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  1. 2010年9月2日 · It was held from 1–9 September 1864 in Charlottetown , with additional meetings the following week in Halifax, Saint John and Fredericton . The conference was organized by delegates from New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island to discuss the union of their three provinces.

  2. 2007年12月18日 · Maurice Frederick Strong, PC, CC, OM, LLD, FRSC, environmentalist, statesman, business administrator (born 29 April 1929 in Oak Lake, MB; died 27 November 2015). Strong began a business career as a trading-post employee for the Hudson's Bay Company in the Arctic in 1944.

  3. 2013年5月8日 · Last Edited July 15, 2021. The Battle of Batoche, 9–12 May 1885, was the last major action of the North-West Resistance. Under the leadership of Louis Riel, Métis and their First Nations allies were defeated by government troops. Battle of Batoche. Historical Background.

  4. 2011年6月6日 · Indigenous treaties in Canada are constitutionally recognized agreements between the Crown and Indigenous peoples. Most of these agreements describe exchanges where Indigenous nations agree to share some of their interests in their ancestral lands in return for various payments and promises.

  5. From 4 December 1866 to March 1867, politicians from the Province of Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick met with delegates of the British government in London. This was the last of three conferences — after the Charlottetown Conference and Quebec Conference in 1864 — that were held to determine the constitutional details of Confederation.

  6. 2017年5月23日 · Sheila Watt-Cloutier (née Watt) was born into a small and close-knit Inuit community in Nunavik (Northern Québec) in 1953. Her mother, Daisy Watt (1921–2002), was an interpreter, healer and respected Inuit elder. Her father, George Kornelson, was a Qallunaaq (white) man who worked in the North during the 1950s.

  7. 2006年2月6日 · These frustrations broke into open war between United States rebels and British forces at Lexington, Massachusetts on 19 April 1775. The American rebels mounted a propaganda campaign for support in what is now Canada. They attracted some sympathy inside Quebec particularly in Montreal, where there was some pro-American activity.