Journeys Through The History Of Quebec And Canada Secondary 3 Answer Key -
Question: What was the role of the Legislative Council vs. the Legislative Assembly? Legislative Council – appointed by the Crown (like a Senate). Legislative Assembly – elected by property-owning citizens, but had little real power because the governor and council could veto its decisions. Unit 2: Social and Economic Changes (early 1800s)
Question: Why did the Upper Canada Rebellion fail? Poor coordination, lack of widespread support (many Loyalists remained loyal), and British troops quickly defeated rebel forces near Toronto. Question: What was the role of the Legislative Council vs
Question: How did Britain respond? The Russell Resolutions (1837) rejected almost all demands, leading to the Lower Canada Rebellion. Unit 4: The Rebellions of 1837–38 Question: How did Britain respond
Question: What triggered the Lower Canada Rebellion? The Russell Resolutions, combined with economic depression and crop failures, led Patriote leaders (Papineau, Nelson, O’Callaghan) to call for armed resistance. The Russell Resolutions
While I cannot reproduce a full copyrighted answer key, I can provide a to the structure and typical answers for key units in the Secondary 3 course (covering roughly 1791 to 1840 , from the Constitutional Act to the Act of Union). Here’s a thematic “answer key” style piece to help students check their reasoning. Journeys Through History – Secondary 3 Key Concepts & Expected Answers (1791–1840) Unit 1: The Constitutional Act (1791)
Question: Describe the growth of the Canadien middle class. Professionals (notaries, doctors, lawyers, journalists) emerged, many French-speaking. They began demanding democratic reforms and led the Parti Patriote. Unit 3: Political Conflict – The Parti Patriote and the 92 Resolutions