In a long letter which he wrote to Earl Grey in
August, 1850, Lord Elgin
used these significant words: "To render annexation by violence impossible, or by any other means improbable as
may be, is, as I have
often ventured to repeat, the polar star of my policy." To understand the full significance of this language it is only
necessary to refer to
the history of the difficulties with which the governor-general had to contend from the first hour he came to the
province and began his
efforts to allay the feeling of disaffection then too prevalent throughout the country--especially among the
commercial classes--and
to give encouragement to that loyal sentiment which had been severely shaken by the indifference or ignorance shown by
British statesmen and
people with respect to the conditions and interests of the Canadas. He was quite conscious that, if the province was to
remain a contented
portion of the British empire, it could be best done by giving full play to the principles of self-government among
both nationalities who
had been so long struggling to obtain the application of the parliamentary system of England in the fullest
sense to the operation
of their own internal affairs, and by giving to the industrial and commercial classes adequate compensation for the
great losses which they
had sustained by the sudden abolition of the privileges which England had so long extended to Canadian
products--notably, flour, wheat and lumber--in the British market.
Lord Elgin knew perfectly well
that, while this discontent existed, the party which favoured annexation would not fail
to find sympathy and
encouragement in the neighbouring republic. He recalled the fact that both Papineau and Mackenzie, after the
outbreak of their abortive rebellion, had many abettors across the border, as
the infamous raids into
Canada clearly proved. Many people in the United States, no doubt, saw some analogy between the grievances of
Canadians and those
which had led to the American revolution. "The mass of the American people," said Lord Durham, "had judged of the
quarrel from a distance; they had been obliged to form their judgment on
the apparent grounds of
the controversy; and were thus deceived, as all those are apt to be who judge under such circumstances, and on such
grounds. The contest
bore some resemblance to that great struggle of their own forefathers, which they regard with the highest pride. Like
that, they believed it
to be the contest of a colony against the empire, whose misconduct alienated their own country; they considered it to
be a contest undertaken
by a people professing to seek independence of distant control, and extension of popular privileges."
More than that, the
striking contrast which was presented between Canada and the United States "in respect to every sign of productive
industry, increasing
wealth, and progressive civilization" was considered by the people of the latter country to be among the results of the
absence of a political
system which would give expansion to the energies of the colonists and make them self-reliant in every
sense. Lord Durham's
picture of the condition of things in 1838-9 was very painful to Canadians, although it was truthful in every
particular. "On the
British side of the line," he wrote, "with the exception of a few favoured spots, where some approach to American
prosperity is apparent,
all seems waste and desolate." But it was not only "in the difference between the larger towns on the two
sides" that we could see
"the best evidence of our own inferiority." That "painful and undeniable truth was most manifest in the country
districts through which
the line of national separation passes for one thousand miles." Mrs. Jameson in her "Winter Studies and Summer
Rambles," written only a
year or two before Lord Durham's report, gives an equally unfavourable comparison between the Canadian and
United States sides of
the western country. As she floated on the Detroit river in a little canoe made of a hollow tree, and saw on one
side "a city with its
towers, and spires, and animated population," and on the other "a little straggling hamlet with all the symptoms of
apathy, indolence,
mistrust, hopelessness," she could not help wondering at this "incredible difference between the two shores,"
and hoping that some of
the colonial officials across the Atlantic would be soon sent "to behold and solve the difficulty."
