{"id":176,"date":"2015-06-19T19:56:00","date_gmt":"2015-06-19T19:56:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/?post_type=chapter&#038;p=176"},"modified":"2019-07-12T23:25:10","modified_gmt":"2019-07-12T23:25:10","slug":"5-4-the-clifford-sifton-years-1896-1905","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/chapter\/5-4-the-clifford-sifton-years-1896-1905\/","title":{"raw":"5.4. The Clifford Sifton Years, 1896\u20131905","rendered":"5.4. The Clifford Sifton Years, 1896\u20131905"},"content":{"raw":"[caption id=\"attachment_2898\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"760\"]<a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681.jpg\"><img src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681.jpg\" alt=\"A team of women in headscarves and long skirts pull a plough.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2898\" width=\"760\" height=\"582\" \/><\/a> Figure 5.3 Doukhobor women pull a plough, breaking the prairie soil for the first time at Thunder Hill Colony, MB, ca. 1899.[\/caption]\r\n\r\nAmong the most able and imaginative of Laurier\u2019s cabinet ministers was Clifford Sifton (1861-1929). Born in southern Ontario, Sifton entered adulthood in Manitoba where he established himself as a lawyer, entrepreneur, and politician. Under Laurier he was Minister of the Interior, which put him at the helm of Canada\u2019s evolving immigration policy.\r\n\r\nIn the 30 years after the <em>BNA Act<\/em> was proclaimed the population of the West increased at a rate that was unmatched in the history of British North America. From a few thousand around Red River and similar numbers across what would become Alberta and Saskatchewan in 1905, the North-West Territories (that is, the Prairies beyond little Manitoba) surpassed 56,000 by 1881. Ten years later, this had nearly doubled to 99,000. In 1896, therefore, Sifton inherited a portfolio that was already doing well, though not as well as it might.\r\n<h1>The Victorian Food Revolution<\/h1>\r\nMechanized farming, new crops, new transportation technologies that cut the time and distance between harvest and market, and the need to feed burgeoning urban populations were together revolutionizing farming on a global level. Over the course of the 18th and 19th centuries central Europe had become a complex patchwork quilt of ethnic, farming enclaves. Germanic settlers moved into the Ukraine, and minority religious sects <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> often associated with pacifism <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> established farming communities with strong cooperative sensibilities. Some had reasonably deep roots but much of the lands between the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea were farming frontiers in their own right. Similarly, agricultural lands were opening in Argentina on the Pampas, in Australia,<b> <\/b>and across southern Africa. In the United States three million families were drawn into the American West by the promise of homesteads. This was a global phenomenon and <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> as the Indigenous populations were being removed by the colonial regimes <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> settlers were being recruited into various farming colonies with an assortment of promises and assurances. In short, the business of finding farmers was competitive.\r\n\r\nSifton\u2019s timing was good. The American frontier <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> as the United States historian Frederick Jackson Turner announced in the 1890s <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> was \u201cclosed\u201d: free land in the United States was all but gone. Sifton replied with a campaign to bill\u00a0the\u00a0Canadian Prairies, famously, as \u201cThe Last Best West.\u201d Employing a variety of sales and advertising strategies and gimmicks that were startlingly innovative, Sifton and his department changed the face of Canada in the space of one decade.\r\n<h1>Selecting Prairie Society<\/h1>\r\nSifton established a list of preferred sources for immigrants. This is interesting for a few reasons, which\u00a0are worth enumerating. First, the outcome of his preferential list can be seen even now in the ethno-linguistic and cultural make-up of the Prairie West. Second, it reveals contemporary thinking about the nature of race and ethnicity. Sifton, like most of his peers, believed that ethnicity signalled essentialized qualities: that is, all Italians were, in their essence or fabric, the same. Stereotyping, then, was something he regarded as part of informed decision-making, not a case of narrow-mindedness or bigotry. Third, the composition of the immigrant pool included people whose ethnic differentness from Anglo-Protestants and Franco-Catholics (not to mention Aboriginal peoples) were in some instances profound, and that very differentness created a perceived need to build institutions and policies that would foster\u00a0their assimilation. As Prairie settlers they might reasonably have been assimilated into the bilingual and bi- or multicultural heritage of the M\u00e9tis; they might have been assimilated into a new, bicultural French and English Canada. Steps were taken, however, to transform these new arrivals into anglophones. And this would prove profoundly divisive among Central Canadians who were, predictably, not in agreement on the privileging of Anglo-Protestantism over Franco-Catholicism.\r\n\r\nSo who did Sifton prefer? White Americans, mostly. People who had had experience homesteading and who spoke English (and who were likely Protestants) were the principal group he hoped to recruit. Of course, Americans brought with them the possibility of disloyalty, something which made Canadian politicians generally wary. But even the Macdonald regime (more than a little America-phobic) had circulated recruitment materials in the United States, mostly in the hope of finding Canadian emigrants who could be lured back \u201chome\u201d to the West. Almost one million people arrived in Canada from the United States in the 14 years leading to the Great War, and many of those immigrants were, in fact, returning Canadians. Many more were German and Scandinavian immigrants to the United States who simply kept moving until they landed in the Canadian West.