The Structure of Canadian History |
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Page 40
... colony began to lose its will to persist . - Discouragement did not arise from the numerical superiority of the Indians . Of the nearly 3000 total population in the colony in 1660 at least 1000 were able - bodied men who had they still ...
... colony began to lose its will to persist . - Discouragement did not arise from the numerical superiority of the Indians . Of the nearly 3000 total population in the colony in 1660 at least 1000 were able - bodied men who had they still ...
Page 41
... colony itself . The apparent inertia evident in military matters extended to the affairs of the colony more generally as well . A council consisting of the governors of each of the three areas of most concentrated settlement ( Quebec ...
... colony itself . The apparent inertia evident in military matters extended to the affairs of the colony more generally as well . A council consisting of the governors of each of the three areas of most concentrated settlement ( Quebec ...
Page 69
... colony by colony and working alliances with the Indian people were almost nonexistent . Consequently , a better accounting of numbers on the two sides would be the population of any one British colony against the whole of New France ...
... colony by colony and working alliances with the Indian people were almost nonexistent . Consequently , a better accounting of numbers on the two sides would be the population of any one British colony against the whole of New France ...
Contents
Aboriginal People and the Potential for Empire | 17 |
Traders Missionaries and Aboriginal People 1580 | 28 |
Imperial Rescue 16611672 | 39 |
Copyright | |
28 other sections not shown
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Aboriginal Alberta amendment American Arthur Meighen Assembly Atlantic Borden Britain British Columbia British North America Brunswick Canada West Canadian Centenary Series chapter colonists colony Confederation Conservative continued Council defeat defence demand Diefenbaker Dominion economic election electorate export farmers federal force France French fur trade Government of Canada Governor House of Commons immigrants imperial independence Indian industrial issue labour Lake land Laurier leaders Legislative legislature Liberal Lower Canada Macdonald Mackenzie King majority Manitoba Maritime Meighen ment Métis million Montreal Newfoundland North America Act Nova Scotia number of members Office Ontario Ottawa Parliament of Canada party percent persons political population Prairies premiers Prime Minister Prince Edward Island promised proposed province Quebec railway reform repealed revenue River Saskatchewan Senate settlement status tariff territory timber tion Tories Toronto Trudeau union United Upper Canada vote voters West Winnipeg workers Yukon