1867 in Canada
Canada-related events during the year of 1867
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Events from the year 1867 in Canada .
Incumbents
Crown
January to June
Governors
Premiers
July to December
Federal government
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Premiers
Events
Full date unknown
Births
January 25 – Simon Fraser Tolmie , politician and 21st Premier of British Columbia (died 1937 )
February 2 – Charles E. Saunders , agronomist (died 1937 )
February 7 – John Livingstone Brown , politician (died 1953 )
February 20 – Flora Denison , feminist
March 5 – Louis-Alexandre Taschereau , politician and 14th Premier of Quebec (died 1952 )
March 31 – Noah Timmins , mining developer and executive (died 1936 )
June 30 – Napoléon Turcot , politician (died 1939 )
August 9 – Charles Ballantyne , politician (died 1950 )
October 19 – Marie Lacoste Gérin-Lajoie , feminist and social activist (died 1945 )
October 27 – Thomas Walter Scott , Politician and first Premier of Saskatchewan (died 1938 )
November 1 – Newton Rowell , lawyer and politician (died 1941 )
December 3 – William John Bowser , politician and Premier of British Columbia (died 1933 )
Deaths
Samuel Harrison
July 23 – Samuel Harrison , farmer, lawyer, mill owner, politician, judge and 1st Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada (born 1802 )
August 25 – Pierre-Flavien Turgeon , Archbishop of Quebec (born 1787 )
September 7 – Jesse Ketchum , tanner, politician, and philanthropist (born 1782 )
November 1 – John Strachan , first Anglican Bishop of Toronto (born 1778 )
December 10 – Edward Whelan , journalist and politician (born 1824 )
Historical documents
British House of Commons debates Confederation [4]
In first Speech from the Throne , Governor General Monck lists legislative agenda, including eastern railway and western expansion[5]
Thomas D'Arcy McGee lectures on the state of cultural development in Canada [6]
Court validates a "country marriage ," allowing a Metis man to inherit [7]
Report on Anglican mission work among and by Indigenous people in Rupert's Land [8]
Photo: St. Regis Lacrosse Club[9]
References
^ "Queen Victoria | The Canadian Encyclopedia" . www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca . Retrieved 5 December 2022 .
^ "The Prime Ministers of Canada – John A. Macdonald Quickfacts" . Archived from the original on 2007-04-15. Retrieved 2006-11-25 .
^ "Archived – Budget 2010 – The Budget Process" . Department of Finance Canada . Retrieved 2012-04-08 .
^ "Imperial Parliament, House of Commons, Federation of American Colonies, February 28" The (Auckland, N.Z.) Daily Southern Cross, Vol. XXIII, No. 3,076 (May 27, 1867), pg. 6. Accessed 9 September 2018 (See also John A. Macdonald's comment that British foreign minister objected to "Kingdom" of Canada term in draft bill)
^ "His Excellency the Governor General" Minutes of Proceedings of the Senate of the Dominion of Canada (November 7, 1867), pgs. 8-9. (See 1877 map of Intercolonial Railway and modern Territorial Evolution maps) Accessed 27 November 2021
^ Thomas D'Arcy McGee, "The Mental Outfit of the New Dominion" The (Montreal) Gazette, November 5, 1867. Accessed 9 September 2018
^ John Connolly, plaintiff vs. Julia Woolrich, defendant and Thomas R. Johnson, et al., executors and defendants par reprise d'instance Superior Court, Montreal (1867). Accessed 9 September 2018
^ Right Rev. Robert Machray, Diocese of Rupert's Land, Church of England, Report of the Second Conference of Clergy and Lay-Delegates from Parishes in the Diocese of Rupert's Land (1867), pgs. 21-3 . Accessed 9 September 2018
^ William Notman, "St. Regis Lacrosse Club" (1867), McCord Museum. Accessed 18 May 2022
1867 in North America
Sovereign states Dependencies and other territories