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_2900\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"760\"]<a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745.jpg\"><img src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745.jpg\" alt=\"Eight children of various ages stand outside a log cabin.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2900\" width=\"760\" height=\"524\" \/><\/a> Figure 5.4 African-Americans made their way to north-central Alberta, like this group at Athabasca Landing.[\/caption]\r\n\r\nAfrican-Americans, among whose numbers there were many with homesteading experience, were desirous of coming to Canada but Sifton regarded Africans and people of African descent dimly. He was inclined at first\u00a0to recruit from the British Isles but recognized quickly that mixed-farming on small-holdings in the United Kingdom was a far cry from producing wheat on a quarter-section of land on the Prairies, and Sifton knew, too, that British recruiters would trawl the under-employed urban populations first.\u00a0He turned his attention to continental options.\r\n\r\nGerman farmers had proven their skill\u00a0in various settlement projects that had occurred since the 18th century. For 100 years and more, the German states had been sending out farmers to populate borderlands in places across the Austro-Hungarian Empire and as far east as Imperial Russia. Sifton thought highly of the Germans and\u00a0the Scandinavians. But the further south in Europe he turned, the less impressed he became. Italians and Greeks, in particular, he thought of as worthless to the settlement process. Jews were also to be avoided, as were Arabs.\r\n\r\nEastern Europeans <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> Ukrainians, Poles, and Russians fared better in Sifton\u2019s eyes. In an oft-quoted statement, the western booster described what he saw as the ideal immigrant:\r\n<blockquote>When I speak of quality I have in mind something that is quite different from what is in the mind of the average writer or speaker upon the question of immigration. I think that a stalwart peasant in a sheepskin coat, born to the soil, whose forefathers have been farmers for ten generations, with a stout wife and a half-dozen children, is good quality.[footnote]\"Only Farmers Need Apply: Clifford Sifton, \u2018The Immigrants Canada Wants\u2019,\u201d <em>Maclean\u2019s Magazine<\/em>, 1 April 1922:\u00a016, 32-34.[\/footnote]<\/blockquote>\r\nSifton made this statement in 1922, 17 years after resigning his cabinet post and looking back on his works in retrospect. From\u00a01896-1905, however, immigrants from Eastern Europe\u00a0were\u00a0something of an unknown commodity. And, for a cabinet minister in a narrow-minded Protestant community, they were a bit of a gamble. The Eastern Europeans\u2019 arrival in bulk numbers, their enthusiasm for mutually-supportive [pb_glossary id=\"7423\"]block settlements[\/pb_glossary], and their overall record of success, however, converted Sifton to their value.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_2904\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"640\"]<a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401.jpg\"><img src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401.jpg\" alt=\"Three teenagers, two young children, and their parents at a train station.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2904\" width=\"640\" height=\"421\" \/><\/a> Figure 5.5 Sifton's ideal immigrants. A family newly arrived from Galicia, ca. 1911.[\/caption]\r\n\r\nSifton\u00a0was likewise convinced that religious sects that had strong internal cohesion and familiarity with the kind of farming that would be conducted in the West were highly desirable. These included Mormons from the United States, Mennonites from Central and Eastern Europe, and pacifist Hutterites and [pb_glossary id=\"7424\"]Doukhobors[\/pb_glossary] from Russia. Ethnicity, experience, and the likelihood of community success thus became key principles of the recruitment process.\r\n\r\nAgainst this list of preferences, Sifton was highly suspicious of urban and industrial workers. In an era where \u201cmodern\u201d was acquiring a cachet all its own and in which civic growth <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> even that of Sifton\u2019s beloved Winnipeg <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> was a principal measure of success, there is something very 18th century about Sifton\u2019s 20th century vision.\r\n<h1>Sifton the Salesman<\/h1>\r\nSifton recognized early on that simply putting up posters at shipping offices in Hamburg and Liverpool would\u00a0not draw the numbers he required. So in 1899 he established a network of recruiting agents in Europe under the auspices of a shadow corporation called the North Atlantic Trading Company. Shipping agents in European ports were paid to direct farm emigrants toward Canadian ports. This was a clandestine operation in part because the European countries targeted were all trying to stop the bleeding off of their population to new settlement societies like Canada, the United States, Argentina, and Australia. Sifton's strategy paid off: in the space of a decade, the Prairie population more than doubled to 211,649 by 1901\u00a0<strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> the greatest part of that growth taking place after the Laurier government\u00a0arrived in Ottawa in 1896.