My grandfather was born in Newfoundland 8 years before it joined Canada in 1949. He still has the papers that list him as a British citizen instead of Canadian.
My first passport was in 1976 and it clearly said that a Canadian Citizen is a British subject..I remember Rene Levesque crying his eyes out because of this..
All Canadians born before Jan 1 1948 were British citizens. Canada was the first of the British colonies to push for its own citizenship, which then triggered the domino effect of other colonies doing the same. Prior to that, there was no distinction.
There's a key part of the story missing here. Newfoundland raised a regiment of volunteers to fight for Britain in WW1, and most of the regiment was killed in a single battle on the western front. And, because so many working age Newfoundland men had joined up to fight, this meant they lost a significant chunk of the working age population. That crippled their economy even before the great depression hit which was why they ended up going back under direct rule from London - they'd lost too many people to function as an independent nation.
Also, the riot (insurection/revolution) of 1932 was what officially did the government in. The island was so politically corrupt that if you go into the old government building today.... ghe librarians door on the main floor still has bullet holes in it from the event. An estimated 10,000 people protested before the protest became violent, hundreds threw stones and bricks through the windows and several grabbed their guns, the prime minister resigned and called for a 'Break from politics' this is when the british crown took over again for more than a decade.
WW1 battles efficiently wiping out whole towns of working age men on an industrial scale, sometimes in a single battle, certainly screwed a lot of places over when the war was over.
I looked up some numbers and from a total population of 240,000 in 1914, 12000 signed up to fight in WW1, approximately 5% of the population. Of those 12000, approximately 1300 died and another 2200 sustained injuries. Tragic for sure but I hardly think that those numbers would destroy the entire economy or any reason to exist as an independent nation.
@@treyhall9138 I see this number after looking it up aswell but 5% ( say 10% of total men ) still seems very low.. Upon looking a little further I found this "Newfoundland, a separate British dominion in 1914 and not yet a province of Canada, contributed 12,000 military personnel to Allied forces from a pre-war population of 242,000. By 1918, some 35 percent of men aged 19 to 35 had served.". So that number your getting is only for 1914 perhaps?. 35% of men seems right to me. My great grandfather fought in ww1 for newfoundland, he was a prisoner of war in germany, he was in a book for all the people who fought in my area and there is probably about 200 people there, the population being about 1k~ at the time, the author went door to door some years ago and did all this research himself, so this seems more accurate. The book was by Bill O'gorman, ww1 port au port veterans
As a Canadian I feel it important to point out that the province is "Newfoundland and Labrador" being made up of the island of Newfoundland, and the mainland area known as Labrador.
Yes, and about 20 years ago the Canadian Constitution was amended to change the official name of the province from simply Newfoundland to "Newfoundland and Labrador" to better recognize the two parts.
I go on a three way split here. There are videos where I do have knowledge of the subject but I enjoy the subject matter. There are those which I am less aware of the subject matter but I will watch the video because I also am intrigued. And then, very much like you, it is a subject I have not come across before and want to know the answer.
My grandfather joined the Canadian Air Force in WWII, but after the war, didn't think he was eligible for veteran benefits because they never sent him to Europe. Just a few years before he passed away, he found out he was eligible after all because he'd worked on planes "overseas" in Newfoundland. (He was an electrician.)
NF: hey Canada, let us join you Canada: your just asking for that to saddle us with your debt, no thanks NF: okay I guess we will just have to try joining the US instead Both Canada &Britain: now hold on just a minute!
@@sportsfix6975 We'd be screwed if we had joined the States. And we're too different anyway. Our politcs wouldnt fit, our history and culture are different. We believe in big government, sharing resources, solid social services, universal health care, things that horrify Americans. We had a chance to join the US in the first referendum. We turned it down flat.
@@wfcoaker1398 I live in California, most Californians believe in big government and free healthcare, etc. as well. It wouldn't turn the politics of the US upside down. It just would have made the US lean a little more toward big government overall Not gonna debate whether that's a good thing or bad thing, just saying that it wouldn't have broken US politics
@@boomsday3 Dude, Im a Newfoundlander, born and raised here. My uncle, after whom I was named, was the only anticonfederate in the family. I'm proud to bear his name. You're so wrong about "them" ( which is to say, us) not liking big government. Lol. Why do you think we put the kibosh on joining the Yanks? They don't care about one another. As long as a Yank can grab onto the few shekles he's allowed to earn, he thinks he's rich, poor bastard. Sharing the wealth horrifies them. We're better off in Canada.
@@typicalmountainbiker I pity you Yanks. All rugged individuals, sink or swim on your own, no help from the rest of society. Helping one another, sharing the wealth so everybody is doing well, that's "socialism", it's evil! Lol. Only a few get to have all the wealth, the rest of you scrabble along, thinking you're free. Free to watch the wealthy have their fun.
Not really Newfoundland is mostly uninhabited It being part of US would mean just another small US state like Maine, Vermont... And it being independent would mean just another Nordic like country probably something comparable to mix of Scotland and Iceland
Im a newfoundlander and to this day if you ask older people here about their thoughts on the referendum a lot would say that it’s too bad we couldn’t have joined the states. If it was put on the ballot I am most certain that we would have become a state
@@kostam.1113 as a State it would’ve drastically altered our province and the demographics, culture, and economics. But internationally it wouldnt have made a major difference. As an independent Nation it could’ve been different, there was a real threat that was addressed by both the British and Canadian government of large scale communist activity which had conditions similar to a third world country. Newfoundland, perhaps, could’ve become a second communist nation in NA similar to Cuba, perhaps we could’ve seen a Newfoundland missile crisis? Maybe the Argentia base would’ve then become a Guantanamo bay of the north? It’s all speculation but it’s fun to think about, especially if you’re a Newfoundlander like myself.
Newfoundland had such a large population of Irish people that a good chunk of the population spoke Gaelic Irish there. The Catholic Church used to send for priests from Ireland who could speak Irish to move there, and there are records of the courts needing Irish interpreters for some defendants. Newfoundland is also the only place outside of Europe which has a native name in Irish: Talamh an Éisc (The Land of the Fish).
Actually, there were more of English descent than Irish. Irish make up 20.7% of the population as of a 2016 census. English are 37.5%; Scottish 6.8% and French 5.2%.
@@maazkalim well nova scotia is a bit 'special' inasmuch as it exists because the brits exiled all the people who'd built the place they became cajuns in louisiana
@@theoneanton Do you have any idea how much oil is our waters? Not to mention we are getting a worse deal BECAUSE it is offshore and not on land........
In Canada, the introduction to hockey games shown on CBC includes an old audio clip that says: “Hello hockey fans from Canada, the United States and Newfoundland!” That’s when learned about Newfoundland being independent from Canada, and now I know why they were independent at the time. Really great vid, I love the Canadian content!!
@@solwen we really didn’t do anything to them. Louisiana’s French Culture is very much still there, it’s part of most people’s identity in many parts of the state. By the way, Louisiana has a French Law way of state laws. Do some research on Cajun culture before spewing out garbage.
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Your little 2 second clip of (what i assume to be) "Terry Tate: Office Linebacker" is fantastic 😂 as is all of your work but thats one of my favorite ads from my youth. Not many people remember him!
Nfld went bankrupt during the great depression partially as a result of the cost of providing a regiment of troops during ww1. It suffered horrendous casualties at the battle of beaumont hamel. This in a colony of only 250 000 was a major social and economic blow to nfld that it never recovered from. The nfld regiment was given the designation of royal to become the royal newfoundland regiment. This was the only time during ww1 this was made. Canada day july 1 is still memorial day in nfld to commemorate the loss.
@@elliottbarrett612 wrong. Our railway was narrow gauge so we couldn’t put heavy loads on it. If we had to build the standard gauge instead of cheaping out we would have boomed because we have lots of minerals and forestry.
@@I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music He was always absessed with history, learning about the world and such. But he couldn't afford the knowledge. When he grew up he started going to the library but the library wouldn't let him read the books. He couldn't afford a membership so he sneakily watch videos on the computer. This made his love for history grow more and more. He aced every history test and was offered a full scholarship for history. He is now a rich professor well respected at his job and community. He decided to give back to those history videos for teaching him when others wouldn't. If not for those he would be the man he is today. Jame Bissonette learned that even though life put him down he never gave up what he loved and appreciated those who gave him their knowledge for free when others wouldn't.
