1900 1905 Italys King Assassinated Bloody Sunday Russian
1900 1905 • Italy's King Assassinated • "Bloody Sunday" - Russian Revolution of 1905 • Kodak Introduces $1 Brownie Cameras • Einstein Proposes His Theory of Relativity • Max Planck Formulates Quantum Theory • Freud Publishes His Theory of Sexuality • Freud Publishes The Interpretation of Dreams 1906 1901 • The Dreadnought Launched • Australia Becomes a Commonwealth • Finland First European Country to Give Women the Right • First Nobel Prizes Awarded to Vote • First Trans-Atlantic Radio Signal • Kellogg's Starts Selling Corn Flakes • Queen Victoria Dies • President Roosevelt Simplifies Spelling • U. S. President Mc. Kinley Assassinated • San Francisco Earthquake 1902 • Upton Sinclair Writes The Jungle • Boer War Ends 1907 • Mount Pelée Erupts • Ten Rules of War Established at the Second Hague Peace • The Teddy Bear Is Introduced Conference • U. S. Passes the Chinese Exclusion Act • First Electric Washing Machine 1903 • Picasso Introduces Cubism • First Flight at Kitty Hawk • Typhoid Mary Captured for the First Time • First License Plates Issued in the U. S. 1908 • First Message to Travel Around the World • Ford Introduces the Model-T • First Silent Movie, The Great Train Robbery • SOS Accepted as Universal Distress Signal • First World Series • Turks Revolt in the Ottoman Empire • Plague in India 1909 1904 • Japan's Prince Ito is Assassinated • First Popular American Film • NAACP Is Founded • Ground Broken on Panama Canal • Plastic Is Invented • New York City Subway Opens • Robert Peary Becomes the First to Reach the North Pole • Russo-Japanese War Begins • Trans-Siberian Railway Completed What themes can be identified from this timeline?
The Early 20 th Century Culturally – la belle époque/ the gilded age/Victorian-Edwardian • Flowering of the arts, jazz, impressionism, cubism etc. • Bohemian lifestyles • Cult of the orchid • Realism, Expressionism, Naturalism • Spirit of invention and innovation
The Early 20 th Century Politically - New Imperialism - Scramble for Africa, Middle East - Britain threatened by Germany - Classism - Strict class distinctions - Work, play, identity - Working class consciousness: Anarchism, Socialism
The British Empire What is motivating this contemporary imperialism?
Canada in the 21 st Century…. .
“The 20 th Century belongs to Canada. ” -- Wilfred Laurier, Prime Minister
Canada in the 20 th Century Building a “nation” • Negotiating tensions French and English Manitoba Schools Question, Louis Riel West and East Resources, role in Confederation First Nations Residential Schools, Reserves Immigrants Chinese head tax, Komagata Maru United States Alaska Boundary dispute, free trade (“No truck or trade with the Yankees!”) Britain Boer War, Alaska Boundary, JCPC
Canada in the 20 th Century Building an “identity” • What goes into a personal identity? A national identity? • What does it mean to be Canadian?
Groups 1 & 2 • Describe what it means to be Canadian in 2010. Groups 3 & 4 • Describe what it means to be Canadian in 1910. Groups 5 & 6 • Article Analysis Consider: • Canada’s role in the world • Contemporary issues, struggles, challenges, opportunities and strengths • Seminal events • Contemporary influences
Groups 1 & 2 • Describe what it means to be Canadian in 2010.
Groups 3 & 4 • Describe what it means to be Canadian in 1910.
The Boer War
The Boer War • The Boer War was Canada’s first 20 th Century war which it fought as a dominion in the British Empire. • Part of the British Empire • Very popular in English Canada – French Canada – not so much • The “glory of battle”, heroism
Boer War Background • Britain justified declaring war on the small Boer republic by claiming that British citizen’s resident in the republics were denied rights, that the Boers were slave –states and that if Britain did not control Southern Africa’s gold and diamonds, Germany and other rivals of Britain would. • Remember; WW I is only 12 years after the Boer War.
Canada Responds • Opposition from French Canadians, new immigrants and others who wondered why Canada had a stake in a war against the Boers. • Seen as Heroic Imperial struggle in English Canada • Lord Strathcona’s Horse created in Western Canada and sent off.
Canadian Troops at an Aid Station
POST WAR CANADA • Veterans of the Boer War were granted settlement land were celebrated when they returned • For Anglo Canadians the war was a coming of age – Canada had contributed to the defence of the Empire • Canadians responded enthusiastically to WWI, in part because of the experience in the Boer War • Nationalism and support for Empire seemed compatible
Laurier and Canada • Prime Minister 1896 -1911 • Creation of Yukon, Alberta and Sask • Responded to British naval build up with so called “Tin Pot Nay” – a Canadian built and operated navy that would be used in concert with the RN in war time. Britain wanted financial contributions to pay for new battleships, largest of which were Dreadnoughts
HMS DREADNOUGHT 1906
Laurier Cont. • Canadian Conservative Robert Borden and his party opposed ‘Tin Pot Navy’ and supported the British plan • Laurier proposed Free Trade with United States which along with the naval plan were key issues in the 1911 election • Borden’s Conservatives countered with “No Truck nor Trade” with the Yankees and won
Key Pre War Themes • Imperial Rivalries (German ambitions countered by older imperial powers especially in Africa) • France threatened by growing German influence and alliance with Austro-Hungarian Empire and Italy, seeks closer ties with Britain (entente cordial) • “Arms Race” led to large armies and naval competition – made possible by Industrialization
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