Timeline of Ontario history

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ontario came into being as a province of Canada in 1867. This article also covers the history of the territory Ontario now occupies.

For a complete list of the premiers of Ontario, see List of Ontario premiers.

Contents

[edit] 1762 and earlier

[edit] Province of Quebec, 1763 to 1790

At the same time large numbers of Iroquois loyal to Britain arrive from the United States and are settled on reserves west of Lake Ontario.
Kingston and Hamilton became important settlements as a result of the influx of Loyalists.
  • 1788–The British purchase 250,000 acres (1,000 km²) on which they begin the settlement of York, now Toronto

[edit] Upper Canada, 1791 to 1840

The population of Upper Canada is about 14,000 (Lower Canada's is about 165,000 or almost 12x as much).
  • 1793John Graves Simcoe is appointed as the first governor of Upper Canada. He encourages immigration from the United States, builds roads, and abolishes slavery, which was not an important economic institution in Upper Canada. Slavery is abolished in 1793 by the Act Against Slavery, with the intent that all slaves be released by 1810; this goal was probably reached well ahead of time.
  • 1794–The Jay Treaty is signed November 19 by which Britain agreed to vacate its Great Lakes forts on U.S. territory.
  • 1800–First European settlement on the site of present-day Ottawa
  • 1803–The North West Company moves its mid-continent headquarters from Grand Portage, Minnesota to Fort William, now part of Thunder Bay to be in Upper Canada.
  • 1803Thomas Talbot retires to his land grant in Western Ontario centred around present day St. Thomas and begins settling it. He eventually becomes responsible for settling 65,000 acres (260 km&sup2). His insistence on the provision and maintenance of good roads, and on reserving land along main roads to productive uses rather than to clergy reserves leads to this region becoming the most prosperous in the province.
  • 1804–First European settlement on the site of present-day Waterloo
  • 1807–First settlement, Ebytown, on the site of present-day Kitchener
  • 18121814–The War of 1812 with the United States. Upper Canada is the chief target of the Americans, since it is weakly defended and populated largely by American immigrants. However, division in the United States over the war, the incompetence of American military commanders, and swift and decisive action by the British commander, Sir Isaac Brock, keep Upper Canada part of British North America.
One of the legacies of the war in Upper Canada is strong feelings of anti-Americanism which persist to this day and form an important component of Canadian nationalism.

[edit] The united Province of Canada, 1841 to 1867

  • 1841–Upper and Lower Canada are united by the Act of Union (1840) to form the Province of Canada, as recommended by Durham. Upper Canada becomes known as Canada West and Lower Canada as Canada East.
  • 1841 - Population 455,000.
  • 1841–Sydenham dies in a riding accident and is replaced by Sir Charles Bagot. The movement for responsible government which had been growing under Sydenham is now so strong that Bagot realizes that to govern effectively he must admit French leaders to his executive council. Once admitted, Canada East Reformer Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine insists that Canada West Reformer Robert Baldwin also be admitted. Bagot admits Baldwin as well, creating a Reform bloc.
  • 1843–Bagot retires because of illness and is replaced by Sir Charles Metcalfe, who is determined to make no further concessions to the colonists. Metcalfe refuses a demand by Baldwin and Francis Hincks that the assembly approve official appointments. The ministry in the assembly resigns, and in the ensuing election a slim majority supporting Metcalfe is returned.
  • 1846–The Colonial Secretary, Lord Grey, rules that the British North American lieutenant governors must rule with the consent of the governed. Executive councils are to be selected from the majority in the assembly, and change when the confidence of the assembly changes. Britain is abandoning the mercantilist principles which have guided its imperial policy, and since colonial trade will no longer be restricted, local colonial politics need no longer be restricted.
  • 1846– Britain begins the repeal of preferential tariffs to the colonies, starting with the Corn Laws. These actions essentially spur on the beginning of later negotiated trade agreements with the United States.
  • 1847 - Canada is overwhelmed with 104,000 immigrants, many suffering from typhus who arrive that year alone escaping the Irish Potato Famine. 17,00 typhus deaths, including doctors, nurses, priests and others who aide the sick. They land at Grosse Ile, Canada East and Partridge Island, New Brunswick. Large numbers go on to settle in Canada West. Bytown (Ottawa), Kingston and Toronto receive more than other places, putting a strain on local resources while at the same drastically increasing and changing the composition of the population in the province.
  • 1848Lord Elgin, who had replaced Metcalfe in 1847, asks Baldwin and Lafontaine to form a government following their success in elections for the assembly. This is the Province of Canada's first responsible government.
  • 1849–Elgin signs the Rebellion Losses Bill, which provided compensation for losses suffered during the Lower Canada Rebellion, over the opposition of English conservatives (Tories) in Canada East, who were accustomed to having the governor support them. IN reaction, a Tory mob burns down the parliament building in Montreal but Elgin, supported by majorities in both Canada East and Canada West (which had already passed a similar bill), does not back down, and responsible government is established in fact.
  • 1849–The Canada East Tories then sponsor an Annexation Manifesto calling for the province of Canada to join the United States. They were motivated by the loss of trade threatened by the repeal of the British Corn Laws. However, the rest of the Canadian population opposes the manifesto, including the Tories of Canada West, who favour provincial union. Union with the United States ceases to be an important political issue.
  • 1850–The Robinson Treaties are negotiated by William Benjamin Robinson with the Ojibwe nation transferring to the Crown the eastern and northern shores of Lake Huron and the northern shore of Lake Superior.
  • 1851 - The population of Canada West is now 952,000 having more than doubled in 10 years, by then numerically superior to that of Canada East. Politicians of Canada West begin to argue for representation by population ('rep by pop').
  • 1854An agreement for reciprocal lowering of trade barriers is reached between British North America and the United States. The British North American provinces can now send their natural products (principally grain, timber, and fish) to the United States without tariff, while American fishermen are allowed into British North American fisheries. Lake Michigan and the St. Lawrence River are opened to ships of all signatories.
  • 1854–A law secularizing the clergy reserves is passed; the Anglican and Presbyterian churches retain their endowments.
  • 1855–The American canal at Sault Ste. Marie on the St. Marys River (Michigan-Ontario) opened in May which opened Lake Superior to American and Canadian navigation, and made access to the Red River colony in Manitoba easier.
  • 1855–The Great Western Railway links Windsor with Hamilton and Toronto.
  • 1856–The Grand Trunk Railway opens between Sarnia and Montreal greatly enhancing the flow of goods and people across Southern Ontario. Towns along its route swell in importance and population.
  • 1858–Canada has become increasingly sectional, with Canada West electing Clear Grit Liberals and Canada East electing Conservatives. A coalition government led by John A. Macdonald and Antoine-Aimé Dorion falls in two days. In the assembly Alexander Galt proposes a federal union of the British North American colonies as a solution to the problem.
  • 1858– The provisional judicial districts of Algoma and Nipissing are created, the first in Northern Ontario.
  • 1859–The Clear Grit Liberals under George Brown propose specific arrangements for a federal union of the two Canadas.
  • 1861- Population is 1,396,000.
  • 1864–A committee proposed by George Brown to inquire into solutions to the parliamentary deadlock between the Canadas recommends a federal union of the British North American colonies, a solution which is welcomed by all sides. A government of Liberals and Conservatives, the Great Coalition, is formed to pursue this goal. Representatives of the coalition attend the Charlottetown Conference called to discuss union of the maritime colonies and persuade the representatives to endorse the Canadian plan for a broader federal union. A conference in Quebec City draws up the Quebec Resolutions, a plan for this union.
  • 1866–The Westminster Conference endorses the Quebec Resolutions with minor changes.
  • 1866- After a minor skirmish on the Niagara Peninsulia at Ridgeway, the Fenians withdraw back the United States. This incident only hastens the publics desire for full fledged nationhood (see Fenian raids.

