{"id":4066,"date":"1946-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1946-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1946-vol-27-no-10-canada-and-the-united-states\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T15:00:53","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T15:00:53","slug":"october-1946-vol-27-no-10-canada-and-the-united-states","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1946-vol-27-no-10-canada-and-the-united-states\/","title":{"rendered":"October 1946 &#8211; Vol. 27, No. 10 &#8211; Canada and the United States"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p>(<em>This is the second of two articles dealing with the relationship                     between Canada and the United States<\/em>.)<\/p>\n<p>Canadian-American history is not made up of wars, reigns                     of kings and terms of presidents. It is composed of the play                     of constructive forces in culture, economics and politics.<\/p>\n<p>The flurry which grew out of objections to the stamp tax                     and the duty on tea back in the 1770&#8217;s changed into a dispute                     on the principle of the right of Great Britain to legislate                     for the colonies. This was fanned by the ineptitude of the                     king, who did not learn until the battle of Yorktown that                     the attempt must be abandoned. Then he found that he had also                     lost his royal supremacy over parliament, so the uprising                     in America contributed in no little measure to the victory                     of the principle of parliamentary government in Great Britain,                     and may be regarded as the primary element in colonial self-determination.                     The American Revolution not only brought into being the United                     States, but it founded English Canada, and through the years                     events in the United States and Canada have had reciprocal                     effects.<\/p>\n<p>Canada has been twice invaded by Americans (1775 and 1812)                     when the southern neighbours truly thought they were going                     to conquer Canada for Canada&#8217;s good. A &#8220;friendly invasion&#8221;                     was launched upon Montreal and Quebec with the idea of carrying                     the country into Union as a fourteenth state. Chateau de Ramezay,                     which still stands as a museum a few city blocks from the                     Head Office of The Royal Bank of Canada, was headquarters                     for the American General Montgomery. To it there came Benjamin                     Franklin, armed with arguments of permanent peace, in an effort                     to coax the ministry into transferring Quebec to the United                     States. A half century later, in the war of 1812, the Americans                     burned York, now &#8211; Toronto, at a time when of the total 80,000                     population of what is now Ontario only 35,000 were Loyalists                     and 25,000 were American settlers. In true reciprocal fervor,                     the British burned Washington a year later. These things seem                     old and remote. Canadians have long ago wiped from the slate                     of their memory the feelings of an old feud in which blood                     ran high at the time, and both nations refuse to allow judgment                     on present-day relationships to be warped by ancient                     memories. In this they show the Old World a sterling example.<\/p>\n<p>There lingered for many years a feeling on the American                     side that Canada&#8217;s &#8220;manifest destiny&#8221; was union with the United                     States, though belligerency gave way to a complacent wait-fulness                     which was quite irritating to the now nationality-conscious                     Canadians. This attitude dated from the very beginning of                     the United States. In one section of the Articles of Confederation                     a special dispensation was given Canada, alone among the nations,                     to join the Union: &#8220;Canada, acceding to this Confederation,                     and joining in the measures of the United States, shall be                     admitted into, and entitled to all the advantages of this                     Union; but no other colony shall be admitted into the same,                     unless such admission be agreed to by nine states.&#8221; As MacCormac                     writes in &#8220;America and World Mastery,&#8221; Americans were &#8220;astonished                     and even pained to find that Canadians preferred the shackles                     of monarchy.&#8221; In 1867 the New York Tribune commented on Canada&#8217;s                     confederation of its provinces in this way: &#8220;When the experiment                     of the &#8216;dominion&#8217; shall have failed, as fail it must, a process                     of peaceful absorption will give Canada her proper place in                     the great North American Republic.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Thus developed the relationship of these two countries,                     from single sovereignty through revolution to separation;                     from attempts by arms to return the Loyalists to the fold                     of the republicans to negotiation for union as one of the                     new states; from predictions that the Dominion would fail                     to function in its new status to the present-day union                     of friendship which needs no constitution. Only an occasional                     lonely, and to Canadians rather silly, voice is raised in                     these days in favour of the old annexationist ideas. Such                     expansionist aspirations are at odds with the expressed desires                     of the whole people of United States and Canada for a world                     in which small nations shall be safe from molestation.<\/p>\n<p>How the two nations work together in amity, even in deciding                     difficult matters, is shown by their wholesale introduction                     of the principles of consultation and arbitration into practically                     all affairs. The long habit of peaceful settlement has consolidated                     friendship on a base of realism, which passes the test of                     practicality as well as the test of idealism. In addition                     there is close liaison, if not outright identity, in non-government                     organizations which range through all activities and interests                     of life: economic, cultural, professional, political and aesthetic.                     