1907 in Canada

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Years in Canada: 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910
Centuries: 19th century · 20th century · 21st century
Decades: 1870s 1880s 1890s 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s
Years: 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910

Events from the year 1907 in Canada.

Incumbents[]

Crown[]

  • MonarchEdward VII

Federal government[]

  • Governor GeneralAlbert Grey, 4th Earl Grey
  • Prime MinisterWilfrid Laurier
  • Chief JusticeCharles Fitzpatrick (Quebec)
  • Parliament10th

Provincial governments[]

Lieutenant governors[]

Premiers[]

  • Premier of AlbertaAlexander Cameron Rutherford
  • Premier of British ColumbiaRichard McBride
  • Premier of ManitobaRodmond Roblin
  • Premier of New BrunswickLemuel John Tweedie (until March 6) then William Pugsley (March 6 to May 31) then Clifford William Robinson
  • Premier of Nova ScotiaGeorge Henry Murray
  • Premier of OntarioJames Whitney
  • Premier of Prince Edward IslandArthur Peters
  • Premier of QuebecLomer Gouin
  • Premier of SaskatchewanThomas Walter Scott

Territorial governments[]

Commissioners[]

  • Commissioner of YukonJohn T. Lithgow (acting) (until June 17) then Alexander Henderson
  • Gold Commissioner of YukonF.X. Gosselin (from June 17)
  • Commissioner of Northwest TerritoriesFrederick D. White

Events[]

  • March 6 – William Pugsley becomes premier of New Brunswick, replacing Lemuel John Tweedie
  • May 24 – Boer War Memorial (Montreal) unveiled
  • May 30 – King Edward VII grants the Coat of Arms of Alberta
  • May 31 – Clifford Robinson becomes premier of New Brunswick, replacing William Pugsley
  • August 24 – Part of the under-construction Quebec Bridge collapses in Quebec City killing 75 construction workers and injuring 11.
  • September 7
  • September 14 – Jasper Forest Park – later named Jasper National Park – is established.[1]

Full date unknown[]

  • The National Council for Women demands "equal pay for equal work"
  • The world's first rotary telephone came into use at Sydney Mines, Nova Scotia
  • The first Sobeys opens in Stellarton, Nova Scotia

Births[]

January to June[]

  • January 14 – Georges-Émile Lapalme, politician (d.1985)
  • January 26 – Hans Selye, endocrinologist (d.1982)[2]
  • February 9 – Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter, geometer (d.2003)
  • March 20 – Hugh MacLennan, author and professor of English (d.1990)
  • March 24 – Paul Sauvé, lawyer, soldier, politician and 17th Premier of Quebec (d.1960)
  • April 16 – Joseph-Armand Bombardier, inventor, businessman and founder of Bombardier Inc. (d.1964)
  • April 17 – Louis-Philippe-Antoine Bélanger, politician (d.1989)

July to December[]

  • July 6 – George Stanley, historian, author, soldier, teacher, public servant and designer of the current Canadian flag (d.2002)
  • August 5 – Herman Linder, rodeoist
  • August 24 – Alfred Belzile, politician and farmer
  • September 3 – Andrew Brewin, lawyer and politician (d.1983)
Fay Wray – Publicity photo, ca. 1930
  • September 15 – Fay Wray, actress (d.2004)
  • October 20 – Carl Goldenberg, lawyer, arbitrator, mediator and Senator (d.1996)
  • November 19 – Frederick Thomas Armstrong, politician (d.1990)
  • November 21 – Christie Harris, children's author (d.2002)
  • December 12 – Fleurette Beauchamp-Huppé, pianist, soprano and teacher (d.2007)[3]

Unknown[]

  • Edythe Shuttleworth, mezzo-soprano (d.1983)[4]

Deaths[]

January to June[]

  • January 1 – William Pearce Howland, politician (b.1811)
  • January 25 – Andrew George Blair, politician and 6th Premier of New Brunswick (b.1844)
  • January 31 – Timothy Eaton, businessman and founder of Eaton's (b.1834)
  • March 3 – Oronhyatekha, Mohawk physician and scholar (b.1841)
  • March 8 – Edward Cochrane, politician (b.1834)
  • March 20 – Louis Adolphe Billy, politician and lawyer (b.1834)
  • April 6 – William Henry Drummond, poet (b.1854)
  • June 12 – John Waldie, politician (b.1833)

July to December[]

  • August 10 – James Brien, politician and physician (b.1848)
  • September 26 – Alexander Gunn, politician (b.1828)
  • October 10 – Cassie Chadwick, fraudster (b.1857)[5]
  • October 13 – Harvey William Burk, politician and farmer (b.1822)

Historical documents[]

Report that staff "minimize the dangers of infection" in "the defective sanitary condition" of many residential schools in Prairie Provinces[6]

Newspaper covers "not too favorable a report" issued by Dr. Peter Bryce, concluding "vigorous action cannot be long delayed"[7]

Missing residential school boys are forced to run back with arms tied, and church committee advises against that to avoid cruelty complaints[8]