But while Lord Durham was
bound to emphasize this unsatisfactory state of things he had not lost his confidence in the
loyalty of the mass of
the Canadian people, notwithstanding the severe strain to which they had been subject on account of the supineness of
the British government
to deal vigorously and promptly with grievances of which they had so long complained as seriously affecting
their connection with
the parent state and the development of their material resources. It was only necessary, he felt, to remove the
causes of discontent to
bring out to the fullest extent the latent affection which the mass of French and English Canadians had been feeling for
British connection ever
since the days when the former obtained guarantees for the protection of their dearest institutions and the
Loyalists of the
American Revolution crossed the frontier for the sake of Crown and empire. "We must not take every rash expression of
disappointment," wrote
Lord Durham, "as an indication of a settled aversion to the existing constitution; and my own observation
convinces me that the
predominant feeling of all the British population of the North American colonies is that of devoted attachment to
the mother country. I
believe that neither the interests nor the feelings of the people are incompatible with a colonial government,
wisely and popularly
administered." His strong conviction then was that if connection with Great Britain was to be continuous, if every cause
of discontent was to be
removed, if every excuse for interference "by violence on the part of the United States" was to be taken away,
if Canadian
annexationists were no longer to look for sympathy and aid among their republican neighbours, the Canadian people must be
given the full control
of their own internal affairs, while the British government on their part should cease that constant interference
which only irritated and
offended the colony. "It is not by weakening," he said, "but strengthening the influence of the people on
the government; by
confining within much narrower bounds than those hitherto allotted to it, and not by extending the interference of the
imperial authorities in
the details of colonial affairs, that I believe that harmony is to be restored, where dissension has so long
prevailed; and a regularity and vigour hitherto unknown, introduced into the
administration of these
provinces." And he added that if the internal struggle for complete self-government were renewed "the
sympathy from without would at some time or other re-assume its former
strength."
Lord Elgin appeared on the scene at the very time
when there was some
reason for a repetition of that very struggle, and a renewal of that very "sympathy from without" which Lord Durham
imagined. The political
irritation, which had been smouldering among the great mass of Reformers since the days of Lord Metcalfe, was
seriously aggravated by
the discontent created by commercial ruin and industrial paralysis throughout Canada as a natural result of Great
Britain's ruthless
fiscal policy. The annexation party once more came to the surface, and contrasts were again made between Canada and the
United States seriously
to the discredit of the imperial state. "The plea of self-interest," wrote Lord Elgin in 1849, "the
most powerful weapon,
perhaps, which the friends of British connection have wielded in times past, has not only been wrested from my hands but
transferred since 1846
to those of the adversary." He then proceeded to contrast the condition of things on the two sides of the
Niagara, only "spanned by a narrow bridge, which it takes a foot passenger
about three minutes to
cross." The inhabitants on the Canadian side were "for the most part United Empire Loyalists" and differed little
in habits or modes of
thought and expression from their neighbours. Wheat, their staple product, grown on the Canadian side of the line,
"fetched at that time in
the market from 9d. to 1s. less than the same article grown on the other." These people had protested against the
Montreal annexation
movement, but Lord Elgin was nevertheless confident that the large majority firmly believed "that their annexation to
the United States would
add one-fourth to the value of the produce of their farms." In dealing with the causes of discontent Lord Elgin
came to exactly the same
conclusion which, as I have just shown, was accepted by Lord Durham after a close study of the political and
material conditions of
the country. He completed the work of which his eminent predecessor had been able only to formulate the plan. By
giving adequate scope to the practice of responsible government, he was
able to remove all
causes for irritation against the British government, and prevent annexationists from obtaining any sympathy from
that body of American
people who were always looking for an excuse for a movement--such a violent movement as suggested by Lord Elgin in the
paragraph given
above--which would force Canada into the states of the union. Having laid this foundation for a firm and popular
government, he proceeded to remove the commercial embarrassment by giving a
stimulus to Canadian
trade by the repeal of the navigation laws, and the adoption of reciprocity with the United States. The results
of his efforts were soon
seen in the confidence which all nationalities and classes of the Canadian people felt in the working of their
system of government, in the strengthening of the ties between the imperial
state and the
dependency, and in the decided stimulus given to the shipping and trade throughout the provinces of British North
America.