In the book "Don't Tell the Newfoundlanders", the author brings to light strong evidence that the final referendum was rigged, including, among other things, the ballots being burned after the initial count. There was a strong feeling at the time that the independence vote won. It's a great book if you're interested in the history.
@@parsatayebi7652 Okay look. Most of us don't even want that in the first place. We never did. The thing about Newfoundland is we consistently elected trash governments, hate those governments and then re elect those governments.
@@jacobhogan3208 Oh buddy trust me I know the whole deal. The project was a fucking disaster so we just throw it onto the next government. And then along comes the NDP raising taxes for everyone because there are no rich people left to tax. I was one of the people who moved away lol.
@@parsatayebi7652 I'm unfortunately too stubborn to leave. Honestly it's worse because I know a few MHA's right now personally and it's very awkward to talk about this stuff. One candidate in the last election that I have spoken to said to me that they only went in it because it was the only job that they could think of that would never be in jeopardy. I wouldn't be shocked if that was the plans of all 40 of them in there right now.
Minor points. Newfoundland wasn't a solid population of protestants, it is actually split between protestants and Irish Catholics. Not 50-50 but certainly a higher percentage of the population than anywhere other than Quebec. Secondly, Newfoundland was severely impacted by the 1st World War. The Royal Newfoundland Regiment took massive casualties, as a percentage of the population. What's worse is that it wiped out much of the educated young men of that generation, which left a void in the political realm. That left the government open to be raided and pilfered by con artists. Britain actually exempted Newfoundland from sending troops in WW2, but many volunteered anyways. The first referendum was held, the Independence movement won, but didn't win over 50%. Nobody suggested that as a requirement until after the vote was held. The locals who financed the Indepence campaign were tapped out and then the British Government, along with Canadian Banks, dumped piles more money into a second campaign. There is a fair bit of question held around that vote, as I believe 2 people who worked on it have made deathbed statements that the vote was the other way.
Yeah, the protestant bit is a really bad take. There are more Catholics (largest church in NL) than Anglicans (2ed largest denomination) in NL. Also the WWI take is pretty bad - as per your explanation.
And everyone forgets the Indigenous Labradorians, as per usual. I'll admit I've been guilty of similar (forgetting to watch for New Year's hitting the Territories while celebrating each of the Provinces would be my biggest blunder there). I'm sure the government didn't count them either. Seems to be as Canadian as saying sooory.
@@burnyizland Who cares about the Stone Age cannibals? They live infinitely better lives now, now that they aren't eating and sacrificing each other, oh and the advanced technology and not living in huts helps a lot.
When I was in fourth grade (in the U.S. in 1974) I asked my teacher why a map of Canada we were given showed an international border around Newfoundland. My teacher wasn’t a young guy (he’d fought in WWII) but even he didn’t know. He looked into it and told me that apparently it _used to be_ a separate country!
@@sarahgilbert8036 Yes as a teacher he should have God like omnipotence and know everything about every country that has or ever will exist so he can easily list off random fun facts unrelated to the curriculum any time a curious 4th grader asks something random
@@andym9571 The elected representatives of the people voted against Confederation, the lawyer society of Newfoundland argued that it was unconstitutional for Newfoundland to consider anything other than returning independence given that the Newfoundland Act of 1933 gauranteed we'd get it back, the people were denied the publicly popular option of union with America by the British government, the people voted for independence in the first referendum (of which there was only supposed to be one) they held a second referendum and nearly every vote that went towards maintaining British commission in the first referendum went to Confederation in the second (apparently). Ballots were burned before recount could happen, the districts with the most Confederate votes happened to be the most illiterate where only the Confederate Association had enough funds to send a scrutineer, and some of those districts reported over 100% voter turnout.. So sure.. yeah after a century of Newfoundland public being against joining Canada and the government being for it, the people definitely voted for confederation.. totally legit nothing funny here
"Why did Newfoundland took so long to join Canada?" Me, a non-Canadian who thought Newfoundland is a Canadian province all along, "Well now I'm intrigued."
It's funny because some random American diplomat whose name escapes me managed to have America buy Alaska from the Russians and tried to buy Greenland from the Danish in an attempt to surround Canada, plus resources. So America possibly trying to yoink New foundland into the Union isn't as far fetched as I thought it would be.
@@tremedar Oh that's an easy answer, we're waiting for them to catch up to us on things like health-care and social services. We'd be trading down otherwise.
Newfoundland Map: I will never forget Newfoundland. After what you did during 9/11, it made me proud and glad that Newfoundland is part of Canada. For me, that is how you treat guests! Stay safe, stay sane, be well
I'm always reminded of NFLD each time the CBC states the scheduled time of their programming. For those of you not in Canada, Newfoundland has a separate time zone. During each commercial for a CBC program you will hear the following phrase "x show at 6:00pm, 6:30 Newfoundland". I also worked with a bunch of people who moved from Newfoundland and they were some of the most friendly and hilarious individuals I've met.
Thank you for providing this synopsis. I have been interested in Canada since I was in gradeschool. Several Canadian friends and acquaintances have laughingly said that I know more about Canada than most Canadians (probably not true). I visited the other maritime parts of Canada in the early 1980s on my motorcycle and only regretted that I did not take more vacation time and also visit Newfoundland. I still hope to go there before I die. I knew that something really important happened in 1948 that did not happen in 1867 when the rest of Canada got invented, but now I have a better understanding.
Going to teach you another bit of Canadian knowledge. Newfoundland & Labrador are not a part of the Maritimes (it only includes NS, NB, and PEI). Adding NL, the proper name is "Atlantic Canada"
@@dallascopp4798 Newfoundlanders* One word. Also, maybe some of us do wanna break from Canada. But that's not unique to us. Almost every province but Ontario (maybe even them for all I know) have had some small movement wanting to separate that went nowhere. Honestly in my opinion we would not have survived if we had become an independent nation. We tried it before and it didn't work.
Because they werent close to the Soviet Union following the soviet invasion of Tschechoslovakia. They even left the warsaw pact out of protest for that and turned to "new allies" in the communist world: Yugoslavia (which had a "its difficult" relationship with the Soviet Union) and China ("actually WE are the true communists"). Albania was also absolutely paranoid about the Italians "returning"/invading and basically turned the little country into a giant bunker network to fend of any invasion
Having walked across Canada and spending substantial time in Newfoundland I can attest that these people are amazing, despite all the jokes, and that it's like stepping into a new country.
Wow-I had no idea at all! This was most eye-opening! Thank you so much for producing this and posting it! A big fan of Canada. Michael Weeks, San Antonio, Texas. May God bless us both.
@@UgandatheTFplayer Say that to a Newfoundlanders face, you will end up at the bottom of the Atlantic fish food. There's no cameras in our little towns, no footage of anything to be chased after as evidence. Our little towns have one way in and the same one out......
I'd always wondered about this. As a child, I'd look at the maps in my parents' textbooks and see "Newfoundland and Labrador" marked separately, but no one knew anything about it. Thanks for the info!
Bonjour! As a french kid growing in Ontario, i was taught that labrador was 'offered' to sweeten the deal of the 2nd élection. I don't know that the Quebec province was completely willing to let go of labrador. Alot of the teachers gave us the option of colouring in our Canadian provinces maps with labrador as part of Québec, or as part of Newfoundland.
The video did not mention that, as conditions of federation, Newfoundland had to switch from driving on the left to driving on the right and change the wiring from 230 volts - 50 hz to 110 volts - 60 hz. They also needed to change the sockets from the UK standard D and G sockets to the Canada/US standard A and B sockets.
You always ask if I enjoyed your presentation & I have to say I always do! Concise, accurate & to the point, & super cute animation that works well in conveying the message what's there not to enjoy. Thanks
I'm heading to Canada next week and these videos are perfect for my understanding of the place. Thank you very much for these thoughtful and insightful lessons!
