Stories of Canada 

 

Canada and the United States have many major geographic features in common. They share the Rocky Mountains, the Interior Plains, four of the Great Lakes, the Appalachian Highlands, and many rivers. Therefore, the stories of the exploration and settlement of both of these nations are closely interwoven. However, each country achieved its independence by a completely different path: Canada by gradual constitutional change and the United States by the War of Independence against the Great Britain. This made many differences in the ways of thinking and acting.

 

In Canada the largest protestant church is The United Church of Canada, which was formed in 1925. It is organized into 13 regional conferences, 94 district presbyteries, 2,413 local pastoral charges, and 3,909 individual congregations. DPUC is one of these congregations, one of the local pastoral charges (which can sometimes be up to three or four congregations), and we belong to the Don Valley Presbytery which is a member of the Toronto Conference.  

 

   

      At the 37th General Council August 2000.                                           13 Conferences of The United Church of Canada

 

 Following is a brief history of Canada. Any one can add in this summary of events.

 The earliest discovery of the New World was made by Norse seafarers known as Vikings.

 In AD 1000 Leif Ericson became the first European to land in North America (see Ericson).

 In 1497 an Italian named John Cabot sailed west from Bristol, England, intent on finding a new trade route to the Orient for his patron, King Henry VII of England. This voyage led to the rediscovery of the eastern shores of Canada.

 The first Parliament of the new Dominion met on Nov. 6, 1867, with Macdonald as prime minister.

 By the Deed of Surrender of 1869, Canada purchased the vast Northwest Territories from the Hudson's Bay Company. The company was permitted to retain trading rights in the area and a small percentage of the prairie lands.

 The year 1967 marked the 100th anniversary of the British North America Act, which had been proclaimed on July 1, 1867, and established the basis for the modern state of Canada. A giant birthday party on Parliament Hill in Ottawa was attended by Queen Elizabeth II.

 A highlight of the year was the Universal and International Exhibition, known as Expo '67, held in Montreal. Also to mark the centennial, Winnipeg, Man., was host to the fifth Pan-American Games, and the Order of Canada was instituted to reward Canadians for outstanding merit and service.

 In 1982 the British North America Act was replaced by a new constitution for the government of Canada.

 Queen Elizabeth visited Parliament Hill to proclaim the document. This completed the transfer of constitutional powers from Great Britain to Canada.

 In October 1987 Canada and the United States reached agreement on a trade pact to eliminate all bilateral tariffs over a ten-year period beginning Jan. 1, 1989.

 The two countries signed a Great Lakes water-quality agreement in November 1987. Both countries agreed to track and clean up sources of pollution.

 In January 1988 abortion was legalized in Canada.

 Victories by Mulroney and his Conservative party in the November 1988 elections guaranteed passage of the free-trade agreement.

 The socialist New Democratic party chose Audrey McLaughlin, the member of Parliament from the Yukon, as its leader in 1989--the first woman to head a major Canadian political party.

 While the international political climate became more conservative, the party began to dominate Canadian leadership in the early 1990s. New Democrats were elected premiers of the provinces of Ontario, Saskatchewan, and British Columbia.

 

Updated November 25, 2002.  We update every week.

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Acknowledgements:

Web planning team: Marion Current, Hannah Lee

Technical support & web designer: David Nam-Joong Kim

(c) copyright 2001 by John Young-Jung Lee.  All rights reserved.