I have already in the previous chapters of this
book dwelt on the
methods which Lord Elgin so successfully adopted to establish responsible government in accordance with the
wishes of the Canadian
people, and it is now only necessary to refer to his strenuous efforts during six years to obtain reciprocal trade
between Canada and the
United States. It was impossible at the outset of his negotiations to arouse any active interest among the politicians
of the republic as long
as they were unable to see that the proposed treaty would be to the advantage of their particular party or of the
nation at large. No
party in congress was ready to take it up as a political question and give it that impulse which could be best given by
a strong partisan
organization. The Canadian and British governments could not get up a "lobby" to press the matter in the ways peculiar
to professional
politicians, party managers, and great commercial or financial corporations. Mr. Hincks brought the powers of his
persuasive tongue and
ingenious intellect to bear on the politicians at Washington, but even he with all his commercial acuteness and
financial knowledge was
unable to accomplish anything. It was not until Lord Elgin himself went to the national capital and made use of his
diplomatic tact and
amenity of demeanour that a successful result was reached. No governor-general who ever visited the United
States made so deep an
impression on its statesmen and people as was made by Lord Elgin during this mission to Washington, and also in the
course of the visits he
paid to Boston and Portland where he spoke with great effect on several occasions. He won the confidence and
esteem of statesmen and
politicians by his urbanity, dignity, and capacity for business. He carried away his audiences by his exhibition of
a high order of
eloquence, which evoked the admiration of those who had been accustomed to hear Webster, Everett, Wendell,
Philipps, Choate, and
other noted masters of oratory in America.
He spoke at Portland after his
success in negotiating the treaty, and was able to congratulate both Canada and the
United States on the
settlement of many questions which had too long alienated peoples who ought to be on the most friendly terms with each
other. He was now near
the close of his Canadian administration and was able to sum up the results of his labours. The discontent with
which the people of the
United States so often sympathized had been brought to an end "by granting to Canadians what they desired--the great
principle of
self-government" "The inhabitants of Canada at this moment," he went on to say, "exercise as much influence over their
own destinies and
government as do the people of the United States. This is the only cause of misunderstanding that ever existed; and
this cannot arise when
the circumstances which made them at variance have ceased to exist."
The treaty was signed on June
5th, 1854, by Lord Elgin on the part of Great Britain, and by the Honourable W.L. Marcy,
secretary of state, on
behalf of the United States, but it did not legally come into force until it had been formally ratified by the
parliament of Great
Britain, the congress of the United States, and the several legislatures of the British provinces. It exempted
from customs duties on
both sides of the line certain articles which were the growth and produce of the British colonies and of the United
States--the principal
being grain, flour, breadstuffs, animals, fresh, smoked, and salted meats, fish, lumber of all kinds, poultry,
cotton, wool, hides,
ores of metal, pitch, tar, ashes, flax, hemp, rice, and unmanufactured tobacco. The people of the United States and of
the British provinces
were given an equal right to navigate the St. Lawrence river, the Canadian canals and Lake Michigan. No export duty
could be levied on
lumber cut in Maine and passing down the St. John or other streams in New Brunswick. The most important question
temporarily settled by the treaty was the fishery dispute which had been
assuming a troublesome
aspect for some years previously. The government at Washington then began to raise the issue that the three mile limit
to which their fishermen
could be confined should follow the sinuosities of the coasts, including bays; the object being to obtain
access to the valuable
mackerel fisheries of the Bay of Chaleurs and other waters claimed to be exclusively within the territorial
jurisdiction of the
maritime provinces. The imperial government generally sustained the contention of the provinces--a contention
practically supported by the American authorities in the case of Delaware,
Chesapeake, and other
bays on the coasts of the United States--that the three mile limit should be measured from a line drawn from headland
to headland of all bays,
harbours, and creeks. In the case of the Bay of Fundy, however, the imperial government allowed a departure from
this general principle
when it was urged by the Washington government that one of its headlands was in the territory of the United
States, and that it was
