1860 in Canada

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Years in Canada: 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863
Centuries: 18th century · 19th century · 20th century
Decades: 1830s 1840s 1850s 1860s 1870s 1880s 1890s
Years: 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863

Events from the year 1860 in Canada.

Incumbents[]

  • Monarch — Victoria

Federal government[]

Governors[]

  • Governor General of the Province of CanadaEdmund Walker Head
  • Colonial Governor of NewfoundlandAlexander Bannerman
  • Governor of New BrunswickArthur Charles Hamilton-Gordon
  • Governor of Nova ScotiaGeorge Phipps, 2nd Marquess of Normanby
  • Governor of Prince Edward IslandDominick Daly

Premiers[]

  • Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada
  • Premier of NewfoundlandJohn Kent
  • Premier of New BrunswickSamuel Leonard Tilley
  • Premier of Nova ScotiaJames William Johnston
  • Premier of Prince Edward IslandEdward Palmer

Events[]

  • February 20 – 205 killed when the SS Hungarian (Allan Line) is wrecked at Cape Sable, Nova Scotia[1]
  • April 26 – The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada formed
  • May 8 – Roman Catholic Diocese of Chatham (later renamed Roman Catholic Diocese of Bathurst (Canada)) erected
  • August 25 – Montreal's Victoria Bridge opens
  • September 1 – In Ottawa, the cornerstone of the Centre Block building is laid by Prince Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, signalling the beginning of the building of the Parliament of Canada buildings.

Full date unknown[]

  • Chalon head postage stamp issued in New Brunswick
  • First ecclesiastical province of the Anglican Church of Canada – Canada – created
  • Free Methodist Church in Canada founded
  • Two month tour of Canada by Albert Edward, Prince of Wales

Sport[]

  • June 27 – Don Juan won the first Queen's Plate race is held in Toronto.
  • Fred Lillywhite's The English Cricketers' Trip to Canada and the United States published, detailing the 1859 Tour of the US and Canada

Births[]

January to June[]

  • January 10 – Charles G.D. Roberts, poet and prose writer (died 1943)
  • March 7 – Alexander Grant MacKay, teacher, lawyer and politician (died 1920)
John Douglas Hazen
  • May 31 – Henry Wise Wood, politician and president of the United Farmers of Alberta (died 1941)
  • June 1 – Margaret Mick, prison guard, first female Canadian peace officer to be killed in the line of duty (died 1925)
  • June 5 – John Douglas Hazen, politician and 12th Premier of New Brunswick (died 1937)
  • June 18 – Laura Muntz Lyall, painter (died 1930)

July to December[]

  • July 9 – Frederick Cope, 3rd Mayor of Vancouver (died 1897)
  • August 14 – Ernest Thompson Seton, author and wildlife artist (died 1946)
  • August 21 – Aylesworth Perry, 6th Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (died 1956)
  • August 29 – James Duncan McGregor, agricultural pioneer, politician and Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba (died 1935)
  • September 2 – Georgina Fraser Newhall, author and the bardess of the Clan Fraser Society of Canada (died 1932)
  • September 15 – Napoléon Belcourt, politician (died 1932)
  • October 14 – John Hampden Burnham, politician and lawyer (died 1940)

Full date unknown[]

  • Nazaire-Nicolas Olivier, lawyer and politician (died 1898)

Deaths[]

  • January 18 – William Thompson, farmer and political figure (born 1786)
  • May 26 – John Willson, judge and political figure (born 1776)
  • July 16 – Brenton Halliburton, army officer, lawyer, judge, and politician (born 1774)
  • August 10 – Joseph-François Deblois, lawyer, judge and political figure (born 1797)
  • September 20 – John McDonald, businessman and political figure (born 1787)
  • October 23 – Peter Boyle de Blaquière, political figure and first chancellor of the University of Toronto (born 1783)

Full date unknown[]

  • A-ca-oo-mah-ca-ye, a chief of the Blackfoot First Nation

Historical documents[]

Escaped slave in Victoria allowed by court to remain, and local paper finds reaction in U.S.A. "blustering," "ridiculous" and "buncombe"[2]

"Pernicious habit" - Letter to the editor (with excerpt from The Lancet) warns against young men and boys smoking[3]

References[]

  1. ^ "On the Rocks: Shipwrecks of Nova Scotia – Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, Halifax, Nova Scotia". Archived from the original on 2007-07-13. Retrieved 2009-03-04.
  2. ^ "Fugitive Slave Case" (September 27, 1860; Vol. 4, No. 64, pg. 2) and "The Last Fugitive Slave Case" (October 4, 1860; Vol. 4, No. 69, pg. 2), The (Victoria) Daily British Colonist. Accessed 10 February 2021
  3. ^ "Excessive Smoking" The Nor'-Wester (Red River Settlement, March 14, 1860), pg. 1. Accessed 16 December 2020
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