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United Provinces of America
Timeline: Washington Shot at Murdering Town!
Flag Coat of Arms
Flag Coat of Arms
Capital
(and largest city)
Philadelphia
Language
  official
 
English
  others French
Monarch Elizabeth II
Prime Minister Sir Nigel Harrison
Governor-General Grant Black-Feather (Liberal Party)
Area area km²
Population 127,350,000 
Established April 16th, 1780 (Treaty of Philadelphia)
Currency Pound

The United Provinces of America (U.P.A) is a member state of the British Empire and Commonwealth (B.E.C) located in North America. Founded as a sub autonomous nation of 18th century Great Britain the United Provinces of America developed as a powerful member of the British influenced world. Expanding from its core of the Atlantic Coast of North America the U.P.A covers the breadth of the continent to the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic Oceans. Informally, the U.P.A is referred to as British America or simply America. In its history the America benefited from British-led industrialization before becoming a technological leader in its own right. The culture of the U.P.A is a production of its colonial and industrial origins, being primarily influenced from Great Britain, West Africa and Amerindiana. Historically America hosted strong ethnic and regional identities

In the present, British America has created its own national identity defined more by the country's place in the New World than its colonial past. America is a key exporter of grain and petroleum and with rising manufacturing base both empire and world wide.

History

See:Colonial America

Origins 1780-1820

Indhall

Union Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania province, site of the creation of the U.P.A. The failed colonial rebellion also begun on the same site.

Following the defeat of a large colonial uprising in 1777, the British Government took steps to ensure that the colonies would not revolt again. The United Provinces of America were formed on April 16th, 1780, from the 13 colonies and the Districts (later Provinces) of Maine and Vermont. The new nation was founded as an autonomous dependency to the British crown.

The early years of the United Provinces of America saw remnants of the colonial uprising, in remote places but no such riots again took place in major cities. The so called Founding Fathers of the rebellion were put on trial for treason in Philadelphia, while originally many of the leaders were threatened with hanging all but almost all of the major supporters of independence were eventually given parole. Famous Insurrectionists Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson were the only British citizens to be officially hanged as traitors. The war criminal Nathaniel Green was executed by firing squad for his destruction of New York.

Upon the signing of the Treaty of Philadelphia much of the colonial territory was still undeveloped, even unsettled in the case of the Appalachian Mountains. Much of this "open territory" was in reality inhabited by Amerindian or West Indian tribes. Despite the Incorporation Act of 1808 which recognized several Indian Tribes as legal provinces, the frontiers were lawless. To maintain peace the first army of National Colonial regulars worked with Indians to preserve their ancestral homelands from the flow of pioneers. Such moves created the backdrop for the short lived Second Colonial Rebellion led by the famous frontiersman Andrew Jackson.

Close to the coast the societies and governments of all the colonies remained distinct from each other. The challenge of the New Union was to unify the land under on set of standards while cutting Imperial expenses and allowing for a degree of autonomy.Like Great Britain the new American parliament created a two party system modeled after their London forebears. American Conservatives and Liberals diverged on issues of religious tolerance and trade. At the time these parties meant little to the majority of men still unable to vote due to land ownership quotas.

From the turn of the 19th century the fledgling American economy grew slowly but steadily as most land was made more productive by British mechanical inventions. Freer trade allowed colonists to profit from trade with the French and the Spanish. With security provided and deficits reduced, wealthy colonists began to theorize of new public projects to bring different but growing economies together.

A country of many worlds 1820-1860

George Catlin painting Native American chief

An Anglo American Painter, paints the famous chief Tecumseh in Cherokee Province.

Different regions spread out over a breath of continent developed into subcultures. National and Imperial administration were frustrated by these developments in implementing a common law throughout the land. The British parliament encouraged the localization to prevent a unified dissent. The distinct cultures which emerged- Mercantile New England, Quebec, Amerindiana, Islandville, the Cotton Belt and Back Country are still distinguished in the present.