A postscript is that Newfoundland Time is a half hour ahead of Atlantic Time, an hour and a half ahead of Eastern Time, and so on for the other time zones. Newfoundland was a separate dominion when time zones were established. It maintained the 30 minute difference when it joined Canada.
nothing really Canada would just slowly fade away as a national entity because the U.S. influence would grow and grow due to surrounding Canada economically, politically and territorially.
The end of the seven years war dictated a lot of that. The French got the west coast for the fishery along with st Pierre. Then the whole island got under British control.
This finally explains why New Foundland was a British territory in HoI4. I always thought it was for some gimmicky game reason. Turns out it really wasn't part of Canada at all.
Thanks for the refresher on the history of my home province. It’s been a while since I took that course on Newfoundland history in high school. Two points: 1) The official name of the province is Newfoundland and Labrador; 2) Hate to be pedantic on pronunciation, but it’s “New-fund-LAND” (rhymes with “un-der-STAND”). Cheers!
@@republicofnewfoundlands America's borders right now look so nice and clean, it's good that Canada got you. Would've made the USA slightly harder to look at, on a world map.
Nova scotia used to be interesting when it spoke Scottish gaelic. Bring to back and you might get some more attention. Same goes with Newfoundland and irish.
This is fantastic. I'm in my 30s and this is the first time I've heard this history. Public school system let me down, internet infotainment for the win.
also in my 30's and I do not recall learning this either but that makes it quite interesting to learn something new about Canadian history while browsing youtube
It was started with Sino-Soviet split. China alway treated Vietnam as their vassal. Along came the Vietnam War, and Vietnam received a lot of supports from USSR and in return leant more and more toward USSR side. So China used Cambodia as a dagger pointed at Vietnam's back to balance the power. But then Vietnam invaded Cambodia, so of course China had to response. However, the "punishment" proved that China's 1950s weaponry was almost obsolete where Vietnam's local militia (their regulars were busy invading Cambodia) was enough to stop PLA and inflicted heavy casualties that China had to call off their invasion. As a last resort, China gave life support to Cambodian resistance (there were more than one resistance faction, but of course China supported their brethren in spirit, the Pol Pot faction) who for the entire duration of Vietnam occupation stayed mostly at the Thailand-Cambodia border, clinging to their dear life. On Vietnam part, they didn't want to stirred up more problem with Thailand (and potentially entire South East Asia) with weaponry technology at the equal level as Vietnam had. So they never crossed the border or declared war right away against Thailand.
That would be WWI, if we are talking about camouflage patterns that we know of today. But before that, a form of camouflage, which was just drab colored clothing was worn even by the native americans. During the American Revolution, the americans would wear clothing to match their surrounding to hide. Riflemen, marksmen/sharpshooter, would wear a more dull color. Depending on the country of the military. Austria would wear light grey, while British would wear green. Military Khaki arose in the mid 19th century, from the Indian British army dyeing their white uniforms with tea and curry. Still, WWI was when armies started to wear camouflage itself. First used to camouflage vehicles and equipment from air attacks.
I'm guessing it relates to the invention of the hand-held radio. Camouflage has always been useful but dressing your troops to look alike so they don't murder each other on accident was more important. With modern communication it becomes possible to coordinate an army without signaling with flags, horns, drums and such.
I grew up in Newfoundland thinking I was a true Canadian, I even lived in Toronto for a time thinking that It felt like home(It did when i spent my time with catholic Poles). But then I moved to regular Canada and it was a massive culture shock. I never realized how Americanized Mainland Canadians can be. Ironically Toronto/Montreal felt more familiar to me than the smaller towns in mainland Canada, because they were diverse and wacky enough the American influence wasn't so noticeable. But it was when I started going into smaIler towns that I noticed the American influence. To me it's like living in a movie, everything is like it is in the movies. The roads are wide and straight, people talk about farming, they like football, they like church, no sense of communal tradition and a big focus on getting ahead(again in rural). I came here at 30 and it's still a perpetual source of confusion. For example we don't have a true left and right spectrum like you do on the mainland. Our divides are more rural versus urban(with the rural being more leftist) and those defending tradition versus those promoting economic growth. It's also just shocking to me that there's no sense of collective goals. In newfoundland it's a super common sentiment that for one reason or another we all defend the provinces economic fortunes. Few people are interested in sabotaging the oil industry, because we all know it pays for our socialized medicine etc. To this day Canada just feels like living in a foreign country.
This is honestly one of the most out-of-left-field takes I've ever read about Canada, and I say that as someone from Toronto. I've heard so many other Canadians tell me that Toronto is the most American city we have, but your description actually kind of fits in with what I've experienced in rural Canada and in the smaller urban centres. I don't mean this in a bad way but I can definitely see where you're coming from. I also find it interesting how the rural/urban divide in NFLD seems to be the reverse from the rest of the country. A very interesting commend to read and I hope to visit your fine province some day.
It wasn’t anglicans that were opposed to joining Canada. It was actually on the contrary. The irish catholic bishop of st.John’s compared Newfoundland joining Canada to that of Ireland and Britain’s union. The pro-confederation forces actually polarized the Catholics and protestants by convincing the protestants that confederation is the only way that they can ensure the Irish Catholics in Newfoundland wouldn’t gain power.
ireland gained its independence in 1916 - with the choices at Independence or British, the people were polarised so they opted for the Canada choice - the issue with catholics and protestants is still on-going today and the issue fairly settled down while the UK was in the EU - now the UK has left, that has complicated the situation on the island of Ireland
@@TheBigBoyBrian The UK leaving the EU isn't what has complicated the situation on the island of Ireland... as the UK and R.O.I can come up with a sensible solution between them... but its the EU that wants to 'protect' 'their' single market with a hard border... and where this hard border is to be has complicated the situation... as we are only given two solutions... ether on the border is... on the island of Ireland or down the Irish Sea... we all know just how repugnant those solutions are to their respective factions with in the N.O.I... but there is a third solution... yet both the pro EU Irish politicians and the EU don't want that solution and British politicians are so compromised they haven't taken it up... and that solution is... down the English Channel. Also Ireland didn't gained its independence in 1916... it was 1921... and as understand it... not for Ireland to be under the Continental yok... which is why England, (and it really was the Old Kingdom of England, as Wales also strongly voted leave), wanted out from the EU... I think both England and Ireland interests can be served hear... not without a great deal of suspicion on both sides though.
I was speaking to someone from Newfoundland and apparently residents a lot of the more rural villages were essentially forced by the Canadian government to move to towns, which I thought was interesting.
They are still doing it to us to this day, they've shut many smaller outport islands because getting resources proved a hassle to the government. Many of our residents still live in these long forgotten towns, and minor islands around Newfoundland.
My grandfather was born in Newfoundland 8 years before it joined Canada in 1949. He still has the papers that list him as a British citizen instead of Canadian.
That is pretty cool and interesting.
My first passport was in 1976 and it clearly said that a Canadian Citizen is a British subject..I remember Rene Levesque crying his eyes out because of this..
My mum was born in Uganda, so she was born as a British Subject
All Canadians born before Jan 1 1948 were British citizens. Canada was the first of the British colonies to push for its own citizenship, which then triggered the domino effect of other colonies doing the same. Prior to that, there was no distinction.
@@aryanscience That absolutely was not the case in 1976
“...They didn’t want this but that’s not how British rule works...”
*Rule Britannia intensifies*
something something Crimea
Ahahaha
And interestingly, that was the more democratic option, since obviously a good portion ofnthe population wanted that.
It’s not how ANY kind of rule works.
🏴"Do you think we are the baddies?"
🏴"!"
There's a key part of the story missing here. Newfoundland raised a regiment of volunteers to fight for Britain in WW1, and most of the regiment was killed in a single battle on the western front. And, because so many working age Newfoundland men had joined up to fight, this meant they lost a significant chunk of the working age population. That crippled their economy even before the great depression hit which was why they ended up going back under direct rule from London - they'd lost too many people to function as an independent nation.
