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Governor General – Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon
Prime Minister – William Lyon Mackenzie King
Chief Justice – Francis Alexander Anglin (Ontario)
Parliament – 16th
Provincial governments
[edit]
Lieutenant governors
[edit]
Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – William Egbert
Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Robert Randolph Bruce
Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Theodore Arthur Burrows
Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – William Frederick Todd (until December 28) then Hugh Havelock McLean
Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – James Cranswick Tory
Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – William Donald Ross
Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Frank Richard Heartz
Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Narcisse Pérodeau (until December 31) then Lomer Gouin
Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Henry William Newlands
Premiers
[edit]
Premier of Alberta – John Edward Brownlee
Premier of British Columbia – John Duncan MacLean (until August 21) then Simon Fraser Tolmie
Premier of Manitoba – John Bracken
Premier of New Brunswick – John Baxter
Premier of Nova Scotia – Edgar Nelson Rhodes
Premier of Ontario – George Howard Ferguson
Premier of Prince Edward Island – Albert Charles Saunders
Premier of Quebec – Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
Premier of Saskatchewan – James Garfield Gardiner
Territorial governments
[edit]
Commissioners
[edit]
Gold Commissioner of Yukon – George A. Jeckell (until April 1) then George Ian MacLean
Commissioner of Northwest Territories – William Wallace Cory
Events
[edit]
April 2 – Camillien Houde elected mayor of Montreal
April 24 – The Supreme Court of Canada rules that women are not persons who can hold office according to the British North America Act, 1867—reversed a year later by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Britain
May 7 – The St. Roch is launched. It would become the first ship to sail the Northwest Passage from west to east and to circumnavigate North America.
May 31 – The Legislative Council of Nova Scotia is abolished
July 4 – Jean Lussier goes over Niagara Falls in a rubber ball.
August 20 – John Duncan MacLean resigns as premier of British Columbia
August 21 – Simon Fraser Tolmie becomes premier of British Columbia, replacing John Duncan MacLean
August 25 – Canada's first major air disaster occurred when bad weather caused a BC Airways Ford Trimotor plane to crash in Puget Sound, Washington[2]
Science and technology
[edit]
Frank Morse Robb of Ontario obtains a patent for the first Electronic Organ, the Robb Wave Organ.
Sports
[edit]
The Winter Olympics take place in St. Moritz, Switzerland. The University of Toronto Grads won a gold medal in ice hockey.
The Summer Olympics take place in Amsterdam. Percy Williams and Ethel Catherwood won gold medals for Canada.
March 26 – The South Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League's Regina Pats win their second Memorial Cup by defeating the Ottawa City Junior Hockey League's Ottawa Gunners 2 game to 1. The deciding Game 3 was played Arenas Garden in Toronto
December 1 – The Hamilton Tigers win their third Grey cup by shutting out the Regina Roughriders 30 to 0 in the 16th Grey Cup played at A.A.A Grounds in Hamilton
Births
[edit]
January to March
[edit]
January 2
Avie Bennett, businessman and philanthropist (d. 2017)
Allen Sapp, painter (d. 2015)
January 7 – Benny Woit, ice hockey player (d. 2016)
January 20 – Peter Donat, actor (d. 2018)
January 25 – Jérôme Choquette, lawyer and politician (d. 2017)
February 8 – Gene Lees, biographer and lyricist (d. 2010)
February 13 – Gerald Regan, politician, Minister and Premier of Nova Scotia (d. 2019)
February 16 – Les Costello, ice hockey player and Catholic priest (d. 2002)
February 26 – Donald Davis, actor (d. 1998)
March 3 – Diane Foster, athlete (d. 1999)
March 9 – Gerald Bull, engineer and artillery designer (d. 1990)
March 10 – Robert Coates, politician and minister (d. 2016)
March 12 – Thérèse Lavoie-Roux, politician and senator (d. 2009)
March 13 – Douglas Rain, actor and narrator (d. 2018)
March 17
André Chagnon, businessman and philanthropist (d. 2022)
William John McKeag, politician and Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba (d. 2007)
March 20 – James K. Irving, businessman (d. 2024)
March 31 – Gordie Howe, ice hockey player (d. 2016)
April to June
[edit]
April 10
Kenneth Earl Hurlburt, politician (d. 2016)
Fraser MacPherson, jazz musician (d. 1993)
April 17 – Fabien Roy, politician
April 28 – Zbigniew Basinski, physicist
April 30 – Hugh Hood, novelist, short story writer, essayist and university professor (d. 2000)
May 4 – Maynard Ferguson, jazz trumpet player and bandleader (d. 2006)
May 7 – Bruno Gerussi, actor and television presenter (d. 1995)
May 9 – Barbara Ann Scott, figure skater and Olympic gold medalist (d. 2012)
