In 1949, Newfoundland became Canada's () province.
In 1497 an Italian named John Cabot sailed west from England hoping to find a new trade route to ( ). Instead he found his way to eastern Canada.
By the British North America Act, Canada was made a ( )in 1867.
In ( ) the English founded Hudson's Bay Company, which built trading posts in the region surrounding the bay.
In 1497 an Italian named John Cabot sailed west from England hoping to find a new trade route to Asia. Instead he found his way to ( ) Canada.
During World War II, Canada fought as an ally of()with nearly one million people serving in the armed forces.
Who founded the first permanent settlements at Quebec and Montreal on the St. Lawrence River? ()
As a result of World War II, Canada ().
In 1605 ( ) settlers led by the explorer Samuel de Champlain established a settlement at Port Royal, in present-day Nova Scotia, Canada.
After (), the whole Canada came under the British rule.
The growing population of the colony led the British to divide Quebec into Upper and Lower Canada in ( ).
Beginning in the 1960s, many ( ) Canadians in Quebec called for separation from Canada.
In ( ) the French explorer Jacques Cartier entered the Gulf of Saint Lawrence.
In the year of(),Canada was finally a fully independent nation.
Canada finally became a fully independent nation in 1982 through ( ).
The British North America Act was officially announced on July 1, now celebrated as().
After the British were defeated in the American Revolution, many people who had supported the British during the war fled to ( ).
By 1608, Samuel de Champlain had reached(), where he founded France ’ s first permanent Canadian colony.
In ( ) the people of Canada began to call for a union of Britain's North American colonies.