Some aspects of the historical geography of the Red River Settlement from 1812 to 1870

It has often been observed that Canada has evolved from six different growth points, four of them coastal centres -- the Atlantic coast, the Quebec lowlands, the Hudson Bay lowlands, the British Columbian coast -- the two of them interior settlements -- Upper Canada and the Red River Valley of Man...

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Main Author: Kaye, Barry
Language:en_US
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3442
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-34422014-03-29T03:42:49Z Some aspects of the historical geography of the Red River Settlement from 1812 to 1870 Kaye, Barry It has often been observed that Canada has evolved from six different growth points, four of them coastal centres -- the Atlantic coast, the Quebec lowlands, the Hudson Bay lowlands, the British Columbian coast -- the two of them interior settlements -- Upper Canada and the Red River Valley of Manitoba. This thesis surveys the changing geography of the smallest and most continental of the two interior settlements, the Red River Valley, over a period of about sixty years, and is presented as a study in historical geography. It is a geographical study of the Red River Settlement or Colony, sometimes called after its founder the Selkirk Settlement or Colony, which I hope will contribute something to a better knowledge of the early geography of the Canadian West. It is not meant to be, however, a complete geographical analysis. The bias is on agriculture, population and patterns of settlement. Transportation and the fur trade are given but scant treatment... 2009-12-01T17:10:10Z 2009-12-01T17:10:10Z 1967 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3442 en_US The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description It has often been observed that Canada has evolved from six different growth points, four of them coastal centres -- the Atlantic coast, the Quebec lowlands, the Hudson Bay lowlands, the British Columbian coast -- the two of them interior settlements -- Upper Canada and the Red River Valley of Manitoba. This thesis surveys the changing geography of the smallest and most continental of the two interior settlements, the Red River Valley, over a period of about sixty years, and is presented as a study in historical geography. It is a geographical study of the Red River Settlement or Colony, sometimes called after its founder the Selkirk Settlement or Colony, which I hope will contribute something to a better knowledge of the early geography of the Canadian West. It is not meant to be, however, a complete geographical analysis. The bias is on agriculture, population and patterns of settlement. Transportation and the fur trade are given but scant treatment...
author Kaye, Barry
spellingShingle Kaye, Barry
Some aspects of the historical geography of the Red River Settlement from 1812 to 1870
author_facet Kaye, Barry
author_sort Kaye, Barry
title Some aspects of the historical geography of the Red River Settlement from 1812 to 1870
title_short Some aspects of the historical geography of the Red River Settlement from 1812 to 1870
title_full Some aspects of the historical geography of the Red River Settlement from 1812 to 1870
title_fullStr Some aspects of the historical geography of the Red River Settlement from 1812 to 1870
title_full_unstemmed Some aspects of the historical geography of the Red River Settlement from 1812 to 1870
title_sort some aspects of the historical geography of the red river settlement from 1812 to 1870
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3442
work_keys_str_mv AT kayebarry someaspectsofthehistoricalgeographyoftheredriversettlementfrom1812to1870
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