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Quebec Act: Impact on French Canada

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27 views17 pages

Quebec Act: Impact on French Canada

Uploaded by

CECILIA ABI SAAD
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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A RT I C L E

Quebec Act, 1774


Article by Maxime Dagenais

Updated by Andrew McIntosh, Celine Cooper

Published Online August 12, 2013

Last Edited May 11, 2020


The Quebec Act received royal assent on 22 June 1774. It revoked the Royal Proclamation of 1763, which had aimed to
assimilate the French-Canadian population under English rule. The Quebec Act was put into effect on 1 May 1775. It was
passed to gain the loyalty of the French-speaking majority of the Province of Quebec. Based on recommendations from
Governors James Murray and Guy Carleton, the Act guaranteed the freedom of worship and restored French property
rights. However, the Act had dire consequences for Britain’s North American empire. Considered one of the five “Intolerable
Acts” by the Thirteen American Colonies, the Quebec Act was one of the direct causes of the American Revolutionary War
(1775–83). It was followed by the Constitutional Act in 1791.

This is the full-length entry about the Quebec Act of 1774. For a plain language summary, please see The Quebec Act, 1774
(Plain-Language Summary).
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Quebec Act, 1774
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Background Context D O N AT E

In 1763, a century of imperial warfare in North America ended. Following the decisive British victory at the Plains of
Abraham, France surrendered much of its North American territory to Great Britain with the Treaty of Paris. (See The
Conquest of New France.) These lands included Île Royale (Cape Breton Island), Canada, and its holdings in the Great Lakes
Basin and east of the Mississippi River (except New Orleans). The Royal Proclamation of 1763 brought these regions and
their people into Britain’s North American empire.
Did you know?
The Treaty of Paris ended the Seven Years’ War between France, Britain and Spain. It marked the end of that
phase of European conflict in North America, and created the basis for the modern country of Canada.

The Royal Proclamation aimed to assimilate the French-speaking population. English laws, customs and practices were
established in the colony. It was hoped that a massive influx of English-speaking Protestant settlers would follow. The local
French-speaking population was expected to assimilate in order to survive. The Proclamation also created an environment in
which British merchants could gain a stranglehold on the colony’s economy, particularly in the fur trade.

In practice, however, things were very different. Since English-speaking immigrants were not coming en masse, Governor
James Murray saw that assimilation was impractical. French speakers outnumbered English speakers and Murray depended
on their co-operation to govern. Therefore, while he introduced English criminal law, he kept French property and civil law.
According to historian Donald Fyson, French-speaking Catholics even held public offices.
Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester
Lord Guy Carleton was largely responsible for the Quebec Act, which helped to preserve French laws and customs.
(courtesy Library and Archives Canada/C-2833)

Did you know?


In the five decades following the British Conquest of 1759-60, the English-speaking community in Quebec
remained a small yet influential group. Because of this community’s relatively small size and the American
Revolution brewing in the south, the ruling elite was reluctant to impose the British government’s official policy of
anglicization and suppression of Catholicism that was being enforced in Ireland. They instead sought to win the
loyalty of the French Canadian majority through measures of appeasement, notably the Quebec Act of 1774. This
did not always sit well with the anglophone merchant class or the Anglican clergy.

Quebec Act

In February 1774, Alexander Wedderburn, the solicitor general for England and Wales, began working on an act to replace
the Royal Proclamation. He was assisted by Lord Dartmouth, the secretary of state for the colonies; Governor Guy Carleton;
William Hey, the chief justice of the Province of Quebec; Lord Hillsborough, the former secretary of state for the colonies;
Lord Mansfield, lord chief justice of the King’s Bench; and Attorney General Edward Thurlow.

In June 1774, the Quebec Act was first passed by the British House of Commons. It was later adopted by the House of
Lords. It received Royal Assent on 22 June 1774 and was put into effect on 1 May 1775. In many ways, the Act was shaped
by the views of Murray and his successor, Guy Carleton. The slow arrival of English-speaking immigrants meant that colonial
officials depended on local French-speaking colonists. Governor Carleton even warned officials in Britain that Quebec was
“a province unlike any other, and its distinctive circumstances needed to be acknowledged.…”

As a result, Carleton argued that keeping French-Canadian customs was a much more practical option. He spent years
convincing British officials to abandon their assimilationist policies. Given the growing tensions in the Thirteen Colonies,
there was also concern that French Canadians might join a potential revolt. It was imperative that Britain gain their loyalty.