The trend was intensified during the late war, when Canada                     and the United States had places on combined boards, where                     they shared problems, pooled knowledge and united their skills                     and resources.<\/p>\n<p>As an example of how the goodwill method of settling differences                     works, consider the International Joint Commission. This was                     set up with three Canadian and three United States members                     with the objective: &#8220;&#8230;to settle all questions between the                     United States and Canada involving the rights, obligations                     or interests of either in relation to the other along their                     common frontier.&#8221; This commission, which has been operating                     smoothly since 1909, is an unmatched demonstration of a method                     for just settlement of difficulties between unequal powers.                     The commissioners work, not as two groups of three, but as                     one group of six, determined to deal impartially with matters                     brought before them. Part of the secret of continued amity                     seems to be that these countries do not wait for irreconcilable                     ideas to collide at the border. They tackle them early, and                     use common sense, ingenuity, and a blind eye to get around,                     over or under obstacles.<\/p>\n<p>Co-operation and achievements of the two countries                     during the late war would fill many volumes, and can be mentioned                     here only to the extent of saying how splendidly they worked                     together. Canada did not benefit from United States lend-lease,                     (which Churchill called &#8220;that most unsordid act in the history                     of nations&#8221;) but paid in goods and cash. At the same time,                     Canadians surprised themselves by their ability to send a                     billion dollars&#8217; worth of goods as an outright gift to Great                     Britain. More than that, in 1943 Canada passed her Mutual                     Aid Act, and under it the next two years saw $2,360 million                     worth of further supplies allocated on grounds of strategic                     need to Britain, the Soviet Union, China, France, Australia,                     New Zealand and India, with $1,892 million in other kinds                     of financial accommodation also provided. She gave 20,000                     tons of wheat to Greece every month from 1942, an amount that                     kept alive almost half the population of that country, and                     contributed 100,000 tons of wheat to relieve the famine in                     India in 1943. In his article in the January issue of Foreign                     Affairs, the American Quarterly Review, Lionel Gelber says:                     &#8220;To Britain alone Canada furnished per capita as much as the                     American program gave everyone. Mutual Aid being her own variation                     of lend-lease, Canada could have received but did not                     ask for reciprocal assistance; she herself, dispensing rather                     than consuming help of that sort, drew no lend-lease                     at all from the United States. She paid for her own American                     imports by the manufacture of war material and equipment.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>As to Canada&#8217;s manpower, out of a population of less than                     12 million there were 1,031~000 enrolled in the three fighting                     services. Canada was third among the United Nations in sea                     power, and was the main protector of the North Atlantic convoy                     route. She was fourth in air power, and in addition a host                     of her airmen served in the Royal Air Force.<\/p>\n<p>This brief glimpse of what was achieved in war and how the                     lessons are being carried into peace is enough to indicate                     the possibilities, and to emphasize the natural desire of                     the two countries for co-operation, but it is not meant                     to indicate that strong similarities exclude significant differences.                     The disparity in population is important in itself, because                     it makes Americans thoughtless and Canadians hypersensitive.                     Canadians are characterized by introversion, as against the                     American extroversion, and perhaps this, as in marriage, helps                     toward a peaceful and successful partnership. In their temperament                     Canadians have a redoubtable slowness to match their neighbours&#8217;                     precipitancy, but one must admit that it has an air of majesty                     and that in the long run it works with fewer upsets than are                     suffered by their speeding co-continentals. Canadians                     are adept at reaching working compromises which are nearer                     realities of the times than would be ambitious theories. They                     take their work calmly, and are more serious about their pleasures.                     John MacCormac said in his book &#8220;Canada: America&#8217;s Problem&#8221;                     that a political convention in the United States bears the                     same relation to its Canadian counterpart as bedlam does to                     a cemetery. To this he adds: &#8220;Organized racketeering is unknown,                     and no hooded figures have ever dominated the night scene.                     The law tolerates fewer technicalities and is far swifter.                     Relatively fewer Canadians murder each other and many more                     are hanged when they do. Trial by newspaper is not tolerated.                     The law of slander is more strictly enforced.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In a letter to the Royal Bank, Arthur W. Calhoun, of Sterling                     College, Kansas, remarked: &#8220;I think the people of the United                     States take Canada for granted, without understanding or interest.                     