{"id":3888,"date":"1966-06-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1966-06-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1966-vol-47-no-6-the-province-of-quebec\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:20:03","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:20:03","slug":"june-1966-vol-47-no-6-the-province-of-quebec","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1966-vol-47-no-6-the-province-of-quebec\/","title":{"rendered":"June 1966 &#8211; VOL. 47, No. 6 &#8211; The Province of Quebec"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Many artists and poets have tried                     to picture and describe the Province of Quebec, but it has                     a charm that is beyond the expression of paint and words.<\/p>\n<p> Quebec is made up of a thousand small things and sentiments.                     It has been different from other provinces throughout Canada&#8217;s                     history, and it will continue to be different because it is                     only at the beginning of its thrust toward economic maturity                     whereas some other provinces are already far advanced.<\/p>\n<p>Quebec is today an expectant province, looking forward to                     satisfaction of its ambitions. The old agrarian society has                     been broken away from; men and women whose fathers could scarcely                     bear to travel beyond the sound of their village church bells                     are now working in the towns and cities. From the insularity                     of only twoscore years ago the province has opened its doors                     to the world through inviting all nations to take part in                     the World Fair in 1967. Urbanization and the rise of a vast                     industrial complex have set in motion an irreversible process.<\/p>\n<p>This is the largest province in Canada, 594,860 square miles,                     more than double the size of Texas, equal to the combined                     area of France, Spain and all Germany. Its last Census population                     was 5,259,211, which was 29 per cent of Canada&#8217;s total.<\/p>\n<p>The characteristic vegetation of the greater part of Quebec                     is forest. Occupied agricultural land totals 22,185 square                     miles, while forest covers 378,125 square miles. The highest                     mountain is Mount Jacques Cartier, 4,160 feet. There are four                     lakes over 400 square miles. Quebec has a long sea frontage                     on Hudson Bay, Hudson Strait, Ungava Bay and the Gulf of St.                     Lawrence.<\/p>\n<p>Because the province extends for more than twelve hundred                     miles from south to north, the climate is extremely varied.                     At Fort Chimo, on Ungava Bay, the season between frosts is                     about 52 days; while at Sherbrooke, in the Eastern Townships,                     it lasts about 130 days.<\/p>\n<p>Railways and roads are pushing their fingers northward as                     new sources of minerals are discovered and new areas of forest                     opened up. People to develop the resources and to process                     the products of mines and forests are increasing in number.                     It is estimated that the population will have grown to 6,380,000                     by 1971.<\/p>\n<h3>The St. Lawrence River<\/h3>\n<p>An explorer of 1663 wrote in his diary that there is no                     other country in the world so well supplied with water. At                     \u00cele d&#8217;Orl\u00e9ans the earlier explorers had found                     &#8220;the water begins to be fresh&#8221; ( they were entering the mainstream                     of the great St. Lawrence River, the main geographical feature                     of Quebec. Along it and its shores the life of Quebec has                     been going on for more than four hundred years.<\/p>\n<p>The principal agricultural area of the province lies in                     the river valley and in the adjacent Eastern Townships, extending                     from the river to the United States boundary. The south shore                     is dotted with a string of small towns and villages dating                     from the days of the first colony. Trading posts for widely                     spread farms have become cities and towns.<\/p>\n<p>Quebec City, the oldest national capital north of the Rio                     Grande, was founded in 1608 when Champlain brought the first                     colonists from France.<\/p>\n<p>Knights of the sword and cross made it their headquarters                     when they set out to conquer this vast land for king and church.                     Fur traders centred their business here. Here were fought                     many battles, notably the one which saw the death of the opposing                     generals, now commemorated on the heights by one obelisk bearing                     this inscription: &#8220;Valor gave them a common death, history                     a common fame, and posterity a common monument.&#8221; Today, the                     city is an administrative, educational and religious centre.<\/p>\n<p>Some eighty miles upstream is Trois-Rivi\u00e8res, founded                     in 1634, an important trading centre from which set out the                     La V\u00e9rendryes who were the first explorers to reach                     the site of Winnipeg and the Black Hills of Wyoming. It is                     one of the half dozen largest ports in Canada, the chief newsprint-producing                     centre in the world, with a population of 55,000.