Alright, here's my take at the Map Challenge:
- The United Kingdom does better in the War of 1812, annexes the Upper and Lower Peninsulas, which become the Province of Michigan. It also ends up with much of the Northern Louisiana Purchase. Also, the War lasts much longer and New England secedes.
- The 1837 revolutions are far more sucessful. The Republic of Canada is proclaimed, as a federal system between Ontario and New-France Provinces.
- Later, Canada seizes Rupert's Land from the Hudson's Bay Company.
- A tiny revolt in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia results in a complete British overreaction, including putting the colony's legislature on hold, among others.
- A far more mavor revolution in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia results in Independence. The new Republic takes the name Acadia, rather than use the "British" names. However, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia are used as Provincial names.
- Major settlement in Canada in the 1840s and 1850s, especially from Germany. In the newly-created provinces of Saskatchewan and Athabasca, German-speakers are as common as English for a time.
- Texas fights a longer war for indepednece, gets the Rio Grande and everything north of it from the start. It wants to get annexed by the US, but...
- Canada and the United States go to war over the Oregon Territory. Canada wins, plunging the United States into depression, making in unattractive for Texas.
- Alaska is bought by Canada. Feeling debt, Canada sells part of it's frigid north to Denmark to help pay for Alaska.
- In World War One, Canada joins the Central Powers side, along with many of the North American nations that join (The United States stays out, as does New England.) Canada seizes Newfoundland. However, the Central Powers still lose, though Canada is too powerful to invade.
- In a similair but different World War Two, Canada feels that Nazi Germany is simply evil, and instead joins the Allies for this war. It occupies Greenland after Denmark is annexed into the Reich. After the war, Canada simply holds on to Greenland.
There... hopefully makes sense.