The Quebec Act once again divided the North American territory. The Province of Quebec was greatly enlarged. It was no
longer limited to the St. Lawrence River valley. Its borders expanded to include Labrador, Anticosti Island, the Magdalen
Islands and a large area to the west of the Thirteen Colonies. This included what would become Southern Ontario, the
disputed territory of Ohio, Michigan and Indiana, and even parts of modern-day Wisconsin, Illinois and Minnesota. The
region also included what was then called the “Land of the Indians.” The Royal Proclamation had recognized it as
Indigenous reserves. The proclamation had banned European settlement on this territory. According to Alan Taylor, the idea
was that “Quebec’s authoritarian government” could better prevent settlers and land speculators from the Thirteen
Colonies from moving to this land.
Murray, James
Portrait of General James Murray by an unknown artist, circa 1770-80, oil on canvas. The English merchants had Murray, the first governor of the Province of
Québec, recalled. The dispute centered on the application of British law and the creation of an Assembly .
(courtesy National Portrait Gallery)

The Quebec Act and the Province of Quebec

The Quebec Act was intended to appease French Canadians and to gain their loyalty. First and foremost, the Act allowed
them to freely practice Roman Catholicism. This was in stark contrast to how the British government had handled similar
situations. For the previous 200 years, it had adopted anti-Catholic approaches, particularly in Ireland. But it recognized
Quebec’s distinct realities and adopted a different attitude. With freedom of religion, French-speaking Catholics were no
longer barred from running the affairs of the colony. They were only required to swear an oath of allegiance to the king,
which made no mention of one’s religious affiliation (unlike under the previous Test Act).

Though English criminal law was retained, the Act restored French civil law. This meant that the Roman Catholic Church
could now legally collect tithes. The seigneurial system was also re-established. While the seigneurs and church officials were
undoubtedly happy, French-speaking inhabitants were less pleased about having to pay seigneurial dues and taxes. The Act
also revoked every ordinance that had been passed between 1764 and 1775. As stated by the Royal Proclamation,
legislative authority could only be held by the governor, his council, and the assembly. And since an assembly was never
created, colonial authorities did not have the power to impose taxes or duties.

To English-speaking colonists, especially the men of the “British Party,” the Act was not something to celebrate. These men
— most of whom were merchants living in Montreal and Quebec City— wanted to assimilate the French-speaking
population. They hoped to turn the colony into a proper British colony. They wanted the English common law system and
freehold tenures instead of the seigneurial system. They also wanted an elected assembly under the control of the British
Party. They argued that only English-speaking Protestants should be able to vote or hold public office. They even petitioned
— unsuccessfully — in favour of this.

British officials rejected these demands. They feared that a British-dominated assembly would cause tensions within the
colony. Historian Alan Taylor concluded that “Quebec presented a paradox where a British minority resented that imperial
officials protected the culture and law of the French majority.” Instead, a Legislative Council of 23 would be appointed by
the Crown. It would govern the colony with the governor. Nevertheless, the expansion of the colony’s territory surely
pleased many British merchants, as it significantly increased their commercial reach.

Loyalists at the Site of Kingston


One wave of Loyalists came up the St Lawrence River in 1783 to Lake Ontario, where their encampment grew into the town of Kingston. Drawing by James
Peachey.
(courtesy John Ross Robertson Coll, Metropolitan Toronto Library)

The Quebec Act and the Thirteen American Colonies

Perhaps the most important consequence of the Quebec Act was the American Revolutionary War (1775–83). The Quebec
Act was very unpopular among settlers in the Thirteen Colonies. They thought it was a kind of “British Authoritarianism.” It
was considered one of the five “intolerable acts” passed by Britain in the lead-up to the revolution.

