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Events from the year 1867 in Canada.

Incumbents

Crown

  • Monarch – Victoria

January to June

Governors

  • Governor General of Canada – Charles Monck, 4th Viscount Monck
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – vacant
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Sir William Fenwick Williams

Premiers

  • Premier of Canada – Narcisse-Fortunat Belleau
  • Premier of New Brunswick – Peter Mitchell
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – Charles Tupper

July to December

Federal government

  • Governor General – Charles Monck, 4th Viscount Monck
  • Prime Minister – John A. Macdonald (from July 1)
  • Parliament – 1st (from November 6)

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Charles Hastings Doyle (until October 18) then Francis Pym Harding
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Sir William Fenwick Williams (until October 18) then Charles Hastings Doyle
  • Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Henry William Stisted
  • Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Narcisse-Fortunat Belleau
Premiers
  • Premier of New Brunswick – Andrew Rainsford Wetmore (from August 16)
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – Hiram Blanchard (July 4 – September 30) then William Annand (from November 4)
  • Premier of Ontario – John Sandfield Macdonald (from July 16)
  • Premier of Quebec – Pierre-Joseph-Olivier Chauveau (from July 15)

Events

  • February 16 – John A. Macdonald marries his second wife Susan Agnes Bernard.
  • March 29 – Queen Victoria gives royal assent to the British North America Act, 1867.
  • July 1
  • The Province of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick are united into the single country of Canada by the British North America Act.
  • Sir John A. Macdonald becomes the first prime minister of Canada.
  • The Windsor Police Service is established.
  • July 4 – Hiram Blanchard becomes premier of Nova Scotia, replacing Charles Tupper.
  • July 15 – Pierre-Joseph-Olivier Chauveau becomes the first premier of Quebec.
  • July 16 – J. S. Macdonald becomes the first premier of Ontario.
  • August 7 – September 20 – The 1867 Canadian election sees John A. Macdonald's Conservatives elected as government.
  • September 3 – The 1867 Ontario election: J. S. Macdonald Liberal-Conservatives win a minority.
  • September 18 – The 1867 Nova Scotia election
  • November 6 – The 1st Canadian Parliament meets.
  • November 7 – William Annand becomes premier of Nova Scotia, replacing Hiram Blanchard.
  • December 7 – The first federal budget is presented by Finance Minister John Rose.

Full date unknown

  • Andrew R. Wetmore becomes premier of New Brunswick, replacing Peter Mitchell.
  • The 1867 Quebec election
  • The Parliamentary Press Gallery is established.
  • Fall: Henry Seth Taylor steam buggy debuts at the Stanstead Fall Fair in Quebec, believed to be Canada's first car.

Births

  • January 25 – Simon Fraser Tolmie, politician and 21st Premier of British Columbia (died 1937)
  • February 2 – Charles E. Saunders, agronomist (died 1937)
  • February 7 – John Livingstone Brown, politician (died 1953)
  • February 20 – Flora Denison, feminist
  • March 5 – Louis-Alexandre Taschereau, politician and 14th Premier of Quebec (died 1952)
  • March 31 – Noah Timmins, mining developer and executive (died 1936)
  • June 30 – Napoléon Turcot, politician (died 1939)
  • August 9 – Charles Ballantyne, politician (died 1950)
  • October 19 – Marie Lacoste Gérin-Lajoie, feminist and social activist (died 1945)
  • October 27 – Thomas Walter Scott, Politician and first Premier of Saskatchewan (died 1938)
  • November 1 – Newton Rowell, lawyer and politician (died 1941)
  • December 3 – William John Bowser, politician and Premier of British Columbia (died 1933)

Deaths

thumb|right|150px|Samuel Harrison

  • July 23 – Samuel Harrison, farmer, lawyer, mill owner, politician, judge and 1st Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada (born 1802)
  • August 25 – Pierre-Flavien Turgeon, Archbishop of Quebec (born 1787)
  • September 7 – Jesse Ketchum, tanner, politician, and philanthropist (born 1782)
  • November 1 – John Strachan, first Anglican Bishop of Toronto (born 1778)
  • December 10 – Edward Whelan, journalist and politician (born 1824)

References