When Upper Canada Became Dominant Partner 33 



o,n& T 3, ..o MV J Ireland decreased from 8,175,124 to 

 'HHO 3? H3j,xDNit; while the efflux from Germany to 



'9T6T Zl AJtmuBf 'pa^BQ , . .. , , 



pasBaoaa <dy just a million by 1850, brought a 



__BS oi9 Suv jo luauiBjsaj, - i , . xl , , , 



IBT oqj jo sao;noaxa ;ople during the next decade, who gave 

 s \* smo r i , .1 . . -i P 4.1 



:vs T anvcf ibour to the virgin soils of the prairie 

 >> r r r rvH"^TTv r 



s NaHdaxs m g fight, and who perhaps saved the 



jitfmu ush of people to Upper Canada, making 

 slofjjo Sf p^J^lSei, a population of only 103,894 was 



SVlO 1 "^! '$' dtieS > r 7 P 6r C6nt f the total then 



%'IPITHS x?i?J5 s So^'SSJl her centralised commercial needs, 



U U0 ^?ai 9 ?B '^nolxf ^'' farm alone amounted to $69,129,315." 



Tao -So^oul^s^l res so far exceeded anything conceived 



' k statistics, 



reverential 



eq; 3SUIB2B suijBto em credence. The influx' had exceeded 



8UOSJ8CI IIB pU-B JO SJO^lpajO .... 



s jo ;uaui^;sa^ PUB of immigration for five previous decades 



![ 9m jo saoinoaxa eiu 'peuSis _ . 



xqajaq gj 90^0^ ' ited States by over 66 per cent. Surely 



' 



inautnSires i i i i M M t 



9 9q; jo aa^^Btu aqi m clearly demonstrate the possibilities 01 







i i , ,i - A f -I 



\ em JQJ PUB ui -BiujojiiBo^he peninsula, girt with its fresh water 



eqi jo ;anoo aoiaadns'am UT i <? j 



c of primeval forest, fanned in autumn 



HOXIQ3HO OJ. 3OIXOV i j i * MI i 



^^ and fed from virgin soils sleeping during 



uonBonqnd ^say jo oiurf^deep calm of the still winter whiteness, 



rn,M}siuuupy jo? sAauao^^v i i ,1 i ^ .1 i i 



NOiHaHJtv ^ snacwoK vernal sunshine that rich Earth, which 



oaa *Aa>iaB)s x^aqBZTia; ? xl _ i r , i 1-4. 



of the ploughman s share to make it 



IOH.L -a VHVTO u , F . , . , , , , 



39031) '.?a>iJB;g q;aq3 wealth of grass and gram demanded by 



, ,. , TT Al i 



ssauisnq jo aoBidmasses of English towns. He thus began 



as pauSisaapun aq; saoujo. , ? , 



luaojii^o jo aiB^smg of that immanent Providence which, 



3 jo XmnoQ 'uo^ooig jc _ . 



loq^noo 9qi a^isoddolierhood of man and making them learn 



ipJK ^ST33 07,Z 'ox 'Suipung TTT? 



ji)sa 'uo^brought the resources of Science to bear 



'NPI'c jo saoujo Avc[ aq^ ^ 



saaqonoA the invention of the steam engine, pro- 



e q}iAi 'uiaqi ^tqtxe 



n i tnerto measureless oceans, and bearing 



fu!" to the sea-board over thousands of miles 

 ^plying a means by which the congested 

 ; aoa 9 'L cities could esca P e their thraldom, and, 





^ l aq?jo 9 ?aBm a ons of famine, whose gaunt forms from 



Jj-ing all the past centuries, stalked across 



> }ano D joijodns aq; ui )es of the ooiintriVs of " 

 '9i'js 'ox ~ -- u Lue couuiriess 01 



OX L-I >I.LO.V 



