The
Maritime provinces, also called the
Maritimes or the Canadian Maritimes, is a
region of
Eastern
Canada
consisting of three provinces: New Brunswick
, Nova
Scotia
, and Prince Edward Island
.
On the
Atlantic
coast, the
Maritimes are a subregion of Atlantic Canada
. The population of the Maritime provinces
was 1,826,896 in 2008.
The
Maritimes front the Atlantic Ocean and its various sub-basins such
as the Gulf of
Maine
and Gulf of St. Lawrence
systems. The region is located northeast of New England
, southeast of Quebec
's Gaspé
Peninsula
, and southwest of the island of Newfoundland
.
The
province of Newfoundland and Labrador
is often mistakenly identified as a Maritime
province: it is properly part of Atlantic Canada (with the other
three provinces) and thus referred to as an Atlantic
province. Although it is located on the Atlantic coast,
the Gulf of St.
Lawrence
physically separates this province from the
Maritimes. It also has a uniquely different history; the
Dominion of Newfoundland
joined Canada eight decades after the three Maritime provinces.
The four
provinces of Atlantic Canada, combined with the two of Central Canada (Quebec and Ontario
), comprise
Eastern
Canada
.
There was talk of a
Maritime Union of
the three provinces to have greater political power; however, the
first discussions on the subject in 1864 at the
Charlottetown Conference led to the
process of
Canadian
Confederation which formed the larger Dominion of Canada
instead.
The Maritimes are home to
Mi'kmaq and
Maliseet people and have an extensive
history of
French and English settlement
dating back to the seventeenth century, forming a unique culture
that predates Canada.
History
Following the northerly retreat of glaciers at the end of the
Wisconsin glaciation over ten
thousand years ago, human settlement by
Native Americans or
First Nations began in the Maritimes
with
Paleo-Indians during the
Early Period, ending around six thousand years ago.
The
Middle Period, starting six thousand years ago, and
ending three thousand years ago, was dominated by rising sea levels
from the melting glaciers in polar regions. This is also when what
is called the
Laurentian tradition started among
Archaic Indians, existing First Nations
peoples of the time.
Evidence of Archaic Indian burial mounds and
other ceremonial sites existing in the St. John
River
valley has been uncovered.
The
Late Period extended from three thousand years ago
until first contact with European settlers and was dominated by the
organization of First Nations peoples into the
Algonquian-influenced
Abenaki Nation which existed largely in present-day
interior Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine, and the Mi'kmaq Nation
which inhabited all of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, eastern
New Brunswick and the southern Gaspé. The primarily agrarian
Maliseet Nation settled throughout the St.
John River and
Allagash River valleys
of present-day New Brunswick and Maine.
The Passamaquoddy Nation inhabited the
northwestern coastal regions of the present-day Bay of Fundy
. The Mi'kmaq Nation is also assumed to have
crossed the present-day Cabot Strait
at around this time to settle on the south coast of
Newfoundland
but were in a minority position compared to the
Beothuk Nation.
European contact
The Maritimes was the first area in Canada to be settled by
Europeans.
There is speculation that Viking explorers discovered and settled in the
Vinland region around 1000 AD, which is when the L'Anse aux
Meadows
settlement in Newfoundland and Labrador
has been dated, and it is possible that further
exploration was made into the present-day Maritimes and
northeastern United States.
Both
Giovanni Caboto (John Cabot) and Giovanni da Verrazzano are reliably
reported to have sailed in or near Maritime waters during their
voyages of discovery for England
and France
respectively. Several Portuguese
explorers have also documented various parts of the
Maritimes, namely Diego Homem.
However, it was French explorer
Jacques
Cartier who made the first detailed reconnaissance of the
region for a European power, and in so doing, claimed the region
for the King of France.
Cartier was followed by nobleman Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Monts
who was accompanied by explorer/cartographer Samuel de Champlain in a 1604 expedition
where they established the second permanent European settlement in
North America, following Spain's
settlement at St. Augustine
. Champlain's settlement at Saint Croix
Island
, later moved to Port-Royal
, survived where the ill-fated English settlement at
Roanoke did not, and pre-dated the
more successful English settlement at Jamestown by three years.