At Beaumont-Hamel
Also, the riot (insurection/revolution) of 1932 was what officially did the government in. The island was so politically corrupt that if you go into the old government building today.... ghe librarians door on the main floor still has bullet holes in it from the event. An estimated 10,000 people protested before the protest became violent, hundreds threw stones and bricks through the windows and several grabbed their guns, the prime minister resigned and called for a 'Break from politics' this is when the british crown took over again for more than a decade.
WW1 battles efficiently wiping out whole towns of working age men on an industrial scale, sometimes in a single battle, certainly screwed a lot of places over when the war was over.
I looked up some numbers and from a total population of 240,000 in 1914, 12000 signed up to fight in WW1, approximately 5% of the population. Of those 12000, approximately 1300 died and another 2200 sustained injuries.
Tragic for sure but I hardly think that those numbers would destroy the entire economy or any reason to exist as an independent nation.
@@treyhall9138 I see this number after looking it up aswell but 5% ( say 10% of total men ) still seems very low.. Upon looking a little further I found this
"Newfoundland, a separate British dominion in 1914 and not yet a province of Canada, contributed 12,000 military personnel to Allied forces from a pre-war population of 242,000. By 1918, some 35 percent of men aged 19 to 35 had served.".
So that number your getting is only for 1914 perhaps?. 35% of men seems right to me. My great grandfather fought in ww1 for newfoundland, he was a prisoner of war in germany, he was in a book for all the people who fought in my area and there is probably about 200 people there, the population being about 1k~ at the time, the author went door to door some years ago and did all this research himself, so this seems more accurate. The book was by Bill O'gorman, ww1 port au port veterans
As a Canadian I feel it important to point out that the province is "Newfoundland and Labrador" being made up of the island of Newfoundland, and the mainland area known as Labrador.
Yes, and about 20 years ago the Canadian Constitution was amended to change the official name of the province from simply Newfoundland to "Newfoundland and Labrador" to better recognize the two parts.
The people from Labrador are like the butt-bread of Newfoundland and Labrador. You have to get through them to get to the good part.
People on the island portion of the province will tell you they are Newfoundlanders. People in Labrador refer to themselves as Labradorians.
But that wasn't the name at the time of the events described in the video.
@@edmerc92 It was always there, on maps as well.
Newfoundland: “Since we’re broke we should just sell ourselves to another country.”
Texas: “Worked for us.”
And it kept the Mexicans out. Whole up, wait a minute!
@@robhowell260 I had no idea Finland had a colony across the Atlantic Ocean. PERKELE
I think Greece might consider doing the same
West Florida be like :
@@imperators_8700 If someone buys Greece, he's also buying debt. Stonks.
i swear these all answer questions that i would have never thought of to ask, but still make me really intrigued
Wait ... KGB?
Lmao that pfp
@@adrianafamilymember6427 Siberia? it's finger lickin' good
I go on a three way split here. There are videos where I do have knowledge of the subject but I enjoy the subject matter. There are those which I am less aware of the subject matter but I will watch the video because I also am intrigued. And then, very much like you, it is a subject I have not come across before and want to know the answer.
I was today years old when I learned that Newfoundland wasn’t a part of Canada initially
“What was Vietnam like after the Vietnam war?” would be a good future video idea. Love ur Channel.
Hell, my man. We are lucky to get here now.
Communist. Or more accurately isolationist, then fairly open
Recap: War tears the country, conflict with Cambodia and China, and US sanctions. Then reform came.
Faxxx
@@jamiengo2343 Yep. That too.
Newfoundland's involvement in WW1 was huge. They took part on the first day on the Somme in 1916 and incurred massive casualties.
My great uncle was one of the survivors of Beaumont Hamel.
good job i guess, they sucked at war so bad they were infamous for it.
what do you mean as massive they probably lost a few thousand men. comparing to germany turkey and russia this is just a joke
@@borakaraca9788 massive, relative to the whole population of Newfoundland. that should be obvious.
@@borakaraca9788 When there's 3 of you and you lose 2, that's considered as massive.
My grandfather joined the Canadian Air Force in WWII, but after the war, didn't think he was eligible for veteran benefits because they never sent him to Europe. Just a few years before he passed away, he found out he was eligible after all because he'd worked on planes "overseas" in Newfoundland. (He was an electrician.)
Reminds me of my friend's wife who's grandmother immigrated to Canada from Newfoundland some time in the 40s.
Hey, my granddad also was an electrician in WWii. He had two lightenings on his helmet.
@@alexandriaoccasional-corte1346 0_0
@@alexandriaoccasional-corte1346 LOL
@@alexandriaoccasional-corte1346 lol
NF: hey Canada, let us join you
Canada: your just asking for that to saddle us with your debt, no thanks
NF: okay I guess we will just have to try joining the US instead
Both Canada &Britain: now hold on just a minute!
They'd be sooo rich if they joined America...
@@sportsfix6975 We'd be screwed if we had joined the States. And we're too different anyway. Our politcs wouldnt fit, our history and culture are different. We believe in big government, sharing resources, solid social services, universal health care, things that horrify Americans. We had a chance to join the US in the first referendum. We turned it down flat.
@@wfcoaker1398 I live in California, most Californians believe in big government and free healthcare, etc. as well. It wouldn't turn the politics of the US upside down. It just would have made the US lean a little more toward big government overall
Not gonna debate whether that's a good thing or bad thing, just saying that it wouldn't have broken US politics
@@boomsday3 Dude, Im a Newfoundlander, born and raised here. My uncle, after whom I was named, was the only anticonfederate in the family. I'm proud to bear his name. You're so wrong about "them" ( which is to say, us) not liking big government. Lol. Why do you think we put the kibosh on joining the Yanks? They don't care about one another. As long as a Yank can grab onto the few shekles he's allowed to earn, he thinks he's rich, poor bastard. Sharing the wealth horrifies them. We're better off in Canada.
@@typicalmountainbiker I pity you Yanks. All rugged individuals, sink or swim on your own, no help from the rest of society. Helping one another, sharing the wealth so everybody is doing well, that's "socialism", it's evil! Lol. Only a few get to have all the wealth, the rest of you scrabble along, thinking you're free. Free to watch the wealthy have their fun.
Weird to imagine an alt history where Newfoundland is either an independent country or a US state.
You have Alaska on one side and newfoundland on the other, both taking up potential Canadian coastline
Not really
Newfoundland is mostly uninhabited
It being part of US would mean just another small US state like Maine, Vermont...
And it being independent would mean just another Nordic like country probably something comparable to mix of Scotland and Iceland
Im a newfoundlander and to this day if you ask older people here about their thoughts on the referendum a lot would say that it’s too bad we couldn’t have joined the states. If it was put on the ballot I am most certain that we would have become a state
@@newfoundlandmapping4493 based
@@kostam.1113 as a State it would’ve drastically altered our province and the demographics, culture, and economics. But internationally it wouldnt have made a major difference. As an independent Nation it could’ve been different, there was a real threat that was addressed by both the British and Canadian government of large scale communist activity which had conditions similar to a third world country. Newfoundland, perhaps, could’ve become a second communist nation in NA similar to Cuba, perhaps we could’ve seen a Newfoundland missile crisis? Maybe the Argentia base would’ve then become a Guantanamo bay of the north? It’s all speculation but it’s fun to think about, especially if you’re a Newfoundlander like myself.
Newfoundland had such a large population of Irish people that a good chunk of the population spoke Gaelic Irish there. The Catholic Church used to send for priests from Ireland who could speak Irish to move there, and there are records of the courts needing Irish interpreters for some defendants. Newfoundland is also the only place outside of Europe which has a native name in Irish: Talamh an Éisc (The Land of the Fish).
Actually, there were more of English descent than Irish. Irish make up 20.7% of the population as of a 2016 census. English are 37.5%; Scottish 6.8% and French 5.2%.
So quite a bit like Nova Scotia - then?
Duh..., Mr "@@johnbrowne2170".
@@maazkalim well nova scotia is a bit 'special' inasmuch as it exists because the brits exiled all the people who'd built the place
they became cajuns in louisiana
‘They became’, to be sure - Ms "@@zimriel"?
"Women are people" "scheming in progress" you are wonderful mate
Imagine if It was a U.S state?
