Quebec Act
Act of Parliament | |
Status: Repealed | |
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Text of statute as originally enacted |
The Quebec Act, 1774 (
The Act removed the reference to the Protestant faith from the oath of allegiance, and guaranteed free practice of Catholicism and restored the Church's power to impose tithes. Additionally, it restored the use of the French civil law for matters of private law, except for the granting of unlimited freedom of testation in accordance with English common law; which was maintained for matters of public law, including administrative appeals, court procedure, and criminal prosecution.
In Quebec, English-speaking immigrants from the
In the Thirteen Colonies, the Act had been passed in the
Background
Following the defeat of the
Under the terms of the peace treaty, Canadiens who chose not to leave became British subjects. In order for them to serve in public offices, they were required to swear an oath to the King that contained specific provisions rejecting the Catholic faith. Given that many of the predominantly Roman Catholic Canadiens were unwilling to take such an oath, this effectively prevented large numbers of Canadiens from participating in the local governments.
With unrest, which was growing into the
There was also a need to compromise between the conflicting demands of the Canadien subjects and those of newly arrived British subjects. These efforts by the colonial governors eventually resulted in the enactment of the Quebec Act, 1774.[5][6]
The Act
- Territory: The boundaries of the province were defined by the Act. In addition to the territory defined by the Royal Proclamation, the borders were expanded to include land that is now southern Ontario, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin and parts of Minnesota.[6]: ss. 1–3 This increased the size of the province threefold, restoring the territory of the French province of Canada.
- Religion: The Act allowed public office holders to practise the Protestant faith.[6]: s. 7 This enabled, for the first time, Canadiens to legally participate in the affairs of the provincial government without formally renouncing their faith. It also reestablished the collection of tithes, which had been stopped under the previous administrative rules.[6]: s. 5
- Structure of government: The Act defined the structure of the provincial government. The governor was to be appointed by the Crown, and he was to govern with the assistance of a legislative council; there were no provisions for an elected legislative assembly.[6]: s. 12
- Law: The Royal Proclamation of 1763 had provided that English common law would apply for all purposes in the colony. The act restored the application of the former law of Canada for all matters respecting property and civil rights, while providing that English law would apply in matters of public law, criminal law and freedom of testation.[6]: ss. 8–11
- Land use: The seigneurial system as a means of distributing land and managing its use was restored. This was the system by which the French had administered the province; the British had instituted a township system of land management in 1763.[7][page needed][6]: s. 8
- Name of the Act: as was the practice at that time, the act initially only had a long title: An Act for making more effectual Provision for the Government of the Province of Quebec in North America. The act was customarily referred to as the Quebec Act, 1774. In 1898, the British Parliament authorised the use of a short title, the British North America (Quebec) Act, 1774, but that short title was "without prejudice to any other mode of citation".[8] In its collection of constitutional enactments, the federal government has continued to refer to the act as the Quebec Act, 1774.[9]
Legacy
Participation of the Canadiens
This section possibly contains original research. Cites to Shortt, but that only gives the text of the letters; conclusions being drawn here are not supported by Shortt. (November 2023) |
The internal communications of the British colonial government at Quebec suggest a relative failure of the purpose of the Quebec Act. On 4 February 1775, Governor Guy Carleton wrote to General Thomas Gage that he believed the Canadiens to be generally happy with the Act, yet he also added:
... I must not however conceal from Your Excellency, that the Gentry, well disposed, and heartily desirous as they are, to serve the Crown, and to serve it with Zeal, when formed into regular Corps, do not relish commanding a bare Militia, they never were used to that Service under the French Government, (and perhaps for good Reasons) besides the sudden Dismission of the Canadian Regiment raised in 1764, without Gratuity or Recompence to Officers, who engaged in our Service almost immediately after the Cession of the Country, of taking any Notice of them since, tho' they all expected half pay, is still uppermost in their Thoughts, and not likely to encourage their engaging a second Time in the same Way; as to the Habitants or Peasantry, ever since the Civil Authority has been introduced into the