I am sure, however, that it is very important that we should                     recognize the equal nationhood of Canada, and that we should                     prize and profit by the cultural achievements of our neighbours.                     &#8221; People on both sides of the border know well the art, literature                     and entertainment leaders in the United States, but it is                     to be feared that not even Canadians themselves know as well                     their own people who have excelled, and certainly it is not                     widely appreciated in the United States that Canada has an                     art, literature and entertainment life of its own. Sheer weight                     of numbers and cash resources crowd the air with United States                     radio programs, and the screens with United States movie shows.<\/p>\n<p>Canada has achieved undisputed leadership in documentary                     films, of which her National Film Board has become the world&#8217;s                     largest producer. Canada&#8217;s actors and actresses, including                     Walter Huston, Walter Pidgeon, Mary Pickford, Raymond Massey,                     and Deanna Durbin became as beloved by American audiences                     as by Canadian. The popular novels of Mazo de la Roche, the                     poems of Robert Service, and the gentle ironies of the late                     Stephen Leacock are familiar to Americans, and attention is                     being widely paid recent works by Hugh MacLennan and Gwethalyn                     Graham. A publication by the Canadian Federation of Music                     Teachers&#8217; Associations lists 122 Canadian composers, including                     Dr. Healey Willan who has to his credit nearly 200 original                     published compositions as well as over 100 arrangements of                     folk tunes and gregorian melodies.<\/p>\n<p>In the realm of sports, the two nations play in much the                     same repertoire, but there is a lack of exuberance in Canada                     compared with the United States. A famous American professional                     athlete returned home after a visit to Mexico and remarked                     it was not much fun playing for the crowds down there because                     &#8220;they yelled just as loud for the opposing team as they did                     for their home team.&#8221; He might well say the same thing about                     Canadians, since they inherit the sporting instinct of the                     British who are inclined to cheer the fox as well as the hounds.<\/p>\n<p>This tabulation may well conclude with reference to Canada&#8217;s                     place in science and engineering. Mercury Digest recently                     named a few of Canada&#8217;s outstanding men: Lord Rutherford,                     once an instructor at McGill University, who was the first                     man to split the atom; Sir Frederick Banting and Dr. Charles                     Best, who discovered insulin; Sir Charles Saunders, who bred                     rust-resisting Marquis wheat; Gilbert Labine who discovered                     the Eldorado mine by recognizing pitchblende territory from                     the air; Ben Chaffey, well-known for his irrigation projects                     in California and Australia, and Sir William Osler, whose                     contribution to medicine was made &#8220;just as much at McGill                     as at Johns Hopkins or Oxford.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>These, then, are characteristics and personalities of the                     two nations. Neither of these two nations is perfect, nor                     have all their leaders in the past worn wings. Every country                     is inclined to picture its native sons as being more sober,                     industrious and inflexibly honest than those of any other                     nation. But sensible persons know that it cannot be true that                     one party or one nation alone produces celestial harmonies,                     while the others make up that Mephistophelian Pandemonium                     pictured by Milton, out of which came only self-seeking                     imperialism.<\/p>\n<p>Canada and the United States have many important features                     in common. Their strongest tie is the community of their daily                     life. They pursue their democratic convictions and aspirations                     in the same way, in similar environment, but beyond all their                     profitable and pleasant surface resemblance and exchange there                     are sound principles. The most precious common possession                     of Canada and the United States is democracy; their common                     heritage is Magna Carta, the basic document on which democracy                     is built. From the same roots sprang both the American and                     the Canadian way of life, and though Canada has no inspiring                     document to place alongside the Declaration of Independence,                     the same principles are hers.&#8221; Both Canada and the United                     States are devoted to the idea of human progress; they believe                     in the capacity of all men for betterment, no matter to what                     level they have attained, and they affirm the freedom of the                     lowliest individual to work his way up to the top of his capacity.<\/p>\n<p>Nor are these rights and aspirations limited to people of                     native birth. Canada and the United States challenge all the                     concepts of those who used &#8220;race purity&#8221; as a rallying point                     for a dreadful war. America has been called a &#8220;melting-pot&#8221;                     which takes in all manner of foreign elements and turns them                     out good citizens of a new country. For proof of the fact                     that the system works, though not blueprinted, it is necessary                     only to look at the names on the success roster of any enterprise                     from a hockey team to a steel mill. There are 150 million                     persons in this part of the earth, and they can all be different                     from one another and still be good Americans or good Canadians,                     so long as they have the grasp and practice of fundamental                     principles of thought and conduct.