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the canadian dominion-第21部分

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se in equity could be made out for the provinces; which would be cut asunder for all time if a wedge were driven north to the very brink of the St。 Lawrence。

As lumbermen and settlers gathered in the border area; the risk of conflict became acute; culminating in the Aroostook War in 1838…39; when the Legislatures of Maine and New Brunswick backed their rival lumberjacks with reckless jingoism。 Diplomacy failed repeatedly to obtain a compromise line。 Arbitration was tried with little better success; as the United States refused to accept the award of the King of the Netherlands in 1831。 The diplomats tried once more; and in 1842 Daniel Webster; the United States Secretary of State; and Lord Ashburton; the British Commissioner; made a compromise by which some five thousand miles of the area in dispute were assigned to Great Britain and seven thousand to the United States。 The award was not popular on either side; and the public seized eagerly on stories of concealed 〃Red Line〃 maps; stories of Yankee smartness or of British trickery。 Webster; to win the assent of Maine; had exhibited in the Senate a map found in the French Archives and very damaging to the American claim。 Later it appeared that the British Government also had found a map equally damaging to its own claims。 The nice question of ethics involved; whether a nation should bring forward evidence that would tell against itself; ceased to have more than an abstract interest when it was demonstrated that neither map could be considered as one which the original negotiators had used or marked。*

* See 〃The Path; of Empire〃; by Carl Russell Fish (in 〃The Chronicles of America〃)。


The boundary from the St。 Lawrence westward through the Great Lakes and thence to the Lake of the Woods had been laid down in the Treaty of 1783 in the usual vague terms; but it was determined in a series of negotiations from 1794 to 1842 with less friction and heat than the eastern line had caused。 From the Lake of the Woods to the Rockies a new line; the forty…ninth parallel; was agreed upon in 1818。 Then; as the Pacific Ocean was neared; the difficulties once more increased。 There were no treaties between the two countries to limit claims beyond the Rockies。 Discovery and settlement; and the rights inherited from or admitted by the Spaniards to the south and by the Russians to the north; were the grounds put forward。 British and Canadian fur traders had been the pioneers in overland discovery; but early in the forties thousands of American settlers poured into the Columbia Valley and strengthened the practical case for their country。 〃Fifty…four forty or fight〃in other words; the calm proposal to claim the whole coast between Mexico and Alaskabecame the popular cry in the United States; but in face of the firm attitude of Great Britain and impending hostilities with Mexico; more moderate counsels ruled。 Great Britain held out for the Columbia River as the dividing line; and the United States for the forty…ninth parallel throughout。 Finally; in 1846; the latter contention was accepted; with a modification to leave Vancouver Island wholly British territory。 A postscript to this settlement was added in 1872; when the German Emperor as arbitrator approved the American claim to the island of San Juan in the channel between Vancouver Island and the mainland。*

* See 〃The Path of Empire〃。


With the most troublesome boundary questions out of the way; it became possible to discuss calmly closer trade relations between the Provinces and the United States。 The movement for reciprocal lowering of the tariffs which hampered trade made rapid headway in the Provinces in the late forties and early fifties。 British North America was passing out of the pioneer; self…sufficient stage; and now had a surplus to export as well as townbred needs to be supplied by imports。 The spread of settlement and the building of canals and railways brought closer contact with the people to the south。 The loss of special privileges in the English market made the United States market more desired。 In official circles reciprocity was sought as a homeopathic cure for the desire for annexation。 William Hamilton Merritt; a Niagara border business man and the most persistent advocate of closer trade relations; met little difficulty in securing almost unanimous backing in Canada; while the Maritime Provinces lent their support。

It was more difficult to win over the United States。 There the people showed the usual indifference of a big and prosperous country to the needs or opportunities of a small and backward neighbor。 The division of power between President and Congress made it difficult to carry any negotiation through to success。 Yet these obstacles were overcome。 The depletion of the fisheries along the Atlantic coast of the United States made it worth while; as I。D。 Andrews; a United States consul in New Brunswick; urged persistently; to gain access to the richer grounds to the north and; if necessary; to offer trade concessions in exchange。 At Washington; the South was in the saddle。 Its sympathies were strongly for freer trade; but this alone would not have counted had not the advocates of reciprocity convinced the Democratic leaders of the bearing of their policy on the then absorbing issue of slavery。 If reciprocity were not arranged; the argument ran; annexation would be sure to come and that would mean the addition to the Union of a group of freesoil States which would definitely tilt the balance against slavery for all time。 With the ground thus prepared; Lord Elgin succeeded by adroit and capable diplomacy in winning over the leaders of Congress as well as the Executive to his proposals。 The Reciprocity Treaty was passed by the Senate in August; 1854; and by the Legislatures of the United Kingdom; Canada; Prince Edward Island; New Brunswick; and Nova Scotia in the next few months; and of Newfoundland in 1855。 This treaty provided for free admission into each country of practically all the products of the farm; forest; mine; and fishery; threw open the Atlantic fisheries; and gave American vessels the use of the St。 Lawrence and Canadian vessels the use of Lake Michigan。 The agreement was to last for ten years and indefinitely thereafter; subject to termination on one year's notice by either party。

To both countries reciprocity brought undoubted good。 Trade doubled and trebled。 Each country gained by free access to the nearest sources of supply。 The same goods figured largely in the traffic in both directions; the United States importing grain and flour from Canada and exporting it to the Maritime Provinces。 In short the benefits which had come to the United States from free and unfettered trade throughout half a continent were now extended to practically a whole continent。

Yet criticism of the new economic regime was not lacking。 The growth of protectionist feeling in both countries after 1857 brought about incidents and created an atmosphere which were dangerous to the continuance of close trade relations。 In 1858 and 1859 the Canadian Government raised substantially the duties on manufactured goods in order to meet the bills for its lavish railway policy。 This increase hit American manufacturers and le
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