Page:  of 1136
 
VI. THE EMERGENCE OF A NATION--II: 1849-67 276
English racism ( 277 ); reciprocity ( 278 ); abolition of seigneurial
tenure
( 280 ); railroads ( 283 ); retirement of Baldwin and Lafon-
taine
( 284 ); Garneau ( 285 ); other writers ( 289 ); Gérin-Lajoie
( 293 ); Patriotic School of Quebec ( 294 ); Crémazie ( 296 ); La
Capricieuse
( 298 ); Crémazie in France ( 302 ); G.-E. Cartier ( 308 );
Quebec Conference ( 319 ); Confederation debate ( 322 ); Rouge
opposition
( 324 ).
VII. GROWING PAINS: 1867-96 331
Ultramontanism vs. liberalism ( 331 ); Quebec at Confederation
( 333 ); renewal of ties with France and Rome ( 339 ); rise of ultra-
montanism
( 341 ); Rouge liberalism ( 342 ); the Institut Canadien
( 343 ); Bishop Lafleche ( 345 ); Guibord Case ( 347 ); French and
Roman influences
( 350 ); the Catholic Program ( 353 ); the Holy
War
( 356 ); condemnation of Catholic Liberalism ( 359 ); clerical
intervention
( 360 ); Laurier on political liberalism ( 362 ); Bishop
Conroy's mission
( 369 ); the university question ( 370 ); Tardivel
( 374 ); the Castors ( 376 ); Rome decides ( 380 ); Buies ( 382 );
historical writing ( 385 ); Fréchette ( 385 ); intellectual awakening ( 387 ).
VIII. RIEL, THE WEST, AND MERCIER: 1818-97 393
The Red River Colony ( 393 ); transfer to Canada opposed ( 395 );
Riel Rising, 1869-70 ( 397 ); decline of Métis and French influence
( 403 ); the amnesty ( 404 ); Riel in the United States ( 405 ); the
North-West Rebellion
( 405 ); Riel's trial ( 412 ); Mercier's Parti
National
( 416 ); English reaction ( 419 ); Laurier's course ( 420 );
the Mercier regime ( 421 ); Jesuit Estates Act ( 423 ); Equal Rights
agitation
( 424 ); Mercier's and Laurier's nationalisms ( 426 ); fall
of Mercier
( 428 ); ultramontanism and New England ( 432 );
Manitoba school question ( 435 ); Mgr. Merry del Val and Affari
vos
( 439 ); the Western minorities ( 440 ).
IX. IMPERIALISM vs. NATIONALISM: 1867-1904 447
British imperialism in the nineteenth century ( 448 ); imperial feder-
alism
( 451 ); Jingoism ( 454 ); Anglo-Saxon racism ( 455 ); Imperial
Federation League
( 455 ); 1887 Colonial Conference ( 458 );
Canada First ( 460 ); Macdonald's imperialism ( 463 ); Com-
mercial Union
( 465 ); Joseph Chamberlain ( 469 ); 1897 Colonial
Conference
( 472 ); Minto and Hutton ( 475 ); the South African War
( 477 ); Bourassa's revolt ( 483 ); Laurier's reply ( 483 ); imperialism
vs. nationalism
( 487 ); 1902 Colonial Conference ( 488 ); Chamber-
lain's decline
( 492 ); Bourassa's nationalism ( 495 ); Mgr. Paquet's
sermon
( 509 ); 'French Canada and the British Empire' ( 510 );
Goldwin Smith ( 513 ); La Ligue Nationaliste ( 514 ); Bourassa and
Tarte
( 518 ); Asselin's Le Nationaliste ( 522 ); Bourassa's and Tar-
divel's nationalisms
( 524 ); the Dundonald affair ( 527 ); the La
Presse intrigue
( 529 ).
X. NATIONALISM VS. IMPERIALISM: 1905-11 536
Minority rights in the North-West ( 536 ); Sifton's revolt ( 538 );
Bourassa and the North-West school question ( 540 ); his opposi-
tion to immigration and sabbatarianism
( 546 ); 1907 Colonial
Conference
( 552 ); Bourassa attacks provincial administration
( 554 ); L'Action Sociale ( 555 ); Bourassa defeats Gouin ( 556 );
Quebec Tercentenary ( 558 ); Bourassa founds nationalist party
( 560 ); the Navy question ( 562 ); Le Devoir ( 565 ); Naval Bill debate

-xii-

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Publication Information: Book Title: The French Canadians, 1760-1945. Contributors: Mason Wade - author. Publisher: Macmillan. Place of Publication: New York. Publication Year: 1955. Page Number: xii.
    
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