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1989 in Canada

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Events from the year 1989 in Canada.

Incumbents

Main article: 1989 Canadian incumbents

Crown

  • Monarch – Elizabeth II

Federal government

  • Governor General – Jeanne Sauvé
  • Prime Minister – Brian Mulroney
  • Chief Justice – Brian Dickson (Manitoba)
  • Parliament – 34th

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – Helen Hunley
  • Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – David Lam
  • Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – George Johnson
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Gilbert Finn
  • Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland – James McGrath
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Alan Abraham (until February 20) then Lloyd Crouse
  • Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Lincoln Alexander
  • Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Lloyd MacPhail
  • Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Gilles Lamontagne
  • Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Sylvia Fedoruk

Premiers

  • Premier of Alberta – Don Getty
  • Premier of British Columbia – Bill Vander Zalm
  • Premier of Manitoba – Gary Filmon
  • Premier of New Brunswick – Frank McKenna
  • Premier of Newfoundland – Brian Peckford (until March 22) then Tom Rideout (March 22 to May 5) then Clyde Wells
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – John Buchanan
  • Premier of Ontario – David Peterson
  • Premier of Prince Edward Island – Joe Ghiz
  • Premier of Quebec – Robert Bourassa
  • Premier of Saskatchewan – Grant Devine

Territorial governments

Commissioners

  • Commissioner of Yukon – John Kenneth McKinnon
  • Commissioner of Northwest Territories – John Havelock Parker (until October 2) then Daniel L. Norris

Premiers

  • Premier of the Northwest Territories – Dennis Patterson
  • Premier of Yukon – Tony Penikett

Events

  • January 1: The Canadian-American Free Trade Agreement comes into effect.
  • January 21: Newfoundland premier Brian Peckford announces his resignation from politics, giving the PC Party 2 months to find a replacement as party leader and premier.
  • January 30: Prime Minister Brian Mulroney shuffles his cabinet, appointing 6 new ministers and reassigning the responsibilities of 19 others.
  • February 10: President of the United States George H. W. Bush Prime Minister Mulroney in Ottawa, laying the groundwork for the Acid Rain Treaty of 1991.
  • February 20: In the Yukon Territory, the ruling New Democrats narrowly maintain control of the Yukon Legislative Assembly, winning 9 seats vs. the Progressive Conservative Party's 7.
  • March 1: The Canadian Space Agency is created.
  • March 10: An Air Ontario flight crashes near Dryden, Ontario, killing 24.
  • March 13: 2:44 AM ET: A solar coronal mass ejection causes a blackout across all of Quebec, as it hits the Hydro-Québec power grid, affecting 6 million people for more than 9 hours.
  • March 13: Deborah Grey wins a by-election to become the first Reform Party Member of Parliament.
  • March 19: LGBT activist Joe Rose is murdered on public transit in Montreal.
  • March 20: Alberta election: Don Getty's PCs win a sixth consecutive majority.
  • March 22: Thomas Rideout becomes premier of Newfoundland, replacing Brian Peckford.
  • April 20: The Liberal Party of Newfoundland, led by Clyde Wells, wins the Newfoundland general election.
  • May 3: John Turner resigns as leader of the Liberal Party of Canada.
  • May 5: Clyde Wells becomes premier of Newfoundland, defeating Thomas Rideout in a general election.
  • May 25: The Calgary Flames defeat the Montreal Canadiens to win the 1989 Stanley Cup Finals.
  • May 29: The Liberal Party of Prince Edward Island, led by Joe Ghiz, remains in power following the Prince Edward Island general election.
  • June 3: The SkyDome (now known as Rogers Centre) is opened in Toronto.
  • June 5: The federal government announces sweeping cuts to Via Rail.
  • July 31: Cable television network CBC Newsworld is launched.
  • August 2: Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs Bernard Valcourt resigns after he is convicted of drunk driving.
  • September 1: French cable sports network, RDS, signs on.
  • September 25: In the Quebec general election, the Quebec Liberal Party, led by Robert Bourassa, is reelected with a large Liberal majority.
  • October 6: Prime Minister Mulroney nominates Ray Hnatyshyn to succeed Jeanne Sauvé as Governor General of Canada.
  • October 8: The Cormier Village hayride accident kills 13 people and injures 45.
  • October 15 – Wayne Gretzky becomes the leading scorer in the history of the National Hockey League.
  • December 2: Audrey McLaughlin is elected head of the NDP replacing Ed Broadbent becoming the first female major party leader in Canadian history.
  • December 6: École Polytechnique massacre: Marc Lépine murders fourteen women at the École Polytechnique of the Université de Montréal in Montreal, Quebec. The event proves a spur to both the Canadian feminist and gun control movements.
  • December 21: Quebec uses the notwithstanding clause for the first time.
  • December 31: All rail service is terminated in Prince Edward Island after CN Rail abandons its historic rail lines in the province.

Full date unknown

  • Corel releases Corel Draw.
  • Heather Erxleben becomes Canada's first official female combat soldier.
  • Sidney Altman shares in the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.

