Despite the fact that Texas was a magnet for liberal dissidents, this State was a slave state and fought on the side of the Confederacy.You’ll have to excuse me for asking for clarification, I didn’t understand what you meant here
Despite the fact that Texas was a magnet for liberal dissidents, this State was a slave state and fought on the side of the Confederacy.You’ll have to excuse me for asking for clarification, I didn’t understand what you meant here
Ah true, though.Despite the fact that Texas was a magnet for liberal dissidents, this State was a slave state and fought on the side of the Confederacy.
Our home and native land!*Ô Canada intensifies*
Note that I used the French title, rather than the English one. The "o" is wearing a hat.Our home and native land!
still the same musicNote that I used the French title, rather than the English one. The "o" is wearing a hat.
But different lyrics.still the same music
As a lifelong resident of Ebyville in Huronie, why didn't it become Berlin? ;-) Also, unless you're from around here, too, I am surprised you know that name.
Less German immigration?As a lifelong resident of Ebyville in Huronie, why didn't it become Berlin? ;-) Also, unless you're from around here, too, I am surprised you know that name.
"Eby" is an Old Order Mennonite (Swiss-German) name of the first European colonisers in the area. So if the Eby's arrived from Pennsylvania in the early 1800s and Ebyville happened, that tells me that the migration patterns that opened up OTL Southern Ontario and also brought my Amish Mennonite ancestors to the area in the 1830s are probably still in place in this ATL. Thus one would expect the Time of Troubles in 1840s-1850s Europe would stiull result in a lot of Alsatian, Swiss, and German migration to what is OTL Kitchener & Waterloo.Less German immigration?
How do you get the indigenous names for places in the upper Louisiana Purchase and Ungava and northern Ontario? (as well as other such areas in your other North America maps)
Germans, Irish, Scandinavians, Italians, Poles, Ashkenazi Jews, more recently Afro-Caribbeans, Maghrebis, Vietnamese, Tamils among others.What have been the main sources of immigration to Canada historically? Obviously France is probably the main one, but who else came to Canada in large numbers?
Wikipedia when I was lucky, otherwise lots of googling for dictionaries and vocabulary lists and atlases or maps in those languages.How do you get the indigenous names for places in the upper Louisiana Purchase and Ungava and northern Ontario? (as well as other such areas in your other North America maps)
So, basically the same as the US.Germans, Irish, Scandinavians, Italians, Poles, Ashkenazi Jews, more recently Afro-Caribbeans, Maghrebis, Vietnamese, Tamils among others.
Basically! I think that wouldn't necessarily change much, most of the same push factors in Europe and pull factors in North America would still be in place and Canada here could be more enticing for Catholic immigrants in particular than the OTL US (which got plenty of them to begin with).So, basically the same as the US.
Yeah, it would have been no later than the 1838 republican constitution that would have included freedom of religion and may have also been earlier than that.I assume Canada emancipated its Jewish population fairly early, like with OTL Lower Canada.