1885_in_Canada

1885 in Canada

1885 in Canada

Canada-related events during the year of 1885


Events from the year 1885 in Canada.

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Incumbents

Crown

Federal government

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

Premiers

Territorial governments

Lieutenant governors

Events

Full date unknown

  • Banff Hot Springs Reserve is established. It will be renamed Rocky Mountains Park in 1887  the first national park in Canada  and then Banff National Park in 1930.
  • Canada outlaws the potlatch ceremony among Northwest Coast tribes. The law, often ignored, is repealed in 1951.

Births

Gordon Daniel Conant

January to June

July to December

Deaths

Historical documents

Account of battle at Duck Lake[2]

Account of battle at Cut Knife Hill[3]

Two settler women travel with Chief Big Bear's Cree band after Frog Lake Massacre[4]

Accounts of battle at Batoche[5]

Opposition Leader Edward Blake's speeches on fighting in Northwest [6]

Convicted of treason, Chief Big Bear pleads for relief of his people[7]

Louis Riel's statement at his trial[8]

Report of psychiatric physician who visited Louis Riel in prison[9]

Newspaper report of Louis Riel's execution[10]

Air clears when women vote in Ontario municipal election[11]

J.A. Macdonald says "while the crosses of the Aryan races are successful[, they] will not wholesomely amalgamate with the Africans or the Asiatics"[12]

"A disgrace to humanity" - Citing emancipation of Blacks and Catholics, senator objects to restrictions on Chinese immigrants[13]

Montrealers' resistance to vaccination during smallpox outbreak turns to rioting [14]

Illustration: vaccinating passengers against smallpox on train to U.S.A.[15]

Photo: Sitting Bull, while on visit to Montreal with Buffalo Bill's Wild West show[16]


References

  1. "Queen Victoria | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  2. Transcription of Wm. Laurie article Saskatchewan Herald (April 23, 1885). Accessed 8 October 2019 (See also photo “'Sewing Up the Dead': Preparation of North-West Field Force Casualties for Burial" (April 25, 1885))
  3. Transcription of article Saskatchewan Herald (May 11, 1885). Accessed 8 October 2019
  4. Theresa Gowanlock and Theresa Fulford, Two Months in the Camp of Big Bear(...) (1885). Accessed 8 October 2019
  5. Lewis Redman Ord, Reminiscences of a Bungle (1887), pgs. 29-32 and Moses Bremner's Statement (1886) and Canada; Department of Militia and Defence, Report upon the Suppression of the Rebellion in the North-West Territories[...] (1886), pgs. 27-33. Accessed 8 October 2019
  6. William Bleasdell Cameron, Blood Red the Sun (1950), pgs. 196-9. Accessed 8 October 2019
  7. The Queen vs. Louis Riel[...] (1886), pgs. 147-54. Accessed 9 October 2019
  8. Daniel Clark, A Psycho-Medical History of Louis Riel (1887), pgs. 10-13. Accessed 9 October 2019
  9. "Riel Executed; He Dies Without A Speech; A Sane And Beautiful Death" Regina Leader (November 19, 1885), pg. 4. Accessed 9 October 2019
  10. Letitia Youmans, Campaign Echoes: The Autobiography of Letitia Youmans; Second Edition (1893), pgs. 206-9. Accessed 8 October 2019
  11. John A. Macdonald, "The Franchise Bill" (May 4, 1885), Official Report of the Debates of the House of Commons[....], pg. 1589 Accessed 2 July 2023
  12. William J. Almon, "Chinese Immigration; An Explanation" (July 18, 1885), Debates of the Senate of the Dominion of Canada; 1885, pgs. 1411-12 Accessed 2 July 2023
  13. Mde Morel de la Durantaye, A Brief History of the Small Pox Epidemic in Montreal(...) (1886). Accessed 8 October 2019
  14. James Marvin, "Canada - the recent smallpox epidemic in Montreal - vaccinating American-bound passengers on a train[....]" Accessed 25 December 2020 https://digital.library.mcgill.ca/oslerprints/search-results.php?s=Vaccination (click on "The recent smallpox epidemic" thumbnail)
  15. William Notman & Son, "Sitting Bull" (1885), McCord Museum. Accessed 18 May 2022

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