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Events from the year 1915 in Canada.

Incumbents

Crown

  • Monarch – George V

Federal government

  • Governor General – Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn
  • Prime Minister – Robert Borden
  • Chief Justice – Charles Fitzpatrick (Quebec)
  • Parliament – 12th

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – George H. V. Bulyea (until October 20) then Robert Brett
  • Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Francis Stillman Barnard
  • Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Douglas Colin Cameron
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Josiah Wood
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – James Drummond McGregor (until October 19) then David MacKeen
  • Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – John Strathearn Hendrie
  • Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Benjamin Rogers (until June 3) then Augustine Colin Macdonald
  • Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – François Langelier (until February 8) then Pierre-Évariste Leblanc
  • Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – George W. Brown (until October 6) then Richard Stuart Lake

Premiers

  • Premier of Alberta – Arthur Sifton
  • Premier of British Columbia – Richard McBride (until December 15) then William John Bowser
  • Premier of Manitoba – Rodmond Roblin (until May 12) then Tobias Norris
  • Premier of New Brunswick – George Johnson Clarke
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – George Henry Murray
  • Premier of Ontario – William Hearst
  • Premier of Prince Edward Island – John Alexander Mathieson
  • Premier of Quebec – Lomer Gouin
  • Premier of Saskatchewan – Thomas Walter Scott

Territorial governments

Commissioners

  • Commissioner of Yukon – George Black
  • Gold Commissioner of Yukon – George P. MacKenzie
  • Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Frederick D. White

Events

  • January 4 – WWI: Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry becomes the first Canadian troops sent to the front lines
  • January 15 – The Canadian Northern Railway line to Vancouver, British Columbia, is completed
  • February 2 – WW1: Attempt to bomb the Vanceboro international bridge between the Canadian-US border by a German spy
  • February 4 – WW1: After a training accident, Lieutenant W. F. Sharpe becomes the first Canadian military airman killed
  • February 14 – WW1: The 1st Canadian Division arrives in France
  • February 21 – Nellie McClung presents a petition to the Alberta Legislature demanding women's suffrage
  • February 28 – WWI: Canadian troops launch the first trench raid of the war; by the end of the conflict Canadian troops will be regarded as the experts at this manoeuvre
  • April 22 – WWI: In the Second Battle of Ypres Canadian forces bear the brunt of the first large-scale chemical weapons attack on the Western Front. They devise makeshift gas masks of urine-soaked rags and hold their ground
  • May 3 – "In Flanders Fields" is written by Canadian poet John McCrae.
  • May 12 – Tobias Norris becomes premier of Manitoba, replacing Sir Rodmond Roblin
  • July 5 – The Hotel Macdonald in Edmonton opens
  • August 6 – Manitoba General Election
  • September 13 – WWI: with the arrival of the 2nd Canadian Division a separate Canadian Corps is created
  • October 9 – WWI: The 3rd Canadian Division arrives in France
  • December 15 – William John Bowser becomes premier of British Columbia, replacing Richard McBride
  • December 19 – WW1: Captain M.M. Bell-Irving, No.1 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps, achieves the first aerial victory by a Canadian when he shot down a German aircraft

Full date unknown

  • Fermière Monument (Montreal) unveiled
  • World War I – Many Canadian soldiers grow upset at the inferior quality of their Ross Rifles

Arts and literature

New works

  • "In Flanders Fields": John McCrae
  • The Golden Road: Lucy Maud Montgomery

Sport

  • March 26 – The Pacific Coast Hockey Association's Vancouver Millionaires win their first and only Stanley Cup by defeating the National Hockey Association's Ottawa Senators 3 games to 0. All games played at Vancouver's Denman Arena
  • November 20 – The Hamilton Tigers win their 2nd Grey Cup by defeating the Toronto Rugby and Athletic Association 13 to 7 in the 7th Grey Cup played at Toronto's Varsity Stadium

Births

January to June

  • January 12 – Joseph-Aurèle Plourde, Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Ottawa (19671989) (d.2013)
  • January 18 – Syl Apps, pole vaulter and ice hockey player (d.1998)

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  • February 12 – Lorne Greene, actor (d.1987)
  • March 10 – Maurice Camyré, Olympic boxer (d.2013)
  • March 18 – Harold Crowchild, Tsuu T'ina elder and soldier, last Treaty 7 World War II veteran (d.2013)
  • April 9 – Daniel Johnson, Sr., politician and 20th Premier of Quebec (d.1968)
  • April 11 – Eddie Sargent, politician (d.1998)
  • April 28 – Robina Higgins, track and field athlete (d.1990)
  • May 3 – Stu Hart, wrestler, promoter and trainer (d.2003)
  • May 28
  • Conrad Bourcier, ice hockey player (d.1987)
  • Frank Pickersgill, World War II hero (d.1944)
  • June 22 – Arthur Gelber, philanthropist (d.1998)

July to December

  • July 4 – Harold E. Johns, medical physicist (d.1998)
  • July 6 – Leonard Birchall, World War II hero (d.2004)
  • August 3 – Frank Arthur Calder, politician, first Status Indian to be elected to any legislature in Canada (d.2006)
  • August 20 – H. Gordon Barrett, politician (d.1993)
  • August 22
  • James Hillier, scientist and inventor, jointly designed and built first electron microscope (d.2007)
  • Jacques Flynn, politician and Senator (d.2000)
  • August 25 – John W. H. Bassett, publisher and media baron (d.1998)
  • October 7
  • Harry J. Boyle, broadcaster and writer (d.2005)
  • Charles Templeton, cartoonist, evangelist, agnostic, politician, newspaper editor, inventor, broadcaster and author (d.2001)
  • October 25 – Tommy Prince, one of Canada's most decorated First Nations soldiers (d.1977)
  • November 27 – Yves Thériault, author (d.1983)
  • December 4 – Johnny Lombardi, CHIN-TV television personality (d.2002)
  • December 13 – Ross Macdonald, novelist (d.1983)

Full date unknown

  • Arthur Julian Andrew, diplomat and author (d.1994)
  • Earl Cameron, broadcaster and news anchor (d.2005)
  • Percy Saltzman, meteorologist and television personality, first weatherman in English-Canadian television history (d.2007)

Deaths

  • January 18 – Thomas Bain, politician and Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada (b. 1834)

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  • May 16 – Kit Coleman, journalist (b. 1864)
  • June 14 – Antoine Audet, politician (b. 1846)
  • July 21 – Jean Prévost, politician (b. 1870)
  • July 22 – Sandford Fleming, engineer and inventor (b. 1827)
  • August 10 – William Mortimer Clark, lawyer, politician and Lieutenant Governor of Ontario (b. 1836)
  • September 10 – Charles Boucher de Boucherville, politician and 3rd Premier of Quebec (b. 1822)
  • September 11 – William Cornelius Van Horne, pioneering railway executive (b. 1843)
  • September 15 – Ernest Gagnon, folklorist (b. 1834)
  • October 19 – Neil McLeod, lawyer, judge, politician and Premier of Prince Edward Island (b. 1842)
  • October 30 – Charles Tupper, politician, Premier of Nova Scotia and 6th Prime Minister of Canada (b. 1821)
  • December 25 – Graham Fraser (industrialist) (b. 1845)

See also

  • List of Canadian films

References