They are?
@@zaptronixx4488 no?
CK2 stuff 😂😂
@@mugiwara-no-luffy pretty sure he was joking lol
At this point, James Bissonet is probably working a 2nd job to keep up with his donations.
Can we also appreciate that nobody actually knows how his surname is spelled?
We’re all working 2nd jobs bruh, I do it to afford the local hooker.
Plot twist: He is James Bissonet.
@@randomguy-tg7ok Its Jeff Bezos' alter ego. He doesn't know how its spelled either
@SMA Productions I think he might be my dad then, pretty sure I played with that guy in Call of Duty
I’m surprised Canada wasn’t sold to James Bissonet at this point.
Britain almost sold Canada to America for one Ironclad
@@FelipeJaquez glad that they didn’t
@@prince_yt3406 I do believe most Canadians are glad of that too. ONE ironclad??? Were they high at the time?
Is NL worth one ironclad right now?
@@theoneanton Do you have any idea how much oil is our waters? Not to mention we are getting a worse deal BECAUSE it is offshore and not on land........
My mom was from Newfoundland. Her family favored staying British. In many places, they still fly the 🇬🇧.Joey Smallwood became the first premier.
In Canada, the introduction to hockey games shown on CBC includes an old audio clip that says: “Hello hockey fans from Canada, the United States and Newfoundland!” That’s when learned about Newfoundland being independent from Canada, and now I know why they were independent at the time. Really great vid, I love the Canadian content!!
That’s how I learned Newfoundland was different from the rest of Canada. Nice to hockey fans on this channel
My old art teacher wrote that song
Good ole Foster Hewitt
It would be interesting to know how the French settlers in Louisiana reacted to the Louisiana Purchase.
Great video btw
There weren't many to begin with other then the City of New Orleans.
I know that they struggled to keep their culture and language (the "problem language" as it was called by the US oppressor) alive.
What? All two of them?
@@solwen we really didn’t do anything to them. Louisiana’s French Culture is very much still there, it’s part of most people’s identity in many parts of the state. By the way, Louisiana has a French Law way of state laws. Do some research on Cajun culture before spewing out garbage.
@@solwen dude what are you talking about?
PAIN. Yes PAIN does come when your broke.
Yeah, but also ALCOHOL.
Keats said money troubles are likes sleeping a bed of neddles
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@@---zz8nr This reply is more cringe than my original comment mate.
*you're
Your little 2 second clip of (what i assume to be) "Terry Tate: Office Linebacker" is fantastic 😂 as is all of your work but thats one of my favorite ads from my youth. Not many people remember him!
OMG, i was wondering what that is, until i found your comment and searched it
“Hello Canada, and Hockey fans in the United States and Newfoundland”.
That’s how I learned Newfoundland was not always a part of Canada.
Ah nostalgia.
Shhhhhhhhhhhh
Da, dat da da, dat da da da, da dat da da....da na na na naaaaaa, dat da na na na naaaaaaaaa
My gawd it now all makes sense
Nfld went bankrupt during the great depression partially as a result of the cost of providing a regiment of troops during ww1. It suffered horrendous casualties at the battle of beaumont hamel. This in a colony of only 250 000 was a major social and economic blow to nfld that it never recovered from. The nfld regiment was given the designation of royal to become the royal newfoundland regiment. This was the only time during ww1 this was made. Canada day july 1 is still memorial day in nfld to commemorate the loss.
Thank you for this.
Newfoundland******
God rest their souls
Thanks for the history lesson!
@@elliottbarrett612 wrong. Our railway was narrow gauge so we couldn’t put heavy loads on it. If we had to build the standard gauge instead of cheaping out we would have boomed because we have lots of minerals and forestry.
At this point we need an entire Episode dedicated to the Story of James Bissonette
❤
I'll start: "James Bissonette was born a poor black child..."
@@I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music He was always absessed with history, learning about the world and such. But he couldn't afford the knowledge. When he grew up he started going to the library but the library wouldn't let him read the books. He couldn't afford a membership so he sneakily watch videos on the computer. This made his love for history grow more and more. He aced every history test and was offered a full scholarship for history. He is now a rich professor well respected at his job and community. He decided to give back to those history videos for teaching him when others wouldn't. If not for those he would be the man he is today. Jame Bissonette learned that even though life put him down he never gave up what he loved and appreciated those who gave him their knowledge for free when others wouldn't.
Wouldn't it be funny if he posted on here and said, "What do you want to know?"😁
The great powers of James Bissonette and Kelly Moneymaker still fight for supremacy to this day.
I knew a man (who has since passed away) who was born in 1936 in Newfoundland. We were surprised when he told us he wasn't born in Canada.
Canadian Archipelago: "We exist"
History Matters: "But fun fact: no"
It's like Luxemburg. We don't believe it exists.
Or New Zealand.
Explain
@@samrevlej9331 NZ exists.
@@uriargaman7241 nz is just propaganda lol
In the book "Don't Tell the Newfoundlanders", the author brings to light strong evidence that the final referendum was rigged, including, among other things, the ballots being burned after the initial count. There was a strong feeling at the time that the independence vote won. It's a great book if you're interested in the history.
It did win, lets be real here. Newfoundland was robbed of its independence and wasted a generation of men more then earning it in Flanders.
Wow interesting I’d like to read
there’s still some discussion about the vote counts here
I do wonder about these kinds of votes with so much on the line how much tampering is involved like with Quebec's vote.
wouldn't surprise me in the slightest
Seeing "Pain" over the province of NFLD, very fitting
"Hmm let's build this hydroelectric power plant, I hope this doesn't bankrupt the entire province and cause a massive political scandal."
@@parsatayebi7652 Okay look. Most of us don't even want that in the first place. We never did. The thing about Newfoundland is we consistently elected trash governments, hate those governments and then re elect those governments.
@@jacobhogan3208 Oh buddy trust me I know the whole deal. The project was a fucking disaster so we just throw it onto the next government. And then along comes the NDP raising taxes for everyone because there are no rich people left to tax. I was one of the people who moved away lol.
@@parsatayebi7652 I'm unfortunately too stubborn to leave. Honestly it's worse because I know a few MHA's right now personally and it's very awkward to talk about this stuff.
One candidate in the last election that I have spoken to said to me that they only went in it because it was the only job that they could think of that would never be in jeopardy.
I wouldn't be shocked if that was the plans of all 40 of them in there right now.
@@parsatayebi7652 I want to gtfo out of NL so bad. Considering joining the Armed Forces just to try for a transfer to the mainland.
Canada: *exists*
James Bisonette: “I’ll fund your existence.”
He's gonna be our prime minister xD
Well Bissonnette is a french canadian name. So he might actually be funding Canada's existence through his taxes.
Normie
@@PrincessLockette fax
Don’t forget Kelly Moneymaker.
Lol omg "L'INFLUENCE" is one of the best skipping through the daisies.
Despite ''L'influence'', Quebecers weren't skipping in the daisies that hard. They had a voice but it was rather muffled unless they yelled
“Why does Lesotho exist” we’ve done it with Europe so why not with Africa
now Eswatini feels left out!
@@Apokalypse456 don't worry, they were my next pick :)
What's Lesotho?
@@seanwebb605 a small country entirely surrounded by South Africa.
@@ralphvelthuis2359 Seriously?
Minor points. Newfoundland wasn't a solid population of protestants, it is actually split between protestants and Irish Catholics. Not 50-50 but certainly a higher percentage of the population than anywhere other than Quebec.
Secondly, Newfoundland was severely impacted by the 1st World War. The Royal Newfoundland Regiment took massive casualties, as a percentage of the population. What's worse is that it wiped out much of the educated young men of that generation, which left a void in the political realm. That left the government open to be raided and pilfered by con artists. Britain actually exempted Newfoundland from sending troops in WW2, but many volunteered anyways.
The first referendum was held, the Independence movement won, but didn't win over 50%. Nobody suggested that as a requirement until after the vote was held. The locals who financed the Indepence campaign were tapped out and then the British Government, along with Canadian Banks, dumped piles more money into a second campaign.
