What is Ontario's history?

Link to this answer

CloseClose

Link to this answer

Share this credible answer with others. Simply paste this code into your blog or Web page:

<a href="http://qanda.encyclopedia.com/question/ontario-history-213294.html" >What is Ontario's history?</a>
E-mail this answer Link to this answer

Before the arrival of Europeans the Ontario region was inhabited by several Algonquian (Ojibwa, Cree, and Algonquin) and Iroquoian (Iroquois, Huron, Petun, Neutral, Erie, and Susquehannock) tribes. Étienne Brulé explored southern Ontario in 1610-12. Henry Hudson sailed into Hudson Bay in 1611 and claimed the region for England. A few years later Samuel de Champlain reached (1615) the eastern shores of Lake Huron, and French explorers, missionaries, and trappers had established posts at several points. However, settlement was long hindered by the presence of the Iroquois. In the late 17th cent. the British established trading posts in the Hudson Bay area, and the Anglo-French struggle for control of Ontario began. The conflict was resolved by the Treaty of Paris of 1763, which gave Great Britain all of France's mainland North American territory. In 1774 the British merged Ontario with Quebec , which had a predominantly French culture. When many pro-British Loyalists migrated to Ontario after the American Revolution, the desire for institutions and a government separate from those of Quebec grew. The Constitutional Act of 1791 split Quebec into Lower Canada (present-day Quebec) and Upper Canada (present-day Ontario), with the Ottawa River as the dividing line. During the War of 1812, Americans raided Upper Canada and burned Toronto (1813). After the war many English, Scottish, and Irish settlers came to the colony. Conflict developed between the conservative, aristocratic governing group (known as the Family Compact ) and the reformers and radicals led by William Lyon Mackenzie . The radicals staged an armed uprising in 1837 but were easily suppressed. However, the rebellion occurred at the same time as a revolt in Lower Canada, and the British government dispatched Lord Durham (see Durham, John George Lambton, 1st earl of ) to study the situation in the North American colonies. He recommended the reunion of the two colonies (to place the French of Quebec in a minority) and the granting of self-government. Accordingly, Upper and Lower Canada were joined in 1841 and became known, respectively, as Canada West and Canada East. Parliamentary self-government was not granted until 1849. However, conflict between French and English made the united province unworkable, and in 1867, when the confederation of Canada was formed, Ontario and Quebec became separate provinces. With the construction of the transcontinental railroad in the 1880s, settlement increased in western Canada, and Ontario's commerce and industry flourished. The exploitation of minerals in the Canadian Shield region began in the early 20th cent. From the 1960s, many businesses that left Quebec because of agitation against anglophone economic domination there relocated around Toronto, shifting the balance of Canadian business and financial power decisively to Ontario.

Answer verified with
Get more facts and information about Ontario (province) . Or, view the full encyclopedia entry from The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.

Similar questions: What is the history of Ontario? What happened in Ontario? [ Hide these questions ]

Related research articles

About Ontario history and the neglected English. Magazine article from: The Loyalist Gazette In Ontario History, Vol. LXXXVIII No. 1 (March 1966) Journal of the Ontario Historical Society, David T. Moorman provided...stories have already been told. In Upper Canadian history this is not the case." (p.67) While deliberating...
Multicultural Ontario.(cultural history of Ontario) Magazine article from: Faces: People, Places, and Cultures ...toward eastern and northern Ontario to settle in regions such as...and other shops, reveals the history and culture of the French in...later followed the French to Ontario. American colonists loyal...immigrants moved to southern Ontario. Other northern, central...
First Presbyterian Church, Chatham, Ontario: A History to Commemorate the New... Magazine article from: Presbyterian Record ...First Presbyterian Church, Chatham, Ontario: A History to Commemorate the New Millennium...This wonderful hardback book of the history of First Church has more than 200 glossy...own. This is one of the finest church histories I have had the pleasure of reading...
A Sense of Their Duty: Middle-Class Formation in Victorian Ontario... Magazine article from: American Review of Canadian Studies ...Class Formation in Victorian Ontario Towns. Montreal: McGill...significant presence in Canadian history, has been poorly understood...scholarship by scrutinizing two Ontario communities during the late...and Goderich, two dissimilar Ontario communities, is compelling...
FROM THE EDITOR.(Cineplex theater in Toronto, Ontario: history)(Brief Article) Magazine article from: Take One Located near the Yonge and Dundas subway station, right in the heart of downtown Toronto, the first Cineplex theatre complex opened April 19, 1979. It closed March 12, 2001, just 23 days shy of its 22nd anniversary. It revolutionized motion-picture exhibition in North America and around the world,
See all results at HighBeam

HighBeam gives you access to newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles plus press releases, facts, information, and biographies from thousands of sources.