请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 1979 in Canada
释义

  1. Incumbents

      Crown    Federal government    Provincial governments    Lieutenant governors    Premiers    Territorial governments    Commissioners    Premiers  

  2. Events

     January to June  July to December  Full date unknown 

  3. Arts and literature

     New works  Awards  Television 

  4. Sport

  5. Births

     January to June  July to December 

  6. Deaths

  7. See also

  8. External links

{{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}}{{Year box}}{{History of Canada}}

Events from the year 1979 in Canada.

Incumbents

{{Main|1979 Canadian incumbents}}

Crown

  • Head of state (monarch) – Elizabeth II

Federal government

  • Governor general – Jules Léger (until January 22) then Edward Schreyer
  • Prime minister – Pierre Trudeau (until June 4) then Joe Clark
  • Chief Justice – Bora Laskin (Ontario)
  • Parliament – 30th (until 26 March) then 31st (11 June-14 December)

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – Ralph Steinhauer (until October 18) then Francis Charles Lynch-Staunton
  • Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Henry Pybus Bell-Irving
  • Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Francis Lawrence Jobin
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Hédard Robichaud
  • Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland – Gordon Arnaud Winter
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – John Elvin Shaffner
  • Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Pauline Mills McGibbon
  • Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Gordon Lockhart Bennett
  • Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Jean-Pierre Côté
  • Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Irwin McIntosh

Premiers

  • Premier of Alberta – Peter Lougheed
  • Premier of British Columbia – Bill Bennett
  • Premier of Manitoba – Sterling Lyon
  • Premier of New Brunswick – Richard Hatfield
  • Premier of Newfoundland – Frank Moores (until March 26) then Brian Peckford
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – John Buchanan
  • Premier of Ontario – Bill Davis
  • Premier of Prince Edward Island – Bennett Campbell (until May 3) then Angus MacLean
  • Premier of Quebec – René Lévesque
  • Premier of Saskatchewan – Allan Blakeney

Territorial governments

Commissioners

  • Commissioner of Yukon – Frank Fingland (interim) (until January 20) then Ione Christensen (January 29 to October 6) then Douglas Bell
  • Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Stuart Milton Hodgson (until April 15) then John Havelock Parker

Premiers

  • Premier of Yukon – Chris Pearson

Events

January to June

  • January 17 - Edward Richard Schreyer replaces Jules Léger as Governor General
  • February 1 - The first Winterlude is held in Ottawa
  • February 24 - An explosion rips through Number 26 Colliery located in Glace Bay, Cape Breton killing 12 men.
  • March 14 - Alberta election: Peter Lougheed's PCs win a third consecutive majority
  • March 26 - Brian Peckford becomes premier of Newfoundland, replacing Frank Moores
  • May 3 - Angus MacLean becomes premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing Bennett Campbell
  • May 22 - Canadians go to the polls in the federal election. They defeat Pierre Trudeau's Liberals and elect Joe Clark's PCs, but only with a minority
  • June 4
    • Joe Clark becomes Canada's sixteenth, and youngest ever, prime minister.
    • Flora MacDonald becomes Canada's first female Secretary of State for External Affairs.
  • June 7 - The Sudbury Strike of 1978 ends after nine months.

July to December

  • September 5 - Canada's first gold bullion coin goes on sale
  • November 10 - The 1979 Mississauga train derailment causes the evacuation of hundreds of thousands of people
  • December 13 - Supreme Court declares Quebec and Manitoba's provincial legislatures to be unconstitutional because of their use of only one language.
  • December 13 - The government is defeated on a non-confidence motion and Prime Minister Clark calls an election
  • December 31 - A fire at Le Club Opemiska in Chapais, Quebec, kills 48 at a New Year's Eve party.

Full date unknown

  • Chris Haney and Scott Abbott invent Trivial Pursuit
  • Petro-Canada buys U.S.-controlled Pacific Petroleums
  • The first women enroll in Canadian military colleges
  • Founding of Academy of Canadian Cinema

Arts and literature

New works

  • Irving Layton: The Tightrope Dancer
  • Margaret Atwood: Life Before Man
  • Steve McCaffery: Intimate Distortions
  • Roch Carrier: Les enfants du bonhomme dans la lune
  • Joy Fielding: Trance
  • Gabrielle Roy: Courte-Queue
  • Gordon R. Dickson: The Spirit of Dorsai
  • Farley Mowat: And No Birds Sang

Awards

  • Antonine Maillet wins the French Prix Goncourt for her novel Pélagie-la-Charette
  • See 1979 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
  • Stephen Leacock Award - Sondra Gotlieb, True Confessions
  • Vicky Metcalf Award - Cliff Faulknor

Television

  • Lorne Michaels starts Broadway Video, a company that would go on to produce shows like The Kids in the Hall and Saturday Night Live
  • You Can't Do That On Television premiers