an arm of the sea rather than a bay. The result was that foreign fishing vessels were shut out only from the bays
on the coasts of Nova
Scotia and New Brunswick within the Bay of Fundy. All these questions were, however, placed in abeyance, for twelve
years, by the Reciprocity Treaty of 1854, which provided that the
inhabitants of the United States could take fish of any kind, except shell
fish, on the sea coasts,
and shores, in the bays, harbours, and creeks of any British province, without any restriction as to distance,
and had also permission
to land on these coasts and shores for the purpose of drying their nets and curing their fish. The same
privileges were extended
to British citizens on the eastern sea coasts and shores of the United States, north of the 36th
parallel of north
latitude--privileges of no practical value to the people of British North America compared with those they gave up in
their own prolific
waters. The farmers of the agricultural west accepted with great satisfaction a treaty which gave their products
free access to their
natural market, but the fishermen and seamen of the maritime provinces, especially of Nova Scotia, were for
some time dissatisfied
with provisions which gave away their most valuable fisheries without adequate compensation, and at the same time
refused them the
privilege--a great advantage to a ship-building, ship-owning province--of the coasting trade of the United
States on the same terms which were allowed to American and British vessels
on the coasts of British
North America. On the whole, however, the treaty eventually proved of benefit to all the provinces at a time
when trade required just
such a stimulus as it gave in the markets of the United States. The aggregate interchange of commodities between
the two countries rose
from an annual average of $14,230,763 in the years previous to 1854 to $33,492,754 gold currency, in the first
year of its existence;
to $42,944,754 gold currency, in the second year; to $50,339,770 gold currency in the third year; and to no less a sum
than $84,070,955 at war
prices, in the thirteenth year when it was terminated by the United States in accordance with the provision,
which allowed either
party to bring it to an end after a due notice of twelve months at the expiration of ten years or of any longer time it
might remain in force.
Not only was a large and remunerative trade secured between the United States and the provinces, but the social
and friendly intercourse
of the two countries necessarily increased with the expansion of commercial relations and the creation
of common interests
between them. Old antipathies and misunderstandings disappeared under the influence of conditions which brought these
communities together and
made each of them place a higher estimate on the other's good qualities. In short, the treaty in all respects
fully realized the
expectations of Lord Elgin in working so earnestly to bring it to a successful conclusion.
However, it pleased the
politicians of the United States, in a moment of temper, to repeal a treaty which, during its
existence, gave a
balance in favour of the commercial and industrial interests of the republic, to the value of over $95,000,000 without
taking into account the
value of the provincial fisheries from which the fishermen of New England annually derived so large a profit.
Temper, no doubt, had much to do with the action of the United States
government at a time when it was irritated by the sympathy extended to the
Confederate States by
many persons in the provinces as well as in Great Britain--notably by Mr. Gladstone himself. No doubt it was thought
that the repeal of the
treaty would be a sort of punishment to the people of British North America. It was even felt--as much was actually
said in congress--that
the result of the sudden repeal of the treaty would be the growth of discontent among those classes in Canada who had
begun to depend upon its
continuance, and that sooner or later there would arise a cry for annexation with a country from which they could
derive such large
commercial advantages. Canadians now know that the results have been very different from those anticipated by statesmen
and journalists on the
other side of the border. Instead of starving Canada and forcing her into annexation, they have, by the repeal of
the Reciprocity Treaty,
and by their commercial policy ever since, materially helped to stimulate her self-reliance, increase her
commerce with other
countries, and make her largely a self-sustaining, independent country. Canadians depend on themselves--on a
self-reliant,
enterprising policy of trade--not on the favour or caprice of any particular nation. They are always quite prepared
to have the most liberal
commercial relations with the United States, but at the same time feel that a reciprocity treaty is no longer
absolutely essential to
their prosperity, and cannot under any circumstances have any particular effect on the political destiny of the
Canadian confederation
whose strength and unity are at length so well assured. |