Champlain
went on to greater fame as the founder of New
France which comprises much of the present-day lower St. Lawrence
River
valley in the province of Quebec
.
Acadia
Champlain's success in the region, which
came to be called Acadie, led to the
fertile tidal marshes surrounding the southeastern and northeastern
reaches of the Bay of
Fundy
being populated by French immigrants who called
themselves Acadien.
Acadians eventually built small settlements throughout what is
today mainland Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, as well as
Île-Saint-Jean (Prince Edward Island), Île-Royale (Cape Breton
Island), and other shorelines of the Gulf of St. Lawrence in
present-day Newfoundland and Labrador, and Quebec.
Acadian settlements
had primarily agrarian economies, although there were many early
examples of Acadian fishing settlements in southwestern Nova Scotia
and in Île-Royale, as well as along the south and west coasts of
Newfoundland
, the Gaspé Peninsula, and
the present-day Côte-Nord
region of Quebec. Most Acadian fishing
activities were overshadowed by the comparatively enormous seasonal
European fishing fleets based out of Newfoundland which took
advantage of proximity to the Grand Banks
.
The growing English colonies along the American seaboard to the
south and various European wars between England and France during
the 17th and 18th centuries brought Acadia to the centre of
world-scale geopolitical forces.
In 1613, Virginian raiders captured Port
Royale, and in 1621 Acadia was ceded to Scotland's
Sir
William Alexander who renamed it Nova Scotia.
By 1632,
Acadia was returned from Scotland to France under the Treaty of
Saint-Germain-en-Laye,
and the Port Royale settlement was moved to the site of nearby
present-day Annapolis Royal
. More French settlers, primarily from the
Vienne
, Normandie, and Brittany
regions of France
, continued
to populate the colony of Acadia during the latter part of the 17th
and early part of the 18th centuries. Important settlements
also began in the Beaubassin
region of the present-day Isthmus of
Chignecto
, and in the St. John
River
valley, and settlers began to establish communities
on Île-Saint-Jean and Île-Royale as well.
In 1654,
New
England
raiders attacked Acadian settlements on the
Annapolis
Basin
, starting a period of uncertainty for Acadians
throughout the English constitutional crises under Oliver Cromwell, and only being properly
resolved under the Treaty of Breda
in 1667 when France's claim to the region was reaffirmed.
Colonial administration by France throughout the history of Acadia
was contemptuous at best. France's priorities were in settling and
strengthening its claim on New France and the exploration and
settlement of interior North America and the
Mississippi River valley.
British and French control
Further
French-English conflict resulted in the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 which saw
France formally relinquish Acadia to Britain
. Confusion over the boundaries between
Acadia, New France, and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
left Britain in possession of what is the
present-day Nova
Scotia peninsula
. The early British capital of the Colony of
Nova Scotia (sometimes referred to as the 14th Colony) was
established at Annapolis Royal, where Fort Anne
was constructed.
France
still maintained control over much of present-day New Brunswick and
northern Maine
, Île-Saint-Jean
, and Île-Royale
. In 1719, to further protect strategic
interests in the Gulf of St. Lawrence
and St. Lawrence River
, France began the 20-year construction of a large
fortress at Louisbourg
on Île-Royale. Massachusetts was
increasingly concerned over reports of the capabilities of this
fortress, and of
privateers staging out of
its harbour to raid New England fishermen on the Grand Banks.
The
War of the Austrian
Succession saw Britain and France in conflict with each other,
and in 1745 several warships and a small
contingent of troops were sent from Boston, first to the Nova
Scotian fishing port of Canso
, and on to Louisbourg where they laid siege to the
fortress until the French surrendered and were
evacuated.
The British returned control of Île-Royale to France with the
fortress virtually intact three years later under the
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle and the
French reestablished their forces there. In 1749, to counter the
rising threat of Louisbourg, Halifax was founded and the
Royal Navy established a major naval base and
citadel.
The
Seven Years' War from 1756 to
1763 was the final struggle for European domination of North
America.