\r\n\r\nDiversity was, as a consequence of these recruitment efforts, growing rapidly in the West and in some Atlantic port towns. \u00a0It was politically imperative that English Canadians be\u00a0reassured that their culture was not at risk. To that end, Sifton stepped up efforts to recruit from Britain in 1903. The results were significant: 1,200 arrived in Canada in 1900 and 65,000 in 1905. This was not, however, a typically agrarian population. This Edwardian-era wave was made up of professionals, merchants, urban labourers, mineworkers, and others whose conditions in a rapidly growing and changing country were in some jeopardy. Canada was presented to them as Brit-friendly, \u201cjust like home,\u201d and an opportunity to enjoy real social mobility <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> something that the entrenched class system in Britain stifled at best and\u00a0prevented at worst. It was this generation that repopulated the Okanagan Valley and southwestern Alberta, with visions of becoming \u201cgentleman orchardists\u201d and ranchers. It was also this generation that supplied many of the early trade union leaders and members whose experience with Britain's new-born\u00a0Labour Party would produce echoes across Canada and\u00a0especially in British Columbia. On Vancouver Island, British immigrants would cultivate two contrary myths of British-ness characterized by both an ersatz upper-class Britophilia in Victoria and British-style labour militance in the coal mining towns of Nanaimo, Wellington, Ladysmith, and Cumberland. Both of these movements overlay existing Island political and social traditions so deeply that they effectively eclipsed them to the point that Britishness became part of the Vancouver Island brand.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_2951\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"2896\"]<a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790.jpg\"><img src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790.jpg\" alt=\"Two young girls lie on the ground in an orchard. A third girl kneels between them.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2951\" width=\"2896\" height=\"2312\" \/><\/a> Figure 5.6 Imperialism, steam-powered paddlewheelers, railways, and telegram systems made it possible to transplant British and Anglo-Celtic Canadian culture to the \"gentlemanly\" business of orcharding in the Okanagan. Kelowna, 1909.[\/caption]\r\n\r\nHowever much the British immigrants of the pre-Great War years played a role in reaffirming imperial connections and the primacy of Anglo-Protestantism, they were not always welcomed by the locals. Canadians were often irritated by British sensibilities and signs appeared in shop windows across the country, \u201cNo English Need Apply.\u201d There was a sense, too, that many of the British immigrants were simply impoverished social detritus, incapable of functioning in their own society let alone in Canada. Tens of thousands of children <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> part of a migration\u00a0referred to as the [pb_glossary id=\"7425\"]Home Children[\/pb_glossary] \u2014 were plucked\u00a0from British slums and orphanages and placed into apprentice-like situations on Canadian farms. Scandals and outrages plagued the Home Children project as news leaked out from time to time of horrible physical abuse and neglect of the 8 to\u00a010 year old immigrants. It was, however, the failure of the [pb_glossary id=\"7426\"]Barr Colony[\/pb_glossary] project, an attempt to settle British farmers in a Prairie block, that drew the greatest criticism of Sifton\u2019s office and further confirmed the Canadian belief that\u00a0British immigrants made for poor farmers.[footnote]Valerie Knowles, <em>Strangers at Our Gates: Canadian Immigration and Immigration Policy, 1540-1997<\/em>, revised ed. (Toronto: Dundurn Press, 1997), 70-6.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_3114\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"640\"]<a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907.jpg\"><img src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907.jpg\" alt=\"Thirty boys pose outside of a wooden building.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-3114\" width=\"640\" height=\"444\" \/><\/a> Figure 5.7 Some 8,000 boys passed through the St. George's Home in Ottawa as part of the Home Children migration.[\/caption]\r\n<h1>Post-1905<\/h1>\r\nSifton resigned from the Laurier government early in 1905, seemingly at the top of his game. The recurrent issue of sectarian, French-language schooling and the cultural agenda in the West was his last round-up. The North-West Territories had enjoyed non-denominational schools under the territorial regulations of 1901. This was slated\u00a0to come to an end with the arrival of provincial status for Alberta and Saskatchewan and the extension of guarantees of separate and state-funded schools for Catholics. Laurier, who cautiously promoted the ideal of dualism in the West, would not give way and Sifton\u00a0<strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> who preferred the vision of an Anglo-Protestant West\u00a0<strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> resigned. Later, Laurier found himself obliged to change course, but Sifton did not re-enter the cabinet.\r\n\r\nIn many respects, Sifton was not only an architect of Western Canada: he was an example of what it was becoming. A relentless booster of Winnipeg and Brandon, he was an advocate of social reforms (his wife, Elizabeth Burrows, led the Brandon Women's Christian Temperance Union), and a champion of non-denominational schools in the West (often used as coded-language for anti-French or anti-Catholic education). The society he envisioned in 1896 was not one that all Canadians at the time embraced: drawn from different and diverse locales, peoples of many languages and cultures would open the economic potential of the West and, thus, Canada. In return, they would be Anglo-Canadianized and offered what Dominion officials immodestly regarded as a superior and more humane cultural alternative to that of the United States. Although many factors independent of Sifton contributed to what was to follow, the fact remains that many aspects of his\u00a0vision were realized.\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\r\n<h2>Key Points<\/h2>\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li>The late 19th century saw a rapid expansion in global food production to feed industrializing communities and nations. Canada's expansion into the West was part of this process.<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Canada had to compete for immigrants and did so through strategies that targeted specific groups and whole communities.