There is a fair bit of question held around that vote, as I believe 2 people who worked on it have made deathbed statements that the vote was the other way.
Even if Newfoundland didn't send men, they played a huge role in the merchant marine. Leave it to an island to have a lot of sailors.
Yeah, the protestant bit is a really bad take. There are more Catholics (largest church in NL) than Anglicans (2ed largest denomination) in NL. Also the WWI take is pretty bad - as per your explanation.
And everyone forgets the Indigenous Labradorians, as per usual. I'll admit I've been guilty of similar (forgetting to watch for New Year's hitting the Territories while celebrating each of the Provinces would be my biggest blunder there). I'm sure the government didn't count them either. Seems to be as Canadian as saying sooory.
@@burnyizland Who cares about the Stone Age cannibals? They live infinitely better lives now, now that they aren't eating and sacrificing each other, oh and the advanced technology and not living in huts helps a lot.
@@2hotflavored666 Wow, your ignorance and racism are astounding. What a disgusting attitude from a useless person.
When I was in fourth grade (in the U.S. in 1974) I asked my teacher why a map of Canada we were given showed an international border around Newfoundland.
My teacher wasn’t a young guy (he’d fought in WWII) but even he didn’t know. He looked into it and told me that apparently it _used to be_ a separate country!
Newfoundland is older than Canada and the United States
It was a Republic then it joined Canada, and as one author said, in doing so, it gained the biggest backyard.
At least he looked into it!
Although, as a teacher, he should have known.
@@Nx0-o1i So are a lot of countries
@@sarahgilbert8036 Yes as a teacher he should have God like omnipotence and know everything about every country that has or ever will exist so he can easily list off random fun facts unrelated to the curriculum any time a curious 4th grader asks something random
Newfoundland would have stayed independent if they had the funding of James Bisonette.
Lol true
Lol true
I was looking for this comment.
@@rafaelcosta3238 same
Who?
“That’s not how British rules works” Lmao
But that's how the Russian rule works
IMPERIALISM INTENSIFIES
Isn't the first law "England comes first"?
@@leighfoulkes7297 not really.... devolved regions are better funded than England... but it probably did work that way back in history.
the British mismanaged NF and lab they mis manage everythingso no surprise there
Topic idea: what did senators do during the Roman empire?
Ooo this is good
Good idea
Senating
an even better question: what did byzantine senate do ?
Or what did the senate do during the Roman Monarchy
Huzzah thank you. Haven't watched you for a while
Forgot how GREAT your animations are :)
"They didn't want this option but that isn't how British rule works" lmao
Well they obviously did want it to happen because that is what they voted for !
@@andym9571 maybe, though the brits did burn the ballots when we asked for a recount so....
^ Only because we were fed up by that point and wanted the matter dealt with :P .
@@andym9571 The elected representatives of the people voted against Confederation, the lawyer society of Newfoundland argued that it was unconstitutional for Newfoundland to consider anything other than returning independence given that the Newfoundland Act of 1933 gauranteed we'd get it back, the people were denied the publicly popular option of union with America by the British government, the people voted for independence in the first referendum (of which there was only supposed to be one) they held a second referendum and nearly every vote that went towards maintaining British commission in the first referendum went to Confederation in the second (apparently). Ballots were burned before recount could happen, the districts with the most Confederate votes happened to be the most illiterate where only the Confederate Association had enough funds to send a scrutineer, and some of those districts reported over 100% voter turnout..
So sure.. yeah after a century of Newfoundland public being against joining Canada and the government being for it, the people definitely voted for confederation.. totally legit nothing funny here
@@marsbolcan9311
Same shit happened to nova scotia,
nobody here wanted to join.
"Why did Newfoundland took so long to join Canada?"
Me, a non-Canadian who thought Newfoundland is a Canadian province all along, "Well now I'm intrigued."
Bigger question is: "Why is it taking so long for Minnesota and Wisconsin to join Canada?"
@@iwatchwithnoads7480 The even bigger question is what is taking Canada so long joining the USA and becoming the 51st through 60th states.
It's funny because some random American diplomat whose name escapes me managed to have America buy Alaska from the Russians and tried to buy Greenland from the Danish in an attempt to surround Canada, plus resources.
So America possibly trying to yoink New foundland into the Union isn't as far fetched as I thought it would be.
@@tremedar Oh that's an easy answer, we're waiting for them to catch up to us on things like health-care and social services. We'd be trading down otherwise.
@@tremedar Because the US is an afro-Hispanic country.
As a newfoundlander I’m glad to see we’re actually getting some recognition for our unique place
as a HUJMAN i am NOT GLAD TO SEE FAKE COUNTIRES
I am doing a massive realistic map of America for Age of Empires 2 HD if you want Newfoundland to be all yours.
Newfoundland Map: I will never forget Newfoundland. After what you did during 9/11, it made me proud and glad that Newfoundland is part of Canada. For me, that is how you treat guests!
Stay safe, stay sane, be well
You are quite known here in Portugal, especially in my region, where codfishing ships have been built and set sail for Newfoundland for centuries!
I'm always reminded of NFLD each time the CBC states the scheduled time of their programming. For those of you not in Canada, Newfoundland has a separate time zone. During each commercial for a CBC program you will hear the following phrase "x show at 6:00pm, 6:30 Newfoundland". I also worked with a bunch of people who moved from Newfoundland and they were some of the most friendly and hilarious individuals I've met.
Thank you for providing this synopsis. I have been interested in Canada since I was in gradeschool. Several Canadian friends and acquaintances have laughingly said that I know more about Canada than most Canadians (probably not true). I visited the other maritime parts of Canada in the early 1980s on my motorcycle and only regretted that I did not take more vacation time and also visit Newfoundland. I still hope to go there before I die. I knew that something really important happened in 1948 that did not happen in 1867 when the rest of Canada got invented, but now I have a better understanding.
Going to teach you another bit of Canadian knowledge. Newfoundland & Labrador are not a part of the Maritimes (it only includes NS, NB, and PEI). Adding NL, the proper name is "Atlantic Canada"
English explorers when they run out of ideas to name their newly found land
They named it Newfoundland because it was the first New land that they found.
@@Valencetheshireman927 hence why they ran out of ideas with the name.
@@filb It was the first place they found hence they hadn’t ran out of ideas yet.
It was actually their first idea. While the first British colony was not officially in Newfoundland, it was their first North American territory.
@@Valencetheshireman927 They hadn't figured out that they were suposed to call new land "New [old-land-name]" yet.
I’ve been wondering this for a long time.
"That was at least until the Great Depression, which could only mean one thing: PAIN"
Yea we all feel that
“Hey bro what should we call this new found land?
“Ive got it… *Newfoundland”*
As someone from Newfoundland and who still lives here I think this is an awesome video about our interesting history!
Well 70 years after this all happened, as a New Foundlanders do the people there want to be independent
There's nothing interesting about your history
Newfoundland is one word not two. 😎
@@trentlandon9033 Yet, you're on this video learning about it
@@dallascopp4798 Newfoundlanders* One word.
Also, maybe some of us do wanna break from Canada. But that's not unique to us. Almost every province but Ontario (maybe even them for all I know) have had some small movement wanting to separate that went nowhere.
Honestly in my opinion we would not have survived if we had become an independent nation. We tried it before and it didn't work.
My uncle is one of the first Canadian Newfoundlanders, he was born the day it joined the confederation, he's very proud of his plaque!
proud to have your country taken over not a good look
@@mattalexander3764 He was born in Canada
“Why did Albania remain close to China after the Sino-Soviet Split” great topic
Because they werent close to the Soviet Union following the soviet invasion of Tschechoslovakia. They even left the warsaw pact out of protest for that and turned to "new allies" in the communist world: Yugoslavia (which had a "its difficult" relationship with the Soviet Union) and China ("actually WE are the true communists").
Albania was also absolutely paranoid about the Italians "returning"/invading and basically turned the little country into a giant bunker network to fend of any invasion
@@noobster4779 why the idea of albania becoming a giant bunker for that reason makes me do a aaaww
wow you got this one brother
This was the first video I watched on this channel, I've loved it since
Having walked across Canada and spending substantial time in Newfoundland I can attest that these people are amazing, despite all the jokes, and that it's like stepping into a new country.