<\/p>\n<p>The Island of Montreal, 164 miles above Quebec, was visited                     by Jacques Cartier, the Breton sea captain, in 1535. The first                     settlers disembarked in May 1642, numbering among them two                     courageous women, Jeanne Mance and Mme. de la Peltrie, the                     first of whom established a hospital. At the end of the 1660&#8217;s                     the population had reached 600.<\/p>\n<p>The geographical situation of Montreal at the junction of                     the St. Lawrence, Ottawa and Richelieu rivers gave it significance                     in a time when all traffic was by water. Today it is the main                     economic centre, with a population of 2,000,000 in the metropolitan                     area, representing ten per cent of the Canadian population.<\/p>\n<p>But Montreal is noteworthy for more than its economic activity.                     It is the largest French-speaking city in the world except                     Paris. It is, of all North American cities, the city of debate                     in which differently trained minds express themselves without                     inhibition on all matters of interest socially, politically                     and economically.<\/p>\n<p>As to the river itself, it loses none of its importance                     at Montreal, where it has already flowed a thousand miles                     from the head of the lakes and has a thousand miles to roll                     along before reaching the Atlantic Ocean.<\/p>\n<p>In this journey the river falls 580 feet. A small canal                     was built at Lachine in 1700 to eliminate the portage around                     the rapids, and by 1850 vessels up to 140 feet long and nine                     feet in draught could make the passage from Montreal to Lake                     Erie. Today, the St. Lawrence Seaway, opened in the spring                     of 1959, provides a channel 27 feet in depth from the Atlantic                     Ocean to Duluth, Minnesota, at the head of the Great Lakes.                     The upper St. Lawrence and the lakes are open to eighty per                     cent of the world&#8217;s salt-water fleets.<\/p>\n<p>The impact of this seaway on Quebec ports has been great.                     In 1964 there were 21 ports in Canada handling more than two                     million tons of foreign and coastwise cargo. Of these, eight                     were in the Province of Quebec, handling 44 per cent of the                     total tonnage.<\/p>\n<h3>Exploration and development<\/h3>\n<p>All of this development began when Cartier sailed up the                     great river in search of the Pacific. He was followed by Champlain,                     who, whether he fought, explored, or colonized ( and he did                     all three well ( did so as a crusader. Champlain was the true                     father of Canada.<\/p>\n<p>There were periods when both France and Britain doubted                     the value of this new land. It was argued in the English Parliament                     that Canada was not worth her upkeep, and Voltaire gave a                     sumptuous banquet at his home in Paris to celebrate the take-over                     by Britain of the troublesome dependency.<\/p>\n<p>When Canada was ceded in 1763, France washed its hands of                     the &#8220;few arpents of snow&#8221;. Most of the military, the aristocracy                     and the bureaucrats went back to France, leaving the Canadian                     people to develop a personality of their own. After the French                     Revolution, Quebec had less and less sympathy with old France,                     and turned increasingly to its own resources and development.                     The people retained their tradition of law and charity, and                     they did not forget that they were the descendants of one                     of the most cultured countries the world has ever known, but                     the clear air and the wide spaces of this land gave them a                     dynamic force that made them distinctive.<\/p>\n<p>There have been ups and downs politically, first as the                     debris of war was cleared away and then as the foundations                     of economic and social life were laid. The colony struggled                     along under provisional government, popular assemblies, legislative                     union of Upper and Lower Canada, responsible government, and                     finally reached a meeting of minds in a conference in Quebec                     City in 1864 at which final resolutions recommending a federal                     union were drafted and adopted.<\/p>\n<p>The federal system of government demanded a compromise between                     two sets of political forces: centralization of power and                     provincial autonomy. The Canadian plan, in view of its special                     circumstances, differed from the United States federal plan.                     Whereas the latter left residual powers to the states, the                     Canadian plan allotted specific areas of power to the provinces                     and gave residual powers to the central government. As an                     outcome, federal power in Canada has decreased, while in the                     United States it has become very great.