Province, the Government of it has hung so loose, and retained so little Power, they have in a Manner emancipated themselves, and it will require Time, and discreet Management likewise, to recall them to their ancient Habits of Obedience and Discipline; considering all the new Ideas they have been acquiring for these ten years past, can it be thought they will be pleased at being suddenly, and without Preparation embodied into a Militia, and marched from their Families, Lands, and Habitations to remote Provinces, and all the Horrors of War, which they have already experienced; It would give appearance of Truth to the Language of our Sons of Sedition, at this very Moment busily employed instilling into their Minds, that the Act was passed merely to serve the present Purposes of Government, and in the full Intention of ruling over them with all the Despotism of their ancient Masters.[10]
On June 7, after having received word of the Battles of Lexington and Concord, as well as the capture of Fort Ticonderoga and Benedict Arnold's subsequent raid on Fort Saint-Jean, he wrote to Colonial Secretary Dartmouth:
The little Force we have in the Province was immediately set in Motion, and ordered to assemble at or near St. John's; The Noblesse of this Neighbourhood were called upon to collect their Inhabitants, in order to defend themselves, the Savages of those Parts likewise had the same orders; but tho' the Gentlemen testified great Zeal, neither their Entreaties or their Example could prevail upon the People; a few of the Gentry, consisting principally of the Youth, residing in this Place, and its Neighbourhood, formed a small Corps of Volunteers under the Command of Mr. Samuel Mackay, and took Post at St. John's; the Indians shewed as much Backwardness as the Canadian Peasantry. ...[11]
Less than a month later, on 28 June 1775, Chief Justice
... What will be your Lordships astonishment when I tell you that an Act passed for the express purpose of gratifying the Canadians & which was supposed to comprehend all that they either wished or wanted is become the first object of their discontent & dislike. English officers to command them in time of war, & English Laws to govern them in time of Peace, is the general wish. The former they know to be impossible (at least at present) & by the latter if I understand them right, they mean no Laws & no Government whatsoever – in the mean time it may be truly said that Gen. Carleton had taken an ill measure of the influence of the seigneurs & Clergy over the lower order of people whose Principle of conduct founded in fear & the sharpness of authority over them now no longer exercised, is unrestrained, & breaks out in every shape of contempt or detestation of those whom they used to behold with terror & who gave them I believe too many occasions to express it. And they on their parts have been and are too much elated with the advantages they supposed they should derive from the restoration of their old Privileges & customs, & indulged themselves in a way of thinking & talking that gave very just offence, as well to their own People as to the English merchants.[12]
On 21 September 1775, Lieutenant-Governor
My Lord !
I am sorry to transmit to Your Lordship the disagreeable account of a disagreeable Business, some time in the Beginning of this Month, upon news of the Rebel Army approaching, General Carleton set out for Montreal in great Haste; the 7th instant the Rebels landed in the Woods near St. John's, and beat back to their Boats by a Party of Savages incamped at that Place; in this Action the Savages behaved with great Spirit and Resolution, and had they remained firm to our Interests, probably the Province would have been safe for this Year, but finding the Canadians in General averse to the taking up Arms for the Defence of their Country, they withdrew, and made their Peace.
After their Defeat the Rebels retired to the Isle aux Noix, where they continued till lately, sending out some Parties, and many Emissaries, to debauch the Minds of the Canadians and Indians, in which they have proved too successful, and for which they were too well prepared by the Cabals and Intrigues of these two last years; We knew of their being reinforced, and very considerably, I suppose, as they appeared in Numbers near St. John's last Sunday Evening; where or when they landed, or the Particulars since, we have but very imperfect Accounts of, all Communications with the Forts of St. John's and Chambli, being, as far as I can find, entirely cut off.
No Means have been left untried to bring the Canadian Peasantry to a Sense of their Duty, and engage them to take up arms in Defence of the Province, but all to no Purpose. The Justice must be done to the Gentry, Clergy, and most of the Bourgeoisie, that they have shewen the greatest Zeal and Fidelity to the King's Service, and exerted their best endeavours to reclaim their infatuated Countrymen; ...[13]
Thirteen Colonies
The Quebec Act angered the Americans and was termed one of the Intolerable Acts by the Patriots, and contributed to the coming of the American Revolution.
