No. John A. Macdonald, George Brown, and George Etienne Cartier formed the grand coalition (im sry if its not actually called the grand coalition, I learn history in french) Together, the 3 of them overpowered Antoine Aimee Dorion, so they made the laws.
he told George that Upper and Lower Canada can have better chance to govern, if they have whole province of Canada and also better have defense against United State
Yes, it was. His full name was Sir John Alexander Macdonald.
Archibald John Macdonald - Prince Edward Island politician - was born in 1834.
Sir John A. Macdonald's hobby was consuming copious amounts of booze.
they were George Etienne Cartier and George Brown
george brown, george etienne cartier and john a macdonald started the great coalition
John A. Macdonald, George Etiennes Cartier, and George Brown
The four fathers of confederation were Sir John A Macdonald, George Brown, Alaxender Galt, and George Cartier, Sir John A MacDonald being the co-"primeinister"at the time...
He wanted confederation. It was because in the great coalition, john a macdonald wanted to kill george brown but he couldn't so in order to kill him, Macdonald wanted Conderation.
NO,John wanted to join with George Brown.An arch enemy of his because they couldn't cope with one another.it was all part of MacDonald scheme to unite to form CANADA!
the 3 founding fathers of confederation are John A. Macdonald, George Brown, George-Etienne Cartier.
The four key confederation leaders in Canada confederation are John A. Macdonald, George-Etienne Cartier, George Brown, and Etienne-Paschal Tache.
How did John a MacDonald and George Etienne Cartier contribute as partners of Confederation? Improve
How did John a MacDonald and George Etienne Cartier contribute as partners of Confederation? Improve
he helped confederation by stepping down and letting John A MacDonald combine the Parti Bleu with the Conservatives (the Tories)
John A. MacDonald and George Brown were arguing about the nature and structure of Canadian Confederation. MacDonald wanted a strong central government with more power given to the provinces, while Brown advocated for a more decentralized system with more autonomy for the provinces. They had different visions for the future of Canada and clashed over how power should be distributed between the federal and provincial governments.