1872 in Canada explained
Events from the year 1872 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Premiers
Territorial governments
Lieutenant governors
Events
- March 14 – Henry Joseph Clarke becomes premier[2] of Manitoba, replacing Marc-Amable Girard.
- March 25 – The beginning of the Toronto Printers' Strike for a nine-hour day.
- March 31 – The first issue of the Toronto Mail, which would later be merged into The Globe and Mail, is published.
- April 15 – Ten thousand demonstrate at Queen's Park in support of the striking Toronto printers. The police, prompted by the Masters Printers' Association and its leader, George Brown of the Globe, arrest the entire 24-man strike committee.
- April 18 – John A. Macdonald introduces a bill to legalize trade unions.
- April 25 – The first issue of the weekly Ontario Workman is published by the Toronto Trades Assembly. It is Canada's first labour newspaper.
- May 15 – In the first nationwide labour protest, marchers across the land press for the nine-hour workday.
- June 14 – The Trade Unions Act is passed in parliament, legalizing labour unions. The Criminal Law Amendment Act is also passed, making picketing illegal.
- June 22 – A Grand Trunk Railway express passenger train from Toronto to Montreal derails near Shannonville, Ontario, killing 34.
- June 25 – Frederick Temple Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 1st Earl of Dufferin becomes Governor General of Canada.
- July 20 – October 12: In the 1872 federal election Sir John A. Macdonald's Conservatives are re-elected.
- October 31 – Oliver Mowat becomes Premier of Ontario replaces the retiring Edward Blake.
- November 21 – Victoria Memorial (Montreal) unveiled.
- December 23 – Amor De Cosmos becomes premier of British Columbia, replacing John McCreight.
Full date unknown
Births
- June 24 – Pierre-Ernest Boivin, politician and businessman (d.1938)
- August 23 – Egerton Reuben Stedman, politician (d. 1946)
- August 25 – John Campbell Elliott, lawyer and politician (d.1941)
- October 17 – Samuel Wickett, businessman
- October 26 – Alfred Edmond Bourgeois, politician (d.1939)
- November 10 – Frederick C. Alderdice, businessman, politician and last Prime Minister of Newfoundland (d.1936)
- November 30 – John McCrae, poet, physician, author, artist and soldier (d.1918)
- December 23 – Charles Bélec, politician (d.1958)
Deaths
Historical documents
Federal agriculture minister points to "millions of unsettled acres of prairie" for wheat and "homes of many millions of men from the old world"[3]
Privy Council committee recommends terms to encourage Mennonites to immigrate[4]
Government fails to establish some agreed-to First Nations reserves, while settlers steal the timber[5]
Sandford Fleming reports on difficulties surveying the route of the Canadian Pacific Railway[6]
Indigenous paddlers race each other on the CPR survey expedition[7]
Notes and References
- Web site: Queen Victoria The Canadian Encyclopedia . www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca . 5 December 2022.
- Web site: Elections Manitoba . 2007-05-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928055547/http://www.electionsmanitoba.ca/main/history/premiers.htm . 2007-09-28 . dead .
- "Report of the Minister of Agriculture [for] 1872," pg. 8 (frame p. 26-8'), Sessional Papers; Volume 6; First Session of the Second Parliament; Session 1873. Accessed 19 February 2023
- (Colonial Secretary) no. 51, 1872/03/07, German Menonites (sic) in Russia Wish to Emigrate to Canada Library and Archives Canada. Accessed 24 November 2019
- http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/bibliography/619/4.html Letter "Copy - No. 79"
- Sandford Fleming, Progress Report on the Canadian Pacific Railway Exploratory Survey (1872), pgs. 15-16. Accessed 15 September 2018
- George Monro Grant, Ocean to Ocean: Sandford Fleming's Expedition through Canada in 1872 (1873), pgs. 40-1. Accessed 15 September 2018