The steady migration West despite the active effort by the Continental government to enforce various proclamation lines spilled over the continent. While some captured migrants were imprisoned or deported the ethnic English and Scottish settlement redefined the demographics of much of North America. The movement of people spilled over the western border into the Kingdom of Mexico. The illegal emigration west caught the ire of Spain. The problem turned into an international incident where London used the wayward settlers to gain concessions from Spain. British America's western frontier would become open to British citizens who promised to reside in the area for twenty years. The blended Spanish and English settlement of New Spain's Mississippi river valley resulted in the creation of the Louisianian Kingdom

Through 1850 the frontiers of the U.P.A also had designated penal colonies for prisoners both from America and England which moved north, and westwards as the country expanded. The end of the penal system released prisoners onto open land, creating the first towns for the central and Northwest frontiers. Gold rushes on North America's west coast brought the earliest settlers to some of the last unsettled lands on the continent.

As the country spread out over the continent regional economic interests threatened to split the provinces. The enduring slave trade continued to import African slaves to the British America against their will. The plantations of America's south grew on the mainland and the Caribbean. Contrasting with an industrial north and a west based on free farmers. Northern Americans and British nationals began to oppose the continuance of slavery on moral and economic grounds. While the British parliament itself was interested in abolishing slavery there was a reluctance to do so based on a strong personal relationship with the "Gentlemen Plantation owners". Slavery also became a new business for American tribes seeking to recover from the destruction of colonial times.

Freed slaves

Freed Slaves in the Lesser Antilles waiting to board freighters to migrate to the mainland.

When the Slavery Controversy almost caused armed insurrection by the mainland Southern Provinces, London intervened. Slavery was abolished in all British Crown dominions in 1845. Plantation owners were compensated handsomely for their freed slaves. Local unrest from white populations still occurred in the Carolinas, Georgia and the Caribbean provinces who feared the economic consequences of a free black population. Slavery continued on American processions of the East India Company.

The British North America Act, and the Territories Act of 1857 marked the final expansion of the U.P.A and set a stage for an independent culture- hardly seen before in history, as the abundance of space provided the land's citizens for a new found autonomy irrespective of politics in Philadelphia or London.

Land of rolling countryside 1860-1900

Wilderman - George - Example of Flat Boat- Ohio River Pioneers

Pioneers sailing westward upstream, water were the highways for inland settlement.

Across the continent, the United Provinces was built by free peasants and craftsmen, a vast territory of small villages. Word of unoccupied land in from the Territories Act spread quickly, and were settled even while many lands were technically held by large land owning proprietors. Old colonial law permitted newcomers to seize territory they used productively. Europeans, Blacks and West Indians all ventured westward both for fortune and seclusion. Occasionally different races worked and lived together in frontier towns for mutual survival despite the prejudices of the time. The creation of a large agricultural populations that tilled their own independent land would have implications through to the present. This settlement did come at the cost of the remaining aboriginal West Indian peoples of the area know as "wild people" contrasted with the "civilized tribes" who often migrated westwards as well.

Government's greatest role in the frontier was the construction of large scale canal projects, involving the Great Lakes, as well as the Atlantic Coast. Life, away from the Atlantic Coast for all people in isolated agricultural villages. Water as in earlier centuries was the highway to penetrating deeper inland. From the banks of rivers, bands of pioneers then diverged away to make their own enterprises. Away from immediate transportation Neighboring towns would go for months or sometimes even years with little to no communication with each other, over vast distances. Outside of agriculture, timber and mining made their way as key industries. By 1880, British America would became the breadbasket for the entire sprawling empire. Despite attempts by the government to modernize further, Great Britain purposely manipulated trade laws to keep America as a producer of raw materials, to slow the rise of industrialization.

1 Thomas Le Clear) Young America

Here, in this painting from the Young America, series children gather and play in the growing frontier communities. Their attitude reflects the spirit of a growing political culture.

Diversity of geography and people also created difficulties for the national government to encourage industrialization. With English, French and Spanish all being present across the land local identities proved supreme. In the case of Quebec a scheme to invest in the construction of engine factories ended when conservative French Yeomen revolted, while the revolt dissolved quickly demands for self determination were largely agreed to. As other areas performed similar actions, national policy became less coherent. The multiparty system also favored regional interests more than national priorities. Famously Governor General Sir Harold Mayweather, pushed through universal suffrage for all men in 1879 to encourage voting across the country- revolutionary for its time, however enforcement of the provision was spotty for decades to come.