Frontiersmen from
Langston (2005) looked at press reaction in New England. Some colonial editors explained their views on how it reorganized Canadian governance, explaining how they felt it established direct rule by the Crown and limiting the reach of English law to criminal jurisprudence.
The Quebec Act's main significance in the
For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies.
The First Continental Congress
In Quebec, the 1774 Act was effectively superseded by the Constitutional Act 1791, which partitioned Quebec into two new provinces, Upper and Lower Canada.
The Quebec Act of 1774 is an important predecessor to the
See also
- Constitutional history of Canada
- Timeline of Quebec history
- History of Ontario
- History of Canada
- American Revolution
References
Citations
- ^ Gerald E. Hart (1891). The Quebec Act 1774. Montreal: Gazette Printing Company. p. 12.
- ISBN 978-0-17-644244-6.
- ISBN 9780195350883.
- ISBN 0813137934.
- ^ Woodward, William Harrison (1921). A Short History of the Expansion of the British Empire, 1500-1920. Cambridge University Press. pp. 247–250.
- ^ a b c d e f g Quebec Act, 1774, 14 Geo. III (UK), c. 83.
- OCLC 938019103.
- ^ Short Titles Act, 1896, 59 & 60 Vict. (UK), c. 14, s. 1 and First Schedule 1.
- ^ Quebec Act, 1774, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Appendix II, No. 2.
- ^ Shortt 1918, p. 660
- ^ Shortt 1918, p. 665
- ^ Shortt 1918, p. 670
- ^ Shortt 1918, p. 667
- ^ Joseph J. Casino, "Anti-Popery in Colonial Pennsylvania", Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography Vol. 105, No. 3 (Jul., 1981), pp. 279–309 in JSTOR
- ^ Gordon Wood, The American Revolution (New York: Random House, 2002).
- ISBN 9781258177744.
- ^ Miller, John C. (1943). Origins of the American Revolution.
- ^ The Civil War of 1812: American Citizens, British Subjects, Irish Rebels
- ISBN 0-306-80366-6.
- ^ Cornish, Paul. "Quebec Act of 1774 (1774)." The First Amendment Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
Bibliography
- Coupland, Reginald (1925). The Quebec Act: A Study in Statemanship. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. s.
- Langston, Paul (2006). "'Tyrant and Oppressor!' Colonial Press Reaction to the Quebec Act". Historical Journal of Massachusetts. 34 (1): 1–17.
- Lawson, Philip (1991). "'Sapped by Corruption': British Governance of Quebec and the Breakdown of Anglo-American Relations on the Eve of Revolution". Canadian Review of American Studies. 22 (3): 301–323 – via Ebsco.
- Metzger, Charles Henry (1936). "The Quebec act; a primary cause of the American revolution". American Catholic Studies. New York: American Catholic Historical Society.
- Miller, John C. (1943). Origins of the American Revolution.
- Creviston, Vernon P. (2011). "'No King unless it be a Constitutional King': Rethinking the Place of the Quebec Act in the Coming of the American Revolution". Historian. 73 (3). s: 463–479.
Primary sources
- Cavendish, Sir Henry (1839). Debates of the House of Commons in the Year 1774 on the Bill for Making More Effectual Provision for the Government of the Province of Quebec: Drawn Up from the Notes of the Henry Cavendish, Member for Lostwithiel, London: Ridgway, 303 pp. (online)
- Shortt, Adam; Doughty, Arthur G., eds. (1918). Documents relating to the constitutional history of Canada 1759–1791 (2nd ed.).
External links
- Original text of The Quebec Act (bilingual)
- Full (clear) text of The Quebec Act – Law Society of Upper Canada
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 729. .
- Digital Reproduction of the Original Act on the Parliamentary Archives catalogue