1824 150,066 +58.0% Sikh 179,765 1.4 After the Rebellions the new governor Charles Poulett Thomson 1st Baron Sydenham proved an exemplary Utilitarian despite his aristocratic pretensions This combination of free trade and aristocratic pretensions needs to be underscored; although a liberal capitalist Sydenham was no radical democrat Sydenham approached the task of implementing those aspects of Durham's report that the colonial office approved of municipal reform and the union of the Canadas with a "campaign of state violence and coercive institutional innovation . empowered not just by the British state but also by his Benthamite certainties." Like governors Bond Head before him and Metcalfe after he was to turn to the Orange Order for often violent support it was Sydenham who played a critical role in transforming Compact Tories into Conservatives Sydenham introduced a vast expansion of the state apparatus through the introduction of municipal government Areas not already governed through civic corporations or police boards would be governed through centrally controlled District Councils with authority over roads schools and local policing a strengthened Executive Council would further usurp much of the elected assembly's legislative role leaving elected politician's to simply review the administration's legislative program and budgets Settlement. ! . 1986 9,101,695 +5.5% 3 Residential rentals 5.6%, Toronto City Hall Religion, 2017 Line 6 Finch West is a planned 11-kilometre (6.8 mi) 19-stop light rail line scheduled for completion in 2023 it was also originally a part of the Transit City proposal New Brunswick (French: Nouveau-Brunswick; Canadian French pronunciation: [nuvob??nzw?k] (About this soundlisten)) is one of four Atlantic provinces on the east coast of Canada According to the Constitution of Canada New Brunswick is the only bilingual province About two-thirds of the population declare themselves anglophones and one third francophones One-third of the population describes themselves as bilingual Atypically for Canada only about half of the population lives in urban areas mostly in Greater Moncton Greater Saint John and the capital Fredericton Unlike the other Maritime provinces New Brunswick's terrain is mostly forested uplands with much of the land further from the coast giving it a harsher climate New Brunswick is 83% forested and less densely-populated than the rest of the Maritimes Being relatively close to Europe New Brunswick was among the first places in North America to be explored and settled by Europeans starting with the French in the early 1600s who displaced the indigenous Mi'kmaq Maliseet and the Passamaquoddy peoples the French settlers were later displaced when the area became part of the British Empire in 1784 after an influx of refugees from the American Revolutionary War the province was partitioned from Nova Scotia in 1785 Saint John became Canada's first incorporated city the province prospered in the early 1800s and the population grew rapidly reaching about a quarter of a million by mid-century in 1867 New Brunswick was one of four founding provinces of the Canadian Confederation along with Nova Scotia and the Province of Canada (now Ontario and Quebec) After Confederation wooden shipbuilding and lumbering declined while protectionism disrupted trade ties with New England the mid-1900s found New Brunswick to be one of the poorest regions of Canada now mitigated by Canadian transfer payments and improved support for rural areas as of 2002 provincial gross domestic product was derived as follows: services (about half being government services and public administration) 43%; construction manufacturing and utilities 24%; real estate rental 12%; wholesale and retail 11%; agriculture forestry fishing hunting mining oil and gas extraction 5%; transportation and warehousing 5% Tourism accounts for about 9% of the labour force directly or indirectly Popular destinations include Fundy National Park and the Hopewell Rocks Kouchibouguac National Park and Roosevelt Campobello International Park in 2013 64 cruise ships called at Port of Saint John carrying on average 2600 passengers each Contents. !
. . Season-by-season record Main article: History of the Toronto Maple Leafs, 3.2 Mascot King Green tick Green tick, 8.3 Professional sports Education 4 See also. The rest of the city is primarily served by a network of about 150 bus routes many of them forming a grid along main streets and all of them (except for routes 99 and 171 both of which connect to bus garages and 176 Mimico GO which serves Mimico GO Station) connecting to one or more subway stations a more distinctive feature of the TTC is the streetcar system one of the few remaining in North America with a substantial amount of in-street operation the city of Toronto has the largest streetcar system in the Americas Most of the eleven streetcar routes are concentrated in the downtown core and all connect to the subway the TTC also operates a night bus service called the Blue Night Network Four routes of the Blue Night Network are operated using streetcars as well A southbound GO train on the Kitchener line GO Transit is a regional public transit system that services the Greater Toronto Area Commuter rail and buses. . . .
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