Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Why Didn’t Canada Join the American Revolution? (Encore)
Episode Date: September 30, 2023The United States and Canada are like two siblings. They live next to each other, have the same parents, and are a lot alike. However, the way they both grew up was very different. The United St...ates achieved its independence through a revolution. The Canadians, however, didn’t join the American Revolution even though they almost certainly could have. Learn more about why Canada didn’t join the American Revolution on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Draft Kings Step into the thrilling world of sports and entertainment with DraftKings, where every day is game day! Join the millions of fans who have already discovered the ultimate destination for fantasy sports and sports betting. Download the DraftKings Sportsbook app and use code EVERYTHING to score two hundred dollars in bonus bets instantly when you bet just five dollars! Newspapers.com Newspapers.com is like a time machine. Dive into their extensive online archives to explore history as it happened. With over 800 million digitized newspaper pages spanning three centuries, Newspapers.com provides an unparalleled gateway to the past, with papers from the US, UK, Canada, Australia and beyond. Use the code “EverythingEverywhere” at checkout to get 20% off a publisher extra subscription at newspapers.com. Noom Noom is not just another diet or fitness app. It’s a comprehensive lifestyle program designed to empower you to make lasting changes and achieve your health goals. With Noom, you’ll embark on a personalized journey that considers your unique needs, preferences, and challenges. Their innovative approach combines cutting-edge technology with the support of a dedicated team of experts, including registered dietitians, nutritionists, and behavior change specialists. Noom’s changing how the world thinks about weight loss. Go to noom.com to sign up for your trial today! ButcherBox ButcherBox is the perfect solution for anyone looking to eat high-quality, sustainably sourced meat without the hassle of going to the grocery store. With ButcherBox, you can enjoy a variety of grass-fed beef, heritage pork, free-range chicken, and wild-caught seafood delivered straight to your door every month. ButcherBox.com/Daily Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
The United States and Canada are like two siblings.
They live next to each other.
They have the same parents, and they're a lot alike.
However, the way they both grew up was very different.
The United States achieved its independence through a revolution.
The Canadians, however, didn't join the American Revolution,
even though they almost certainly could have.
Learn more about why Canada didn't join the American Revolution
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
Many of you might be thinking that the answer to the question, why didn't the Canadians, join the American Revolution, is easy and straightforward.
forward. The Canadians were loyalists and the Americans were revolutionaries, which explains why it happened.
That is a part of the answer, but there's a whole lot more to it. And the story actually starts
well before the American Revolution. The English began colonizing the Atlantic coast of North America.
Putting aside the colonies they set up in the Caribbean, they created about 15 colonies along the
coast with the number changing over time as new colonies were created. Along the Atlantic coast were
also colonies that were run by France and Spain. Canada, as you think of it today, simply did not
exist. The event which really changed everything was the seven-year war, also known as the French-Indian
War in North America. If you remember back to my episode on the subject, this was basically
World War Zero, insofar as battles were fought all over the globe. One of the results of the war
was that the British managed to take the French and Spanish colonies on the North American coast.
This would include what is today the state of Florida, as well as much of what is today Canada,
including Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Labrador, and Ontario.
The British already had small settlements on the island of Newfoundland, but it was mostly just small fishing villages with Irish settlers, and it wasn't a formal colony yet.
The point is that before the seven years war, there really wasn't much of a British presence in what is today Canada.
They did control an area around Hudson Bay known as Rupert's land, but that was very sparked.
partially populated and actually administered by the Hudson Bay Company. By the time the seven-year
war started in 1754, the 13 British colonies in North America were already well established.
They had their own legislative assemblies and customs, and they had English colonists who had
living there now for several generations. The expulsion of the French Acadians began in
1755, which led to the creation of the colony of Nova Scotia as a British political and cultural
entity. Likewise, in 1769, the island of St. John, now called Prince Edward Island, split from
Nova Scotia and became its own colony. So Nova Scotia, which was really the only English-speaking
colony of note in Canada before the revolution, had a very different history than the other
13 colonies to the south of them. Moreover, it was geographically separated from those 13 colonies.
