- The Charlottetown and Quebec Conferences of 1864
- Early Advocates of Union in British North America
- The Press
- Maritime Union
- The Charlottetown Conference
- The Quebec Conference
- The Constitutional Project: The Quebec Resolutions
- Economy and Public Finances
- Education, Religion, and Minority Rights
- Opposition to Confederation
The Press

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Confederation’s advocates and opponents used the press to present a wide array of arguments in support of their various positions, often appealing to local concerns. One of the best anti-confederation satirists was Jean-Baptiste CÔTÉ, a wood engraver, and caricaturist in Quebec City:
“This humorous paper [La Scie] denounced, among other things, the proposal for confederation, seeing it as national suicide for French Canadians. The ‘crafty types,’ those ‘men with an elastic conscience,’ were traitors who had sold out for money. Politicians George-Étienne