Arts and literature

New works

  • Mordecai Richler: Solomon Gursky Was Here
  • Steve McCaffery: The Black Debt
  • Erín Moure: WSW
  • Joy Fielding: Good Intentions
  • Dave Duncan: West of January
  • Tomson Highway: Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing
  • William Bell: Death Wind
  • Farley Mowat: The New Found Land

Awards

  • Books in Canada First Novel Award: Rick Salutin, A Man of Little Faith
  • See 1989 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
  • Geoffrey Bilson Award: Martyn Godfrey, Mystery in the Frozen Lands, and Dorothy Perkyns, Rachel's Revolution
  • Gerald Lampert Award: Sarah Klassen, Journey to Yalta
  • Marian Engel Award: Merna Summers
  • Pat Lowther Award: Heather Spears, The Word for Sand
  • Stephen Leacock Award: John Kertes, Winter Tulips
  • Trillium Book Award: Modris Eksteins, Rites of Spring
  • Vicky Metcalf Award: Stéphane Poulin

Music

  • Simply Saucer, Cyborgs Revisited
  • The Tragically Hip, Up to Here

Sport

  • May 13 – The Swift Current Broncos win their only Memorial Cup by defeating the Saskatoon Blades 4 to 3. The final game was played at Saskatchewan Place in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
  • May 25 – The Calgary Flames win their only Stanley Cup by defeating the Montreal Canadiens 4 games to 2. The deciding Game 6 is played at the Montreal Forum. Inverness, Nova Scotia's Al MacInnis is awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy
  • June 5 – The Toronto Blue Jays lose the first baseball game played at the SkyDome to the Milwaukee Brewers 3 to 5.
  • November 18 – The Western Ontario Mustangs win their fifth Vanier Cup by defeating the Saskatchewan Huskies 35 to 10 in the 25th Grey Cup played at the SkyDome in Toronto.
  • November 26 – The Saskatchewan Roughriders win their second (and first since 1966) Grey Cup by defeating the Hamilton Tiger-Cats 43 to 40 in the 77th Grey Cup played at the SkyDome in Toronto.

Births

  • January 9 – Nina Dobrev, actress
  • January 14 – Karine Thomas, synchronized swimmer
  • February 11 – Jesse Rath, actor
  • February 13 – Carly McKillip, actress
  • February 14 – Emma Miskew, curler
  • February 20 – Melanie Leishman, actress
  • March 3 – Andrea Brooks, actress
  • March 19 – Stephanie Horner, swimmer
  • April 5 - Rachel Homan, curler
  • April 13 – Mallory Deluce, ice hockey player
  • April 19 – Simu Liu, actor
  • April 25 – Marie-Michèle Gagnon, skier
  • April 28 – Steffi DiDomenicantonio, singer
  • May 11 – Alyssa Brown, artistic gymnast
  • May 17 – Tessa Virtue, ice dancer
  • May 23 – Grace Mahary, model
  • June 11 – Keith Aulie, ice hockey player
  • June 17 – Brandon Jones, singer
  • July 27 – Charlotte Arnold, actress
  • July 31 – Marshall Williams, actor
  • August 2 – Dominic Jalbert, ice hockey player
  • September 12 – Elyse Hopfner-Hibbs, artistic gymnast
  • September 23 – Craig Sharpe, singer
  • September 25 – Jordan Gavaris, actor
  • October 20 – Colin Wilson, Canadian-American ice hockey player
  • October 24 – Shenae Grimes, actress
  • November 3 – Nav, rapper
  • November 5 – Joey Lawrence, photographer
  • November 24 – Nicole Sassine, sprinter
  • December 2 – Cassie Steele, actress and singer-songwriter
  • December 22 – Derek Famulare, Canadian ice hockey player

Deaths

January to June

  • January 20 – Beatrice Lillie, comic actress (b. 1894)
  • January 22 – Farquhar Oliver, politician (b. 1904)
  • January 31 – William Stephenson, soldier, airman, businessperson, inventor and spymaster (b. 1897)
  • February 9
    • Ken Adachi, writer and literary critic (b. 1929)
    • John Duffie, writer (b. 1913)
  • May 14 – Joe Primeau, ice hockey player (b. 1906)
  • May 14 – E. P. Taylor, business tycoon and race horse breeder (b. 1901)
  • June 14 – Louis-Philippe-Antoine Bélanger, politician (b. 1907)
  • June 26 – Howard Charles Green, politician and Minister (b. 1895)

July to December

  • July 3 – Peter Fox, politician (b. 1921)
  • July 13 – Samuel Boulanger, politician (b. 1909)
  • July 24 – Michael Estok, poet
  • August 10 – George Ignatieff, diplomat (b. 1913)
  • November 11 – Kenneth MacLean Glazier, Sr., minister and librarian (b. 1912)
  • September 12 – Elyse Hopfner-Hibbs, gymnast
  • November 13 – Victor Davis, swimmer, Olympic gold medalist and World Champion (b. 1964)
  • November 15 – George Manuel, Aboriginal leader (b. 1921)
  • November 29 – Nancy Bell, senator (b. 1924)
  • December 6 – Marc Lépine, murderer responsible for the École Polytechnique massacre (b. 1964)
  • December 26 – Doug Harvey, ice hockey player (b. 1924)
  • December 26 – Maryon Pearson, wife of Lester B. Pearson, 14th Prime Minister of Canada (b. 1901)

References

References

  1. "Queen Elizabeth II {{!}} The Canadian Encyclopedia".
  2. (4 February 2014). "Heads of States and Governments Since 1945". Routledge.
  3. (2010-08-04). "Space Weather Blackout – Massive Power Grid Failure". [[NBC Washington]] Weathernet.
  4. "Elected in By-Elections". parl.gc.ca.
  5. "Pink hair and leather cost Joe Rose his life". ''[[Edmonton Journal]]'', March 22, 1989.
  6. "GAGNON Marie-Michele - Athlete Information".
  7. "Gymn.ca: Alyssa Brown".
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