The French
colony of New France was the objective, and the present-day
Maritime provinces saw conflict beginning in 1755 with the British
capture of French forces at Fort
Beausejour and Fort
Gaspereau
, guarding
the Isthmus of Chignecto. In 1758, the fortress of
Louisbourg was laid siege for a second time within 15 years, this
time by more than 27,000 British soldiers and sailors with over 150
warships. After the French surrender, Louisbourg was thoroughly
destroyed by British engineers to ensure it would never be
reclaimed. With the fall of Louisbourg, French resistance in the
region crumbled.
British forces seized remaining French
control over Acadia in the coming months, with Île-Saint-Jean
falling in 1759 to British forces on their way to Quebec
City
for the Siege of Quebec and ensuing Battle of
the Plains of Abraham
.
It was also during the course of this war that British
administrators in Nova Scotia began the expulsion of the
Acadians from their adopted homeland.
Many were expelled to
Louisiana
, but some Acadian families, and sometimes entire
communities, escaped British soldiers tasked with their
deportation, by hiding for years in hidden forest settlements,
aided by the Mi'kmaq. These Acadians during the 19th century
created new settlements in western Nova Scotia, southwestern and
northwestern Cape Breton Island, and western Prince Edward Island,
but their most significant concentration was along the New
Brunswick shores of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
American Revolution
Following the
Seven Years' War,
empty Acadian lands were settled first by
New England Planters and then by
immigrants brought from
Yorkshire. Île-Royale
was renamed to Cape Breton Island and incorporated into the Colony
of Nova Scotia.
Both the colonies of Nova Scotia (present-day Nova Scotia and New
Brunswick) and St. John's Island (Prince Edward Island) were
affected by the
American
Revolutionary War, largely by privateering against American
shipping, but several coastal communities were also the targets of
American raiders. Charlottetown, the capital of the new colony of
St. John's Island, was ransacked in 1775 with the provincial
secretary kidnapped and the Great Seal stolen.
The largest military
action in the Maritimes during the revolutionary war was the attack
on Fort
Cumberland
(the renamed Fort
Beausejour) in 1776 by a force of American sympathizers led by
Jonathan Eddy. The fort was
partially overrun after a month-long siege, but the attackers were
ultimately repelled after the arrival of British reinforcements
from Halifax.
The most significant impact from this war was the settling of large
numbers of
Loyalist
refugees in the region, especially in Shelburne and Parrtown (Saint
John). Following the
Treaty of
Paris in 1783, Loyalist settlers in what would become New
Brunswick persuaded British administrators to split the Colony of
Nova Scotia to create the new colony of New Brunswick in 1784. At
the same time, another part of the Colony of Nova Scotia, Cape
Breton Island, was split off to become the Colony of Cape Breton
Island.
The Colony of St. John's Island was renamed
to Prince Edward
Island
on November 29, 1798.
The
War of 1812 had some affect on the
shipping industry in the Maritime colonies of New Brunswick, Nova
Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Cape Breton Island; however, the
significant
Royal Navy presence in
Halifax and other ports in the region prevented any serious
attempts by American raiders. Maritime and American
privateers targeted unprotected shipping of both
the United States and Britain respectively, further reducing trade.
The
American border with New Brunswick did not have any significant
action during this conflict, although British forces did occupy a
portion of coastal Maine
at one
point. The most significant incident from this war which
occurred in the Maritimes was the British capture and detention of
the American
frigate USS Chesapeake in
Halifax.
19th century
In 1820,
the Colony of Cape
Breton Island
was merged back into the Colony of Nova Scotia for
the second time by the British government.
British
settlement of the Maritimes, as the colonies of Nova Scotia, New
Brunswick and Prince Edward Island came to be known, accelerated
throughout the late 18th century and into the 19th century with
significant immigration to the region as a result of Scottish
migrants displaced by the Highland Clearances and Irish escaping the Great Irish Famine . As a result,
significant portions of the three provinces are influenced by
Celtic heritages, with
Scottish Gaelic having been widely
spoken, particularly in Cape Breton, although it is less prevalent
today.
During the
American Civil War,
some Maritimers emigrated to the United States to volunteer for the
armies of the Union or the Confederacy.
However, the majority
of the conflict's impact was felt in the shipping industry since
diplomatic tensions between Britain
and the Unionist
North had deteriorated after Britain expressed support for the
secessionist Confederate
South. The Union navy, although much smaller than the
Royal Navy, did posture off Maritime coasts at times. Although an
amphibious invasion was never in question, blockading by Union
naval forces was common, particularly at Halifax, where Confederate
navy ships sought refuge and reprovisioning.
