<
 
 
 
 
×
>
Vous consultez une page Web conservée, recueillie par Bibliothèque et Archives Canada le 2007-05-16 à 14:27:55. Il se peut que les informations sur cette page Web soient obsolètes, et que les liens hypertextes externes, les formulaires web, les boîtes de recherche et les éléments technologiques dynamiques ne fonctionnent pas. Voir toutes les versions de cette page conservée.
Chargement des informations sur les médias

You are viewing a preserved web page, collected by Library and Archives Canada on 2007-05-16 at 14:27:55. The information on this web page may be out of date and external links, forms, search boxes and dynamic technology elements may not function. See all versions of this preserved page.
Loading media information
X
Skip navigation links (access key: Z)Library and Archives Canada - Bibliothèque et Archives Canada Canada
Graphical element Home > Exploration and Settlement > Moving Here, Staying Here Français
Graphical element
Banner: Moving Here, Staying Here. The Canadian Immigrant Experience
Graphical Element
Graphical Element
The Documentary TrailGraphical ElementTraces of the PastGraphical ElementFind an Immigrant

Printed Advertisements

by Jeffrey S. Murray, Library and Archives Canada

The dream was simple enough. Canada wanted to see the Prairie West become its breadbasket, linked to the world through railways to central Canada. Wheat would flow east to feed the world, and central Canada would fill the returning freight cars with manufactured goods. Surely, it was reasoned, with the West's expanding population and ever-increasing agricultural bounty, Canada would be able to duplicate America's economic prosperity and perhaps even overtake it. The 20th century would belong to Canada!

The dream could only become reality if Canada got the farmers it needed. But how was it going to attract the men and women of muscle who would reshape the prairie landscape into an agricultural paradise? For more than two centuries, the Hudson's Bay Company had been filling the world's imagination with images of the Canadian West as a snowbound, inhospitable, empty wilderness. To counter these prejudices, the federal government and the railways began, in the late 19th century, a massive advertising campaign to change people's perceptions of the West. Expanding their distribution of immigration literature from a few thousand pieces per year to over 1.25 million, they blitzed the four corners of the world with one simple message: "Canada West. The last best west."

The effect of their campaign was phenomenal. The number of western homesteads settled immediately before the start of the massive advertising campaign in 1896 averaged only 4,000 a year. Once the campaign was fully operational, around 1905, Canada saw an eight-fold increase in the number of settlers looking for a western homestead.

Although the federal government and the railways used every means possible to advertise the West, their greatest annual expense was reserved for posters and pamphlets.

Posters

Printed on one side of an over-sized paper panel, posters were meant to be exhibited almost anywhere. The earliest immigration posters used limited colours and had little in the way of illustrations. They tried to get their message across through concise, well-worded text. As printing technology improved in the early years of the 20th century, immigration posters became more image-based. The design gradually shifted into something that would catch the attention of passers-by through a striking, colourful design that appealed to the senses. When properly executed, poster art can be understood by anyone, including the illiterate.

Prior to the introduction of motion pictures in the 1920s, posters were the single, most important of all visual media and the Canadian government took full advantage of them. In one 1897 report from Canada's High Commissioner in London, England, Lord Strathcona reports having 23,000 new posters made for "exhibition" in all the post offices of the United Kingdom. "The value of the advertising we thus receive through the courtesy of the Postmaster General cannot be over-estimated," announced Strathcona in his report. (Canada, Dept. of the Interior, Annual Report, 1897, part iv, p. 12)

In the early part of the 20th century, immigration posters were rendered in clear, radiant colours. Their images promised not only a productive landscape, but a picturesque one as well. The horizon was often set high so as to diminish the immensity of the prairies and everywhere the vegetation was lush. If families were toiling in the fields, they appeared happy and in the company of bountiful harvests. Obviously their labour had been justly rewarded. Nowhere was there any suggestion that the homesteaders might have said goodbye to an awful lot in their homeland when they took up their prairie farm. The sense was that the homesteaders stood only to gain in their new land.

Pamphlets

In some instances, pamphlets consisted of a single, large-format page printed on both sides and folded into individual panels. In other instances, they consisted of a number of unbound (or loosely bound) pages and a paper cover. Pamphlets have a long-standing tradition in Western Europe where, as early as the 15th century, they were used to inflame popular opinion in periods of religious controversy or as a vehicle for social and political commentary.

In the early 20th century, the Canadian government used this means to connect with prospective homesteaders on a one-to-one basis. The single-page, folded pamphlet was inexpensive to produce and could be distributed through mass mailings. In one such mailing, in 1897, Canada's High Commissioner in London distributed a specially prepared pamphlet "through the post to every farmer in the United Kingdom, and to every blacksmith." (Canada, Dept. of the Interior, Annual Report, 1897, part iv, p. 15) In another distribution, pamphlets were sent to "the free libraries, reading rooms, farmers' and workmen's clubs and institutions, hotels, etc...." (Canada, Dept. of the Interior, Annual Report, 1897, part iv, p. 14) The pamphlets were designed to spark an interest in immigration and to encourage the prospective settler to contact an immigration agent who would then provide further encouragement in favour of Canada's "last best west."

Printed in as many as 12 European languages, the pamphlets promised productive soil, adequate rainfall, a good growing season, bountiful crops and a healthy climate. Such words as "cold" and "snow" were universally banned from the pamphlets in favour of the more positive terms "invigorating" and "bracing." With their colourful covers and attractive photographs, the pamphlets visually reaffirmed the Prairie West as a land of prosperity and happiness.


Introduction | Copyright/Sources | Comments


Graphical element