[edit] Canada, Dominion of the British Empire, 1867 to 1930

Canada 1867 and after. The Province of Ontario 1867 and after

[edit] Canada, Sovereign Dominion, 1931 to 1982

[edit] Independent Canada, 1982 and after

  • 1982Canada Act 1982, an Act of Parliament passed by the British Parliament that severed remaining constitutional and legislative ties between the United Kingdom and Canada.
  • 1985 – The Progressive Conservative government of Frank Miller falls, ending 42 years of the "Big Blue Machine". David Peterson's Liberals gain power to be lost in 1989 to the NDP.
  • 1986 - Brewer's Retail strike cripples the hospitality industry throughout the summer
  • 1988 - Toronto hosts the 14th G7 conference
  • 1989 - Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement goes into effect
  • 1990-1992 - A major recession hits Ontario. Many companies began to massively downsize and threaten to leave Canada all together. New advancements in manufacturing such as automation and globalization further destabalize the Province, and lead to a decade of instability
  • 1993–Due to major budget shortfalls, the government of Bob Rae introduces its so-called social contract (nicknamed Rae Days) which re-opens public-sector collective agreements with the intent of rolling back wages; his New Democratic Party's traditional labour support is greatly weakened.
  • 1994 - NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) comes into full effect.
  • 1994 - The Ontario budget deficit reaches $17 billion (CAD)
  • 1995 - The right-wing Progressive Conservative Party wins a large majority running on the concept of the Common Sense Revolution
  • 1995 - Native protester Dudley George killed by OPP officers at Ipperwash.
  • 1995 - Anti-poverty organization Ontario Coalition Against Poverty and others in the social movements begin public protests against the Harris government. December 11, 1995, the Ontario Federation of Labour calls the first of what would be eleven "Days of Action"
  • 1997 - The province stops funding of GO Transit, downloading the costs onto local municipalities.
  • 1997 - The province passes the unpopular Bill 103 (the 'Mega City' bill) that calls for the dissolution of Metro Toronto and merging of 6 cities within it to create the new City of Toronto.
  • 1998 – The government of Mike Harris begins privatizing the Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario.
  • 1999 - Highway 407 is sold to a private company (built in 1997)
  • 2000 – Seven people die after contamination of Walkerton's water supply.
  • 2003 - The Magna Budget Premier Ernie Eves for the first time in British Parliamentary history presents the Provincial budget outside parliament at a privately owned company (Magna International - which employed former Premier Mike Harris)
  • 2003 - Outbreak of SARS in Toronto; 44 die and tourist revenue drops by half. The World Health Organization advises against all but essential travel to the city.
  • 2003 – Two decisions of the Ontario Court of Appeal legalize same-sex marriage in Ontario.
  • 2003 - The Liberal party returns to power under the leadership of Dalton McGuinty.
  • 2007 - The Liberal party remains in power and keeps control of its majority government.
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