<\/p>\n<p>The special minority position of Quebec was recognized by                     writing into the British North America Act certain irreducible                     obligations to the French-speaking province. It retained its                     civil law, its religious liberty, equality of its language                     in the Parliament of Canada, in the Legislature of Quebec,                     and in the courts of the Dominion and Quebec province, and                     jurisdiction over its own education system. This arrangement                     was not, in the minds of the French Canadians, simply a federal                     union, but a pact or treaty guaranteeing to each group the                     right to its own faith, language, laws and customs.<\/p>\n<p>Under the circumstances prevailing since the revolt of the                     American colonies, continued partnership with English-speaking                     Canada is the only guarantee a French Canadian has of being                     able to maintain his cultural identity. &#8220;But by the same token,&#8221;                     said an article in the <em>Manchester Guardian<\/em>, &#8220;English-speaking                     Canada needs the French, or it, too, outnumbered and undistinguished                     by a separate language, might be submerged by the Southern                     giant.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Natural resources<\/h3>\n<p>It is part of the Quebec legend that its people displayed                     from the first spectacular and dominant genius for agricultural                     pioneering. The farmer who owned a small farm and worked it                     with the aid of his family, was the incarnation of the simple,                     honest, independent, healthy, happy human being. The ambition                     of the Quebec farmer was to see his sons on reaching manhood                     established with their families on farms clustered about his                     own.<\/p>\n<p>The time came, however, when the hard working farmer needed                     cash crops to buy the appliances and comforts of life which                     became available with the development of industry. The self-sufficiency                     forced upon him by lack of transportation and markets became                     unnecessary in an age of railways and roads.<\/p>\n<p>These also lured his sons to the tinsel and glamour of towns                     and cities. In 1941 the rural population of Quebec was 36.7                     per cent; in 1961 it had fallen to 24.8 per cent. The agricultural                     labour force was 12.5 per cent in 1956; in 1965 it was only                     6 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>To maintain agriculture as a going concern in the social                     and economic structure of the province, the government is                     working toward improvement of production and marketing through                     the provision of farm credit, assistance to farmers in organizing                     the collective commercialization of their products, the improvement                     of education, and the encouragement of agricultural research.                     Subsidies are provided to settlers and farmers in handicapped                     rural areas for the construction of buildings, the acquiring                     of stock, land clearing and development, and the transportation                     of produce to market.<\/p>\n<p>The Gasp\u00e9 Peninsula is the home of the commercial                     fishermen of Quebec. The government operates a network of                     sixty cold storage plants for the freezing and preservation                     of fish, with a daily freezing capacity of 500 tons and a                     storage capacity of 25 million pounds. In addition, the government                     owns and maintains 123 stations in small fishing ports where                     fish is kept under proper conditions while awaiting transportation,                     and it operates an artificial drying plant with a capacity                     of three million pounds of fish annually.<\/p>\n<p>Quebec has extremely valuable timber resources, the biggest                     in Canada. Forest covers 242 million acres, of which 141 million                     are productive and 86 million acres are being developed.<\/p>\n<p>Minerals have a high place in the roster of resources, although                     intensive prospecting did not start until the mid-19th century.                     As late as 1900 the value of mineral production was only $1,670,000;                     in 1965 it was $705 million, equal to 19 per cent of the Canadian                     total.<\/p>\n<p>The biggest deposits of asbestos in the world are in Quebec,                     and output runs at about $120 million a year. The gold-copper                     mine at Noranda opened in 1911. Most sensational, however,                     was the discovery in 1937 of massive deposits of iron and                     titanium in Northern Quebec. Estimates run all the way from                     400 million tons of iron ore to 20,000 million tons. The deposits                     were brought into production in 1954 following the building                     of a 360-mile railway from the St. Lawrence River at Sept                     \u00celes to Schefferville.<\/p>\n<p>Water power has been important in Quebec since the earliest                     days. The first plant in North America to use water as a source                     of power was a mill built in 1691 at Petit Pr\u00e9, near                     Quebec, and in 1861 there were 344 mills using water as a                     source of power. A new era dawned following the discovery                     of electro-magnetic induction and the development of the dynamo.                     