Culturally America was inspiration far beyond the British world for the apparent purity and stout nature of its people, creative works made by French, German and Italian writers about the United States would get far more coverage than American artists for years to come. Local American artists nevertheless experimented on their own often outside of European standards, creating a genre later to be known as "folk art". Common Themes included the importance of faith, community and importance of appreciating time.

The Formation of Identity 1900-1940

A Rising power 1940-1980

Steps toward the future

Government and Politics

The executive is theoretically the monarch but the Governor-General holds most of the power. The President-General is always the leader of the majority party in the House of Commons. The Governor-General has been reduced to the eyes and ears of the monarch.

The judicial is the Judge's Council, which is composed by the Chief Justice from the supreme court of each province.

The legislative is the Parliament of America. It is bicameral. The lower, larger house is the House of Commons. The upper, smaller house is the House of Senators.

Political Parties

Major Parties

  • American Labour Party - left-wing - majority socialist party
  • Progressive Party of America - left-wing - formed from parts of the Liberal and Conservative Parties in 1809
  • American Liberal Party - centre
  • American Conservative Party - right-wing - Was formed as America's first political party.

Minor Parties

  • American People's Party - left wing - Radical Socialist, evolved out of extreme of American Labour Party
  • American Green Party - left-wing green
  • United Rationalist Party - centre-left - formed in 1836; has been a major party since the late 1840s; based on French Social-Rationalism principles
  • Parti Laurentien (Laurentien Party) - Catholic centre - want Lower Canada to have more autonomy
  • Christian Democratic Party - Protestant centre-right
  • Freedom Party - centre-right - libertarian in spirit

Original Members (1780)

MapupaWSMT

The historical progression of U.P.A expansion, color coded

  • Connecticut
  • Delaware
  • Georgia
  • Maine
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • New Hampshire
  • New Jersey
  • New York
  • North Carolina
  • Pennsylvania
  • Rhode Island
  • South Carolina
  • Vermont
  • Virginia

Further Additions

Expansion Act (1804)

  • Transylvania (1804)
  • Vandalia (1804)

Incorporation Act (1808)

  • Cherokee
  • Chickasaw
  • Choctaw
  • Creek Confederation
  • Iroquois Confederation

Florida Act (1819)

  • East Florida
  • West Florida

Nova Scotia Act (1823)

  • Nova Scotia, along with St. John's Island (Prince Edward Island)

West Indies Act (1830)

  • Antilles (Lesser Antilles) - Anguilla, Antigua, Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, Nevis, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, St Vincent
  • Bahamas
  • Jamaica
  • Trinidad and Tobago

Northwestern Act (1838)

  • Anishinaabe
  • Illinois Confederation
  • Menominee
  • Miami
  • Potawatomi
  • Shawnee
  • Wisconsin Confederation

Canada's Act (1845)

  • Newfoundland
  • Upper Canada
  • Lower Canada

British-North-America Act (1857)

  • Belize
  • District of Bermuda
  • Guiana
  • Miskito
  • Vancouver Island

Territories Act (1857)

  • Arctic Islands
  • Northwest Territory
  • Oregon Territory
  • Rupert's Land

Culture

UPA Flag   Provinces of the United Provinces of America   UPA Flag
Provinces

Antilles | Bahamas | Belize | Connecticut | Delaware | East Florida | Georgia | Guiana | Jamaica | Lower Canada | Maine | Maryland | Massachusetts | New Hampshire | New Jersey | New York | Newfoundland | North Carolina | Nova Scotia | Pennsylvania | Rhode Island | South Carolina | Transylvania | Trinidad & Tobago | Upper Canada | Vandalia | Vermont | Virginia | Vancouver | West Florida

Nations

Anishinaabe | Cherokee | Chickasaw | Choctaw | Creek | Illinois | Iroquois | Menominee | Miami | Miskito | Potawatomi | Shawnee | Wisconsin

Districts and Territories

Arctic Islands | Bermuda | Northwest Territory | Oregon Territory | Rupert's Land

British Flag   Members of the British Empire and Commonwealth   British Flag
Nations

Australia | Great Britain | Ireland | India | Nigeria | South Africa | Sierra Leone | United Provinces of America

Protectorates

Arabia | Cyprus | Egypt | Malta

Colonies

British Antarctic Territory | British Atlantic Territory | British Somaliland | Falkland Islands | Gambia

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