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  1. Hace 1 día · Depiction of the Battle of Saint-Eustache in 1837, a decisive engagement during the first uprising of the Lower Canada Rebellion. Two armed uprisings broke out from 1837 to 1838 in the Canadas. [167] Calls for responsible government and an economic depression in Lower Canada led to protests and, subsequently, an armed insurrection led by the ...

  2. Hace 4 días · Moreover, the market integration level argument can also be confirmed differently in Geloso and Kufenko and their explanations of the 1837–1838 rebellions in Lower Canada. Geloso and Kufenko ( 2019 ) pointed out that the innovations that fostered greater market integration in the colony could be cheaply repurposed for rebellious purposes.

  3. Hace 4 días · Revolts in favor of democracy in Ontario and Quebec ("Lower Canada") in 1837 were suppressed; many of the leaders fled to the US. The American policy was to largely ignore the rebellions, and indeed ignore Canada generally in favor of westward expansion of the American Frontier.

  4. Hace 4 días · Rebellions flared at the Battle of Fort Cumberland (November 1776), the Siege of Saint John (1777), the Maugerville Rebellion in 1776 and the Battle at Miramichi in 1779. However the Nova Scotia government in Halifax was controlled by an Anglo-European mercantile elite [ who? ] for whom loyalty was more profitable than rebellion.

  5. Hace 3 días · 1837 The Patriots of Lower Canada (Quebec) rebel against the British for freedom. 1870 Irish Fenians raid Eccles Hill, Quebec

  6. Hace 3 días · Victoria Day, Canadian holiday on which the British sovereign’s birthday is celebrated. In 1845, during the reign of Queen Victoria, May 24, the queen’s birthday, was declared a holiday in Canada. After Victoria’s death in 1901, an act of the Canadian Parliament established Victoria Day as a legal.

  7. Hace 3 días · Broad Title History: (This includes all related titles and supplements and the publication dates of each) Weekly Chronicle (Saint John, New Brunswick : 1836) Sep 9, 1836 - Jul 11, 1851. St. John Chronicle and Colonial Conservative (1851) Jul 18, 1851 - Feb 22, 1856. Weekly Chronicle (Saint John, New Brunswick : 1856) Feb 29, 1856 - May 1, 1857.