we stand on guard for thee". Stained glass, Yeo Hall,
Royal Military College of Canada. Featuring arms of the Canadian provinces and territories as of 1965. Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia were the original provinces, formed when three British North American colonies federated on July 1, 1867, into the Dominion of Canada and by stages began accruing the indicia of sovereignty from the United Kingdom. (Ontario and Quebec had been united as the
Province of Canada from 1841 to 1867.) Over the next six years, Manitoba (1870), British Columbia (1871), and Prince Edward Island (1873) joined as provinces. The area entered confederation as the Province of Manitoba and the North-West Territories. In 1869, the people of Newfoundland voted to remain a
British colony over fears that taxes would increase with Confederation, and that the economic policy of the Canadian government would favour mainland industries. In 1907, Newfoundland acquired dominion status. In the middle of the
Great Depression in Canada, Newfoundland underwent a prolonged
economic crisis, and the legislature turned over political control to the
Newfoundland Commission of Government in 1933. Following
Canada's participation in the Second World War, in a
1948 referendum, a narrow majority of Newfoundland citizens voted to enter into Confederation, and on March 31, 1949, Newfoundland became Canada's tenth province. The province was renamed Newfoundland and Labrador in 2001.
Bermuda, the last British North American colony, which had been somewhat subordinated to Nova Scotia, was one of two
Imperial fortress colonies in British North America the other being Nova Scotia, and more particularly the city of Halifax. Halifax and Bermuda were the sites of the Royal Navy's
North America Station main bases, dockyards, and Admiralty Houses (called variously the
River St. Lawrence and Coast of America and North America and West Indies Station, the
North America and Newfoundland Station, the
North America and West Indies Station, and the
America and West Indies Station). The squadron of the station was based at
Royal Naval Dockyard, Halifax, during the summers and
Royal Naval Dockyard, Bermuda, in the winters. In the 1820s, Bermuda, which was better located to control the Atlantic Seaboard of the United States, impossible to attack over land, and almost impregnable against attack over water, became the main base year round. A large
British Army garrison in Bermuda, which fell under the
commander-in-chief in Nova Scotia, existed to defend the colony as a naval base, and to prevent it becoming as useful a base to the navy of an adversary, and to support amphibious operations throughout the region, such as the
Chesapeake campaign during the
American War of 1812. Bermuda was consequently the most important British naval and military base in the Americas. Canadian confederation resulted in the Canadian Militia becoming responsible for the defence of the Maritimes, the abolition of the British Army's commander-in-chief there, and the reduction of British military forces in the Maritimes to a small garrison for the protection of the Halifax dockyard, which was withdrawn when the dockyard was handed over to the Dominion government in 1905 for use by the new Canadian naval service. Britain retained control of Bermuda as an imperial fortress, with the governor and commander-in-chief of Bermuda (a military officer previously ranking between lieutenant-colonel and major-general) becoming a lieutenant-general termed a
general officer commanding and the Bermuda garrison becoming a command in its own right. Bermuda was consequently left out of Canadian confederation. It retained naval links with Halifax. The
state church (or
established church), the
Church of England, continued to place Bermuda under the
bishop of Newfoundland until 1919. Bermuda also remained linked to the Maritimes under the Methodist and Roman Catholic churches. In 1903, resolution of the
Alaska Panhandle Dispute fixed British Columbia's northwestern boundary, the first of only two provincial reductions in Canada. In 1927, the second reduction occurred when a
boundary dispute between Canada and the Dominion of Newfoundland saw Labrador (part of the Dominion of Newfoundland) enlarged at Quebec's expense. (In 1949, this land returned to Canada as part of the province of Newfoundland.) In 1999, Nunavut was created from the northern and eastern portions of the Northwest Territories. The three territories are the most sparsely populated region in Canada, combined covering in land area. For much of the Northwest Territories' early history, it was divided into
several districts for ease of administration. The District of Keewatin was created as a separate territory from 1876 to 1905, after which, as the Keewatin Region, it became an administrative district of the Northwest Territories. In 1999, it was dissolved when it became part of Nunavut. ==Government==