<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Clifford Sifton's term as Minister of the Interior coincides with the largest waves of immigrants to the West and thus gave shape to the population that arrived around the turn of the century.<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Sifton's preferences as regards immigrant groups were explicitly in\u00a0favour of northern Europeans over southern Europeans, Whites over non-Whites, and people with experience farming in prairie-like conditions.<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Concerns among British-Canadians that their culture might be under threat was met by new recruitment of British immigrants in the early 20th century.<\/li>\r\n<\/ul>\r\n<\/div>","rendered":"<figure id=\"attachment_2898\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-2898\" style=\"width: 760px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681.jpg\" alt=\"A team of women in headscarves and long skirts pull a plough.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2898\" width=\"760\" height=\"582\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681.jpg 760w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681-300x230.jpg 300w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681-65x50.jpg 65w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681-225x172.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/c000681-350x268.jpg 350w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 760px) 100vw, 760px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-2898\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Figure 5.3 Doukhobor women pull a plough, breaking the prairie soil for the first time at Thunder Hill Colony, MB, ca. 1899.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Among the most able and imaginative of Laurier\u2019s cabinet ministers was Clifford Sifton (1861-1929). Born in southern Ontario, Sifton entered adulthood in Manitoba where he established himself as a lawyer, entrepreneur, and politician. Under Laurier he was Minister of the Interior, which put him at the helm of Canada\u2019s evolving immigration policy.<\/p>\n<p>In the 30 years after the <em>BNA Act<\/em> was proclaimed the population of the West increased at a rate that was unmatched in the history of British North America. From a few thousand around Red River and similar numbers across what would become Alberta and Saskatchewan in 1905, the North-West Territories (that is, the Prairies beyond little Manitoba) surpassed 56,000 by 1881. Ten years later, this had nearly doubled to 99,000. In 1896, therefore, Sifton inherited a portfolio that was already doing well, though not as well as it might.<\/p>\n<h1>The Victorian Food Revolution<\/h1>\n<p>Mechanized farming, new crops, new transportation technologies that cut the time and distance between harvest and market, and the need to feed burgeoning urban populations were together revolutionizing farming on a global level. Over the course of the 18th and 19th centuries central Europe had become a complex patchwork quilt of ethnic, farming enclaves. Germanic settlers moved into the Ukraine, and minority religious sects <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> often associated with pacifism <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> established farming communities with strong cooperative sensibilities. Some had reasonably deep roots but much of the lands between the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea were farming frontiers in their own right. Similarly, agricultural lands were opening in Argentina on the Pampas, in Australia,<b> <\/b>and across southern Africa. In the United States three million families were drawn into the American West by the promise of homesteads. This was a global phenomenon and <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> as the Indigenous populations were being removed by the colonial regimes <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> settlers were being recruited into various farming colonies with an assortment of promises and assurances. In short, the business of finding farmers was competitive.<\/p>\n<p>Sifton\u2019s timing was good. The American frontier <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> as the United States historian Frederick Jackson Turner announced in the 1890s <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> was \u201cclosed\u201d: free land in the United States was all but gone. Sifton replied with a campaign to bill\u00a0the\u00a0Canadian Prairies, famously, as \u201cThe Last Best West.\u201d Employing a variety of sales and advertising strategies and gimmicks that were startlingly innovative, Sifton and his department changed the face of Canada in the space of one decade.<\/p>\n<h1>Selecting Prairie Society<\/h1>\n<p>Sifton established a list of preferred sources for immigrants. This is interesting for a few reasons, which\u00a0are worth enumerating. First, the outcome of his preferential list can be seen even now in the ethno-linguistic and cultural make-up of the Prairie West. Second, it reveals contemporary thinking about the nature of race and ethnicity. Sifton, like most of his peers, believed that ethnicity signalled essentialized qualities: that is, all Italians were, in their essence or fabric, the same. Stereotyping, then, was something he regarded as part of informed decision-making, not a case of narrow-mindedness or bigotry. Third, the composition of the immigrant pool included people whose ethnic differentness from Anglo-Protestants and Franco-Catholics (not to mention Aboriginal peoples) were in some instances profound, and that very differentness created a perceived need to build institutions and policies that would foster\u00a0their assimilation. As Prairie settlers they might reasonably have been assimilated into the bilingual and bi- or multicultural heritage of the M\u00e9tis; they might have been assimilated into a new, bicultural French and English Canada. Steps were taken, however, to transform these new arrivals into anglophones. And this would prove profoundly divisive among Central Canadians who were, predictably, not in agreement on the privileging of Anglo-Protestantism over Franco-Catholicism.