When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization of the Province. The map was redrawn to impose English county names on the French countryside, schemes for universal education were drafted to teach English to francophone youth, the new-burgeoning commerce was conducted in association with English firms employing English terminology and in accordance with accepted English practices. A Legislative Assembly was promised and Canada was to become as English as New England: even more so, for the Church of England was to be established as the National Church as in England, Wales and Ireland. But within a short while, the Colonial Administration began to have second thoughts. It quickly found itself...
Although Canada was a single province (1763-1791), subsequently divided into Upper and Lower Canada,...
The eighteen fifties were years of progress in Canadian education. Concrete steps were taken in each...
Until 1837, Upper Canada had no Court of Chancery. This omission forced stop-gap measures which in t...
When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization o...
This paper examines information available to Francophone persons regarding their rights as British s...
In 1763 the French possessions in Canada were surrendered to Great Britain, which thereafter; ruled ...
The underlying problem undertaken in this study was to find out how English-speaking culture in Queb...
Many people believe that the English spoken in Canada is a direct descendant of British English, whi...
Travel accounts are an important source of information about eastern Canada during the period 1763-1...
By the terms of the British North America Act of 1867 each of the Provinces of Canada was given the ...
PhDLower Canada occupied a strategic position in Britain's policies for the defence, trade and sett...
This book is the first of two volumes devoted to the history of law in Canada. This volume begins at...
At their founding, the nine predominantly anglophone provinces of Canada adopted the English legal s...
In 1870 Canada completed the acquisition of Rupert's Land from the Hudson's Bay Company, and Manitob...
Movements for political reform were a world-wide phenomenon in the 1820’s. On both sides of the Atla...
Although Canada was a single province (1763-1791), subsequently divided into Upper and Lower Canada,...
The eighteen fifties were years of progress in Canadian education. Concrete steps were taken in each...
Until 1837, Upper Canada had no Court of Chancery. This omission forced stop-gap measures which in t...
When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization o...
This paper examines information available to Francophone persons regarding their rights as British s...
In 1763 the French possessions in Canada were surrendered to Great Britain, which thereafter; ruled ...
The underlying problem undertaken in this study was to find out how English-speaking culture in Queb...
Many people believe that the English spoken in Canada is a direct descendant of British English, whi...
Travel accounts are an important source of information about eastern Canada during the period 1763-1...
By the terms of the British North America Act of 1867 each of the Provinces of Canada was given the ...
PhDLower Canada occupied a strategic position in Britain's policies for the defence, trade and sett...
This book is the first of two volumes devoted to the history of law in Canada. This volume begins at...
At their founding, the nine predominantly anglophone provinces of Canada adopted the English legal s...
In 1870 Canada completed the acquisition of Rupert's Land from the Hudson's Bay Company, and Manitob...
Movements for political reform were a world-wide phenomenon in the 1820’s. On both sides of the Atla...
Although Canada was a single province (1763-1791), subsequently divided into Upper and Lower Canada,...
The eighteen fifties were years of progress in Canadian education. Concrete steps were taken in each...
Until 1837, Upper Canada had no Court of Chancery. This omission forced stop-gap measures which in t...