Nineteenth-century farm families needed land for the next generation.
Their quest shaped agricultural settlement across Canada. This overview
of rural history in Quebec, Ontario, and the Prairies provides a new
perspective on the ways in which agriculture and the family farm were
central to the country's expansion and essential to understanding
social, political, and economic changes. How Agriculture Made Canada
shows how differences between the agricultural development of Quebec and
that of Ontario had a decisive influence on the settlement of the
Prairies. Peter Russell demonstrates that farming families eventually
ran out of land against the edges of the St Lawrence lowlands. While
Quebec-based Habitants reached their region's limits earlier, Ontario
encouraged people to migrate west. Russell argues that the thousands of
relocated Ontario farmers changed Manitoba's bilingual openness to an
exclusively English-speaking province that then assimilated East
European arrivals. Thus, if not for the agricultural crises in the
Canadas, Manitoba might have been at least as francophone as anglophone.
The first comprehensive synthesis on the history of Canadian farming in
decades, How Agriculture Made Canada reveals the lasting impact that
nineteenth-century agricultural changes have had on the nation.