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The Irish Settlers settled mostly in New France (what is now called Quebec". They settled here mostly because of the potato famine and the Catholic culture like theirs. Sadly, other Irish women and men were forcibly taken to New France to take action on wars against the indigenous culture.
Irish migrants appeared in France's Canadian empire as early as the 17th century, and Irish fishermen fished on the waters off Newfoundland in the same period. In the three decades immediately prior to the Famine close to 450,000 Irish migrated to Great Britain ( what is called Canada today)
The Irish were big farmers as their potato famine was started after their big successor on potatoes. This was due to all the potatoes in Ireland getting sick due to a fungal infection. They grew potatoes now in Canada. .
In the years after the War of 1812, increasing numbers of Irish, a growing proportion of them Catholic, were venturing to Canada to obtain work on projects such as canals, roads, early railroads and in the lumber industry. The labourers were known as 'navvies' and built much of the early infrastructure in the province.
The Vikings mostly settled in Newfoundland and Labrador. this do to the proximity to their old homeland, Greenland.
Wooden artifacts bearing scars from iron tools reveal that the inhabitants felled trees at the site, on Newfoundland's extreme northern tip, that's what they do.
Norse settlements in Canada. A reconstruction of Norse buildings at the UNESCO listed L'Anse aux Meadows site in Newfoundland, Canada. Archaeological evidence demonstrates that iron working, carpentry, and boat trpairwere conducted at the site. Greenland lacked natural resources like forests and iron ore.
Scientists say a new dating technique analysing tree rings has provided evidence that Vikings occupied a site in Newfoundland, Canada, in 1021AD. It has long been known that Europeans reached the Americas before Columbus's arrival in the New World in 1492.
Because in junior kindergarten we did something about tree stumps and their ages at my Toronto school.
The Vikings are the first known Europeans to set foot in Newfoundland and Labrador, and indeed the Western world, were the Norse of Scandinavia who landed here about a thousand years ago. Erik the Red, an explorer exiled from his home in Norway, had gathered groups of people to follow him on an exploration for new land. There old home: Vinland is an organisation of Viking reenactors, consisting of 5 local member-groups in Alberta, Canada, as well as Wyoming and Colorado. In 2006, were united into one governing body. All members of The Vikings - Vinland are full members of a larger society known as The Vikings.
Mennonites don't believe in technology. Why you may ask? it is because Despite the benefits, the use of technology also presents certain challenges for Mennonites. There are concerns about the potential negative impacts on their way of life, such as promoting individualism over community or complicating their simple lifestyle
From 1922 to 1930, nearly 8000 Mennonites emigrated from Canada to Mexico and Paraguay, seeking to avoid assimilation and preserve their autonomy as a faithful community. if you didn't know, assimilation means the process of taking in and fully understanding information or ideas.