The immense size of the Union army (the largest on the planet
toward the end of the Civil War), however, was viewed with
increasing concern by Maritimers throughout the early 1860s.
Another
concern was the rising threat of Fenian raids
on border communities in New Brunswick
by those seeking to end British rule of Ireland
. This combination of events, coupled with an
ongoing decline in British military and economic support to the
region as the Home Office favoured newer colonial endeavours in
Africa and elsewhere, led to a call among Maritime politicians for
a conference on
Maritime Union, to be
held in early September, 1864 in—chosen in part because of Prince
Edward Island's reluctance to give up its jurisdictional
sovereignty in favour of uniting with New Brunswick and Nova Scotia
into a single colony. New Brunswick and Nova Scotia felt that if
the union conference were held in Charlottetown, they might be able
to convince Island politicians to support the proposal.
The
Charlottetown
Conference, as it came to be called, was also attended by a
slew of visiting delegates from the neighbouring colony of
Canada, who had largely arrived at
their own invitation with their own agenda. This agenda saw the
conference dominated by discussions of creating an even larger
union of the entire territory of
British North America into a united
colony.
The Charlottetown Conference ended with an
agreement to meet the following month in Quebec City
, where more formal discussions ensued, culminating
with meetings in London
and the
signing of the British North
America Act. Of the Maritime provinces, only Nova Scotia
and New Brunswick were initially party to the BNA Act, Prince
Edward Island's reluctance, combined with a booming agricultural
and fishing export economy having led to that colony opting not to
sign on.
Major communities
The major
communities of the region include Halifax
and Sydney
in Nova Scotia, Moncton
, Saint John
, and Fredericton
in New Brunswick, and Charlottetown
in Prince Edward Island.
Society and culture
Maritime society is based upon a mixture of traditions and class
backgrounds. Predominantly rural until recent decades, the region
traces many of its cultural activities to those rural
resource-based economies of
fishing,
agriculture,
forestry, and
coal
mining.
While
Maritimers are predominantly of west European heritage (Scottish
, Irish
, English
, and Acadian), immigration
to Industrial Cape Breton
during the heyday of coal mining and steel manufacturing brought
people from eastern Europe as well as from Newfoundland. The
Maritimes also has a
black population
who are descendants of former
African
American runaway
slaves and
loyalists, largely concentrated in
Nova Scotia but also in various communities throughout southern New
Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. The Mi'kmaq Nation's reserves
throughout Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and eastern New
Brunswick dominate aboriginal culture in the region, compared to
the much smaller population of the
Maliseet
Nation in western New Brunswick.

Skyline of Saint John, New Brunswick
as of Summer 2002
Cultural activities are fairly diverse throughout the region, with
the music, dance, theatre, and literary art forms tending to follow
the particular cultural heritage of specific locales. Notable Nova
Scotian folklorist and cultural historian
Helen Creighton spent the majority of her
lifetime recording the various
Celtic
musical and folk traditions of rural Nova Scotia during the
mid-20th century, prior to this knowledge being wiped out by mass
media assimilation with the rest of North America. A fragment of
Gaelic culture remains in Nova Scotia
but primarily on Cape Breton Island.

Skyline of Moncton, New
Brunswick
Canada has witnessed a "Celtic revival" in which many Maritime
musicians and songs have risen to prominence in recent decades.
Some companies, particularly breweries such as
Alexander Keith's and
Moosehead have played up a connection between
folklore with alcohol consumption during their marketing campaigns.
The Maritimes were among the strongest supporters of
prohibition (Prince Edward Island lasting until
1949), and some predominantly rural communities maintain "dry"
status, banning the retail sale of alcohol to this day as a vestige
of the original temperance movement in the region.
Economy
Present status

Fredericton City Hall
Given the small population of the region (compared with the Central
Canadian provinces or the New England states), the regional economy
is a net exporter of natural resources, manufactured goods, and
services. The regional economy has long been tied to natural
resources such as fishing, logging, farming, and mining activities.