Fallout from September 7 riot against Asian Canadians in Vancouver[9]

Opposition Leader Robert Borden's Vancouver speech on restricting East Asian immigration[10]

Mackenzie King believes workers running cooperative will learn capitalists' risks and responsibilities, thus reducing labour strife[11]

Rudyard Kipling speaks on spirit of development in Winnipeg[12]

Photo and text: Winnipeg Beach, Lake Winnipeg, Manitoba[13]

Speech on U.S. influence on Canadian thought, habits, literature and press[14]

Local Saskatchewan debate on women's suffrage results in negative decision[15]

Western boards of trade resolutions call for state-supported hospitals[16]

Mayor of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan advocates transportation route to Hudson Bay[17]

Stinkers, mortal terror, and common enemy: automobile issues in Nova Scotia[18]

McGill University principal on place of classical studies in modern education[19]

Article on inner workings of Marconi wireless telegraph station[20]

Minister and three other rowers survive ice and huge waves in Notre Dame Bay, Newfoundland[21]

References[]

  1. ^ "Jasper National Park Is The Most Beautiful Place In Canada". All That's Interesting. 5 January 2015. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Dr Hans Selye". home.cc.umanitoba.ca. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  3. ^ "Fleurette Beauchamp-Huppé". The Canadian Encyclopedia. April 25, 2012. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  4. ^ "Edythe Shuttleworth". The Canadian Encyclopedia. October 25, 2009. Retrieved May 12, 2021.
  5. ^ "CHADWICK, CASSIE L." case.edu. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  6. ^ Peter H. Bryce, "The Health of the Pupils of the Industrial and Boarding Schools" Report on the Indian Schools of Manitoba and the North-West Territories (1907), pgs. 17-21 plus tables. Accessed 4 February 2020
  7. ^ "Indian Schools Deal Out Death" The (Victoria, B.C.) Daily Colonist, Vol. XCVII, No. 137 (November 16, 1907), pg. 1. Accessed 29 September 2021
  8. ^ "Report of Committee appointed to enquire into the complaints made by the Indian Department against the Crowstand Indian School" (August 8, 1907), in Denise Hildebrand, Staff Perspectives of the Aboriginal Residential School Experience: A Study of Four Presbyterian Schools, 1888-1923 pg. 243. Accessed 10 June 2021
  9. ^ "Vancouver's Agitation for Exclusion of Asiatics" Victoria Daily Colonist (September 13, 1907). Accessed 4 February 2020
  10. ^ "Speech (in Part) Delivered by Mr. R.L. Borden at Vancouver, 24th September 1907" The Question of Oriental Immigration; Speeches (in Part) Delivered by R.L. Borden, M.P.; In 1907 and 1908, pgs. 3-9. Accessed 5 February 2020
  11. ^ "Minutes of Evidence" (March 12, 1907), Reports of the Special Committee of the House of Commons [on] Industrial and Co-Operative Societies, pgs. 79-80. Accessed 9 October 2020
  12. ^ "Address by Rudyard Kipling to the Canadian Club; Winnipeg; 2nd October, 1907" Accessed 5 February 2020
  13. ^ "A Day with a Camera at Winnipeg Beach" and "Situated on Lake Winnipeg" (1907), British Library. Accessed 23 December 2021
  14. ^ J. Castell Hopkins, "Continental Influences in Canadian Development" (February 28, 1907), The Empire Club of Canada Addresses, pgs. 228-43. Accessed 5 February 2020
  15. ^ "No Votes For The Women; Such Was The Burden Of Argument In Nutana-Floral Debate" Saskatoon Phoenix (February 11, 1907), pg. 2. Accessed 5 February 2020
  16. ^ Associated Boards of Trade of Western Canada, Memorandum of Resolutions to Be Presented at the Fourth Annual Convention[....] (1907), pgs. 26-7, 58-60. Accessed 5 February 2020 http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/bibliography/3018/30.html http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/bibliography/3018/62.html
  17. ^ Associated Boards of Trade of Western Canada, Memorandum of Resolutions to Be Presented at the Fourth Annual Convention.... (1907), pg. 7. Accessed 5 February 2020
  18. ^ Excerpts from New Glasgow Eastern Chronicle (various dates, 1907). Accessed 5 February 2020 http://epe.lac-bac.gc.ca/100/205/300/nova_scotias_electronic_attic/07-04-09/www.littletechshoppe.com/ns1625/automobiles.html (scroll down to 1907)
  19. ^ W. Peterson, "The Claims of Classical Studies in Modern Education" Canadian Essays and Addresses (1915), pgs. 287-303. Accessed 5 February 2020
  20. ^ "Interior Description of the Operator's Room at Marconi Wireless Station, Morien," Sydney (N.S.) Daily Post (October 16, 1907). Accessed 5 February 2020 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2019-12-29. Retrieved 2020-02-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  21. ^ Diaries of Reverend Robert Samuel Smith (Part 2). Accessed 5 February 2020 http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cannf/nd_diary2.htm (scroll down to "JUNE 6")
Retrieved from ""