1920 in Canada

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

1920
in
Canada

Decades:
See also:

Events from the year 1920 in Canada.

Incumbents

Crown

Federal government

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

Premiers

Territorial governments

Commissioners

Events

The Capitol Cinema in Ottawa opens on November 8

Date unknown

  • Esther Marjorie Hill (1895–1985) becomes the first female architect in Canada when she graduates from the University of Toronto
    .

Arts and literature

Sport

1920 Olympics

Births

January to March

James Doohan, 1997

April to June

July to December

Deaths

January to June

July to December

See also

Historical documents

Guide to improving your community by understanding its needs and resources [10]

Funding is "not sufficient to meet our needs in buying food," and Indian residential school lacks enough garden space to make up for it[11]

TB patient must follow sanatorium stay with home treatment and lifestyle change, including "winter living out of doors"[12]

Anti-vaccination group seeks "judicial recognition [that] every freeman owns his own body"[13]

Professor calls for better obstetrics training to lower high rate of injury to mothers[14]

School improvements in Nova Scotia include hot lunches, stove polish and pencil sharpeners[15]

Advocacy magazine says present civil servant compensation amounts to economic slavery[16]

Wood Gundy co-founder insists on Christianity in global business[17]

Nellie McClung wants newspaper articles about "heroism, generosity, neighborly kindness" more than crime stories[18]

Stepmother of murdered child is sentenced to death[19]

Disposition, care and management of general purpose Canadian horse breed known for its endurance[20]

Witness before Senate committee on Hudson Bay envisions 50 million domestic reindeer on northern pasture, and muskox ranching too[21]

Lawrence Lambe finds Hadrosaur fossil "Edmontosaurus" in good condition near Red Deer River, Alberta[22]

References

  1. ^ "King George V | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Historically Relevant Dates to the RCMP". Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Archived from the original on 2014-06-14. Retrieved 2018-02-12.
  3. ^ Indian Act
  4. ^ Dominion Elections Act Statues of Canada C 46 S 38.
  5. ^ "The History of Metropolitan Vancouver - 1920 Chronology".
  6. ^ 1920
  7. ^ http://www.sportshall.ca/accessible/hm_profile.php?i=318[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Dr Lou Siminovitch". Prix Siminovitch. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
  9. ^ "Hometown Hero - Qapik Attagutsiak, Arctic Bay, Nunavut". Parks Canada. 27 January 2020. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
  10. ^ The Citizens' Research Institute of Canada, Community Engineering (1920). Accessed 10 April 2020
  11. ^ Letter of John T. Ross (July 21, 1920), National Archives of Canada, in Denise Hildebrand, Staff Perspectives of the Aboriginal Residential School Experience: A Study of Four Presbyterian Schools, 1888-1923 pg. 160. Accessed 10 June 2021
  12. ^ "Proceedings and Minutes of Evidence" (April 22, 1920), Pensions, Insurance and Re-Establishment; Proceedings of the [House] Special Committee[....], pgs. 141-2. Accessed 15 October 2020
  13. ^ Correspondence relating to An Appeal to the Imperial Authorities by The People's Anti-Vaccination and Medical Freedom League of B.C. Accessed 6 June 2021
  14. PMID 20312355
    .
  15. ^ "School Improvement". Journal of Education. 6 (5): 41. January 20, 1920.
  16. ^ "Economic Slavery" The Civilian, Vol. XIII, No. 12 (November 1920), pg. 1. Accessed 10 April 2020
  17. ^ "The Forward Movement" The Empire Club of Canada Addresses, pgs. 20-35. Accessed 9 April 2020
  18. ^ Nellie L. McClung, "The Newspaper of the Future" The Western Home Monthly (December 1920), pg. 3. Accessed 10 April 2020
  19. ^ "La justice humaine venge l'enfant martyre" (translated), La Presse (April 22, 1920), pg. 1. Accessed 6 April 2020
  20. ^ Gus. Langelier, The French-Canadian Horse Department of Agriculture Dominion Experimental Farms, Bulletin No. 95, Regular Series (1920). Accessed 10 April 2020
  21. ^ "Extract from the Evidence of Mr. V. Stefansson, Arctic Explorer" Report of the Special Committee[...]on the Navigability and Fishery Resources of Hudson Bay and Strait (June 4, 1920), pgs. 33-4. Accessed 5 October 2020
  22. ^ Lawrence M. Lambe, "The Hadrosaur Edmontosaurus from the Upper Cretaceous of Alberta" Department of Mines - Canada, Geological Survey, No. 102, Geological Series (1920). Accessed 10 April 2020