European Exploration
Fur Trade
War!
Great Migration
Confederation
100

This disease was caused by a lack of Vitamin C, leading to internal bleeding.

Scurvy

100

This company had a monopoly over the fur trade.

The Hudson's Bay Company (HBC)

100

This lengthy war actually began in North America but spilled over to Europe.

The Seven Years' War

100

This dark name was given to the ships on which many Britons (people from the U.K.) travelled to reach North America.

Coffin Ships

100

In which year was Confederation achieved?

1867

200

France, England, and the Netherlands focused on northern routes of exploration to North America for this reason.

Spain controlled the southern (Caribbean) routes.

200

This term was given to the men who made canoe trips between settlements during the fur trade.

Voyageurs

200

This treaty signed in 1763 ended the Seven Years' War and caused France to give up Guadeloupe.

The Treaty of Paris

200

Famine and unemployment in the United Kingdom (U.K.) were two major triggers for this massive emigration between 1815 and 1850.

The Great Migration

200

On which date was Confederation achieved?

July 1st

300

This English-sponsored, but Italian-born navigator, claimed Newfoundland for England in 1497.

Giovanni Caboto (John Cabot)

300

This industry is what started the early fur trade.

The Cod Fishery

300

This pivotal battle in Quebec secured victory for the British after a lengthy war.

The Battle of the Plains of Abraham

300

This was implemented in Lower Canada in an attempt to reduce the spread of cholera during the Great Migration.

Quarantine 

300

This political stalemate situation occurred often in the Province of Canada and served as one of the motivations for Confederation.

Political Deadlock

400

This explorer established Port-Royal, the first French colony, in 1604, and then another colony in 1608 where Stadacona once stood.

Samuel de Champlain

400
The French fur trade fostered cross-cultural marriages as a way fur trading strategy, leading to this unique group of people.

The Metis

400

The Treaty of Utrecht (1713), the Oath of Neutrality (1730), and the Oath of Allegiance (1755) were key events leading to this mass expulsion.

The Great Deportation (of the Acadians)

400

Small groups of powerful Anglophones, irresponsible government with little representation, and crop failures all culminated with these two conflicts.

The Rebellions of 1837 and 1838.

400

These provinces were the first to be a part of Canada.

Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick

500
When New France became a British colony, merchants trading out of Montreal united to form this fur trading company in order to compete against the HBC's fur trade monopoly. 

The North West Company (NWC)