Sport

  • March 18 - Alberta Golden Bears won their Fifth(second consecutive) University Cup by defeating the Dalhousie Tigers 5-1 in Montreal
  • May 13 - Peterborough Petes won their only Memorial Cup by defeating the Brandon Wheat Kings 2 to 1. The Final game was played at Palais des Sports in Sherbrooke, Quebec
  • May 21 - Montreal Canadiens won their Twenty Second(Fourth consecutive) Stanley Cup by defeating the New York Rangers 4 games to 1. The deciding Game 5 was played at the Montreal Forum. Peterborough, Ontario's Bob Gainey was awarded the Conn Smythe
  • June 22 - The World Hockey Association folds. Four teams—the Edmonton Oilers, Winnipeg Jets, Quebec Nordiques, and Hartford Whalers—survive and move to the NHL.
  • September 1 - Pat Patterson won the First World Wrestling Federation Intercontinental Champion
  • September 8 - Vancouver Whitecaps won their only Soccer Bowl by defeating the Tampa Bay Rowdies 2–1 at Soccer Bowl '79 played Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey
  • November 17 - Acadia Axemen won their First Vanier Cup by defeating the Western Ontario Mustangs 34-12 in the 15th Vanier Cup played at Varsity Stadium in Toronto
  • November 25 - Edmonton Eskimos won their Sixth(second consecutive) Grey Cup by defeating the Montreal Alouettes by the score 17 to 9 in the 67th Grey Cup played at Olympic Stadium at Montreal. Vancouver's Don Sweet is awarded his Third Most Valuable Canadian

Births

January to June

  • January 8 - Sarah Polley, actress, singer, film director and screenwriter
  • January 9 - Jenny Johnson, field hockey player
  • January 14 - Nick Boynton, ice hockey player
  • January 24 - Tom Kostopoulos, ice hockey player
  • February 8 - Adam Trupish, boxer
  • February 11 - Eric Cyr, baseball player
  • February 15 - Ohenewa Akuffo, freestyle wrestler
  • February 21 - Andre Noble, actor (d. 2004)
  • February 22 - Jeremy Wilcox, volleyball player
  • March 15 - Azelia Liu, field hockey player
  • April 4 - Roberto Luongo, ice hockey player
  • April 17 - Eric Brewer, ice hockey player
  • May 9 - Pierre Bouvier, singer
  • May 10 - Dion Lavhey, Montreal Canadiens player
  • May 11 - Erin Lang, singer-songwriter and guitarist
  • June 1 - Craig Olejnik, actor
  • June 3 - Pierre Poilievre, politician
  • June 5 - Pete Wentz, musician
  • June 27 - Rebecca Jane Middleton, murder victim (d. 1996)

July to December

  • July 2 - Joe Thornton, ice hockey player
  • July 16 - Nathan Rogers, singer-songwriter
  • August 3 - Evangeline Lilly, actress
  • August 9 - Erin Chan, synchronized swimmer
  • August 22 - Jennifer Finnigan, actress
  • August 31 - Mark Johnston, swimmer
  • September 15 - Patrick Marleau, ice hockey player
  • September 15 - Brett Youngberg, volleyball player
  • September 21 - Nathaniel Miller, water polo player
  • October 7 - Aaron Ashmore, actor
  • October 7 - Shawn Ashmore, actor
  • October 13 - Ryan Malcolm, singer (Low Level Flight) and winner of Canadian Idol (season 1)
  • November 14 - Randee Hermus, soccer player
  • November 21 - Alex Tanguay, ice hockey player
  • December 6 - Maxime Collin, child actor
  • December 10 - Andrea Rushton, field hockey player

Deaths

  • February 23 - W. A. C. Bennett, Premier of British Columbia (b.1900)
  • March 26 - Lionel Bertrand, politician, journalist and newspaper editor (b.1906)
  • May 9 - Cyrus S. Eaton, investment banker, businessman and philanthropist (b.1883)
  • May 15 - Dora Mavor Moore, actor, teacher and director (b.1888)
  • May 29 - Mary Pickford, actress and studio co-founder (b.1892)
  • July 11 - Claude Wagner, judge and politician (b.1925)
  • August 16 - John Diefenbaker, politician and 13th Prime Minister of Canada (b.1895)
  • September 28 - John Herbert Chapman, scientist and space researcher (b.1921)
  • November 24 - John Robert Cartwright, jurist and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada (b.1895)
  • December 19 - Donald Creighton, historian (b.1902)

See also

  • 1979 in Canadian television
  • List of Canadian films of 1979

External links

{{Canada year nav}}{{North America topic|1979 in}}{{DEFAULTSORT:1979 In Canada}}

4 : 1979 in Canada|Years of the 20th century in Canada|1979 by country|1979 in North America

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/10 12:14:43