Timeline of Quebec history (1760–90)

1760s

  • 1760: The British defeat the French at the Battle of Sainte-Foy on the Plains of Abraham on April 26.
  • 1760: French forces lay siege to Quebec City but fail to capture the city from British forces.
  • 1760: On May 9, British ships arrive at Quebec City, forcing the French army back to Montreal.
  • 1760: The Battle of Restigouche in what is now the Province of New Brunswick, is the last battle between France and Britain for possession of Canada during the Seven Years' War.
  • 1760: July to September, British conduct a three pronged attack on Montreal
  • 1760: On September 8, Montreal capitulates. Governor Vaudreuil surrenders to the British army on the terms of a treaty of capitulation. See Articles of Capitulation of Montreal.
  • 1763: The Seven Years' War ends with the signing of the Treaty of Paris on February 10. France gives the northerly portion of New France to the British in favour of keeping Guadaloupe.
  • 1763: Hanging of Marie-Josephte Corriveau on April 18, for the murder of her second husband.
  • 1763: In May, Indian Chief Pontiac leads a series of raids against British trade posts.
  • 1763: With the October 7 Royal Proclamation by the British Parliament, the area then referred to by the natives as Canada is renamed the Province of Quebec.
  • 1763: James Murray is made governor of the Province of Quebec on November 21.
  • 1764: William Brown and Thomas Gilmore publish the first edition of The Quebec Gazette / La Gazette de Québec on June 21.
  • 1764: On September 17, the civil courts are established, ending the military rule of the Province of Quebec which had been in place during the Seven Years' War.
  • 1764: The Government in Great Britain denies the request by British colonial merchants that the French civil code be replaced by British common law and that a House of Assembly be created for Anglophone Protestants alone.
  • 1764: On October 29, 94 "Canadien" merchants submit a first petition requesting that the orders of the King be available in the French language and that they be allowed to participate in the government.
  • 1764: Exiled Acadians are permitted to return to Nova Scotia.
  • 1765: The population of the Province of Quebec is 69,810.
  • 1768: On October 26, Guy Carleton, later baron of Dorchester, becomes governor of the province of Quebec.

1770s

1780s

  • 1781: The British are defeated at Yorktown, ending major revolutionary war hostilities in North America. Major Clément Gosselin, a Canadian from La Pocatière, along with other Canadians in the 2nd Canadian Regiment, and Admiral Louis-Philippe de Vaudreuil, who is the nephew of Pierre Vaudreuil of Montreal, participate.
  • 1783: Arrival of the first of 8,000 United Empire Loyalists who settle mainly in Cataraqui (Kingston, Ontario). The Haldimand Collection provides first hand information regarding the arrival and settlement of Loyalists in Canada. See Haldimand Collection
  • 1783: Fleury Mesplet gets out of prison in September.
  • 1784: The population of the Province of Quebec is 113,012.
  • 1784: A group of 2291 colonial petitioners formally request that the Parliament of Britain create of a House of Assembly for the Province of Quebec for all citizens without regard to nationality or religion.
  • 1785: Fleury Mesplet founds the newspaper The Montreal Gazette / Gazette de Montréal on August 28.
  • 1786: John Molson founds the Molson Breweries.
  • 1789: The French Revolution begins on July 14 with the storming of the Bastille.
  • 1789: On October 20, William Wyndham Grenville writes a confidential letter to Lord Dorchester in which he recommends that the latter make concessions regarding the government of the Province of Quebec rather than letting things go until the residents of the colony rebel.

See also

References

    Preceded by
    1663 to 1759
    Timeline of Quebec history
    1760 to 1790
    Succeeded by
    1791 to 1840
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