By 1887 the city of Quebec was being supplied with hydro-electric                     power, by the end of 1900 the power stations in Quebec province                     were developing half Canada&#8217;s total, and since 1926 this province                     has remained constantly in the lead.<\/p>\n<p>Quebec possesses nearly a third of the hydraulic resources                     of Canada. Installed turbine capacity is about 47 per cent                     of the country&#8217;s total. Today&#8217;s interest of power engineers                     is centred upon the huge Manicouagan-Outardes hydro complex                     now under construction. It will harness two rivers to provide                     about six million kw. of hydro capacity.<\/p>\n<h3>Industry<\/h3>\n<p>Quebec was born in the country, but it is moving to the                     city. Until 1914 agriculture provided 65 per cent of the provincial                     product, forestry 25 per cent, and manufacturing less than                     five per cent; in 1965 there were more than 12,000 industries,                     employing some 475,000 persons, accounting for more than seventy                     per cent of the gross value of Quebec&#8217;s total production.<\/p>\n<p>Discovery of enormous mineral wealth and the development                     of hydro-electric energy contributed to the fact that between                     1939 and 1950 the increase in industrial activity in Quebec                     was ten times greater than in the whole of the previous century.<\/p>\n<p>New capital has been brought in, new industries have been                     attracted, secondary industry has been expanded. Just before                     the Second World War total production amounted to only $1,500                     million; in 1965 the total value of production of goods in                     Quebec amounted to $14,013 million.<\/p>\n<p>The most important of the processing industries in terms                     of gross dollar value are pulp and paper, non-ferrous metals,                     petroleum and meat-packing. The pulp and paper industry is                     Quebec&#8217;s major manufacturing industry. Shipments have represented                     more than eight per cent of total Canadian shipments. Abundance                     of power has led to the establishment of a great aluminum                     plant at Arvida, based on bauxite imported by ship up the                     River Saguenay.<\/p>\n<h3>Developing the economy<\/h3>\n<p>To attain the desired high level of living requires prompt                     and vigorous attention to building and sustaining the economy.<\/p>\n<p>A few years ago Quebec passed from the era of manifestos                     into one of blueprints. An Economic Advisory Council was set                     up to prepare a six-year plan of regional development to extend                     from 1965 to 1970, making the most complete use of material                     and human resources.<\/p>\n<p>In 1966 the government announced its intention to divide                     the province into ten regions and 25 sub-regions. These new                     districts will create poles of growth around which regional                     economic development will be centred.<\/p>\n<p>Man-power in the province has increased from 1,591,000 in                     1955 to 2,019,000 in 1965, and average weekly wages have risen                     from $58.62 to $88.71.<\/p>\n<p>It is evident from all this that the fundamental fact about                     Quebec today is that it is in transition. The Second World                     War brought the full impact of the industrial revolution to                     a region which had long escaped that profoundly disturbing                     social process.<\/p>\n<p>Since then an ardent realism has grown in the minds of young                     people along the St. Lawrence River. As the Mayor of Montreal                     told a Canadian Club meeting: &#8220;The younger generation wants                     to prove by new departures and success that being French does                     not consist only in a collection of moving traditions and                     touching folklore songs, but that it may be translated into                     a sequence of undertakings and of rewarding successes, adapted                     to twentieth century mentality in the field of ideas and that                     of works.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Culture<\/h3>\n<p>The fact that there are two cultural groups in Canada is                     an element of distinction. The presence of French culture                     gives Canada individuality. It helps to set Canada apart from                     the all-pervasive American civilization.<\/p>\n<p>No one should think of French and English as foreign languages,                     but as Canadian languages. French-Canadian culture is not                     just the spoken language; it is also the over-all mentality                     and the behaviour of a whole group. &#8220;Culture&#8221; ( or &#8220;intellectual                     personality&#8221; ( is made up of many things: religion, politics,                     education, tradition, memories and aspirations. The French-Canadian                     culture has expanded sharply so as to recognize and accept                     industrialization as part of today&#8217;s civilization. The ecumenical                     movement has animated the churches with a breath of brotherhood                     and understanding. Education has broadened the horizon and                     has made Quebec part of the world.