<\/p>\n<p>It is being realized by other nations that these North American                     neighbours must play the great part in world affairs worthy                     of their status and potentialities, if democracy everywhere                     is not to decline. While some nations prefer to follow a vacillating                     policy depending upon immediate self-interest, these                     two must pursue policies based upon intelligent appraisal                     of long-range world interests. Each has peculiar qualifications,                     and together they make an important team. They need the outside                     world as customers and suppliers, but more than that, they                     need to participate in world political affairs and not merely                     to sit back as umpires for consultation but not participation.                     Americans should remember that, powerful as their country                     is, they are, after all, a relatively small part of the world&#8217;s                     population. Dorothy Thompson once wrote: &#8220;We are just 132,000,000                     people out of a world containing over two billions of other                     people, all of whom can manufacture tanks and guns and make                     coalitions, and who have a historic tendency to gang up together                     when any one nation claims too much for itself.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Canada has her own problems. Just now she is on top of the                     world, but being a small nation with enough wealth for a large                     one she faces particular responsibilities and dangers. To                     those who have learned to view the globe from the top, it                     is clear that Canada is at the centre of world power, surrounded                     by the United States, Great Britain and Russia. Her position                     used to mean safety, but the strategy of air war has made                     her land mass a crucial point in event of war. Her political                     integrity is assured, her external relationships are clean                     of all selfish imputations, and she has many friends throughout                     the world. Her innate conservatism keeps the nation a political                     sobersides; her racial dualism gives her a tolerance and an                     understanding important in international dealings; her national                     feeling, based upon pride in her industrial, agricultural                     and military achievements, prevents her from becoming a drag                     upon progress. She is playing her part on international committees                     and in conferences and international work. Her plans for monetary                     stabilization and for control of civil aviation contributed                     much to agreement between Great Britain and the United States                     on these prickly subjects. She has a place on nine peace bodies;                     PICAO and ILO have their headquarters in Montreal; the first                     United Nations conference on food and agriculture was held                     in Canada with a Canadian chairman; she is the largest contributor                     of supplies and third largest contributor of money to UNRRA;                     and when the atom bomb fell on Hiroshima she was revealed                     as a partner with the United States and Great Britain in that                     world-resounding enterprise.<\/p>\n<p>All this indicates that Canada has an importance in the                     world of nations far beyond her meagre population, and through                     it all she stands as an autonomous nation. Full stature was                     reached in 1931, when Canada accomplished peacefully the same                     result that the War of Independence achieved 155 years previously                     for the United States: recognition as an independent nation.                     The extent of this independence was illustrated by the fact                     that Canada declared war on Germany seven days later than                     Great Britain; she declared war on Japan before either Great                     Britain or the United States, and she need not have declared                     war on anybody if she had wished to stand aside. So independent                     is Canada that she refuses to consider allowing even British                     authorities to set up military establishments in her territory                     for the training of troops: she is willing to have the armed                     forces of friendly nations use her facilities, provided the                     establishments are owned, maintained and controlled by the                     Canadian government. This was demonstrated in the air training                     plan during the late war, when Americans, Britishers, Australians,                     New Zealanders, Norwegians, and men of all the fighting United                     Nations were trained in Canada for service with their own                     national military forces. As Lionel Chevrier, Minister of                     Transport, told Kiwanis International at Atlantic City this                     summer: &#8220;Canada is a nation with the same independence, rights                     and obligations as the United States&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, Canada is a partner in the British Commonwealth                     of Nations, which stands by itself in history as a remarkable                     political institution. It is a world wonder that the British                     mother country, a mere dot on the map, can inspire such tenacious                     loyalty as to bind far-off nations such as Canada, New                     Zealand, Australia and South Africa to herself in spite of                     powerful attractions of environment and difference an living.                     Commonwealth members enjoy all the elements of freedom, and                     yet are bound together by loyalty to the Crown, a great inheritance                     of political and social and moral precepts, and by traditions                     time has been unable to weaken. Field Marshal Jan Christiaan                     Smuts, who fought with distinction against the British in                     the Boer War, and is now a leading Empire statesman, describes                     the British Empire as &#8220;the widest system of organized freedom                     which has ever existed.