1926 in Canada
Events from the year 1926 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
- Monarch – George V
Federal government
- Governor general – Julian Byng then Freeman Freeman-Thomas
- Prime minister – William Lyon Mackenzie King then Arthur Meighen then William Lyon Mackenzie King
- Chief Justice – Francis Alexander Anglin
- Parliament – 15th then 16th
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – William Egbert
- Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Walter Cameron Nichol then Robert Randolph Bruce
- Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – James Albert Manning Aikins then Theodore Arthur Burrows
- Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – William Frederick Todd
- Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – James Cranswick Tory
- Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Henry Cockshutt
- Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Frank Richard Heartz
- Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Narcisse Pérodeau
- Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Henry William Newlands
Premiers
- Premier of Alberta – John Edward Brownlee
- Premier of British Columbia – John Oliver
- 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 – James D. Stewart
- Premier of Quebec – Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
- Premier of Saskatchewan – Charles Avery Dunning then James Garfield Gardiner
Territorial governments
Commissioners
- Gold Commissioner of Yukon – Percy Reid
- Commissioner of Northwest Territories – William Wallace Cory
Events
- February 24 – Robert Randolph Bruce becomes British Columbia's 13th Lieutenant Governor
- February 26 – James Garfield Gardiner becomes premier of Saskatchewan, replacing Charles Dunning
- June 24 – Monument aux Patriotes, Montreal unveiled
- June 28 – The King-Byng Affair climaxes as William Lyon Mackenzie King resigns as prime minister. Arthur Meighen becomes prime minister for the second time, but an election is forced when Meighen fails to win the confidence of the House.
- June 28 – 1926 Alberta general election: John Brownlee's United Farmers of Alberta win a second consecutive majority
- July 1 – Canada moves back onto the gold standard
- September 14 – Federal election: the coalition of Mackenzie King's Liberals and the Liberal-Progressives win a majority, defeating Arthur Meighen's Conservatives
- September 25 – Mackenzie King becomes prime minister for the second time, replacing Arthur Meighen
- November 18 – British Dominions given official autonomy in the Balfour Declaration of 1926
- December 1 – Ontario election: Howard Ferguson's Conservatives win a second consecutive majority
Full date unknown
- The Royal Canadian Mounted Police establish a base on Ellesmere Island as a proof of Canadian sovereignty.
- The Saskatchewan Grain Growers Association amalgamates with the Farmers' Union of Canada to create the United Farmers of Canada.
Sport
- March 26 – The Calgary City Junior Hockey League's Calgary Canadians win their only Memorial Cup by defeating the Ontario Hockey Association's Queen's University 2 game to 1. All games were held at Shea's Amphitheatre in Winnipeg
- April 6 – The National Hockey League's Montreal Maroons win their only Stanley Cup by defeating the Western Hockey League Victoria Cougars 3 games to 1. This was the last time a non-NHL team would contest for the Cup. The deciding game was played at the Montreal Forum
- December 4 – The Ottawa Senators win their second Grey Cup by defeating the Toronto Varsity Blues 10 to 7 in the 14th Grey Cup played at Varsity Stadium
Arts and literature
Births
January to June
- January 2 – John Stroppa, football player
- January 3 – Murray Dowey, ice hockey goaltender
- January 4 – Betty Kennedy, broadcaster, journalist, author, Senator and gameshow panelist
- January 20 – John Michael Sherlock, Roman Catholic bishop
- January 26 – Georges-C. Lachance, politician and father of Claude-André Lachance
- February 4 – Roger Blais, engineer and academic
- February 6 – Ray Perrault, politician
- February 11 – Leslie Nielsen, comedian and actor
- February 20 – Jean Boucher, politician
- April 1 – Gérard La Forest, lawyer and judge
- April 17 – Gerry McNeil, ice hockey player
- April 21
- *Keith Davey, businessman and politician
- *Princess Elizabeth of York
- April 28 – Alex Oakley, race walker
- May 3 – Matt Baldwin, curler
- May 13 – Joy Coghill, actress, director, and writer
- May 20 – Allan McEachern, lawyer, judge and university chancellor
- May 26 – Phyllis Gotlieb, science fiction novelist and poet
- June 3 – Flora MacDonald, politician
- June 7 – Jean-Noël Tremblay, lawyer and politician
July to December
- July 14 – Wallace Diestelmeyer, figure skater
- July 18 – Margaret Laurence, novelist and short story writer
- July 21 – Norman Jewison, film director, producer, actor and founder of the Canadian Film Centre
- July 22 – Paul Collins, long-distance runner
- August 13 – Dalton McGuinty Senior, politician and father of premier of Ontario Dalton McGuinty and the politician David McGuinty
- August 18 – Gordon Donaldson, author and journalist
- September 1 – James Reaney, poet, playwright and literary critic
- September 27 – Jack Duffy, actor and comedian
- October 1 – Ben Wicks, cartoonist, illustrator, journalist and author
- October 26 – George Crum, conductor, pianist, vocal coach and musical arranger
- November 9 – Mary Louise Morrison, soprano
- December 3 – Denise Morelle, actress and murder victim
Full date unknown
- Daniel McCarthy, television producer
Deaths
- January 31 – Paul Tourigny, politician
- February 2 – John Alexander Macdonald Armstrong, politician
- February 20 – Paul-Eugène Roy, Roman Catholic priest, and Archbishop of Quebec
- March 27 – Georges Vézina, ice hockey player
- June 23 – Nérée Le Noblet Duplessis, politician, 19th Mayor of Trois-Rivières and father of 16th Premier of Quebec Maurice Duplessis
- August 24 – Laurent-Olivier David, journalist, lawyer, and politician
Historical Documents
King profoundly relieved that Byng took Meighen's advice to dissolve, "deliver himself so completely into my hands"
British government recognizes Canada's need of direct diplomatic relations with U.S.A.
Canada posts its first diplomatic representative in Washington
Exile-weary anarchist Emma Goldman hopes Canada will let her stay
Touching letter to stranger follows visit to her brother's grave in France
English immigrant loves slush-free winters and long summer days in Dawson City, Yukon
Instructions for bleaching out suntan