Significant industrialisation in second half
of the 19th century brought steel to Trenton,
Nova Scotia
, and subsequent creation of a widespread industrial
base to take advantage of the region's large underground coal
deposits. After Confederation, however, this industrial base
withered with technological change, and trading links to Europe and
the U.S. were reduced in favour of those with Ontario and Quebec.
In recent years, however, the Maritime regional economy has begun
increased contributions from manufacturing again and the steady
transition to a service economy.
Important
manufacturing centres in the region include Pictou
County
, Truro
, the Annapolis Valley
and the South Shore
, and the Strait of Canso
area in Nova Scotia, as well as Summerside
in Prince Edward Island, and the Miramichi
area, the North Shore and the upper
Saint
John River
valley of New Brunswick.
Some
predominantly coastal areas have become major tourist centres, such
as parts of Prince Edward Island, Cape Breton Island, the South
Shore of Nova Scotia and the Gulf of St. Lawrence
and Bay of
Fundy
coasts of New Brunswick. Additional
service-related industries in
information technology,
pharmaceuticals,
insurance and
financial
sectors—as well as
research-related
spin-offs from the region's numerous universities and colleges—are
significant economic contributors.
Another important contribution to Nova Scotia's provincial economy
is through spin-offs and royalties relating to off-shore
petroleum exploration and development.
Mostly
concentrated on the continental shelf of the province's Atlantic
coast in the vicinity of Sable Island
, exploration activities began in the 1960s and
resulted in the first commercial production field for oil beginning
in the 1980s. Natural gas was
also discovered in the 1980s during exploration work, and this is
being commercially recovered, beginning in the late 1990s. Initial
optimism in Nova Scotia about the potential of off-shore resources
appears to have diminished with the lack of new discoveries,
although exploration work continues and is moving farther off-shore
into waters on the
continental
margin.
Regional
transportation networks have also changed significantly in recent
decades with port modernizations, with new expressways and ongoing
arterial highway construction, the abandonment of various
low-capacity railway branchlines (including the entire railway system
of Prince Edward Island and southwestern Nova Scotia), and the
construction of the Canso Causeway
and the Confederation Bridge
. There have been airport improvements at
various centres providing improved connections to markets and
destinations in the rest of North America and overseas.
Improvements in infrastructure and the regional economy
notwithstanding, the three provinces remain one of the poorer
regions of Canada. While urban areas are growing and thriving,
economic adjustments have been harsh in rural and
resource-dependent communities, and emigration has been an ongoing
phenomenon for some parts of the region. Another problem is seen in
the lower average wages and family incomes within the region.
Property values are depressed, resulting in a smaller tax base for
these three provinces, particularly when compared with the national
average which benefits from central and western Canadian economic
growth.
This has been particularly problematic with the growth of the
welfare state in Canada since the
1950s, resulting in the need to draw upon
equalization payments to provide
nationally-mandated social services.
Since the 1990s the
region has experienced an exceptionally tumultuous period in its
regional economy with the collapse of large portions of the ground
fishery throughout Atlantic Canada, the closing of coal mines and a
steel mill on Cape
Breton Island
, and the closure of military bases in all three
provinces.
Historical
Growth
While the economic underperformance of the Maritime economy has
been long lasting, it has not always been present. The mid-19th
century, especially the 1850s and 1860s, has long been seen as a
"Golden Age" in the Maritimes. Growth was strong, and the region
had one of
British North
America's most extensive manufacturing sectors. The question of
why the Maritimes fell from being a centre of Canadian
manufacturing to being an economic hinterland is thus a central one
to the study of the region's pecuniary difficulties. The period in
which the decline occurred had a great many potential culprits. In
1867 Nova Scotia and New Brunswick merged with the Canadas in
Confederation, with Prince
Edward Island joining them six years later in 1873. Canada was
formed only a year after
free trade with
the United States (in the form of the
Reciprocity
Agreement) had ended. In the 1870s
John A. Macdonald's
National Policy was implemented, creating a
system of protective
tariffs around the new
nation. Throughout the period there was also significant
technological change both in the production and transportation of
goods.
