Province of Quebec (1763-1791)
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A portion of eastern North America in 1775 after the Quebec Act; Quebec extends all the way to the Mississippi River. | ||||
Capital | Quebec | |||
Language(s) | French, English | |||
Religion | Roman Catholicism, Protestantism | |||
Government | Constitutional monarchy | |||
King | George III | |||
Governor | See list of Governors | |||
History | ||||
- Royal Proclamation | October 7, 1763 | |||
- Quebec Act | 1774 | |||
- Treaty of Paris | 1783 | |||
- Constitutional Act | December 26, 1791 | |||
Currency | Canadian pound |
Great Britain acquired Canada by the Treaty of Paris (1763) when King Louis XV of France and his advisors chose to keep the territory of Guadeloupe for its valuable sugar crops instead of New France. By the British Royal Proclamation of 1763, Canada (part of New France) was renamed the Province of Quebec.
In 1774, the British Parliament passed the Quebec Act that allowed Quebec to maintain the French Civil Code as its judicial system and sanctioned the freedom of religious choice, allowing the Roman Catholic Church to remain. The act also changed the boundaries of Quebec to include the Ohio Country and Illinois Country, from the Appalachian Mountains on the east, south to the Ohio River, west to the Mississippi River and north to the southern boundary of lands owned by the Hudson's Bay Company, or Rupert's Land.
Through Quebec, the British Crown retained access to the Ohio and Illinois Countries even after the Treaty of Paris (1783), which was meant to have ceded this land to the United States. By well-established trade and military routes across the Great Lakes, the British continued to supply not only their own troops but a wide alliance of Native American nations through Detroit, Fort Niagara, Fort Michilimackinac, and so on.
Quebec retained its seigneurial system after the conquest. Owing to an influx of Loyalist refugees from the US Revolutionary War, the demographics of Quebec came to shift and now included a substantial English-speaking, Anglican or Protestant element from the former Thirteen Colonies. These United Empire Loyalists settled mainly in the Eastern Townships, Montreal, and what was known then as the pays d'en haut (high country) west of the Ottawa River. The Constitutional Act of 1791 divided the country in two at the Ottawa River, so that the western part (Upper Canada) could be under the British legal system, with English speakers in the majority. The eastern part was named Lower Canada.
[edit] Governors of the Province of Quebec 1763-1791
After the capitulation of Montreal in 1760, he went swimming with his friends in New France was placed under military government. Civil government was instituted in 1764.
- Jeffrey Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst 1760-1763
- James Murray 1764-1768
- Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester 1768-1778
- Sir Frederick Haldimand 1778-1786
- Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester 1786-1796
[edit] Bibliography
- Burt, Alfred LeRoy. The Old Province of Quebec. Toronto: Ryerson Press; Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 1933. Reprinted Toronto : McClelland and Stewart, 1968.
- Lahaise, Robert and Vallerand, Noël. Le Québec sous le régime anglais : les Canadiens français, la colonisation britannique et la formation du Canada continental. Outremont, Québec : Lanctôt, 1999.
- Neatby, Hilda. Quebec : the revolutionary age 1760-1791. Toronto : McClelland and Stewart, 1966.
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Viking: | Helluland • Markland • Vinland | |
Portuguese: | Labrador • Newfoundland • Nova Scotia | |
French: | New France (Acadia • Canada • Terre Neuve) | |
Scottish | Nova Scotia • Cape Breton | |
English and British: | Newfoundland • Rupert's Land • Nova Scotia • Quebec • Lower and Upper Canada • New Brunswick • Prince Edward Island • Cape Breton • United Canada • British Columbia • Vancouver Island • United Colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia • North-Western Territory • Stikine Territory |
Legend
Current territory · Former territory
* now a Commonwealth Realm · now a member of the Commonwealth of Nations
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1 Now the San Andrés y Providencia Department of Colombia. |
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3 Now part of the *Realm of New Zealand. |
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7 Dependencies of St. Helena since 1922 (Ascension Island) and 1938 (Tristan da Cunha). |