The two colonies that rejected the 72 resolutions are: Newfoundland and prince edward island
The seventy-two resolutions relate to confederation because they were a set of proposals drafted at the Quebec Conference in 1864. The Seventy- Two Resolutions also laid out the framework for the Canadian Constitution.
Peace, order, and good government and its a guide for Canada in 1864-1866
The outcome was that the delegates agreed on seventy-two resolutions that set out which powers each level of the government would have.
57th Canadian Geotechnical Conference and the 5th joint CGS-IAH Conference, 24-27 October 2004, Quebec City, Quebec.
Quebec Conference, October 1864. Charlottetown Conference, September 1864. Quebec Conference, October 1864.
He participated in the Charlottetown Conference(1864), the Quebec conference(1864), and the London Conference (1867)
W.M Whitelaw has written: 'The Quebec Conference' -- subject(s): Constitutional history, History, Politics and government, Quebec Conference (1864)
Newfoundland didnt participate in the First Conferenence ( The Charlottetown Conference. ) But they did participate in the send conference. ( Quebec Conference. )
The Charlottetown Conference was a meeting between the maritime colonies in Atlantic Canada with what was then known as the United Province of Canada from 1-9 September 1864. The meeting discussed and finalised the plan to create a Confederation out of Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. This Confederation, enacted in 1867, became the Dominion of Canada.
The governments that were represented at the Quebec Conference were not governments of independent countries, they were the governments of Britain's North American colonies, with the exception of British Columbia. They were not breaking away from their mother country in a revolution as the Thirteen Colonies had when they formed the United States; but they were discussing whether they should join and create a new nation and they felt they needed Britain's permission to do so. The British Government gave its blessings and, with direction from several of the Quebec delegates, John A. Macdonald in particular, they created and passed the British North America Act, which was based on the 72 Resolutions passed at Quebec.
it was about the conditions of the confederation - the "72 reasons"