Ontario

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Ontario
Motto: Ut Incepit Fidelis Sic Permanet (Loyal she began, loyal she remains)
CapitalToronto
Area

 - Total
 - % fresh water
4rd largest
(2th lgst prov.)

1 076 395 km²
14,7%
Population


 - Total (2001)


 - Density
Ranked 1st


11 874 400


12,94/km²
Admittance into Confederation


 - Date


 - Order


1867


1
Time zone UTC -5
Postal information


Postal abbreviation
Postal code prefix

 
ON
K,L,M,N,P

Parliamentary
representation


 House seats
 Senate seats

 

103

24
PremierErnie Eves (P.C.)
Lieutenant-GovernorJames K. Bartleman
Government of Ontario


This article refers to the Canadian province. For other usages, see Ontario (disambiguation).

Ontario is the most populous of Canada's provinces. It is found in east-central Canada. Its capital is Toronto. Ottawa, the national capital of Canada, is also in Ontario. It has a population (2001) of 11 874 400 (Ontarians) and an area of 1 076 395 sq.km.

Geography

Ontario is bounded on the north by Hudson Bay, on the east by Quebec, on the west by Manitoba, and on the south by the American states of Minnesota, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York. Most of the American border lies within the four Great Lakes on which Ontario has coastline: Lake Superior, Lake Huron (including Georgian Bay), Lake Erie, and Lake Ontario (from which the province takes its name); as well as the Saint Lawrence River.

The largest city and capital of the province is Toronto, the main component of the Golden Horseshoe conurbation surrounding the western portion of Lake Ontario. The capital of Canada, Ottawa, is in the far east of the province, on the Ottawa River which forms most of the border with Quebec.

For a list of other cities in the Province of Ontario see:

The province consists of three main geographical regions: the Canadian Shield in the western and central portions, a mainly infertile area rich in minerals and studded with lakes and rivers; the Hudson Bay Lowlands in the northeast, mainly swampy and forested; and the most populous (90%) and temperate region, the fertile Great Lakes-Saint Lawrence Valley in the southeast. Industry and agriculture are concentrated in this region, which has access by the Saint Lawrence Seaway to the Atlantic Ocean.

Increasing immigration from all parts of the world, especially to Toronto and its surroundings, are rapidly diversifying the province's ethnic makeup. About 10% of the population of Ontario is French-Canadian (Franco-Ontariens).

Economy

The province's main industry is manufacturing, found mainly in the Golden Horseshoe, the most industrialized area in the country. Important products include motor vehicles, iron, steel, food, electrical appliances, machinery, chemicals, and paper. The high-tech sector is also important, especially around Waterloo and Ottawa.

Agriculture is also significant in the St. Lawrence River Valley, and mining, especially around Sudbury, is important in the Canadian Shield. Ontario's rivers make it rich in hydroelectric energy.

History

Before the arrival of the Europeans, the region was inhabited both by Algonquian (Ojibwa, Cree and Algonquin) and Iroquoian (Iroquois and Huron) tribes. The French explorer Étienne Brûlé explored part of the area in 1610-12. The English explorer Henry Hudson sailed into Hudson Bay in 1611 and claimed the area for England, but Samuel de Champlain reached Lake Huron in 1615 and French missionaries began to establish posts along the Great Lakes. French settlement was hampered by their hostilities with the Iroquois, who would ally themselves with the British.

The British established trading posts on Hudson Bay in the late 17th century and began a struggle for domination of Ontario. The Treaty of Paris in 1763 ended the French and Indian War by awarding nearly all of France's North American possessions (New France) to Britain. The region now called Ontario was annexed to Quebec in 1774. The Constitutional Act of 1791 split Quebec into The Canadas: Upper Canada west of the Ottawa River, and Lower Canada east of it.

American troops in the War of 1812 burned Toronto in 1813. After the war, many settlers from the British Isles immigrated to Upper Canada, and began to chafe against the aristocratic Family Compact that governed the region, much as the Château Clique ruled Lower Canada. Accordingly, rebellion in favour of responsible government rose in both regions; under Louis-Joseph Papineau and the Patriotes in Lower Canada, and under William Lyon Mackenzie in Upper Canada.

Although both rebellions were crushed, the British government sent Lord Durham to investigate the causes of the unrest. He recommended that self-government be granted and that the colonies be re-merged in an attempt to assimilate the Quebecois - the British of Upper Canada were now the majority in the Canadas. Accordingly, the two colonies were merged into the Province of Canada in 1841, with Ontario becoming known as Canada West. Parliamentary self-government was granted in 1849.

Fearful of aggression from the United States during the unrest of the American Civil War, Canada, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia negotiated to merge under Canadian Confederation in 1867. Conflict between the two parts of the Province of Canada caused them to split and join Confederation as separate provinces, Ontario and Quebec.

Beginning with the construction of the transcontinental railway through the Prairies to British Columbia, Ontario industry flourished. Mineral exploitation began in the early 20th century. The nationalist movement in Quebec drove many businesses out of the province to Ontario, and Toronto took over from Montreal as the largest city and economic centre of Canada.

The main provincial political parties are the Progressive Conservatives, Liberals, and New Democrats. Mike Harris's right-wing Progressive Conservatives defeated the left-wing New Democrats in 1995; his government implemented a neoliberal program of cuts to social spending and taxes (the "Common Sense Revolution") that balanced the budget but was blamed for widespread suffering and poverty, especially in Toronto. In particular, the government's critics accused his cuts to the environmental ministry of leading to the lack of oversight that caused the "Walkerton tragedy," an outbreak of E. coli due to contaminated water in Walkerton, Ontario, that caused a number of deaths and illnesses in May 2000. Harris stepped down in 2002 and was replaced by the current premier, Ernie Eves.

Provincial symbols

The motto of Ontario is Ut incepit fidelis sic permanet (Loyal she began, loyal she remains).

Since 1965, the official flag of Ontario consists of the Union Jack in the upper left corner and the Ontario shield of arms occupying the middle of the right section, all on a red field.

The emblem and provincial flower of Ontario is the white trillium, Trillium grandiflorum. The provincial bird is the common loon (Gavia immer), the same as Canada's; the provincial tree is the eastern white pine (Pinus strobus), and the provincial mineral is the amethyst.

See also: Canada, Canadian provinces and territories, List of Ontario counties, Canadian cities

External link: Government of Ontario

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