Newfoundlanders are not Canadian they are Newfoundlanders.
That's us :)
@@republicofnewfoundlands Of course, you'd be the exception.
@@republicofnewfoundlands
Funny, the rest of Canada calls them "Newfs".
Like a new found land? badum tsss...
Wow-I had no idea at all! This was most eye-opening! Thank you so much for producing this and posting it! A big fan of Canada. Michael Weeks, San Antonio, Texas. May God bless us both.
What, just the two of you?
Newfoundland is the guy in the chat who said “I’ll be back in 5 minutes”
I'm from the US , just wondering why Newfoundland doesn't get much love.
@@LegoofMaEggo Would like some independence?
NEW FOUNDLAN D IS STUPID
@@UgandatheTFplayer Say that to a Newfoundlanders face, you will end up at the bottom of the Atlantic fish food. There's no cameras in our little towns, no footage of anything to be chased after as evidence. Our little towns have one way in and the same one out......
How popular is the idea of re-independence in Newfoundland?
0:54 I guess you could say they would be having Nunavut?
I'd always wondered about this. As a child, I'd look at the maps in my parents' textbooks and see "Newfoundland and Labrador" marked separately, but no one knew anything about it. Thanks for the info!
Bonjour! As a french kid growing in Ontario, i was taught that labrador was 'offered' to sweeten the deal of the 2nd élection. I don't know that the Quebec province was completely willing to let go of labrador. Alot of the teachers gave us the option of colouring in our Canadian provinces maps with labrador as part of Québec, or as part of Newfoundland.
This channel is amazing because of the subtle jokes and references like 0:32.
I never expected to see a Terry Tate reference on this channel.
What was Japans reaction to Germany's fall in ww2 ?
I think it was "WE WILL FIGHT TO THE LAST MAN!" Until the nukes dropped
They really liked Germany and were very shocked that they lost
Something like "SHIT, HOMIES, WE FUCKED"
"Uh oh".
They launched one last attempt at cracking the stalemate in China just before the Soviets and Americans invaded.
The video did not mention that, as conditions of federation, Newfoundland had to switch from driving on the left to driving on the right and change the wiring from 230 volts - 50 hz to 110 volts - 60 hz. They also needed to change the sockets from the UK standard D and G sockets to the Canada/US standard A and B sockets.
No
But they got to keep their own Time Zone,
You always ask if I enjoyed your presentation & I have to say I always do! Concise, accurate & to the point, & super cute animation that works well in conveying the message what's there not to enjoy. Thanks
I love how the guy in the middle seems surprised after looking at the message on the board at 1:41 😂
52% in a referendum? Sounds familiar.
Came for this
I'm heading to Canada next week and these videos are perfect for my understanding of the place. Thank you very much for these thoughtful and insightful lessons!
_"Welcome to Canada. Here's your hockey stick and maple syrup. Don't talk to the neighbours to the south, they're idiots."_
I would love to see one done on why French Guiana is still part of France.
That question has a surprisingly straightforward, but still interesting, answer. I would love to see him make of video of it too.
France still owns 2 small islands off of the east coast of Canada too, that they refuse to let go of.
Because there's already a player named Guiana in the server so they can't rename themselves. But Venezuela is trying to solve this problem asap
@@galerinha
Venezuela wants to take over them?
@@newtfigton8795 about 50%, but I'm sure after they will come up with a new causus belli for the rest of the country
Noobs know about Brexit.
OGs know about Texit.
But only the true pros know about Newfoundlexit.
I hope not, I really love our neighbor brother and I whould feel quite sad if they separated from canada and joined the u.s.a.
Better yet, arctexit 0:00
Que-back away
@@MrExtraordinaire16 we don't want to join any country we want an economic union with Canada and the U.S.A
@@republicofnewfoundlands but aren't you already part of canada.
my whole family is from newfoundland, but i always wondered this question myself so this video is awesome!
A postscript is that Newfoundland Time is a half hour ahead of Atlantic Time, an hour and a half ahead of Eastern Time, and so on for the other time zones. Newfoundland was a separate dominion when time zones were established. It maintained the 30 minute difference when it joined Canada.
2:20 Best few seconds of any YT clip I've seen in a while
That Newfie pimpin since pimpin been pimpin.
Someone should do “what if Newfoundland joined the USA instead of Canada?”
That’s the stupidest idea ever. Not every video has to be about america
@@billybobjoe6441 triggered Canadian ?
@@billybobjoe6441 you’re the stupidest idea ever and I just want to know what would’ve happened
@ alternatehistoryhub
nothing really Canada would just slowly fade away as a national entity because the U.S. influence would grow and grow due to surrounding Canada economically, politically and territorially.
Here's a good one: Why did Saint-Pierre and Miquelon remain French?
the brits simply forgot taking it from france because it is so small
@@oLii96x
Bizarrely it was actually ceded by The Brits in 1763 to compensate France for the loss of Quebec.
For fishing in that area for the French is the TLDR.
@@DouglasEdward84 Yeah it would be dumb to give up an economic zone.
The end of the seven years war dictated a lot of that. The French got the west coast for the fishery along with st Pierre. Then the whole island got under British control.
I've been wondering about this for 30 years; thanks!
Questions I’ve been wondering my entire life finally getting answered. Beautiful to see
This finally explains why New Foundland was a British territory in HoI4. I always thought it was for some gimmicky game reason. Turns out it really wasn't part of Canada at all.
I also wondered the same with HoI2 back in the day. In _Darkest Hour_ it is actually a separate country in the 1914 and 1933 scenarios tho.
When people think your country is a gimmick.
@@I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music hoi4 players after you tell them czechoslovakia hasnt existed for almost a century
@@vault6242Czechoslovakia dissloved 1 January 1993. Is that a century ago?
@@TH-camisgettingworse. Duh
Canada: (smiles) "Welcome to the club!"
Newfoundland: (smiles) "Thanks!"
(Meanwhile)
America: "Damnit,"
pfft those guys already got Alaska!!! Like how much Destiny do they really need to manifest!!!
@@JellothePallascat this comment made me laugh way more then it should
Its alright we still have a shot at greenland
@@kaiseriv8483 Denmark: "Absolutely not, ever!"
@@kaiseriv8483 You mean StarsandStripesland?
Thanks for the refresher on the history of my home province. It’s been a while since I took that course on Newfoundland history in high school.
Two points: 1) The official name of the province is Newfoundland and Labrador; 2) Hate to be pedantic on pronunciation, but it’s “New-fund-LAND” (rhymes with “un-der-STAND”).
Cheers!
0:33 a Terry Tate: Office Linebacker reference? Holy shit my man, you have become the lord of niche pop-culture references, I love it
I'm surpised that newfoundland was so close to being a US state or independent. Amazing work HM
Newfoundland wanted the U.S but the British didn't want them to join.
@@republicofnewfoundlands We dodged a bullet....
@@ih302 no we made a mistake
@@republicofnewfoundlands We made a mistake by not joining America??
@@republicofnewfoundlands America's borders right now look so nice and clean, it's good that Canada got you. Would've made the USA slightly harder to look at, on a world map.
Pain
The great depression summed up perfectly
As an Ontarian with Newfoundlander heritage I never heard about this stuff. Very interesting!
0:33 Never did I expect to see Terry Tate: Office Linebacker in a historical-edutainment video
HAHAHA lol
Cool little fact the roads of the old American base in st. Johns make a cowboy hat
Hey someone talking about the maritimes, I swear we're interesting
Sad really the Maritimes cool there's arcdians inutes Mic Mac fish... Knock off pengines um I think that's it.
Ok ya? Prove it.
Love you guys. Beautiful forests and coasts. Good seafood. Love from the other CA in Los Angeles.
Nova scotia used to be interesting when it spoke Scottish gaelic. Bring to back and you might get some more attention. Same goes with Newfoundland and irish.
Newfoundland is a part of the Appalachian region of Canada so I think is what he meant by Maritimes.
Thank you for making this video.
