Once the presence of American Loyalists became apparent, Upper Canada began to change. With the War of 1812, it introduced a new Canadian society that had been profoundly different from the previous. Democracy entered Upper Canadian society through both elements. Largely, they developed out of the ideas and values from the Loyalists who demand to be seen and the outcomes of the war where citizens started to grasp their shared power as a community. Before the war, the population steadily grew, as new settlers from the United States were actively welcomed. The peopling of the province was desperately needed, and the Americans had the skills to develop a pioneer region. The Loyalists not only provided Upper Canada with bodies but democratic ideas that would become an every constant in this society. For instance, Upper Canada may have been “politically and emotionally a British colony”, however the residents openly recognized that the society had formed into a North American community before and after the War of 1812. Many of the social institutions and practices were based on …show more content…
These colonial newspapers would print information from “American gazettes because of how London reports were months out of date and generally lacked detail”. These types of American sources were copied from American Federalist papers like the Albany Gazette or the Baltimore Federal Republican, where colonial editors select the papers that target American conservative Loyalists. In other words, Loyalists in Upper Canada saw themselves as part of the North American community, specifically the American conservative community. This society was developing much of its democratic ideas from the American sources collected in newspapers. Therefore, greater democracy grew out of the ties that the newly settled Loyalists retained from their