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Lower Canada
DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.
1a — Hist.
from 1791-1841, the official name of the province lying between the Ottawa River and New Brunswick, now included in Quebec.
See: L.C.(def. 1)
Quotations
1787
The whole of the vast province of Canada ought to be viewed as forming two grand divisions, distinguished by the names of Upper and Lower Canada.
1791
Dec. 26--This day the division of the Province of Quebec into Upper and Lower Canada, and the new constitution given to the former, was announced by proclamation.
1836
Judging from the Lower Canada newspapers, which, as in other countries, are the organs of and fomenters of party and faction, we should conclude that parties are breaking up in this country.
1963
In the Union there was also to be equal representation of the two sections which were the old Upper and Lower Canada, now Canada West and Canada East.
1b — Hist.
from 1841-1867, the popular name for Canada East.
See: Canada East
Quotations
1841
The Solicitor General testified that in Upper Canada the schools educated only one in eight of the population, and that in Lower Canada there were 120,000 of the youth of both sexes who receive not the slightest description of elementary education.
1863
It could not be expected that the language of "la belle France" should maintain its classified purity and beauty out here, when it does not even in Lower Canada.
2
since 1867, an unofficial traditional name for Quebec.
See: Upper Canada(def. 2)
Quotations
1868
The law in Lower Canada respecting caterpillars has just been strengthened by a decision in a case brought by a party to recover damages against a neighbor who carelessly allowed caterpillars to breed in his garden.
1917
If the priests of Lower Canada were, in a body, to advise their parishioners to vote for Laurier, what a howl would be raised by the press of Ontario!
1966
Upper and Lower Canada came together with a head-table flourish last night amid the rocking rhythms of old Canadian folk music. . . .