1898 in Canada

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Years: 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901

Events from the year 1898 in Canada.

Incumbents[]

Crown[]

  • MonarchVictoria

Federal government[]

  • Governor GeneralJohn Hamilton-Gordon, 7th Earl of Aberdeen (until November 12) then Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 4th Earl of Minto
  • Prime MinisterWilfrid Laurier
  • Chief JusticeSamuel Henry Strong (Ontario)
  • Parliament8th

Provincial governments[]

Lieutenant governors[]

  • Lieutenant Governor of British ColumbiaThomas Robert McInnes
  • Lieutenant Governor of ManitobaJames Colebrooke Patterson
  • Lieutenant Governor of New BrunswickJabez Bunting Snowball
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova ScotiaMalachy Bowes Daly
  • Lieutenant Governor of OntarioOliver Mowat
  • Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward IslandGeorge William Howlan
  • Lieutenant Governor of QuebecJoseph-Adolphe Chapleau (until January 20) then Louis-Amable Jetté

Premiers[]

  • Premier of British ColumbiaJohn Herbert Turner (until August 15) then Charles Augustus Semlin
  • Premier of ManitobaThomas Greenway
  • Premier of New BrunswickHenry Emmerson
  • Premier of Nova ScotiaGeorge Henry Murray
  • Premier of OntarioArthur Sturgis Hardy
  • Premier of Prince Edward IslandAlexander Warburton (until August 1) then Donald Farquharson
  • Premier of QuebecFélix-Gabriel Marchand

Territorial governments[]

Commissioners[]

  • Commissioner of YukonJames Morrow Walsh (until July 5) then William Ogilvie

Lieutenant governors[]

  • Lieutenant Governor of KeewatinJames Colebrooke Patterson
  • Lieutenant Governor of the North-West TerritoriesCharles Herbert Mackintosh (until May 30) then Malcolm Colin Cameron (May 30 to September 26) then Amédée E. Forget (from October 4)

Premiers[]

  • Premier of North-West TerritoriesFrederick Haultain

Events[]

  • March 1 – 1898 Ontario election: A. S. Hardy's Liberals win a majority
  • June 13 – Yukon becomes a distinct territory from the North-West Territories
  • July 29 – White Pass and Yukon Route opens (Skagway–Whitehorse)
  • August – Donald Farquharson becomes Premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing A. B. Warburton
  • August 8 – John Herbert Turner is dismissed as premier of British Columbia
  • August 15 – Charles Semlin becomes premier of British Columbia
  • September 11 – New Westminster, British Columbia destroyed by fire.
  • September 29 – The .
  • November 4 – The fourth election of the North-West Legislative Assembly

Full date unknown[]

Arts and literature[]

Births[]

  • May 20 – Paul Gouin, politician (d.1976)
  • May 27 – William Arthur Irwin, journalist
  • July 7 – Hugh Llewellyn Keenleyside, diplomat, civil servant and 5th Commissioner of the Northwest Territories (d.1992)
  • July 17 – Osmond Borradaile, cameraman, cinematographer and veteran of First and Second World War (d.1999)
  • August 23 – Brooke Claxton, politician and Minister (d.1960)
  • August 27 – Gaspard Fauteux, politician, Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada and Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec (d.1963)
  • August 30 – Gleason Belzile, politician (d.1950)
  • November 8 – Marie Prevost, actress (d.1937)
  • November 9 – Emmett Matthew Hall, jurist, civil libertarian and Supreme Court justice (d.1995)
  • December 1 – Stuart Garson, politician, Minister and 12th Premier of Manitoba (d.1977)
  • December 15 – George Lawrence Price, last Commonwealth casualty of World War I (d.1918)

Full date unknown[]

  • Maurice Spector, Chairman of the Communist Party of Canada (d.1968)

Deaths[]

Theodore Davie
  • January 1 – John Arthur Fraser, artist (b.1838)
  • February 15 – Wilfrid Prévost, lawyer and politician (b.1832)
  • March 7 – Theodore Davie, lawyer, politician and 9th Premier of British Columbia (b.1852)
  • May 1 – Nazaire-Nicolas Olivier, lawyer and politician (b. c1860)
  • May 13 – François Bourassa, farmer and politician (b.1813)
Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau

Historical Documents[]

Federal plebiscite on prohibition finds apathetic electorate (compared to general election turnout) delivers small majority in favour[1]

Touring U.S. farmers find paradise of meadows, prairies and woodlands in Saskatchewan [2]

Questionable building standards lead to fatal collapse of city hall floor in London, Ontario [3]

Scandinavian newspaper correspondent describes Chilkoot Pass avalanche disaster [4]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Samuel E. St. O. Chapleau, "Report on the Prohibition Plebiscite Held on the 29th Day of September 1898" (January 2, 1899), Sessional Papers, Volume 14, Fourth Session of the Eighth Parliament, pgs. vi, viii and x (pages interspersed with text in French). Accessed 4 October 2020 https://parl.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.9_08052_33_14/33?r=0&s=1
  2. ^ Department of the Interior, Reports of United States Delegates on Western Canada (1898), pgs. 9-12. Accessed 21 December 2019 http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/bibliography/2387/11.html
  3. ^ "The London Building Disaster," The Canadian Architect and Builder, Vol. XI, Issue 1 (January 1898), pg. 2. Accessed 21 December 2019 http://digital.library.mcgill.ca/cab/Volume%2011/Issue%201/v11n1p2.gif
  4. ^ C.A. Clausen, "IV. Dreadful Catastrophe in Sheep Camp," Life in the Klondike and Alaska Gold Fields, Norwegian-American Studies and Records 16 (1950). Accessed 21 December 2019 http://nabo.nb.no/trip?_b=EMITEKST&urn=%22URN:NBN:no-nb_emidata_1245%22
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