Canadian History For Dummies





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A Timeline of Important Events in Canadian History


Canadian history is a lot of fun. There are heroes and villains, tragedies and triumphs, great battles and sudden betrayals, loyal refugees and long struggles for social justice. The interpretation of Canadian history may vary – radically, at times – but there are still core events from our past that every Canadian should know. Brush up on your Canadian history with the following timeline of important events.



































































































































































30,000–10,000 BCPrehistoric hunters cross over into Canada from Asia
circa 1000 ADLeif Ericsson leads a Viking expedition to the New World
1451The Iroquois Confederacy is formed
1497John Cabot reaches Newfoundland (or perhaps Cape Breton)
1534Jacques Cartier first explores the St. Lawrence region
1608Samuel de Champlain establishes a French colony at
Québec City
1670Hudson’s Bay Company is formed
1755Expulsion of the Acadians
1759Battle of the Plains of Abraham: Québec City is
captured
1763New France is formally ceded to Britain; Pontiac Rebellion
erupts
1783Loyalist refugees begin arriving after the American
Revolution
1812–14War of 1812: U.S. invades Canada
1837–38Rebellions against British rule in Upper and Lower Canada
1848Responsible government is won, first in Nova Scotia, then in
Canada
1867Confederation (first four provinces: Québec, Ontario,
N.S., and N.B.)
1870Red River Resistance; province of Manitoba is created
1871, 1873B.C. and P.E.I. join Canada
1885North-West Rebellion; the Canadian Pacific Railway is
completed
1905The provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan are created
1914–18World War I
1916Women win the vote in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta
1919The Winnipeg General Strike
1929–39The Great Depression
1939–45World War II
1949Newfoundland joins Canada
1950–53Korean War
1959St. Lawrence Seaway (major transportation route) officially
opens
1960Québec’s Quiet Revolution begins; Native Canadians
given the vote
1967Canada’s 100th birthday; Expo 67 World’s Fair in
Montréal
1970October Crisis: political kidnappings, Ottawa suspends civil
rights
1980Québec referendum on “sovereignty-association”
defeated 60% to 40%
1982Constitution comes home — with a Charter of Rights and
Freedoms
1987–90Meech Lake Accord is put forward — and collapses
1992Charlottetown Accord is rejected by a national referendum
1995Québec referendum on sovereignty is narrowly
defeated
1999The new Arctic territory of Nunavut is created
2000Clarity Bill outlines the terms of Québec
separation
2003Canada says “no” to joining the war in Iraq
2005Former PM Jean Chrétien and sitting PM Paul Martin
testify at the Gomery Inquiry
2010Canada sets record for gold medals at the Vancouver Winter
Olympic Games




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The Prime Ministers of Canada


Some of the most notable Canadian prime ministers were John A. Macdonald, Robert Borden, William Lyon Mackenzie King, Lester “Mike” Pearson, Pierre Trudeau, and Brian Mulroney. But there were many others. From John A to Stephen Harper, here’s a complete list of Canada’s 22 Prime Ministers and the political parties that they led.






1867–73,
















































































































1878–91Sir John A MacdonaldConservative
1873–78Alexander MackenzieLiberal
1891–92Sir John AbbottConservative
1892–94Sir John ThompsonConservative
1894–96Sir Mackenzie BowellConservative
1896Sir Charles TupperConservative
1896–1911Sir Wilfrid LaurierLiberal
1911–20Sir Robert BordenConservative/Union
1920–21, 1926Arthur MeighenConservative
1921–26,

1926–30,

1935–48
William Lyon Mackenzie KingLiberal
1930–35R.B. (Richard Bedford) BennettConservative
1948–57Louis St. LaurentLiberal
1957–63John DiefenbakerConservative
1963–68Lester “Mike” PearsonLiberal
1968–79,

1980–84
Pierre TrudeauLiberal
1979–80Joe ClarkConservative
1984John TurnerLiberal
1984–93Brian MulroneyConservative
1993Kim CampbellConservative
1993–2003Jean ChrétienLiberal
2003–2006Paul MartinLiberal
2006-presentStephen HarperConservative




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Kings and Queens and When They Ruled over Canada


The following list shows the reigning kings and queens of what ultimately would become Canada, before and after the conquest of New France in 1763.











































French (1534–1763)British (1763–present)
Francis I (1515–47)George III (1760–1820)
Henry II (1547–59)George IV (1820–30)
Francis II (1559–60)William IV (1830–37)
Charles IX (1560–74)Victoria (1837–1901)
Henry III (1574–89)Edward VII (1901–10)
Henry IV (1589–1610)George V (1910–36)
Louis XIII (1610–43)Edward VIII (1936)
Louis XIV (1643–1715)George VI (1936–52)
Louis XV (1715–74)Elizabeth II (1952–present)




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Provinces and Territories and When They Became Part of Canada


Canadian confederation didn’t happen in a day. The provinces of Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia were the first to come onboard in 1867, but it wasn’t until 1999 that the territory of Nunavut was created. For quick reference, here’s a handy list of Canadian provinces and the year in which each joined confederation.



































1867Ontario, Québec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia
1870Manitoba
1871British Columbia
1873Prince Edward Island
1898Yukon Territory
1905Alberta, Saskatchewan
1949Newfoundland
1999Nunavut




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