<\/p>\n<p>So who did Sifton prefer? White Americans, mostly. People who had had experience homesteading and who spoke English (and who were likely Protestants) were the principal group he hoped to recruit. Of course, Americans brought with them the possibility of disloyalty, something which made Canadian politicians generally wary. But even the Macdonald regime (more than a little America-phobic) had circulated recruitment materials in the United States, mostly in the hope of finding Canadian emigrants who could be lured back \u201chome\u201d to the West. Almost one million people arrived in Canada from the United States in the 14 years leading to the Great War, and many of those immigrants were, in fact, returning Canadians. Many more were German and Scandinavian immigrants to the United States who simply kept moving until they landed in the Canadian West.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_2900\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-2900\" style=\"width: 760px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745.jpg\" alt=\"Eight children of various ages stand outside a log cabin.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2900\" width=\"760\" height=\"524\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745.jpg 760w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745-300x207.jpg 300w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745-65x45.jpg 65w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745-225x155.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a040745-350x241.jpg 350w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 760px) 100vw, 760px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-2900\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Figure 5.4 African-Americans made their way to north-central Alberta, like this group at Athabasca Landing.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>African-Americans, among whose numbers there were many with homesteading experience, were desirous of coming to Canada but Sifton regarded Africans and people of African descent dimly. He was inclined at first\u00a0to recruit from the British Isles but recognized quickly that mixed-farming on small-holdings in the United Kingdom was a far cry from producing wheat on a quarter-section of land on the Prairies, and Sifton knew, too, that British recruiters would trawl the under-employed urban populations first.\u00a0He turned his attention to continental options.<\/p>\n<p>German farmers had proven their skill\u00a0in various settlement projects that had occurred since the 18th century. For 100 years and more, the German states had been sending out farmers to populate borderlands in places across the Austro-Hungarian Empire and as far east as Imperial Russia. Sifton thought highly of the Germans and\u00a0the Scandinavians. But the further south in Europe he turned, the less impressed he became. Italians and Greeks, in particular, he thought of as worthless to the settlement process. Jews were also to be avoided, as were Arabs.<\/p>\n<p>Eastern Europeans <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> Ukrainians, Poles, and Russians fared better in Sifton\u2019s eyes. In an oft-quoted statement, the western booster described what he saw as the ideal immigrant:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>When I speak of quality I have in mind something that is quite different from what is in the mind of the average writer or speaker upon the question of immigration. I think that a stalwart peasant in a sheepskin coat, born to the soil, whose forefathers have been farmers for ten generations, with a stout wife and a half-dozen children, is good quality.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"&quot;Only Farmers Need Apply: Clifford Sifton, \u2018The Immigrants Canada Wants\u2019,\u201d Maclean\u2019s Magazine, 1 April 1922:\u00a016, 32-34.\" id=\"return-footnote-176-1\" href=\"#footnote-176-1\" aria-label=\"Footnote 1\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[1]<\/sup><\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Sifton made this statement in 1922, 17 years after resigning his cabinet post and looking back on his works in retrospect. From\u00a01896-1905, however, immigrants from Eastern Europe\u00a0were\u00a0something of an unknown commodity. And, for a cabinet minister in a narrow-minded Protestant community, they were a bit of a gamble. The Eastern Europeans\u2019 arrival in bulk numbers, their enthusiasm for mutually-supportive <a class=\"glossary-term\" aria-haspopup=\"dialog\" aria-describedby=\"definition\" href=\"#term_176_7423\">block settlements<\/a>, and their overall record of success, however, converted Sifton to their value.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_2904\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-2904\" style=\"width: 640px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401.jpg\" alt=\"Three teenagers, two young children, and their parents at a train station.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2904\" width=\"640\" height=\"421\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401.jpg 640w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401-300x197.jpg 300w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401-65x43.jpg 65w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401-225x148.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a010401-350x230.jpg 350w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, 640px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-2904\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Figure 5.5 Sifton&#8217;s ideal immigrants. A family newly arrived from Galicia, ca. 1911.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Sifton\u00a0was likewise convinced that religious sects that had strong internal cohesion and familiarity with the kind of farming that would be conducted in the West were highly desirable. These included Mormons from the United States, Mennonites from Central and Eastern Europe, and pacifist Hutterites and <a class=\"glossary-term\" aria-haspopup=\"dialog\" aria-describedby=\"definition\" href=\"#term_176_7424\">Doukhobors<\/a> from Russia. Ethnicity, experience, and the likelihood of community success thus became key principles of the recruitment process.