Decline
The cause of economic malaise in the Maritimes is an issue of great
debate and controversy among historians, economists, and
geographers. The differing opinions can approximately be divided
into the "structuralists," who argue that poor policy decisions are
to blame, and the others, who argue that unavoidable technological
and geographical factors caused the decline.

The exact date that the Maritimes began to fall behind the rest of
Canada is difficult to determine. Historian Kris Inwood places the
date very early, at least in Nova Scotia, finding clear signs that
the Maritimes "Golden Age" of the mid-nineteenth century was over
by 1870, before Confederation or the National Policy could have had
any significant impact. Richard Caves places the date closer to
1885. T.W. Acheson takes a similar view and provides considerable
evidence that the early 1880s were in fact a booming period in Nova
Scotia and this growth was only undermined towards the end of that
decade. David Alexander argues that any earlier declines were
simply part of the global
Long
Depression, and that the Maritimes first fell behind the rest
of Canada when the great boom period of the early twentieth century
had little effect on the region. E.R. Forbes, however, emphasizes
that the precipitous decline did not occur until after the
First World War during the 1920s when new
railway policies were implemented. Forbes also contends that
significant Canadian defence spending during the
Second World War favoured powerful political
interests in Central Canada such as
C.D.
Howe, when major Maritime shipyards and
factories, as well as Canada's largest steel mill, located in Cape
Breton Island, fared poorly.
One of the most important changes, and one that almost certainly
had an effect, was the revolution in transportation that occurred
at this time. The Maritimes were connected to central Canada by the
Intercolonial Railway in the
1870s, removing a longstanding barrier to trade. For the first time
this placed the Maritime manufacturers in direct competition with
those of Central Canada.
Maritime trading patterns shifted
considerably from mainly trading with New England
, Britain
, and the Caribbean
, to being focused on commerce with the Canadian
interior, enforced by the federal government's tariff
policies.
Simultaneous with the construction of railways in the region, the
age of the wooden sailing ship began to come to an end, being
replaced by larger and faster steel
steam
ships. The Maritimes had long been a centre for
shipbuilding, and this industry was hurt by the
change.
The larger ships were also less likely to
call on the smaller population centres such as Saint John and
Halifax, preferring to travel to cities like New York
and Montreal
. Even the
Cunard
Line, founded by Haligonian
Samuel
Cunard, stopped making more than a single ceremonial voyage to
Halifax each year.
More controversial than the role of technology is the argument over
the role of politics in the origins of the region's decline.
Confederation and the tariff and railway freight policies that
followed have often been blamed for having a deleterious effect on
the Maritime economies. Arguments have been made that the
Maritimes' poverty was caused by control over policy by Central
Canada which used the national structures for its own enrichment.
This was the central view of the
Maritime Rights Movement of the
1920s, which advocated greater local control over the region's
finances. T.W. Acheson is one of the main proponents of this
theory. He notes the growth that was occurring during the early
years of the National Policy in Nova Scotia demonstrates how the
effects of railway fares and the tariff structure helped undermine
this growth. Capitalists from Central Canada purchased the
factories and industries of the Maritimes from their bankrupt local
owners and proceeded to close down many of them, consolidating the
industry in Central Canada.

Princess and Water Street in Saint
John
The policies in the early years of Confederation were designed by
Central Canadian interests, and they reflected the needs of that
region. The unified Canadian market and the introduction of
railroads created a relative weakness in the Maritime economies.
Central to this concept, according to Acheson, was the lack of
metropolises in the Maritimes.
Montreal
and Toronto
were well suited to benefit from the development of
large-scale manufacturing and extensive railway systems in Quebec
and Ontario
, these being the goals of the Macdonald and Laurier
governments. In the Maritimes the situation was very
different. Today New Brunswick has several mid-sized centres in
Saint John, Moncton, and Fredericton but no significant population
centre.
Nova Scotia has a growing metropolitan area
surrounding Halifax
, but a contracting population in industrial
Cape Breton, and
several smaller centres in Bridgewater
, Kentville
, Yarmouth
, and Pictou County
. Prince Edward Island's only significant
population centres are in Charlottetown and Summerside
. During the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, just the opposite was the case with little to no
population concentration in major industrial centres as the
predominantly rural resource-dependent Maritime economy continued
on the same path as it had since European settlement on the
region's shores.
