British American League, the, [15].
British Columbia, [169-70]; joins the Dominion, [170-3].
British North America Act, the, [76], [124-36]. See Confederation.
Brown, George, advocates a federation confined to the Canadas, [19], [20]; and extension westward, [22-3], [158]; his relations with Macdonald, [31-2], [106], [138], [142]; his committee on federal union, [32-3]; expresses his readiness to co-operate with the Conservatives in promoting the federal system, [32-3], [143]; his conference with Macdonald and Galt, [34-8]; joins Macdonald in a coalition government, [38-43], [138], [151]; an amusing incident in the House, [42-3]; at the Charlottetown Conference, [50-1]; his speech emphasizing the happy relations of Canada with Britain, [52-3]; at the Quebec Conference, [57], [62] n., [64], [71-3], [74], [77-8], [79], [80] and note, [82], [158]; his speech upholding the Imperial link, [86-7], [88]; admits imperfection in the Confederation constitution scheme, [89-90], [94]; resigns from the coalition, [106-7]; and the Manchester School, [106], [110-11], his influence in the London Conference, [124]; after Confederation denounces any further coalition of parties, [141-2], [144-5], [185]; a member of the Senate, [153]; an estimate of his work, [181-2]; his personality, [31-2], [43], [73], [86], [152] n., [181-2].
Buckingham, William, [161].
Cameron, Hillyard, [95].
Cameron, M. C., [95].
Campbell, Alexander, a father of Confederation, [50-1], [62] n., [146].
Canada, in the early nineteenth century, [11-14]; the call of the West, [22-3]; the visit of the Prince of Wales (Edward VII), [23-4]; her relations with United States, [25-6], [107]; the intercolonial railway negotiations, [28-9]. See Dominion, Parliament.
Canada First party, the, [167].