1880 in Canada

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1880
in
Canada

Decades:
See also:

Events from the year 1880 in Canada.

Incumbents[edit]

Crown[edit]

Federal government[edit]

Provincial governments[edit]

Lieutenant governors[edit]

Premiers[edit]

Territorial governments[edit]

Lieutenant governors[edit]

Events[edit]

Full date unknown[edit]

Arts and literature[edit]

New books[edit]

Births[edit]

Deaths[edit]

Historical documents[edit]

Statute creates Canadian Pacific Railway as government-supported private company for benefit of B.C. and N.W.T.[2]

Chief Ocean Man and another Nakoda (Stoney) describe attack on their people by Gros Ventre and Mandan from U.S. side of border[3]

British order-in-council transfers Arctic islands to Dominion of Canada [4]

Editorial on complaints of French-Canadians[5]

Walt Whitman calls Thousand Islands most beautiful place on Earth[6]

To avoid bankruptcy caused by westward expansion, Canada must declare independence[7]

Britain gifts part of HMS Resolute to U.S. for saving that Arctic exploration ship [8]

Painting: Trapper approaches animal caught in leghold trap[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Queen Victoria | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  2. ^ An Act Respecting the Canadian Pacific Railway Accessed 14 October 2019
  3. ^ "No. 343; (letter of) Sir Edward Thornton to Mr. (Wm. M.) Evarts(, Department of State, Washington)" Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States[....] (1882), pgs. 570-72. Accessed 8 December 2019 Subsequent correspondence
  4. ^ Gordon W. Smith, "The Transfer of Arctic Territories from Great Britain to Canada(...)" Journal of the Arctic Institute of North America, Vol. 14, No. 1 (1961), pgs. 62-3. Accessed 14 October 2019
  5. ^ "A Morbid Nationalism" Canadian Illustrated News (November 11, 1880), pg. 2. Accessed 27 September 2019
  6. ^ Walt Whitman's Diary in Canada (1904), pgs. 24-5. Accessed 27 September 2019
  7. ^ William Norris, "Canadian Nationality; A Present-Day Plea" Rose-Belford's Canadian Monthly and National Review (February 1880), pgs. 113-18. Accessed 23 April 2020
  8. ^ United States Department of State, Index to the Executive Documents of the House of Representatives for the Third Session of the Forty-Sixth Congress, 1880-'81 (No. 354, August 26, 1880), pg. 525. Accessed 27 September 2019
  9. ^ Harry Bullock-Webster, "Got 'im at last; Fort McLeod 1880" (Fort McLeod, B.C.). Accessed 27 June 2021