1909 in Canada explained
The following lists events that happened during 1909 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Premiers
Territorial governments
Commissioners
Events
Full date unknown
- University of Toronto Schools opens as an all-boys school.
- Leon's furniture store opens.
- The Criminal Code is amended to criminalize the abduction of women. Before this, the abduction of any woman over 16 was legal, except if she was an heiress.[3]
Arts and literature
Sport
Births
January to June
- February 4 – Jack Shadbolt, painter (d.1998)
- February 14 – A. M. Klein, poet, journalist, novelist, short story writer and lawyer (d.1972)
- March 2 – Art Alexandre, ice hockey player (d.1976)
- March 19 – John Fauquier, war hero
- March 20 – Jack Bush, painter (d.1977)
- March 22 – Gabrielle Roy, author (d.1983)
- April 6 – George Isaac Smith, lawyer, politician and Premier of Nova Scotia (d.1982)
- May 8 – Samuel Boulanger, politician (d.1989)
- May 29 – Red Horner, ice hockey player (d.2005)
- May 31 – Aurore Gagnon, murder victim (d.1920)
- June 23 – David Lewis, lawyer and politician (d.1981)
July to December
Full date unknown
Deaths
- May 5 – Daniel Lionel Hanington, politician and 5th Premier of New Brunswick (b.1835)
- May 7 – William Hallett Ray, politician (b. 1825)
- May 12 – Michel Auger, politician (b.1830)
- October 7 – William Thomas Pipes, politician and Premier of Nova Scotia (b.1850)
- October 27 – James William Bain, politician (b.1838)
- November 14 – Joshua Slocum, seaman, adventurer, writer, and first man to sail single-handedly around the world (b.1844)
- December 17 – George Cox, mayor of Ottawa (b.1834)
Historical documents
Government report on huge tar sand deposit in northern Alberta[4]
Origins of Canadian Red Cross Society outlined in Senate bill incorporating it[5]
Union leaders object after Archbishop of St. John's disapproves of Fishermen's Protective Union as secret society[6]
Report of Toronto lecture where British suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst explains rationale for extreme measures[7]
Scottish editorial asks whether Scotsmen should take up farming in Canada[8]
House of Commons agriculture committee learns about types, history and marketing of Lake Erie apples (District No. 1)[9]
Pilot John McCurdy's testimony on flights and development of Silver Dart airplane[10]
Political cartoon about Canadian wheat milled in Minnesota[11]
Postcard: Photo shows "Broadway Falls," created when water from overflowing creek poured into Broadway and Heather St. intersection, Vancouver[12]
Notes and References
- Book: Tidridge . Nathan . Canada's Constitutional Monarchy . 15 November 2011 . Dundurn . 978-1-55488-980-8 . 235 . en.
- Web site: The OPP Museum > Historical Highlights of the Ontario Provincial Police. 2012-06-19. Ontario Provincial Police.
- Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women. http://criaw-icref.ca/millenium
- Canada Department of the Interior, New Northwest Exploration: Report of Exploration, by Frank J.P. Crean, C.E., in Saskatchewan and Alberta[....] (1910), pgs. 58-60. Accessed 18 February 2020
- The Senate of Canada, "Preamble" Bill HH; An Act to incorporate The Canadian Red Cross Society (April 23, 1909), Senate Bills, 11th Parliament, 1st Session: A-GGG. Accessed 7 March 2020
- http://www.mun.ca/mha/fpu/documents_full_view.php?img=documents/106_19_2e&galleryID=doc1 "Letter to Archbishop M.F. Howley from Peter Trimlett and Others, Salmonier, March 23, 1909."
- https://www.loc.gov/resource/rbcmil.scrp6014701/?st=text "Mrs. Pankhurst in Toronto"
- http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/bibliography/3299/13.html "The Granary of the Empire"
- https://parl.canadiana.ca/view/oop.com_HOC_1101_1_1/170?r=0&s=1 "Fruit Districts of Ontario"
- https://www.loc.gov/resource/magbell.14410301/?st=gallery "Deposition by J.A.D. McCurdy, April 9, 1920"
- Charles Lewis Bartholomew (Bart), "It Is Up to Congress to Say Which" Minneapolis Journal (May 6, 1909). Accessed 27 September 2021
- https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/langmann/items/1.0360879 "View of Broadway Falls at the corner of Broadway and Heather Street, Vancouver, B.C."