You know, I actually have wondered this one before.
Lies
Was that a Terry Tate: Office Linebacker reference I saw? That is a deep, deep cut. 0:33
Okay it wasn't just me
Thanks
This is fantastic. I'm in my 30s and this is the first time I've heard this history. Public school system let me down, internet infotainment for the win.
I was looking for this comment cause, I was surprised I hadn’t learned this in high school. I graduated in 2020 btw
also in my 30's and I do not recall learning this either but that makes it quite interesting to learn something new about Canadian history while browsing youtube
i’m from newfoundland and there is so much more to learn on the subject!!!! it’s so interesting, you should definitely look into it more!
My school system taught us the history of Canada. We had books in the library. Did you read any history books in the library?
Holy crap, did you just put a "Terry Tate, Office Linebacker" reference in your video?!
Guess Newfoundland wanted to be new found land in Canada.
I’ll see myself out.
I have to be honest, that made me chuckle
That was funny.
leave
This is a coup. Although I will never give you up
@@TheZinnieShow alright, back to rome I go.
last time I was this early, James bisonette wasn’t the first patron
Pls do « *WHY PAKISTAN DOESN’T RECOGNIZE ARMENIA* »
Yes please
I think that was so random but ok
@@corianut7828 obviously a personal question
@@derrickstorm6976 No, they are into geography
I’m Pakistani and even I don’t know 😂😂 our diplomacy sucks
Brilliant video. 10/10. Straight to the point and hilarious.
"Why China declare war on Vietnam after Vietnam war"That will be interesting tho
It was started with Sino-Soviet split. China alway treated Vietnam as their vassal. Along came the Vietnam War, and Vietnam received a lot of supports from USSR and in return leant more and more toward USSR side. So China used Cambodia as a dagger pointed at Vietnam's back to balance the power.
But then Vietnam invaded Cambodia, so of course China had to response. However, the "punishment" proved that China's 1950s weaponry was almost obsolete where Vietnam's local militia (their regulars were busy invading Cambodia) was enough to stop PLA and inflicted heavy casualties that China had to call off their invasion. As a last resort, China gave life support to Cambodian resistance (there were more than one resistance faction, but of course China supported their brethren in spirit, the Pol Pot faction) who for the entire duration of Vietnam occupation stayed mostly at the Thailand-Cambodia border, clinging to their dear life.
On Vietnam part, they didn't want to stirred up more problem with Thailand (and potentially entire South East Asia) with weaponry technology at the equal level as Vietnam had. So they never crossed the border or declared war right away against Thailand.
“When did Armies start wearing Camouflage patterns?” Video idea for the future
yeah good suggestion especially armies before would just wear what ever or just plain armor.
That would be WWI, if we are talking about camouflage patterns that we know of today. But before that, a form of camouflage, which was just drab colored clothing was worn even by the native americans. During the American Revolution, the americans would wear clothing to match their surrounding to hide. Riflemen, marksmen/sharpshooter, would wear a more dull color. Depending on the country of the military. Austria would wear light grey, while British would wear green. Military Khaki arose in the mid 19th century, from the Indian British army dyeing their white uniforms with tea and curry. Still, WWI was when armies started to wear camouflage itself. First used to camouflage vehicles and equipment from air attacks.
Really? It’s harder to see, the Germans could see the French in WW1 but not the other way around
I'm guessing it relates to the invention of the hand-held radio. Camouflage has always been useful but dressing your troops to look alike so they don't murder each other on accident was more important. With modern communication it becomes possible to coordinate an army without signaling with flags, horns, drums and such.
I believe the correct name is "Vinland"
For Odin!
Based
no, today's newfoundland was the ancient markland, vinland was farther south, like nova scotia
@@Tonyx.yt. my point is still valid, Vikings > Modern Society
Vikings were Christian by the time of Leif Eriksson
@@Tonyx.yt. Nah markland is Labrador
I grew up in Newfoundland thinking I was a true Canadian, I even lived in Toronto for a time thinking that It felt like home(It did when i spent my time with catholic Poles). But then I moved to regular Canada and it was a massive culture shock. I never realized how Americanized Mainland Canadians can be. Ironically Toronto/Montreal felt more familiar to me than the smaller towns in mainland Canada, because they were diverse and wacky enough the American influence wasn't so noticeable. But it was when I started going into smaIler towns that I noticed the American influence. To me it's like living in a movie, everything is like it is in the movies. The roads are wide and straight, people talk about farming, they like football, they like church, no sense of communal tradition and a big focus on getting ahead(again in rural).
I came here at 30 and it's still a perpetual source of confusion. For example we don't have a true left and right spectrum like you do on the mainland. Our divides are more rural versus urban(with the rural being more leftist) and those defending tradition versus those promoting economic growth. It's also just shocking to me that there's no sense of collective goals. In newfoundland it's a super common sentiment that for one reason or another we all defend the provinces economic fortunes. Few people are interested in sabotaging the oil industry, because we all know it pays for our socialized medicine etc.
To this day Canada just feels like living in a foreign country.
Your comment was extremely informative. Thanks for sharing!
This is honestly one of the most out-of-left-field takes I've ever read about Canada, and I say that as someone from Toronto. I've heard so many other Canadians tell me that Toronto is the most American city we have, but your description actually kind of fits in with what I've experienced in rural Canada and in the smaller urban centres. I don't mean this in a bad way but I can definitely see where you're coming from. I also find it interesting how the rural/urban divide in NFLD seems to be the reverse from the rest of the country. A very interesting commend to read and I hope to visit your fine province some day.
Oh so that’s why the US annexes Newfoundland in hoi4 every now and then
Exactly what I was thinking
It wasn’t anglicans that were opposed to joining Canada. It was actually on the contrary. The irish catholic bishop of st.John’s compared Newfoundland joining Canada to that of Ireland and Britain’s union. The pro-confederation forces actually polarized the Catholics and protestants by convincing the protestants that confederation is the only way that they can ensure the Irish Catholics in Newfoundland wouldn’t gain power.
ireland gained its independence in 1916 - with the choices at Independence or British, the people were polarised so they opted for the Canada choice - the issue with catholics and protestants is still on-going today and the issue fairly settled down while the UK was in the EU - now the UK has left, that has complicated the situation on the island of Ireland
Religion has long been used to divide and conquer nations - since the beginning of time.
@@TheBigBoyBrian The UK leaving the EU isn't what has complicated the situation on the island of Ireland... as the UK and R.O.I can come up with a sensible solution between them... but its the EU that wants to 'protect' 'their' single market with a hard border... and where this hard border is to be has complicated the situation... as we are only given two solutions... ether on the border is... on the island of Ireland or down the Irish Sea... we all know just how repugnant those solutions are to their respective factions with in the N.O.I... but there is a third solution... yet both the pro EU Irish politicians and the EU don't want that solution and British politicians are so compromised they haven't taken it up... and that solution is... down the English Channel.
Also Ireland didn't gained its independence in 1916... it was 1921... and as understand it... not for Ireland to be under the Continental yok... which is why England, (and it really was the Old Kingdom of England, as Wales also strongly voted leave), wanted out from the EU... I think both England and Ireland interests can be served hear... not without a great deal of suspicion on both sides though.
Day 7 of asking for the video: "How did the Orthodox church react to the Protestant Reformation?"
Probably not at all because they had a solid grip of the east
The Czars (who pretty much ran the Church) were utterly disgusted. Particularly when Charles I was executed.
Probably like the latest and trending band of heretics.
@@dvv18 the Czar most definitely did not run the church
you are just annoying.
Shout out for using THAT party hat 2:20 lmaoo
I’VE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS ONE!
0:44 ngl the way the Pope's eyes turned to stare directly into my soul kinda spooked me
Well done. Proud to see my homeland finally made it to your channel.. pain, scandal and all.
I was speaking to someone from Newfoundland and apparently residents a lot of the more rural villages were essentially forced by the Canadian government to move to towns, which I thought was interesting.
They are still doing it to us to this day, they've shut many smaller outport islands because getting resources proved a hassle to the government. Many of our residents still live in these long forgotten towns, and minor islands around Newfoundland.