This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "1857 in Canada" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
| |||||
Decades: | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
See also: |
Part of a series on the |
History of Canada |
---|
Benjamin West's The Death of General Wolfe
|
Timeline (list) |
Significant |
Topics |
Provinces |
Cities |
Research |
Events from the year 1857 in Canada.
Incumbents
- Monarch — Victoria
Federal government
Governors
- Governor General of the Province of Canada — Edmund Walker Head
- Colonial Governor of Newfoundland — Charles Henry Darling
- Governor of New Brunswick — John Manners-Sutton
- Governor of Nova Scotia — John Gaspard Le Marchant
- Governor of Prince Edward Island — Dominick Daly
Premiers
- Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada —
- ], Canada West Premier
- ], Canada East Premier
- ],
- Premier of Newfoundland — Philip Francis Little
- Premier of New Brunswick — Charles Fisher
- Premier of Nova Scotia — William Young
- Premier of Prince Edward Island — John Holl
Events
- March 12 — Desjardins Canal disaster - The bridge over Desjardins Canal, near Hamilton, Canada West, collapses under a Great Western Railway passenger train. About 60 people die.
- Grand Trunk Railway (Windsor-Montreal) completed, but $7 million in debt.
- December 31 - Queen Victoria names Ottawa as capital of the Province of Canada.
- The Palliser Expedition begins its exploration of Western Canada.
Births
January to June
- February 2 — Alexander Cameron Rutherford, lawyer and politician, first premier of Alberta (died 1941)
- February 25 — Robert Bond, politician and Prime Minister of Newfoundland (died 1927)
- February 27 — Adelaide Hoodless, educational reformer who founded the Women's Institute (died 1910)
- March 17 — Willis Keith Baldwin, politician (died 1935)
- June 20 — Adam Beck, politician and hydro-electricity advocate (died 1925)
July to December
- July 27 — Ann Stowe-Gullen, doctor
- August 15 — Theodore Arthur Burrows, politician and Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba (died 1929)
- August 15 — John Strathearn Hendrie, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario (died 1923)
- September 12 — George Halsey Perley, politician and diplomat (died 1938)
- October 10 — Cassie Chadwick, fraudster (died 1907)
- October 10 — George Johnson Clarke, lawyer, journalist, politician and 14th Premier of New Brunswick (died 1917)
- November 25 — Frederick W. A. G. Haultain, politician and 1st Premier of the Northwest Territories (died 1942)
Deaths
- February 10 — David Thompson, fur trader, surveyor and map-maker (born 1770)
- March 13 — William Amherst, 1st Earl Amherst, diplomat and governor general (born 1773)
- September 3 — John McLoughlin, physician, fur trader, and merchant (born 1784)
- November 3 — William Fitzwilliam Owen, naval officer, hydrographic surveyor (born 1774)
Full date unknown
- Isabella Clark, first wife of John A. Macdonald, premier of the Province of Canada (born 1811)
References
- "Queen Victoria | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
- "Desjardins Canal Disaster". HPL. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
- Powell, James. "Queen Victoria Chooses Ottawa - The Historical Society of Ottawa". www.historicalsocietyottawa.ca. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
- Spry, Irene M. (1973). The Palliser expedition : an account of John Palliser's British North American exploring expedition, 1857-1860. Toronto: Macmillan Co. of Canada. ISBN 978-0-7705-0287-4. OCLC 15831858.
History of Canada | |
---|---|
Year list (Timeline) | |
Topics | |
Provinces and territories | |
Cities | |
Research | |
1857 in North America | |
---|---|
Sovereign states | |
Dependencies and other territories |