The rest of Canada, which the British now found themselves in possession of, was all formerly called New France.
And they now had a whole bunch of new subjects that did not speak English and were Catholic.
After the Seven Years' War, the British created a new territory known as the province of Quebec out of what used to be New France.
This was a different entity than the modern-day province of Quebec, as it included everything surrounding the Great Lakes,
including what is today Southern Ontario, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and parts of Minnesota.
There were very few English-speaking people living in this region at this time,
including what is today the most populated part of Canada, southern Ontario.
To the south of the 13 colonies, the British now found themselves in possession of the Spanish colony of Florida.
Florida was similar to Quebec, in that the inhabitants mostly didn't speak English, and they were Catholic.
So, before I go any further, the thing that you should take away is a lot of the United States.
that the country you think of as Canada today basically didn't exist at this time.
Most of what the British now controlled was actually French-speaking and not English-speaking.
The British didn't have a great track record since Henry VIII regarding their treatment of Catholic subjects.
They were mostly treated as second-class citizens in both Britain and Ireland,
and now the British suddenly found themselves with a whole lot of them.
You might be thinking that, given British attitudes and their treatment of Catholic subjects,
the French in Quebec would have been natural allies of the Americans during the revolution.
If you think that, you would be wrong.
This is the first big reason why Canada didn't join the American Revolution.
The American colonists were, culturally speaking, English.
They were mostly Protestant, and they distrusted the French and the Catholics.
Moreover, during the Seven Year War, much of the fighting in North America was conducted
not by soldiers transported from Europe, but by American colonists who were already there.
The fighting which took place in Quebec made the French-speaking settlers highly suspicious
of the English-speaking colonists.
Moreover, in 1774, just before the American Revolution started, the British Parliament
passed the Quebec Act.
The Quebec Act basically gave the French-speaking subjects a great deal of autonomy and
preserved many of their rights and traditions.
Those in Quebec didn't have to swear allegiance to Protestantism and their loyalty owes.
It guaranteed freedom of religion.
It allowed French civil law to reign supreme in all private affairs as a
opposed to English common law. And also, it allowed the Catholic Church to continue to mandate a 10%
tithe. Politically speaking, the colonists in Quebec got most of what they wanted. Unlike the colonists
in the 13 colonies, there was never a tradition of democracy in New France, so it wasn't something they
were too agitated about. Economically, being part of the British Empire now gave them a larger trade
network that they could buy and sell with. So Quebec, which was most of Canada at this point,
had no real incentive to support the Americans. They didn't have to be.
the same grievances that the Americans did about taxation and representation, and what grievances
they did have were already addressed with the Quebec Act. That isn't to say that the Americans
didn't try to convince Quebec to join the cause. However, when the Americans invaded Quebec in
1775, it pretty much killed any chance they had of the Quebecwa supporting their cause. The Americans
initially entered Quebec to destroy the British ability to attack them. But then the American
Brigadier General David Worcester occupied Montreal. The Americans,
sent a team to try to convince the French-speaking subjects to join the Americans, but their pleas
fell on deaf ears. In the end, the Americans had nothing to offer Quebec that they didn't already
have, and the cultural and linguistic differences were too great to overcome. So, Quebec didn't join the
revolution out of any deep loyalty to the British or the king. They probably had little of either.
They didn't join out of self-interest, as well as linguistic, cultural, and religious differences.
Okay, so what about the British colony to the South?
What about Florida? Why didn't Florida join the revolution? The situation there was similar to that in Quebec.
The linguistic, cultural, and religious differences were such that they just didn't have the same concerns that the American colonies did.
Moreover, during the start of the revolution, the colonies of East and West Florida, basically the peninsula and the Panhandle, didn't have slavery.
