Battle of Honey Springs

Events from the year 1880 in Canada.

Incumbents

Crown

Federal government

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

Premiers

Territorial governments

Lieutenant governors

Events

Full date unknown

Arts and literature

New books

Births

Deaths

Historical documents

Statute creates Canadian Pacific Railway as government-supported private company for benefit of B.C. and N.W.T.[2]

Chief Ocean Man and another Nakoda (Stoney) describe attack on their people by Gros Ventre and Mandan from U.S. side of border[3]

British order-in-council transfers Arctic islands to Dominion of Canada [4]

Editorial on complaints of French-Canadians[5]

Walt Whitman calls Thousand Islands most beautiful place on Earth[6]

To avoid bankruptcy caused by westward expansion, Canada must declare independence[7]

Britain gifts part of HMS Resolute to U.S. for saving that Arctic exploration ship [8]

Painting: Trapper approaches animal caught in leghold trap[9]

References

  1. ^ "Queen Victoria | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  2. ^ An Act Respecting the Canadian Pacific Railway Accessed 14 October 2019
  3. ^ "No. 343; (letter of) Sir Edward Thornton to Mr. (Wm. M.) Evarts(, Department of State, Washington)" Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States[....] (1882), pgs. 570-72. Accessed 8 December 2019 Subsequent correspondence
  4. ^ Gordon W. Smith, "The Transfer of Arctic Territories from Great Britain to Canada(...)" Journal of the Arctic Institute of North America, Vol. 14, No. 1 (1961), pgs. 62-3. Accessed 14 October 2019
  5. ^ "A Morbid Nationalism" Canadian Illustrated News (November 11, 1880), pg. 2. Accessed 27 September 2019
  6. ^ Walt Whitman's Diary in Canada (1904), pgs. 24-5. Accessed 27 September 2019
  7. ^ William Norris, "Canadian Nationality; A Present-Day Plea" Rose-Belford's Canadian Monthly and National Review (February 1880), pgs. 113-18. Accessed 23 April 2020
  8. ^ United States Department of State, Index to the Executive Documents of the House of Representatives for the Third Session of the Forty-Sixth Congress, 1880-'81 (No. 354, August 26, 1880), pg. 525. Accessed 27 September 2019
  9. ^ Harry Bullock-Webster, "Got 'im at last; Fort McLeod 1880" (Fort McLeod, B.C.). Accessed 27 June 2021