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Events from the year 1889 in Canada.

Incumbents

Crown

  • Monarch – Victoria

Federal government

  • Governor General – Frederick Stanley
  • Prime Minister – John A. Macdonald
  • Chief Justice – William Johnstone Ritchie (New Brunswick)
  • Parliament – 6th

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Hugh Nelson
  • Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – John Christian Schultz
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Samuel Leonard Tilley
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Archibald McLelan
  • Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Alexander Campbell
  • Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – A.A. Macdonald (until September 2) then Jedediah Slason Carvell
  • Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Auguste-Réal Angers

Premiers

  • Premier of British Columbia – Alexander Edmund Batson Davie (until August 1) then John Robson (from August 2)
  • Premier of Manitoba – Thomas Greenway
  • Premier of New Brunswick – Andrew George Blair
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – William Stevens Fielding
  • Premier of Ontario – Oliver Mowat
  • Premier of Prince Edward Island – William Wilfred Sullivan (until November 1) then Neil McLeod
  • Premier of Quebec – Honoré Mercier

Territorial governments

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of Keewatin – John Christian Schultz
  • Lieutenant Governor of the North-West Territories – Joseph Royal

Premiers

  • Chairman of the Lieutenant-Governor's Advisory Council of the North-West Territories – Robert Brett

Events

thumb|Rockslide in Quebec City, September 19, 1889

  • August 1 – Alexander Davie, Premier of British Columbia, dies in office.
  • August 2 – John Robson becomes premier of British Columbia.
  • August 12 – The Canada (Ontario Boundary) Act, 1889 of the British Parliament expands Ontario's boundaries west to the Lake of the Woods and north to the Albany River.
  • September 19 – A rockslide in Quebec City kills 45
  • November – Neil McLeod becomes premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing Sir William Wilfred Sullivan.
  • November 6 – Newfoundland election: William Whiteway's Liberals win a majority, defeating Robert Thorburn's Reforms

Full date unknown

  • The Dominion Women Enfranchisement Association is created to campaign for women's right to vote

Births

  • February 27 – Samuel Bronfman, businessman (d.1971)
  • May 16 – Morris Gray, politician (d.1966)
  • August 13 – Camillien Houde, politician and four-time mayor of Montreal (d.1958)
  • October 13 – Douglass Dumbrille, actor (d.1974)
  • November 20 – John B. McNair, lawyer, politician, judge and 22nd Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick (d.1968)
  • December 4 – Leslie Gordon Bell, politician and lawyer (d.1963)

Deaths

  • April 9 – Andrew Charles Elliott, jurist, politician and 4th Premier of British Columbia (b. c1828)
  • May 4 – A. B. Rogers, surveyor (b.1829)
  • June 5 – John Hamilton Gray, Premier of New Brunswick (b.1814)
  • July 5 – John Norquay, politician and 5th Premier of Manitoba (b.1841)
  • August 1 – Alexander Edmund Batson Davie, politician and 7th Premier of British Columbia (b.1847)
  • September 5 – Louis-Victor Sicotte, lawyer, judge and politician (b.1812)
  • September 13 – Henry Joseph Clarke, lawyer, politician and 3rd Premier of Manitoba (b.1833)
  • October 28 – Alexander Morris, politician, Minister and 2nd Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba (b.1826)

Full date unknown

  • Edwin Randolph Oakes, politician (b.1818)

References