Escape slaves who made it to Florida were considered free if they would accept Catholicism.
That made Florida an attractive destination for escape slaves in the same.
south, leading to the creation of communities of freed slaves in Florida, which the southern colonies
were not cool with. The British eventually gave Florida back to Spain, and slavery was instituted.
Spain sold it to the U.S. in 1890, and it became a state in 1845. So far, the reasons for both
Quebec and Florida not joining the revolution were mostly cultural. There was, however, one colony
that would have made perfect sense to join, and they almost did. Nova Scotia. Having earlier expelled
the French-speaking Canadians, Nova Scotia was now a colony of English speakers,
save for the native Megamac people who live there. However, as I noted before,
Nova Scotia, despite being a new English-speaking colony, wasn't like the other 13 colonies.
They didn't have the history, they were geographically separated, and many of the settlers
who moved there after the Acadians were kicked out, came directly from Britain. However, there
was another large population that did come from the American colonies in New England. When the
revolution started, there was initially some support in Nova Scotia, especially among the
former New Englanders who migrated there. However, it wasn't strong enough to throw their support
behind the Americans. Early in 1776, George Washington received a letter from sympathetic
Nova Scotian rebels. It read, quote, you may reasonably imagine that it is presumptuous in me
to take such liberty in writing your excellency. Still, it is going from one whose principles are
actuated from the genuine feelings of liberty and an indelible anxiety for the happiness of
this country. We would greatly rejoice, could we be able to join with the other colonies,
but we must have other assistance before we can act publicly." End quote. It is quite probable that
there was a decent amount of support for the revolution in Nova Scotia, although probably not a
majority. Much of the land in the colony was owned by absentee landlords back in Britain,
and that angered many of the people who worked the land. The one group that actually did support
the revolution was the Megamac. However, Washington didn't want any part of invading another colony.
He felt it was against the principle of the revolution, and it would have been strategically
unwise to take his troops so far away in a place where they easily could have been cut off
at sea. A small group of Nova Scotians eventually traveled all the way down to Philadelphia,
but they couldn't convince anyone to support their cause. A few Nova Scotians did fight for the
Continental Army, and after the war, they were awarded land in Ohio for their efforts.
The brief window of 1775 and 1776 of possible union with Nova Scotia eventually closed.
Nova Scotia became a base for the British, which resulted in the Americans hiring privateers to harass shipping off the coast in 1777.
225 ships were taken, sailing to or from Nova Scotia within a five-year period.
This obviously began to anger the Nova Scotians and turned whatever sympathy they might have had for the revolutionaries into anger.
However, perhaps the biggest thing which permanently ensured that Nova Scotia never joined the United States
was that it became the primary destination for loyal colonists who didn't want to live in an indefinitely.
independent America. As many as 40 to 50,000 loyalists fled to what is today Canada, in particular,
settling in the areas that are now southern Ontario and New Brunswick. In fact, the colony of
New Brunswick was created because of the increase in population in the western part of Nova
Scotia, as was the colony of Upper Canada, which eventually became Ontario. With so many English-speaking
loyalists coming to Canada, it solidified its separation from the newly formed United States
and laid the groundwork for the future war of 1812.
So the answer to the question, why didn't Canada join the American Revolution,
is far more complicated than just saying loyalty.
It was a complex mix of religion, language, culture, geography, economics, and politics.
In a very real sense, the American Revolution led to changes in demographics and population,
which directly resulted in the creation of modern Canada almost 100 years later.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiever.
I wanted to give a big thanks to everyone who supports the show on Patreon.
Your support helps me put out a new show every day.
And if you're interested in Everything Everywhere Daily merchandise,
Patreon is currently the only place where it's available.
And if you'd like to talk to other listeners of the show and get notified to future episodes and projects,
please join my Facebook group or Discord server.
Links to everything are in the show notes.
Thank you.