May 23
Pauline Julien, singer, songwriter, actress and feminist activist (d. 1998)[3]
Sidney Spivak, politician and Minister (d. 2002)
June 1 – Larry Zeidel, Canadian-American ice hockey player and sportscaster (d. 2014)
June 2 – George Wearring, basketball player (d. 2013)
June 13 – Renée Morisset, pianist (d. 2009)
June 25 – Michel Brault, cinematographer, cameraman, film director, screenwriter and producer (d. 2013)
June 26 – Samuel Belzberg, businessman, philanthropist (d. 2018)
July to December
[edit]
July 3 – Raymond Setlakwe, entrepreneur, lawyer and politician (d. 2021)
July 7 – Tom Chambers, politician (d. 2018)
July 12 – Paul Ronty, ice hockey centre (d. 2020)
July 17 – Robert Nixon, politician
July 21 – Anne Harris, sculptor
July 22 – Hugh Edighoffer, politician (d. 2019)
July 23 – Irving Grundman, ice hockey executive and politician (d. 2021)
July 26 – Peter Lougheed, lawyer and politician (d. 2012)
July 28 – Ann Sloat, politician (d. 2017)
July 31 – Gilles Carle, film director and screenwriter (d. 2009)
August 7 – James Randi, stage magician and scientific skeptic (d. 2020 in the United States)
September 10
Roch Bolduc, civil servant, politician
Jean Vanier, founder of L'Arche (d. 2019)
September 20 – Jacqueline Desmarais, billionaire philanthropist (d. 2018)[4]
October 1 – Jim Pattison, businessman
October 7 – Raymond Lévesque, singer-songwriter (d. 2021)
October 9 – Clare Drake, ice hockey coach (d. 2018)
October 27 – Gilles Vigneault, poet, publisher and singer-songwriter
November 3 – Gary Lautens, humorist and newspaper columnist (d. 1992)
November 16 – David Adams, ballet dancer (d. 2007)
November 20 – Toni Onley, painter (d. 2004)
November 28 – Floyd Crawford, ice hockey player (d. 2017)
December 10 – Michael Snow, artist (d. 2023)
December 12 – Lionel Blair, dancer and entertainer (d. 2021 in the United Kingdom)
December 16 – Roy Bailey, politician (d. 2018)
December 21 – Clayton Kenny, boxer (d. 2015)
December 24 – Adam Exner, Roman Catholic archbishop (d. 2023)[5]
December 28 – Moe Koffman, flautist and saxophonist (d. 2001)
December 29
Robert Hylton Brisco, politician (d. 2004)
Norman Cafik, politician (d. 2016)
Full date unknown
[edit]
Peter Bronfman, businessman (d. 1996)
Deaths
[edit]
April 6 – Godfroy Langlois, politician, journalist and lawyer (b. 1866)
April 28 – George Gerald King, politician (b. 1836)
See also
[edit]
List of Canadian films
Historical documents
[edit]
Supreme Court's negative decision on whether women can be appointed to Senate[6]
Emily Murphy leads Famous Five in response to Supreme Court decision against women entering Senate[7]
Influenza epidemic among Northwest Territories Indigenous people "spread[s] like wildfire" from Mackenzie delta to northern Alberta[8]
MP Agnes Macphail calls for federal department of peace because people lack "confidence in war or in preparedness for war"[9]
Guide to social hygiene combines public health and eugenics[10]
Manitoba MLA explains trials of unemployment for single men and new immigrants, especially after crop failure in her province[11]
Statements and petition from Quebec call on government to give settling "sons of our large families" priority over immigrants[12]
M.J. Coldwell would prioritize settling "those who through[...]damage to crops and mortgage companies had gone to the wall"[13]
Anglican bishop of Saskatchewan calls immigration "the foreignization of Canada [with the] aggression of the Church of Rome"[14]
Backing "Protestantism, Racial Purity, Gentile Economic Freedom" etc., KKK constitution adopted by Imperial Kloncilium in Regina[15]
Film clip: Brief segment of film on Coast Salish people shows Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish) master weaver Skwetsiya (Mrs. Harriet Johnnie) making hat[16]
"Transportation lines[...]have placed thousands [of] unspoiled and little frequented [...]fishing grounds within easy reach of [cities]"[17]
Photographer Ansel Adams and other Sierra Club members' first experience of Canadian Rockies[18]
^"No. 9; In the Supreme Court of Canada" (April 24, 1928), In the Privy Council; No. 121 of 1928; On Appeal from the Supreme Court of Canada[....], pgs. 38-9. Accessed 14 May 2020
^Nellie L. McClung, The Stream Runs Fast; My Own Story (1945), pgs. 187-8. Accessed 14 May 2020
^Testimony of Edith Rogers (April 19, 1928), [House] Select Standing Committee on Industrial and International Relations [on] the question of Insurance against Unemployment, Sickness and Invalidity, pgs. 41-4. Accessed 21 October 2020
^"Productions" [House] Select Standing Committee on Agriculture and Colonization; Minutes of Proceedings and Evidence, pgs. 813-18. Accessed 21 October 2020
^"Traffic in Immigration Permits by Members of Federal House Alleged" The (Regina) Leader (November 24, 1927), read into record during testimony of M.J. Coldwell (May 15, 1928), [House] Select Standing Committee on Agriculture and Colonization, pg. 678. Accessed 21 October 2020