, including all
of Canada.
Convincing
evidence exists that near
the end of the 11th century, Leif Ericson, a seafaring Vikings from Scandinavia, traversed the
frigid waters of the North Atlantic Ocean and
established a small settlement named Vinland along the coast of Newfoundland;
it was
eventually abandoned.
Giovanni
Caboto, an Italian
navigator and explorer, known in English as John Cabot, landed along
the
northeastern shore
of Canada
in 1497, and immediately claimed the land for
his patron, King Henry VII of England.
The Cabot discovery substantiated England's
claim to a significant slice of North
America.
News of this
bountiful land soon
spread across Europe, and in the
years that followed European fishing vessels
regularly harvested the coastal waters. In 1524, not to be outdone by England, the King of
France commissioned
Giovanni da Verrazano to explore this New
World.
The Italian
explorer's discoveries
along the eastern coastline of North America gave France
its own claim to parts of
this land. A decade later the King dispatched Jacques Cartier on
another
mission of discovery. Cartier and crew would make three trips into the Gulf of St. Lawrence
area. 
By the turn of the century, the
French were heavily involved in the lucrative fur trading business in Canada.
On one
of those fur trapping missions in 1605, the French geographer and
explorer,
Samuel de Champlain, established France's
first settlement in western Nova Scotia.
Port Royal would later be abandoned, but in
1608, he founded a permanent colony at Quebec,
a colony that would later become the capital of New France.
New France continued to
grow, albeit slowly, and Champlain was appointed governor in 1633.
Trois-Rivieres was founded in 1634, and Montreal,
a missionary outpost in 1642 would eventually grow to become Canada's
largest city.
For the indigenous Indians, contact
with these early Europeans proved disastrous, as explorers and traders
unintentionally brought diseases, such as smallpox with them. Thousands
would
get sick and die, and relationships between Indians and Europeans were
strained, at best.
The French, seemingly out of
necessity, befriended several Indian nations, including the Algonquin
and
Huron. On the other hand, the Iroquois detested the French, and using
weapons
provided them by the British, waged relentless war on their sworn
enemies,
In 1666, a detailed census of New France indicated a
small population of just over 3,000. In contrast, the English were
still
controlling parts of Canada's
Maritime Provinces,
as well as their
heavily-populated colonies on the Atlantic seaboard, colonies that
would later
form the heart of a new nation called America.
Also, England's
Hudson Bay Company, founded in 1670,
would later become North America's
most
significant fur trader.
Conflict between these two nations
was inevitable, and in the late 17th century the French (New France)
began to
fight the British (New England)
for control of
this valuable real estate. The French utilized their local Indians
friends as
allies, and those experienced warriors attacked numerous English
settlements in
the Colonies; countless houses were burned and many settlers were
kidnapped or
killed.
In 1713, the Treaty of Utrecht
restored a certain level of peace between France
and the forces of England.
However, as part of that agreement, France
was forced to cede Newfoundland,
Hudson Bay,
and Nova Scotia to
England.
Regardless, the French continued to
build forts across their massive territory for protection from Indians,
and
from the expanding influence of Britain
in the Americas.
By the middle of the 18th century, over 70,000 people inhabited New
France, but
Britain's
colonies along the Atlantic Ocean
coastline now exceeded one million.
During the Seven Years' War
(1756–1763), a war involving all of the major European powers of the
day, France
was the
biggest loser. Its position as a major colonial power in the Americas ended, as it
lost much of its long-held
possessions on the North America
continent to
the British.
That war verdict aside, eastern Canada
was
still culturally and politically French, and in the on-going effort to
administer and control their new French-speaking territory, the British
faced
many problems, especially from Indians.
In one daring and unexpected move,
rebels from within Britain's
original colonies developed a
plan to invade and capture all the Canada
colony; Montreal was quickly taken, but the fort at Quebec held firm in
an inspirational battle that changed the
future of Canada forever. 
After the American Revolutionary War
ended in 1783, a large group of loyalists to the British Crown (Tories)
immigrated to Canada
from the American colonies.
In 1791, with this large
English-speaking aggregation now living in French-speaking Canada,
the
British Parliament made its move. In a Constitutional Act, it split the
Province
of Quebec
into Upper and Lower
Canada; each to have
its own representative government and its own
individual lanquage.
Throughout the 18th century, the
Hudson Bay Company gave traders the opportunity to explore uncharted
lands in
northern and western Canada.
One of those fur traders, Samuel Hearne, discovered Great Slave Lake and became the
first non-Indian to reach the Arctic
Ocean over land. 
In 1783, a prominent group of Montreal
merchants began the North West Fur Trading
Company, in direct competition with England's
Hudson Bay Company.
Alexander Mackenzie, one of their traders, and a Scottish-Canadian
explorer,
followed his now namesake river from its
source to the Arctic Ocean,
He later crossed the Rocky Mountains, finding a
route to the Pacific Ocean. He was
knighted for his efforts in 1802.
The
Canada Description
continues here!
Permission
recieved for www.joeji.com to use article "Canada a Brief
Description", pictures and use of links from Mr.J Moen,
Managing
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A
Brief Description (Part
Two)
In
the early 19th century tensions peaked between America
and the British Empire
over maritime power
abuses, and the War of 1812 was the result.
Upper Canada
and Lower Canada
were quickly embroiled in that conflict as America
launched invasions against
British forces on the Canadian frontier.
In the end there were no real land
gains or losses on either side, but some historians believe that the
War of
1812 shifted American migration desires and interests from Canada, west into the Great Lakes
area.
After the war, waves of immigrants
from the British Isles
began to settle in this
new frontier. By mid-century, that great migration had brought nearly
750,000
newcomers into eastern Canada.
