alphazip said:
While that is generally true, if the parent was a British subject living in Canada for a sufficient number of years immediately prior to January 1, 1947, the child can also inherit citizenship that way. A person born in the U.S. to a British subject father was also a British subject.
However, it seems that Bart has disappeared, so we may never hear whether his mother ever lived in Canada.
Sorry, didn't disappear, was otherwise occupied for awhile. To answer your question, my mother was born in Trout River, NY, and did NOT grow up in Canada, so I'm out of luck there. From all the other replies I've read, it appears I'm out of luck, period. Someone mentioned that I should talk with David Cohen, whose name seems to ring a bell as an immigration attorney. I've been trying to arrange a one-hour, $CDN200 phone conference with immigration attorney Damien Barry at Sampson-McPhee in Sydney, Nova Scotia, but the holidays have made hooking up difficult, though he was supposed to be back in his office as of today, January 3, 2017.
I was under the perhaps mistaken impression that northern Nova Scotia in general, and Cape Breton Island in particular, was actually looking for immigrants, because of the drop in population due to major industry -- paper mill, coal, fishing -- closures and downturns, but perhaps it was a one-shot internet hoax.
My wife and I, and our daughter, son-in-law (who'd probably have an excellent chance for Express Canadian Citizenship as a highly-skilled worker -- he's 3D interface design department head at the US' number one GPS device manufacturer), and grandchildren, want to leave the US, for a number of reasons, primarily because of the political climate, which has become worse and worse in the past twenty years, and also because my wife and I live in Connecticut, always the first- or second- most expensive state in which to live in the US in the Forbes listings. Most of all, however, because I don't want my grandchildren to grow up in the violent and hateful socio-political environment the US has become.
I don't really understand CIC's seeming bias against retirees -- we're both only in our 60s, healthy, will have a substantial -- especially as it's in US Dollars -- retirement income, and something well over $US200,000 cash with which to buy a home, which I assume we'd pay Canadian taxes on.
My most sincere thanks to everyone who has posted, and yes, my grandmother's story as a British Home Child in Canada is quite remarkable. There are several video documentaries on YouTube about the British Home Child fostering/indentured servitude schemes which ran from the mid 19th century to as late as 1939, taking orphans and street children from the the "dark, satanic mills" of midland England and industrial Scotland, and "With the Best Intentions," as one of the documentaries is titled, shipping these orphans and foundlings to the healthy, fresh air of primarily Canada and Australia, still part of the Empire, then the Commonwealth, of the time.
Fortunately for my grandmother, she was fostered to a very kind family, but that was far from being the case with many of these children, sent to work as farm laborers and domestics at ages as young as three, and bound by contract to their foster families, with no pay for their work, until their contract was up at age 18, 2 years later than contemporary Canadian-born children of the time reached their majority, and could go off on their own. With such a vast number of Home Children, there was inevitable abuse, and there was also a deep social stigma of being a "Home Child" -- many of the people interviewed in these documentaries, most in their 80s and 90s, were -- and still are -- ashamed to tell their own families that they had been Home Children, and several never did.
Interestingly, the leaders of England, Australia, and Northern Ireland have officially apologized for practicing what amounted to governmentally-allowed and regulated serfdom or the outright slavery of minor children, but Canada still refuses to do so, though it imported the greatest number of Home Children, by a huge margin, than any other Commonwealth country.
It seems from what I've been told in this forum that our quest to live in a better country is not going to happen, but again, thanks for all the information and advice.
Bart Brown