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1905 in Canada

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Events from the year 1905 in Canada.

Incumbents

Crown

  • Monarch – Edward VII

Federal government

  • Governor General – Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey
  • Prime Minister – Wilfrid Laurier
  • Chief Justice – Henri Elzéar Taschereau (Quebec)
  • Parliament – 10th (from 11 January)

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – George Hedley Vicars Bulyea (from September 1)
  • Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière
  • Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Daniel Hunter McMillan
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Jabez Bunting Snowball
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Alfred Gilpin Jones
  • Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – William Mortimer Clark
  • Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Donald Alexander MacKinnon
  • Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Louis-Amable Jetté
  • Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Amédée Forget (from September 1)

Premiers

  • Premier of Alberta – Alexander Cameron Rutherford (from September 2)
  • Premier of British Columbia – Richard McBride
  • Premier of Manitoba – Rodmond Roblin
  • Premier of New Brunswick – Lemuel John Tweedie
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – George Henry Murray
  • Premier of Ontario – George William Ross (until February 8) then James Whitney
  • Premier of Prince Edward Island – Arthur Peters
  • Premier of Quebec – Simon-Napoléon Parent (until March 24) then Lomer Gouin
  • Premier of Saskatchewan – Thomas Walter Scott (from September 5)

Territorial governments

Commissioners

  • Commissioner of Yukon – Zachary Taylor Wood (acting) (until May 27) then William Wallace Burns McInnes
  • Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Frederick D. White (from August 24)

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of Keewatin – Daniel Hunter McMillan (until September 1)
  • Lieutenant Governor of the North-West Territories – Amédée E. Forget (until September 1)

Premiers

  • Premier of North-West Territories – Frederick Haultain (until September 1)

Events

  • January 25 – 1905 Ontario election: Sir James Whitney's Conservatives win a majority, defeating G. W. Ross's Liberals
  • February 8 – Sir James Whitney becomes premier of Ontario, replacing George Ross
  • February 27 – Clifford Sifton resigns from cabinet
  • March 23 – Lomer Gouin becomes premier of Quebec, replacing Simon-Napoléon Parent
  • July 20 – The Saskatchewan Act and the Alberta Act receive royal assent
  • August 24 – Frederick D. White becomes the first Commissioner of the Northwest Territories in Canada, and will serve until his death in 1918.
  • August 26 – Roald Amundsen begins the first to travel through the Northwest Passage
  • September 1 – Saskatchewan and Alberta are established as provinces
  • September 2 – Alexander Rutherford becomes the first premier of Alberta
  • September 5 – Walter Scott becomes the first premier of Saskatchewan
  • November 9 – 1905 Alberta general election: Alexander Rutherford's Liberals win a majority in the first Alberta election
  • November 24 – The Canadian Northern Railway is completed to Edmonton
  • December 13 – 1905 Saskatchewan election: Walter Scott's Liberals win a majority in the first Saskatchewan election

Births

January to June

  • January 21 – George Laurence, nuclear physicist (d.1987)
  • January 28 – Ellen Fairclough, politician and first female member of the Canadian Cabinet (d.2004)
  • February 8 – Louis-Philippe Pigeon, judge of the Supreme Court of Canada (d.1986)
  • March 27 – Elsie MacGill, the world's first female aircraft designer (d.1980)
  • April 30 – John Peters Humphrey, legal scholar, jurist and human rights advocate (d.1995)
  • May 1 – Paul Desruisseaux, lawyer and politician (d. 1982)
  • May 23 – Donald Fleming, politician, International Monetary Fund official and lawyer (d.1986)
  • June 8 – Ralph Steinhauer, native leader, first Aboriginal to become the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta (d.1987)
  • June 23 – Jack Pickersgill, civil servant and politician (d.1997)

July to December

  • July 4 – Marie-Thérèse Paquin, pianist (d. 1997)
  • July 25 – Grace MacInnis, politician and feminist (d.1991)
  • August 1 – Helen Hogg-Priestley, astronomer (d.1993)
  • August 31 – William Anderson, politician and businessman (d.1961)
  • August 15 – E.K. Brown, literary critic
  • September 21 – Loran Ellis Baker, politician (d.1991)
  • November 1 – Paul-Émile Borduas, painter (d.1960)
  • December 1 – Alex Wilson, track and field athlete and Olympic silver medallist (d.1994)
  • December 24 – Milt Dunnell, sportswriter (d.2008)

Full date unknown

  • Nat Taylor, inventor of the cineplex (d.2004)

Deaths

  • April 23 – Gédéon Ouimet, politician and 2nd Premier of Quebec (b.1823)
  • May 23 – Fletcher Bath Wade, politician and barrister (b.1852)
  • May 29 – William McDougall, lawyer, politician and a Father of Confederation (b.1822)
  • August 1 – John Brown, politician, miller, mining consultant and prospector (b.1841)
  • August 7 – Alexander Melville Bell, educator (b.1819)
  • September 8 – David Howard Harrison, farmer, physician, politician and 6th Premier of Manitoba (b.1843)
  • October 29 – Étienne Desmarteau, athlete and Olympic gold medallist (b.1873)

References

References

  1. (15 November 2011). "Canada's Constitutional Monarchy". Dundurn.
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