Abstract

In the North American British colonies, the 1812 war led to a great mobilization of militia corps to protect the Empire’s possessions. For colonial authorities, such context represented an opportunity to measure local militia officers’ loyalty to the Crown, particularly those who resided in the French traditional countryside. What can we understand of the French-Canadian involvement in the War of 1812 as officers? What is the impact of their relation to the Crown on their capacity to hold on to positions in their respective communities? By bringing to life a few case studies, this paper wishes to examine the formation of the French-Canadian identity through the involvement of local elites in the militia. This study is based on an analysis of the correspondence of the principal officers of the battalions with the central authorities and prosopographical research of those same officers in the rural regions of Lower Canada. The analysis of the strategies, values and interests of the militia officers, will serve to enlighten the parameters of the collaboration between the local elite and the colonial elite.

Highlights

  • In the Canadian collective consciousness, there are many contrasting perceptions of the War of 1812

  • What can we understand of the French-Canadian involvement in the War of 1812 as officers? What is the impact of their relation to the Crown on their capacity to hold on to positions in their respective communities? By bringing to life a few case studies, this paper wishes to examine the formation of the FrenchCanadian identity through the involvement of local elites in the militia

  • The same question keeps coming up: how to define the patriotism of French Canadians through the tumultuous transition since the British Conquest in 1760? Without claiming to have a complete answer to this delicate question, we propose in this paper a new way of looking at the whys and wherefores of the process of creating the FrenchCanadian identity, as seen through the lens of the militia officers in the War of 1812

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Summary

London Journal of Canadian Studies

Article Loyalty to the Regime: Prominent Men, Militia and French-Canadian Identity through the 1812 War. How to cite: Thuot, J-R., ‘Loyalty to the Regime: Prominent Men, Militia and FrenchCanadian Identity through the 1812 War’. London Journal of Canadian Studies, 2013, 28(1), pp. Peer Review: This article has been peer-reviewed through the journal’s standard double-blind peer review, where both the reviewers and authors are anonymized during review. Open Access: London Journal of Canadian Studies is a peer-reviewed open-access journal. Loyalty to the Regime: Prominent Men, Militia and French-Canadian Identity through the 1812 War

Introduction
Historiographical References and Field of Enquiry
The Power of the Institution
Conclusion
Note on Contributor
Full Text
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