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词条 1945 in Canada
释义

  1. Incumbents

      Crown    Federal government    Provincial governments    Lieutenant governors    Premiers    Territorial governments    Commissioners  

  2. Events

     Full date unknown 

  3. Arts and literature

  4. Sport

  5. Births

     January to March  April to June  July to September  October to December  Full date unknown 

  6. Deaths

  7. See also

  8. References

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

Events from the year 1945 in Canada.

Incumbents

Crown

  • Head of state (monarch) – George VI

Federal government

  • Governor general – Alexander Cambridge
  • Prime minister – William Lyon Mackenzie King
  • Chief Justice – Thibaudeau Rinfret (Quebec)
  • Parliament – 19th (until 16 April) then 20th (from 6 September)

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – John C. Bowen
  • Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – William Culham Woodward
  • Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Roland Fairbairn McWilliams
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – William George Clark (until November 1) then David Laurence MacLaren
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Henry Ernest Kendall
  • Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Albert Edward Matthews
  • Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Bradford William LePage (until May 18) then Joseph Alphonsus Bernard
  • Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Eugène Fiset
  • Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Archibald P. McNab (until February 27) then Thomas Miller (February 27 to June 20) then Reginald John Marsden Parker (from June 22)

Premiers

  • Premier of Alberta – Ernest Manning
  • Premier of British Columbia – John Hart
  • Premier of Manitoba – Stuart Garson
  • Premier of New Brunswick – John McNair
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – A.S. MacMillan (until September 8) then Angus Macdonald
  • Premier of Ontario – George A. Drew
  • Premier of Prince Edward Island – J. Walter Jones
  • Premier of Quebec – Maurice Duplessis
  • Premier of Saskatchewan – Tommy Douglas

Territorial governments

Commissioners

  • Controller of Yukon – George A. Jeckell
  • Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Charles Camsell

Events

  • 1944-1945: World War II: Japan's Special Balloon Regiment launched 9,000 Fu-Go balloon bombs towards the Pacific Northwest, intended to cause panic, by starting forest fires. Six casualties, a woman and her five children in the American state of Oregon, were reported. The ten metre-wide balloons contained 540 cubic metres of hydrogen and reached as far inland as Manitoba. The Japanese project was declared a failure and abandoned, after six months.[1]
  • January 8 - Brantford, Ontario becomes the first Canadian community to fluoridate its water supply.
  • January 20 - World War II: The first conscripted Canadian soldiers arrive overseas
  • February 8 - World War II: The Anglo-Canadian Operation Veritable launched in the Netherlands
  • February 24 - Radio Canada International begins operation
  • February 25 - Sergeant Aubrey Cosens posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross
  • March 1 - Major Frederick Albert Tilston wins the Victoria Cross
  • March 29 - The British Commonwealth Air Training Plan is shut down
  • April 16 - World War II: HMCS Esquimalt is sunk off Halifax by a German U-boat.
  • May 8 - VE Day sees celebrations across the nation, but also the Halifax Riot.
  • June 4 - Ontario general election, 1945: George Drew's PCs win a majority
  • June 11 - Federal election: Mackenzie King's Liberals win a third consecutive majority
  • June 26 - Canada is a founding member of the United Nations
  • August 2 - The Canadian Armoured Corps becomes the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps
  • August 15 - VJ Day marks the end of the Second World War. Over a million Canadians had fought in the conflict and 42,000 were killed.
  • September 5 - The defection of Soviet embassy clerk Igor Gouzenko reveals a Soviet spy ring in Canada.
  • September 8 - Angus Macdonald becomes premier of Nova Scotia for the second time, replacing Alexander MacMillan
  • September 12 - The Ford Motor employees in Windsor, Ontario go on strike.

Full date unknown

  • Family allowance payments is introduced.
  • Canada has its first trade surplus with the United States.

Arts and literature

  • The Tin Flute (Bonheur d'occasion) by Gabrielle Roy.

Sport

  • February 25 - Maurice Richard sets a new record for the most goals (50) in a single ice hockey season.
  • April 22 - Toronto Maple Leafs won their Fifth Stanley Cup by defeating the Detroit Red Wings 4 games to 3.
  • April 23 - Ontario Hockey Association's Toronto St. Michael's Majors won their Second Memorial Cup by defeating the Southern Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League's Moose Jaw Canucks 4 games to 1. All games were played at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto
  • September 29 - Calgary Stampeders are established
  • December 1 - Toronto Argonauts won their Sixth Grey Cup by defeating the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 35 to 0 in the 33rd Grey Cup played in Varsity Stadium in Toronto.

Births

January to March

  • January 15 - Bonnie Burnard, novelist
  • January 18 - Steven Truscott, exonerated murderer
  • January 21 - Len Derkach, politician
  • January 23 - Mike Harris, politician and 22nd Premier of Ontario
  • January 27
    • Harold Cardinal, writer, political leader, teacher, negotiator and lawyer (d.2005)
    • Joe Ghiz, politician and 29th Premier of Prince Edward Island (d.1996)
  • February 2 - Pauline Vaillancourt, singer
  • February 5 - Nancy McCredie, track and field athlete
  • February 19 - Bill Casey, politician
  • February 20 - Donald McPherson, figure skater (d.2001)
  • March 4 - Patrick Boyer, politician and university professor
  • March 6 - John A. MacNaughton, financier and executive (d.2013)
  • March 26 - Diane McGifford, politician
  • March 17 - Dave Bailey, track and field athlete

April to June

  • April 24 -Doug Riley, Canadian keyboard player and producer (d. 2007)
  • May 27 - Bruce Cockburn, folk/rock guitarist and singer-songwriter
  • June 11 - Robert Munsch, children's writer
  • June 16 - Lucienne Robillard, politician and Minister
  • June 20 - Anne Murray, singer

July to September

  • August 4 - Ben Sveinson, politician
  • August 11 - David Walsh, businessman, disgraced head of Bre-X (d.1998)
  • August 12 - Mary Stewart, swimmer and world record breaker
  • August 15 - Rosann Wowchuk, politician and Deputy Premier of Manitoba
  • September 21 - Bjarni Tryggvason, engineer and astronaut

October to December

  • October 15 - John Murrell, playwright
  • November 5 - Jacques Lanctôt, member of the Front de libération du Québec (FLQ)
  • November 11 - Norman Doyle, politician
  • November 12 - Neil Young, singer-songwriter, musician and film director
  • December 4 - Roberta Bondar, neurologist and Canada's first female astronaut

Full date unknown

  • Felix Partz, artist and co-founder of the artistic collective General Idea (d.1994)

Deaths

  • March 2 - Emily Carr, artist and writer (b.1871)
  • March 23 - Walter Charles Murray, first President of the University of Saskatchewan (b.1866)
  • July 17 - Adjutor Rivard, lawyer, writer, judge and linguist (b.1868)
  • October 24 - Franklin Carmichael, painter and Group of Seven member (b.1890)
  • November 1 - Marie Lacoste Gérin-Lajoie, feminist and social activist (b.1867)
  • December 10 - Joseph-Octave Samson, businessperson, politician and 28th Mayor of Quebec City (b.1862)

See also

  • List of Canadian films

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=http://archives.cbc.ca/war_conflict/second_world_war/clips/12762/|title=Japan bombs Saskatchewan|publisher=CBC.ca|accessdate=2011-03-18}}
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