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The part that the United States and Canada can play on the                     stage of world affairs is enhanced by this connection of Canada                     with the Empire, but there are people who demand why Canada                     is the only American State which is not a member of the Pan                     American Union. Fortunately, it is widely recognized that                     Canada&#8217;s associations with the old world are not only ineradicable                     facts, but facts which have certain advantages to the Americas.                     When Canada speaks in the family councils of the Commonwealth,                     her voice is the voice of America. She does not accept the                     role of mere interpreter. She fulfils that office by being                     true to herself, not as an intermediary but as a principal.                     Her position in the British Commonwealth does not make her                     less an American nation, and she pursues a friendly and mutually                     helpful cultural and business relationship with all the nations                     in the Americas.<\/p>\n<p>One thing is much needed: information. Canadian publicity                     has not been noticeably brilliant. Politicians and public                     servants often fail to understand that resentment to change,                     and opposition to new ideas, do not spring from cussedness                     but failure to understand the reasons. Advance education and                     information of the general public, not on partisan or emotional                     lines but on facts and logic told interestingly, would avert                     many headaches. Continental thinking is a necessary prelude                     to international thinking, something to be fostered in both                     countries. It can be done if the immediate and temporary pleasure                     of recounting the more sensational and lunatic aspects of                     life is supplanted by features vital to the future and the                     permanent.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to publicity, there is an opportunity to be                     found in education. There are upwards of 30 million school                     children in the two countries, growing up into the next adult                     generation. These figures drive home the irresistible fact                     that the partial instruction now given with regard to the                     neighbouring country is evidence of neglect of a grand opportunity.                     In the spring of 1944 the American Council on Education, with                     support of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,                     took the initiative in bringing together a group of educators                     from Canada and the United States. As a result, a continuing                     Canada-United States Committee on Education came into                     being. This bilateral committee, for whose work high hopes                     are held, has the support of many teachers&#8217; and education                     associations.<\/p>\n<p>There are obstacles in the way of the most complete correlation                     of effort by these two countries for their own advancement                     and the good of the world, but there exist in the hearts and                     minds of their people powerful generative impulses which need                     only to be set free by interest to bring about wonders. The                     need for striking off any restraining shackles is more important                     now than ever. The international collaboration in which United                     States and Canada are engaged with other nations extends to                     all human activities, and involves every citizen, and is not                     any longer the prerogative of ministers plenipotentiary. The                     domestic welfare of these North American nations, because                     of the impact of their economy on world business, makes their                     internal activities of interest &#8220;to all the world. There are                     few sceptics in these countries among patriotic and thinking                     people, because it would be very un-American (in the                     broad sense of &#8220;American&#8221; which includes Canada) to entertain                     any doubt that this continent will come out all right. But                     realization is needed of the truth that a happy future does                     not lie in the path of do-nothing-ism. Having agreed                     on ideals which are the growth of centuries, and having planned                     how the ideals are to be sought in a world passionately realistic,                     then the people of Canada and the United States must face                     actualities, think intelligently and pronounce intelligibly,                     build durably, and work without ceasing.<\/p>\n<p>Readers desiring further information on various facets of                     Canadian cultural and economic life may obtain any of the                     following articles from a branch of The Royal Bank of Canada,                     or from Head Office, Montreal:<\/p>\n<p>Canada and the British Empire<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s Northland<\/p>\n<p>What is This Canada?<\/p>\n<p>Social Welfare<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s Government<\/p>\n<p>Banking in Canada<\/p>\n<p>Education<\/p>\n<p>Airway Transport<\/p>\n<p>International Trade<\/p>\n<p>Canadian Women<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[26],"class_list":["post-4066","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-26"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 10 - Canada and the United States - 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\/october-1946-vol-27-no-10-canada-and-the-united-states\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 10 - Canada and the United States - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"(This is the second of two articles dealing with the relationship between Canada and the United States.) Canadian-American history is not made up of wars, reigns of kings and terms of presidents. It is composed of the play of constructive forces in culture, economics and politics. 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Canadian-American history is not made up of wars, reigns of kings and terms of presidents. It is composed of the play of constructive forces in culture, economics and politics. 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