Despite the region's absence of economic growth on the same scale
as other parts of the nation, the Maritimes has changed markedly
throughout the 20th century, partly as a result of global and
national economic trends, and partly as a result of government
intervention. Each sub-region within the Maritimes has developed
over time to exploit different resources and expertise. Saint John
became a centre of the timber trade and shipbuilding and is
currently a centre for oil refining and some manufacturing.
The
northern New Brunswick communities of Edmundston
, Campbellton
, Dalhousie
, Bathurst
, and Miramichi
are focused on the pulp and paper industry and
some mining activity. Moncton was a centre for railways and
has changed its focus to becoming a multi-modal transportation
centre with associated manufacturing and retail interests.
The
Halifax metropolitan area has come to dominate peninsular Nova
Scotia as a retail and service centre, but that province's
industries were spread out from the coal and steel industries of
industrial Cape
Breton and Pictou
counties, the mixed farming of the North Shore and
Annapolis Valley, and the fishing industry was primarily focused on
the South Shore and Eastern Shore
. Prince Edward Island is largely
dominated by farming, fishing, and tourism.
Given the geographic diversity of the various sub-regions within
the Maritimes, policies to centralize the population and economy
were not initially successful, thus Maritime factories closed while
those in Ontario and Quebec prospered.
The traditional
staples thesis,
advocated by scholars such as S.A. Saunders, looks at the resource
endowments of the Maritimes and argues that it was the decline of
the traditional industries of shipbuilding and fishing that led to
Maritime poverty, since these processes were rooted in geography,
and thus all but inevitable. Kris Inwood has revived the staples
approach and looks at a number of geographic weaknesses relative to
Central Canada. He repeats Acheson's argument that the region lacks
major urban centres, but adds that the Maritimes were also lacking
the great rivers that led to the cheap and abundant
hydro-electric power, key to Quebec and
Ontario's urban and manufacturing development, that the extraction
costs of Maritime resources were higher (particularly in the case
of Cape Breton coal), and that the soils of the region were poorer
and thus the agricultural sector weaker.
The Maritimes are the only provinces in Canada which entered
Confederation in the 19th century and have kept their original
colonial boundaries. All three provinces have the smallest land
base in the country and have been forced to make do with resources
within. By comparison, the former colony of the
United Province of Canada (divided
into the District of
Canada East, and
the District of
Canada West) and the
western provinces were dozens of times larger and in some cases
were expanded to take in territory formerly held in British Crown
grants to companies such as the
Hudson's Bay Company. The economic
riches of energy and natural resources held within this larger land
base were only realized by other provinces during the 20th
century.
One comparison made with the wealthier areas of Canada is that of
the region's political and/or work culture. Today few academics
make such a claim, but it still a common explanation in other
circles. Some writers have also alleged that Maritime business
people were unwilling to take risks or invest in manufacturing, a
thesis Acheson devotes much attention to debunking.
In recent years
dependency theory
has been used to examine the situation of the Maritimes, and while
it rejects most traditional economic models it does correspond with
the evidence.
Politics
Maritime conservatism since the Second World War has been very much
part of the
Red Tory tradition, key
influences being former
Premier
of Nova Scotia and federal
Progressive
Conservative Party leader
Robert
Stanfield and New Brunswick Tory strategist
Dalton Camp.
In recent years, the
social
democratic New Democratic
Party (NDP) has made significant inroads both federally and
provincially in the region. The NDP has elected
Members of Parliament (MPs) from New
Brunswick, but most of the focus of the party at the federal and
provincial levels is currently in the Halifax area of Nova Scotia.
Industrial Cape Breton has historically been a region of labour
activism, electing
Co-operative Commonwealth
Federation (and later NDP) MPs, and even produced many early
members of the
Communist Party
of Canada in the pre-
World War II
era. In the
2004 federal
election, the NDP captured 28.45% of the vote in Nova Scotia,
more than any other province.
The
Maritimes are generally socially
conservative but unlike Alberta
, they also have fiscally socialist tendencies. It is because of the
lack of support for
fiscal
conservatism that federal parties such as the
Canadian Alliance never had much success
in the region, and the level of support for the new
Conservative Party of Canada in
the region is uncertain. In the 2004 federal election, the
Conservatives had one of the worst showings in the region for a
right-wing party, going back to Confederation, with the possible
exception of the
1993
election.