One month before the Quebec Act passed, the British Parliament approved a series of acts that angered people in the
Thirteen Colonies. These included the Boston Port Act, an Act for the Impartial Administration of Justice, the Quartering
Act, and the Massachusetts Government Act. These “intolerable acts” were condemned by the American colonists as unjust
and despotic. The Boston Port Act, for instance, shut down the city’s port until locals paid for the tea that was destroyed
during the famous Boston Tea Party. The newly amended Quartering Act now allowed authorities to lodge British soldiers in
private homes. And the Massachusetts Government Act turned the elected colonial council into an appointed one. It also
banned all town meetings that took place without the consent of British officials.

In this context, the Quebec Act was just another “intolerable act.” John Adams, for example, was a supporter of the
American Revolution. He served as a delegate for Massachusetts during the Continental Congress. He said that the Act was
“dangerous to the Interests of the Protestant Religion and of these Colonies.” American colonists were especially opposed
to the fact that the British Crown was favouring French-speaking Catholics over its own Protestant colonists. Most were
furious that they were banned from settling in the Ohio valley. Some even argued that many had given their lives to free this
land from the control of French Catholics. The New York Journal cried out that, “the Savages of the wilderness were never
expelled to make room in this, the best part of the continent, for idolaters and slaves [French Canadians].” Others also
feared that the Act was “a premeditated Design and System, formed and pursued by the British Ministry, to introduce an
arbitrary Government into his Majesty’s American Dominions.”
The Quebec Act not only created more tension in the Thirteen Colonies. More importantly, it broke the bond between the
colonists and the British monarch. According to historian Vernon P. Creston, this “fatally undermined the popularity of the
most recognizable, and cherished, symbol of the British Empire’s authority in the American colonies.” American colonists
even used the Act to justify “physical resistance” against the British. They saw it as “proof that their king could no longer be
trusted.” The Act had shown how tyrannical and corrupt the Crown had become. Many American colonists felt betrayed.
They believed it was their duty to “resist such sweeping attacks on their liberty.”

During the American Revolutionary War, two invasion forces were sent to Canada to recruit locals in the fight against the
British. They were led by Colonel Benedict Arnold and General Richard Montgomery. These attacks failed due to difficult
conditions, a lack of supplies and a lack of support from the local population. (See American Revolution – Invasion of
Canada.)
American Revolution, Battles of

Constitutional Act 1791

The Quebec Act was followed in 1791 by the Constitutional Act. Much had changed since 1774. Thousands of Loyalists
arrived in the Maritimes and in the Province of Quebec and settled north of the Great Lakes. After arriving in a British colony
that had French property and civil laws and lacked British institutions, these Loyalists began pressuring British officials to
establish English common law and a proper legislative assembly. On the other hand, French Canadians feared that the
increasing number of Loyalists would result in the loss of the rights they had gained with the Quebec Act.
The 1791 Constitutional Act was a compromise. The Province of Quebec was divided into the colonies of Upper Canada and
Lower Canada. Upper Canada, where most Loyalists had settled, adopted English common law. Lower Canada, where most
French Canadians lived, kept French property rights and all of the privileges that French Canadians had gained in 1774. Both
colonies also benefited from political representation with the creation of separate, elected Legislative Assemblies.

See also: Quebec Act, 1774: Document; The Quebec Act, 1774 (Plain Language Summary).

Quebec Constitutional Act of 1791 American Revolution Lower Canada British North America

colonization Royal Proclamation


Further Reading

Alan Taylor, American Revolutions: A Continental History, 1750-1804 (2016).

Vernon P. Creviston, ““No King Unless It Be a Constitutional King”: Rethinking the Place of the Quebec Act in the Coming of
the American Revolution.” The Historian 73.3 (2011): 463-479.

Rachel Engel-Taggart, “Crossing Empires: The Experience of the Continental Army During the Invasion of Canada,” Beyond
Borders: The New Canadian History

Hilda Neatby, The Quebec Act (1972).

Raymond Blake, Jeffrey Keshen, Norman Knowles, and Barbara J. Messamore, Conflict and Compromise: Pre-Confederation
Canada (2017).

Donald Fyson, “The Royal Proclamation and the Canadiens,” Active History

Richard A. Primus, The American Language of Rights (1999).

Recommended
ARTICLE

Constitutional Act 1791 Document

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