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  • I’ve talked before about why New Zealand didn’t become a part of Australia despite

  • the two nations sharing a history, and I think few nations could claim to be as close as

  • our two ANZAC cousins. But there are two other Nations that come to mind, who were once part

  • of the British Empire, who share a border, and also didn’t integrate on their independence.

  • These are of cause the United States of America and Canada. So to answer why Canada is not

  • part of the United States, I’ve invited Tristan, a Canadian, a historian, and a YouTuber

  • from the channel Step Back History to tell us the story

  • Hey folks,

  • Why Canada isn’t part of America is actually an interesting tale that was on the fence

  • until as recently as the late 19th century.

  • However, the story must begin somewhere, and first we must set the stage. In the 1750s,

  • only 20-some years before the American revolution, what would become canada was split between

  • the British Hudson’s Bay company, Newfoundland, Labrador, Nova Scotia, and the Majority being

  • part of New France.

  • What did America look like? Well as we know, they were the 13 colonies, spanning from Maine

  • down to the east coast to the border with New Spain in Florida. Most of the population

  • was between Massachusetts and Virginia. There was actually quite a bit of uncolonized lands

  • separating these colonists from the English speakers hiding up in what would become Canada,

  • meaning there was less of a shared identity between them.

  • In 1760, after the famous Seven Years War, or to the American’s the French Indian War,

  • much of that French territory that would become Canada was handed over to the British. Some

  • of the French colonial elite left, but most were actually content to work under British

  • rule as long as they could speak French, and stay Catholic. Though if you are Quebecois,

  • you actually would see this as the beginning of Anglo rule over the French Canadians.

  • It's still quite an issue here.

  • The British made an agreement with the French Canadians in 1774 called the Quebec act. This

  • allowed: civil code and common law to exist side by side; it entrenched the semi-feudal

  • French seigneurial system; and it legalized the Catholic tithe to Catholics in Quebec.

  • Importantly for this story, however, is that a lot of land previously allocated to Native

  • Americans, was then shifted to Quebec in an effort to streamline moving furs out of the

  • St. Lawrence river. The American colonists, who long desired to expand themselves into

  • this territory, got pretty mad about it. If you know a bit of the story of the American

  • Revolution, the Quebec act is one of the quoteInsufferable Actsthat in part triggered

  • the American Revolution.

  • What this means though, is that Quebec, the largest colony in modern Canada at the time,

  • was Catholic, and largely did not speak English. After the Seven Years War, many Americans

  • even considered them rivals, or enemies, and not part of this growing American identity.

  • That being said during the American War of Independence, and before he defected to the

  • British, Benedict Arnold did try to take Quebec. The American’s took Montreal, and tried

  • to siege Quebec City. Then spring came and they gave up on the endeavour. The Americans

  • allied with France during the war, but neither ally wanted to see the other take Quebec,

  • so the issue was largely dropped.

  • The war effort to put down the revolution, actually brought a lot of money into Canada,

  • and the tariff protections the New Englanders gave up to fight the war, were quite good

  • for the Canadian economy as well. Business, especially the fur business, was booming with

  • the 13 colonies in rebellion. They saw that their economic future relied on protection,

  • and integration into the British mercantile empire, and so felt no desire to leave it.

  • Lastly I must mention that Canada then saw an influx of refugees after the American Revolution.

  • These refugees were mostly the loyalists who did not want to stay in the United States.

  • You can imagine they brought a lot of British patriotism with them.

  • Canada then soon grew into its own colony, with its own identity. They banned slavery

  • pretty early on, and had a lot of friction with the US over their position as the end

  • of the underground railroad. They quickly established distinct, and different identities.

  • Many Canadians today speculate that in many ways our culture’s defined

  • by how not-America we can be.

  • One quick footnote. The US did try to conquer Canada once. Amongst a series of other issues,

  • the British Empire found itself rather distracted by the war with Napoleon and the US smelled

  • opportunity. They used a rhetoric of manifest destiny, claiming that Canada was theirs by

  • right. It didn’t help that the British were flat out capturing American soldiers into the

  • royal navy and secretly giving weapons to Native American groups resisting US expansion.

  • In 1812, the US invaded Canada, and after a number of attempts was pushed back by Canadian

  • militias, and blockaded by British fleets. It resulted in a Canadian deployment pushing

  • all the way down to Washington DC. The peace treaty ended the idea of Canada being Americans

  • in waiting basically for the last 200 plus years.

  • The being said, I do not think that two countries are as close as Canada and the United States.

  • We maintain the world's largest undefended border, are each other’s largest trading

  • partners, and have a pretty long history of peace and prosperity between us. Also we gave

  • the US most of its best musicians and comedians. Youre welcome.

  • Thanks Tristan, Step Back History is one of my favourite new channel, so if you haven’t

  • checked it out yet, youll find a link in all the usual places.

  • It seems that from the moment that Colobus landed in the Caribbean in 1492 theories popped

  • up claiming that he was the last of the shownot the first. It seems that many a historian,

  • folkloreist, and arachnologist have theorised, and in at least one case confirmed these claims.

I’ve talked before about why New Zealand didn’t become a part of Australia despite

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為什麼加拿大不是美國的一部分? (Why is Canada not part of the United States?)

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    He Jiun Tseng 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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