Independence Of Canada Essay

601 Words2 Pages

“I am Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I think wrong. Or free to chose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind” by John Diefenbaker from around 75 years ago. What John wanted came true, because 75 years ago he tried making Canada a free country and today that is what we have. Canada is now run by a group of responsible governments but it wasn't always like that. During 1700-1850 there was a lot of a conflict going on over the land. The land was not always owned by Britain. Canada changed names several times before it became its own country. Britain and France fought a long war for the land and later became a group of responsible governments because we get to vote for prime minister. The events that led to the Independence of Canada included the Treaty of Utrecht when Britain took over Acadia, the 7 year war when France and Britain signed the Treaty of Paris, the Constitutional Act when Britain divided Quebec into 2 parts, and the Act of the Union when Upper Canada and Lower Canada merged to become known as the province of Canada. …show more content…

At the end of the war, both sides agreed to return some of the colonies they captured during the war. Britain told France they would either return Acadia, Guadeloupe and Martinique. Since Acadia had the least significance to France, they decided to keep Guadeloupe and Martinique. Therefore, in 1713, Acadia became one of Britain's colonies.
In the year 1763, the 7 year war between Britain and France ended. Both countries fought for land that belonged to others. In Paris, a treaty was signed by both countries. In the treaty countries agreed that each side would return the land they took from each other. Not included in the Treaty was New France as it stayed a British Colony. However New France did not

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