<\/p>\n<p>In common with other under-industrialized countries, Quebec                     has marked recent years by intensified action in support of                     the public schools system and in the creation of specialized                     institutions to meet the constantly changing needs of society.                     By the mid-1960&#8217;s Quebec had some 6,000 elementary and secondary                     schools with about 1,500,000 pupils; six universities; 15                     schools of agriculture; 65 technical schools; about forty                     schools of household education, and a number of schools for                     the graphic arts, applied arts, textiles, paper making and                     mechanics.<\/p>\n<p>The universities, always highly regarded, are also on the                     march. The University of Montreal has one of Canada&#8217;s largest                     computer centres and its Institute of Experimental Medicine                     and Surgery has achieved international repute. McGill University                     has become one of the leading educational centres of aerospace                     research, and its Neurological Institute and Allan Memorial                     Institute of Psychiatry have established themselves as world                     leaders in their fields.<\/p>\n<h3>Arts and crafts<\/h3>\n<p>By the seventeenth century an artistic tradition was firmly                     planted on Canadian soil, and a remarkable growth and flowering                     took place during the next two hundred years. It embraced                     painting, decorative arts, silver-work, architecture, and                     a brilliant school of wood sculpture. It was not a pale copy                     of what was being done in Europe, but a uniquely Canadian                     artistic expression, moulded by climate, the life of the people,                     and a genuine feeling for beauty.<\/p>\n<p>As early as 1668 Laval, the first bishop of Quebec, established                     a school of arts and crafts at St. Joachim. Today, the French                     Canadians are eminent in music, literature, sculpture, drama,                     painting, and ballet, and they are progressing under guidance                     of the Department of Cultural Affairs, established in 1961.<\/p>\n<p>A comprehensive r\u00e9sum\u00e9 of the cultivation                     of the arts and crafts is given in <em>The Arts in Canada<\/em>,                     an illustrated book available from the Queen&#8217;s Printer, Ottawa                     (120 pages, $1.50).<\/p>\n<h3>Quebec is on the march<\/h3>\n<p>Life in Quebec in the sixties has a new roundness, three                     dimensions, instead of the photographic flatness seen by observers                     up until a few years ago. Nothing is static, but moving.<\/p>\n<p>Here is a place where three distinct populations, French-Canadian,                     British, and continental European, mingle in American-type                     surroundings.<\/p>\n<p>From their farm homes, suburban bungalows and apartment                     windows they look back over six thousand years of civilization,                     four hundred of them participated in by Canada, a hundred                     of them marked by a united Canada.<\/p>\n<p>There have been differences of opinion about this and that,                     but even our greatest clashes have been ladylike compared                     with those of many other nations.<\/p>\n<p>Now Quebec is moving into the second century of Confederation                     with confidence, exulting in the progress she has made in                     coping with changing world conditions.<\/p>\n<p>Quebec, like all the rest of Canada, will benefit from the                     renewal of the democratic spirit evident in centres all across                     the country. It is based on respect for the rights of the                     human person, on the tolerance necessary for any dialogue                     between men, and on the concern for the common good which                     prompted the provinces to get together in 1867.<\/p>\n<p>As the Quebec Royal Commission of Inquiry on Education said                     in its report: &#8220;The responsibility of the democratic State                     consists in allowing diversity while avoiding chaos, in respecting                     all rights while preventing abuses, in guaranteeing freedom                     within the boundaries of the common good.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[46],"class_list":["post-3888","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-46"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>June 1966 - VOL. 47, No. 6 - The Province of Quebec - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1966-vol-47-no-6-the-province-of-quebec\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"June 1966 - VOL. 47, No. 6 - The Province of Quebec - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Many artists and poets have tried to picture and describe the Province of Quebec, but it has a charm that is beyond the expression of paint and words. 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Quebec is made up of a thousand small things and sentiments. 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