<\/p>\n<p>Against this list of preferences, Sifton was highly suspicious of urban and industrial workers. In an era where \u201cmodern\u201d was acquiring a cachet all its own and in which civic growth <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> even that of Sifton\u2019s beloved Winnipeg <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> was a principal measure of success, there is something very 18th century about Sifton\u2019s 20th century vision.<\/p>\n<h1>Sifton the Salesman<\/h1>\n<p>Sifton recognized early on that simply putting up posters at shipping offices in Hamburg and Liverpool would\u00a0not draw the numbers he required. So in 1899 he established a network of recruiting agents in Europe under the auspices of a shadow corporation called the North Atlantic Trading Company. Shipping agents in European ports were paid to direct farm emigrants toward Canadian ports. This was a clandestine operation in part because the European countries targeted were all trying to stop the bleeding off of their population to new settlement societies like Canada, the United States, Argentina, and Australia. Sifton&#8217;s strategy paid off: in the space of a decade, the Prairie population more than doubled to 211,649 by 1901\u00a0<strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> the greatest part of that growth taking place after the Laurier government\u00a0arrived in Ottawa in 1896.<\/p>\n<p>Diversity was, as a consequence of these recruitment efforts, growing rapidly in the West and in some Atlantic port towns. \u00a0It was politically imperative that English Canadians be\u00a0reassured that their culture was not at risk. To that end, Sifton stepped up efforts to recruit from Britain in 1903. The results were significant: 1,200 arrived in Canada in 1900 and 65,000 in 1905. This was not, however, a typically agrarian population. This Edwardian-era wave was made up of professionals, merchants, urban labourers, mineworkers, and others whose conditions in a rapidly growing and changing country were in some jeopardy. Canada was presented to them as Brit-friendly, \u201cjust like home,\u201d and an opportunity to enjoy real social mobility <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> something that the entrenched class system in Britain stifled at best and\u00a0prevented at worst. It was this generation that repopulated the Okanagan Valley and southwestern Alberta, with visions of becoming \u201cgentleman orchardists\u201d and ranchers. It was also this generation that supplied many of the early trade union leaders and members whose experience with Britain&#8217;s new-born\u00a0Labour Party would produce echoes across Canada and\u00a0especially in British Columbia. On Vancouver Island, British immigrants would cultivate two contrary myths of British-ness characterized by both an ersatz upper-class Britophilia in Victoria and British-style labour militance in the coal mining towns of Nanaimo, Wellington, Ladysmith, and Cumberland. Both of these movements overlay existing Island political and social traditions so deeply that they effectively eclipsed them to the point that Britishness became part of the Vancouver Island brand.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_2951\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-2951\" style=\"width: 2896px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790.jpg\" alt=\"Two young girls lie on the ground in an orchard. A third girl kneels between them.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2951\" width=\"2896\" height=\"2312\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790.jpg 2896w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790-300x240.jpg 300w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790-768x613.jpg 768w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790-1024x818.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790-65x52.jpg 65w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790-225x180.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirlings_orchard_Kelowna_British_Columbia_HS85-10-21790-350x279.jpg 350w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 2896px) 100vw, 2896px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-2951\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Figure 5.6 Imperialism, steam-powered paddlewheelers, railways, and telegram systems made it possible to transplant British and Anglo-Celtic Canadian culture to the &#8220;gentlemanly&#8221; business of orcharding in the Okanagan. Kelowna, 1909.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>However much the British immigrants of the pre-Great War years played a role in reaffirming imperial connections and the primacy of Anglo-Protestantism, they were not always welcomed by the locals. Canadians were often irritated by British sensibilities and signs appeared in shop windows across the country, \u201cNo English Need Apply.\u201d There was a sense, too, that many of the British immigrants were simply impoverished social detritus, incapable of functioning in their own society let alone in Canada. Tens of thousands of children <strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> part of a migration\u00a0referred to as the <a class=\"glossary-term\" aria-haspopup=\"dialog\" aria-describedby=\"definition\" href=\"#term_176_7425\">Home Children<\/a> \u2014 were plucked\u00a0from British slums and orphanages and placed into apprentice-like situations on Canadian farms. Scandals and outrages plagued the Home Children project as news leaked out from time to time of horrible physical abuse and neglect of the 8 to\u00a010 year old immigrants. It was, however, the failure of the <a class=\"glossary-term\" aria-haspopup=\"dialog\" aria-describedby=\"definition\" href=\"#term_176_7426\">Barr Colony<\/a> project, an attempt to settle British farmers in a Prairie block, that drew the greatest criticism of Sifton\u2019s office and further confirmed the Canadian belief that\u00a0British immigrants made for poor farmers.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Valerie Knowles, Strangers at Our Gates: Canadian Immigration and Immigration Policy, 1540-1997, revised ed. (Toronto: Dundurn Press, 1997), 70-6.