An area
within the region where both fiscal and social conservatism do
coincide and where the federal Reform Party and Canadian Alliance
have met success is in the central-western part of New Brunswick,
in the St. John River valley north of Saint John and south of
Grand
Falls
. Contributing demographics include a
predominantly
Anglophone population
residing in a largely rural agrarian setting.
One influence might
be proximity to the International
Boundary and the state of Maine
. The
valley is also settled by descendants of
United Empire Loyalists, some of
whom established
fundamentalist Christian
congregations in the area which continue to influence certain
segments of society.
There are also a large number of active and
retired military personnel located in the Fredericton and Oromocto
area as a result of the large military base at
CFB
Gagetown
.
Another
area in the region with smatterings of coinciding fiscal and social
conservatism is the Annapolis Valley
of Nova Scotia.
The
Liberal Party of Canada
has done well in the Maritimes in the past because of its
interventionist policies.
The Acadian Peninsula
region of New Brunswick, long dependent upon seasonal employment in
the Gulf of St.
Lawrence
fishery, tends to vote for the Liberals or NDP for
this reason. In the
1997 federal election, Prime
Minister
Jean Chrétien's Liberals
endured a bitter defeat to the PCs and NDP in many ridings as a
result of unpopular cuts to
unemployment benefits for seasonal
workers, as well as closures of several
Canadian Forces Bases, the refusal to
honour a promise to rescind the
Goods and Services Tax,
cutbacks to provincial
equalization payments,
health care,
post-secondary education and
regional transportation infrastructure such as
airports, fishing
harbours,
seaports, and
railways. The Liberals held onto seats in
Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick, while being shut out of
Nova Scotia entirely, the second time in history (the only other
time being the
Diefenbaker sweep).
The Maritimes is currently represented in the Canadian Parliament
by 25 Members of the House of Commons (Nova Scotia - 11, New
Brunswick - 10, Prince Edward Island - 4) and 24 Senators (Nova
Scotia and New Brunswick - 10 each, Prince Edward Island - 4). This
level of representation was established at the time of
Confederation when the Maritimes had a much larger proportion of
the national population. The comparatively large population growth
of western and central Canada during the immigration boom of the
20th century has reduced the Maritimes' proportion of the national
population to less than 10%, resulting in an over-representation in
Parliament, with some federal ridings having fewer than 35,000
people, compared to central and western Canada where ridings
typically contain 100,000-120,000 people.
The
Canadian Senate is structured
along regional lines, giving an equal number of seats (24) to the
Maritimes, Ontario, Quebec, and western Canada, in addition to the
later entry of Newfoundland and Labrador, as well as the three
territories. Enshrined in the
Constitution, this model was developed
to ensure that no area of the country is able to exert undue
influence in the Senate. The Maritimes, with its much smaller
proportion of the national population (compared to the time of
Confederation) also have an over-representation in the Senate,
particularly compared to the population growth of Ontario and the
western provinces. This has led to
calls
to reform the Senate; however, such a move would entail
constitutional changes.
Another factor related to the number of Senate seats is that a
constitutional amendment in the early 20th century mandated that no
province can have fewer Members of Parliament than it has senators.
This cort decision resulted from a complaint by the Government of
Prince Edward Island after that province's number of MPs was
proposed to change from 4 to 3, accounting for its declining
proportion of the national population at that time. When PEI
entered Confederation in 1873, it was accorded 6 MPs and 4
Senators; however this was reduced to 4 MPs by the early twentieth
century. Senators being appointed for life at this time, these
coveted seats rarely went unfilled for a long period of time
anywhere in Canada. As a result, PEI's challenge was accepted by
the federal government, and its level of federal representation was
secured. In the aftermath of the 1989 budget, which saw a
fillibuster by Liberal Senators in attempt to kill legislation
creating the
Goods and
Services Tax, Prime Minister
Brian
Mulroney "stacked" the Senate by creating additional seats in
several provinces across Canada, including New Brunswick; however,
there was no attempt by these provinces to increase the number of
MPs to reflect this change in Senate representation.
See also
References
External links