In 1837, rebellions against British
rule took place in both Upper and Lower
Canada.
A few local skirmishes in Upper
Canada were
outdone by more serious uprisings in Lower
Canada.
A declaration of independence was read in Napierville, but the British
finally
squelched, at least temporarily, the growing desire for sovereignty.
The British Parliament subsequently
acted, and the Act of Union (1840) essentially merged both Upper and
Lower
Canada into a single centralized governmental entity, appropriately
named - the
Province
of Canada.
It consisted of Canada East, the
eastern portion of the modern-day Province
of Quebec
(a French-speaking region),
and Canada West, the southern portion of the modern-day Province
of Ontario,
(a mainly English-speaking region).
That new government was first seated
in Kingston.
In
1845 it was moved to Montreal,
then between Toronto
and Quebec, and
finally to Ottawa
in 1865.
It was a critical time in the
constitutional history of Canada,
as self-government procedures were in place, but that did not prevent
disputes
between French and English factions in the legislative assembly.
Deadlocks were
common, and proved to be one of the major reasons behind the Canadian
Confederation in 1867.
On July 1, 1867, after discussions
in London by all
parties concerned, the British
Parliament enabled the British North America Act, an act which gathered
the Province
of Canada,
and the maritime colonies of New
Brunswick and
Nova
Scotia
into a single dominion. The term dominion was chosen to indicate Canada's status as a
self-governing entity of
the British Empire.
The annual celebration of the
British North America Act is now Canada's
National Day, or Canada
Day, a federal statutory holiday celebrating the anniversary of the
event.
As the Canadian Pacific Railway
helped grow this new Dominion in all directions, its territory quickly
expanded; Manitoba
joined the Dominion in
1870, British Columbia
in 1871, and Prince
Edward Island in
1873. The gold rush of 1897 brought thousands of prospectors into the
undeveloped western prairie lands, and in 1905, Saskatchewan
and Alberta
were admitted as provinces.
Canada's
best participated
admirably in World War I (1914-1918). Canadian Corps repeatedly
spearheaded
Allied attacks against the Germans, thus earning their battle scars and
stripes, and the respect of their peers.
Following World
War I, Canada
experienced record expansion in business, both large and small.
Technical
advances and industrial production were moving off the chart.
Unfortunately, a
turndown was lurking.
The 1926 Imperial Conference, held
in London, brought
together the Prime Ministers
of the Dominions of the British
Empire. During
that conference the Balfour Declaration established the principle that
the
Dominions are all equal in status, and not subordinate to the United Kingdom.
That resolution was confirmed by the British Parliament, and Canada's
sovereignty was the result.
The Great Depression of the 1930's
brought an economic meltdown to many countries. In its wake it
devastated Canada,
especially in the provinces of Alberta,
British Columbia,
Manitoba and Saskatchewan.
After Britain
declared war on Germany
in
1939, Canada
followed suit and World War II began. Canadian troops were involved in
many
war-changing battles including the Battle of Normandy. In the end, the
Allies
defeated Germany
and Canada
paid a
price. Nearly 50,000 Canadians gave their lives, with thousands
wounded.
A positive by-product of World War
II was that it ended any lingering effects of the Great Depression in Canada.
To
support the needs of the war, workers produced raw materials and
manufactured
goods in record quantities. Canada
was again on an economic roll, and it would never look back. 
After decades of bitter debate over
its border with Quebec,
Newfoundland
joined Canada
as a province
in 1949; the massive St. Lawrence Seaway opened in 1959, and on
February 15,
1965, Canada
proudly flew its first official national banner, a red and white
maple-leaf
flag.
The British North America Act marked
its 100th anniversary on July 1, 1967, and fifteen years later, in
1982, it was
replaced by Canada's
new constitution. Queen Elizabeth traveled to Ottawa
and proclaimed the document as official, and constitutional powers were
transferred from Great
Britain
to Canada.
With pride in their French heritage,
Quebec began
a movement in the 1960's to
separate itself from Canada,
and establish a French-speaking nation. The first vote on same failed,
but in
1995, the government of Quebec
tried a sovereignty vote again. It was rejected by a slim margin of
less than
1%. In 1997, the Canadian Supreme Court ruled unilateral secession by a
province to be unconstitutional, but that separatism fever still burns.
On May 4, 1992, voters in the Northwest Territories
authorized the partition of their huge area into two separate
territories, one to
become a self-governing homeland for Inuit peoples, or Eskimos. That
new
territory was called Nunavut,
meaning Our Land.
Canada
is a land of vast distances
and rich natural beauty and resources. As an affluent, high-tech
industrial
society in the trillion-dollar class, Canada
resembles the United States
in its market-oriented economic system, pattern of production, and
affluent
living standards.
Canada
faces the political
challenges of meeting public demands for quality improvements in health
care
and education services. Canada
also aims to develop its diverse energy resources while maintaining its
long-held
commitments to the environment.
Permission recieved for www.joeji.com to use article "Canada
a
Brief Description", pictures and use of links from Mr.J Moen,
Managing director.
Contact
Us | Privacy
Statement
All maps, graphics, flags, photographs and original descriptions
created by
Graphic Maps, a d/b/a of the Woolwine-Moen Group, unless otherwise
noted and/or
directly linked to the source, and use of same for any application
whatsoever
requires written permission.
We make no copyright claim on any
statistical data on this page, nor on any non-original graphics, and/or
pictures not produced by us. Certain statistical data is gathered from
public
domain reference materials.
Every effort is made to be as
accurate as possible when disseminating information on any worldwide
destination. We are not responsible for unintentional data entry errors
or
omissions. If you would like to submit an addition, change or
correction, or
suggest a new link, please forward it to our map department
and we will give it
our immediate attention.
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