\" id=\"return-footnote-176-2\" href=\"#footnote-176-2\" aria-label=\"Footnote 2\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[2]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_3114\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-3114\" style=\"width: 640px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907.jpg\" alt=\"Thirty boys pose outside of a wooden building.\" class=\"size-full wp-image-3114\" width=\"640\" height=\"444\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907.jpg 640w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907-300x208.jpg 300w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907-65x45.jpg 65w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907-225x156.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/104\/2016\/02\/a020907-350x243.jpg 350w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, 640px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-3114\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Figure 5.7 Some 8,000 boys passed through the St. George&#8217;s Home in Ottawa as part of the Home Children migration.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h1>Post-1905<\/h1>\n<p>Sifton resigned from the Laurier government early in 1905, seemingly at the top of his game. The recurrent issue of sectarian, French-language schooling and the cultural agenda in the West was his last round-up. The North-West Territories had enjoyed non-denominational schools under the territorial regulations of 1901. This was slated\u00a0to come to an end with the arrival of provincial status for Alberta and Saskatchewan and the extension of guarantees of separate and state-funded schools for Catholics. Laurier, who cautiously promoted the ideal of dualism in the West, would not give way and Sifton\u00a0<strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> who preferred the vision of an Anglo-Protestant West\u00a0<strong><span>\u2014<\/span><\/strong> resigned. Later, Laurier found himself obliged to change course, but Sifton did not re-enter the cabinet.<\/p>\n<p>In many respects, Sifton was not only an architect of Western Canada: he was an example of what it was becoming. A relentless booster of Winnipeg and Brandon, he was an advocate of social reforms (his wife, Elizabeth Burrows, led the Brandon Women&#8217;s Christian Temperance Union), and a champion of non-denominational schools in the West (often used as coded-language for anti-French or anti-Catholic education). The society he envisioned in 1896 was not one that all Canadians at the time embraced: drawn from different and diverse locales, peoples of many languages and cultures would open the economic potential of the West and, thus, Canada. In return, they would be Anglo-Canadianized and offered what Dominion officials immodestly regarded as a superior and more humane cultural alternative to that of the United States. Although many factors independent of Sifton contributed to what was to follow, the fact remains that many aspects of his\u00a0vision were realized.<\/p>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\n<h2>Key Points<\/h2>\n<ul>\n<li>The late 19th century saw a rapid expansion in global food production to feed industrializing communities and nations. Canada&#8217;s expansion into the West was part of this process.<\/li>\n<li>Canada had to compete for immigrants and did so through strategies that targeted specific groups and whole communities.<\/li>\n<li>Clifford Sifton&#8217;s term as Minister of the Interior coincides with the largest waves of immigrants to the West and thus gave shape to the population that arrived around the turn of the century.<\/li>\n<li>Sifton&#8217;s preferences as regards immigrant groups were explicitly in\u00a0favour of northern Europeans over southern Europeans, Whites over non-Whites, and people with experience farming in prairie-like conditions.<\/li>\n<li>Concerns among British-Canadians that their culture might be under threat was met by new recruitment of British immigrants in the early 20th century.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"media-attributions clear\" prefix:cc=\"http:\/\/creativecommons.org\/ns#\" prefix:dc=\"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/\"><h2>Media Attributions<\/h2><ul><li about=\"http:\/\/collectionscanada.gc.ca\/ourl\/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_tim=2019-07-05T22%3A55%3A35Z&url_ctx_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Actx&rft_dat=3193404&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fcollectionscanada.gc.ca%3Apam&lang=eng\"><a rel=\"cc:attributionURL\" href=\"http:\/\/collectionscanada.gc.ca\/ourl\/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_tim=2019-07-05T22%3A55%3A35Z&url_ctx_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Actx&rft_dat=3193404&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fcollectionscanada.gc.ca%3Apam&lang=eng\" property=\"dc:title\">Doukhobor women are shown breaking the prairie sod by pulling a plough themselves<\/a>  &copy;  Library and Archives Canada (C-000681)    is licensed under a  <a rel=\"license\" href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/mark\/1.0\/\">Public Domain<\/a> license<\/li><li about=\"http:\/\/collectionscanada.gc.ca\/ourl\/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_tim=2019-07-05T22%3A57%3A59Z&url_ctx_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Actx&rft_dat=3193364&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fcollectionscanada.gc.ca%3Apam&lang=eng\"><a rel=\"cc:attributionURL\" href=\"http:\/\/collectionscanada.gc.ca\/ourl\/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_tim=2019-07-05T22%3A57%3A59Z&url_ctx_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Actx&rft_dat=3193364&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fcollectionscanada.gc.ca%3Apam&lang=eng\" property=\"dc:title\">Black Colony, Athabasca Landing, Alberta<\/a>  &copy;  Canada Dept. of Interior, Library and Archives Canada (PA-040745)    is licensed under a  <a rel=\"license\" href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/mark\/1.0\/\">Public Domain<\/a> license<\/li><li about=\"http:\/\/collectionscanada.gc.ca\/ourl\/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_tim=2019-07-05T23%3A01%3A13Z&url_ctx_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Actx&rft_dat=3193424&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fcollectionscanada.gc.ca%3Apam&lang=eng\"><a rel=\"cc:attributionURL\" href=\"http:\/\/collectionscanada.gc.ca\/ourl\/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_tim=2019-07-05T23%3A01%3A13Z&url_ctx_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Actx&rft_dat=3193424&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fcollectionscanada.gc.ca%3Apam&lang=eng\" property=\"dc:title\">Galician immigrants<\/a>  &copy;  William James Topley, Library and Archives Canada (PA-010401)    is licensed under a  <a rel=\"license\" href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/mark\/1.0\/\">Public Domain<\/a> license<\/li><li about=\"https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirling%27s_orchard,_Kelowna,_British_Columbia_(HS85-10-21790).jpg\"><a rel=\"cc:attributionURL\" href=\"https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Pear_blossoms_in_Mr_Stirling%27s_orchard,_Kelowna,_British_Columbia_(HS85-10-21790).jpg\" property=\"dc:title\">Pear blossoms in Mr. Stirling&#8217;s orchard, Kelowna, British Columbia<\/a>  &copy;  G.H.E. Hudson    is licensed under a  <a rel=\"license\" href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/mark\/1.0\/\">Public Domain<\/a> license<\/li><li about=\"http:\/\/collectionscanada.gc.ca\/ourl\/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_tim=2019-07-05T23%3A08%3A33Z&url_ctx_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Actx&rft_dat=3193350&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fcollectionscanada.gc.ca%3Apam&lang=eng\"><a rel=\"cc:attributionURL\" href=\"http:\/\/collectionscanada.gc.ca\/ourl\/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_tim=2019-07-05T23%3A08%3A33Z&url_ctx_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Actx&rft_dat=3193350&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fcollectionscanada.gc.ca%3Apam&lang=eng\" property=\"dc:title\">Immigrant Boys for the St. George&#8217;s Home, Hintonburg<\/a>  &copy;  Library and Archives Canada (PA-020907)    is licensed under a  <a rel=\"license\" href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/mark\/1.0\/\">Public Domain<\/a> license<\/li><\/ul><\/div><hr class=\"before-footnotes clear\" \/><div class=\"footnotes\"><ol><li id=\"footnote-176-1\">\"Only Farmers Need Apply: Clifford Sifton, \u2018The Immigrants Canada Wants\u2019,\u201d <em>Maclean\u2019s Magazine<\/em>, 1 April 1922:\u00a016, 32-34. <a href=\"#return-footnote-176-1\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 1\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-176-2\">Valerie Knowles, <em>Strangers at Our Gates: Canadian Immigration and Immigration Policy, 1540-1997<\/em>, revised ed. (Toronto: Dundurn Press, 1997), 70-6. <a href=\"#return-footnote-176-2\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 2\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div><div class=\"glossary\"><span class=\"screen-reader-text\" id=\"definition\">definition<\/span><template id=\"term_176_7423\"><div class=\"glossary__definition\" role=\"dialog\" data-id=\"term_176_7423\"><div tabindex=\"-1\"><p>An initiative in settling the West with groups drawn from the same ethnicity or creed allocated contiguous lands so as to take advantage of cultures of mutual support.<\/p>\n<\/div><button><span aria-hidden=\"true\">&times;<\/span><span class=\"screen-reader-text\">Close definition<\/span><\/button><\/div><\/template><template id=\"term_176_7424\"><div class=\"glossary__definition\" role=\"dialog\" data-id=\"term_176_7424\"><div tabindex=\"-1\"><p>An immigrant group comprised of pacifists belonging to a Russian dissident religious movement. Settled first on the Prairies then mostly relocated to British Columbia. Persecuted in the 20th century for their pacifism and their rejection of material culture.<\/p>\n<\/div><button><span aria-hidden=\"true\">&times;<\/span><span class=\"screen-reader-text\">Close definition<\/span><\/button><\/div><\/template><template id=\"term_176_7425\"><div class=\"glossary__definition\" role=\"dialog\" data-id=\"term_176_7425\"><div tabindex=\"-1\"><p>Over 100,000 children who were exported from Britain to Canada between 1869 and the late 1930s. Organized by charitable church organizations to alleviate overcrowding and to provide improved and more healthy alternatives. Stories of abuse abound, although many of the children who were distributed to farms across Canada did enjoy improved circumstances.<\/p>\n<\/div><button><span aria-hidden=\"true\">&times;<\/span><span class=\"screen-reader-text\">Close definition<\/span><\/button><\/div><\/template><template id=\"term_176_7426\"><div class=\"glossary__definition\" role=\"dialog\" data-id=\"term_176_7426\"><div tabindex=\"-1\"><p>Located west of Saskatoon covering a massive area that extended to and across what would become the Saskatchewan-Alberta border, the colony was populated by some 2,000 immigrants recruited directly from Britain.<\/p>\n<\/div><button><span aria-hidden=\"true\">&times;<\/span><span class=\"screen-reader-text\">Close definition<\/span><\/button><\/div><\/template><\/div>","protected":false},"author":90,"menu_order":4,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-176","chapter","type-chapter","status-publish","hentry"],"part":174,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/176","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/90"}],"version-history":[{"count":26,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/176\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7901,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/176\/revisions\/7901"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/174"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/176\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=176"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=176"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=176"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/postconfederation\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=176"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}