1905 in Canada
Events from the year 1905 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
- Monarch – Edward VII
Federal government
- Governor general – Albert Grey
- Prime minister – Wilfrid Laurier
- Chief Justice – Henri Elzéar Taschereau
- Parliament – 10th
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – George Hedley Vicars Bulyea
- Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière
- Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Daniel Hunter McMillan
- Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Jabez Bunting Snowball
- Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Alfred Gilpin Jones
- Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – William Mortimer Clark
- Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Donald Alexander MacKinnon
- Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Louis-Amable Jetté
- Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Amédée Forget
Premiers
- Premier of Alberta – Alexander Cameron Rutherford
- Premier of British Columbia – Richard McBride
- Premier of Manitoba – Rodmond Roblin
- Premier of New Brunswick – Lemuel John Tweedie
- Premier of Nova Scotia – George Henry Murray
- Premier of Ontario – George William Ross then James Whitney
- Premier of Prince Edward Island – Arthur Peters
- Premier of Quebec – Simon-Napoléon Parent then Lomer Gouin
- Premier of Saskatchewan – Thomas Walter Scott
Territorial governments
Commissioners
- Commissioner of Yukon – Zachary Taylor Wood then William Wallace Burns McInnes
- Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Frederick D. White
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Keewatin – Daniel Hunter McMillan
- Lieutenant Governor of the North-West Territories – Amédée E. Forget
Premiers
- Premier of North-West Territories – Frederick Haultain
Events
- January 25 – 1905 Ontario election: Sir James Whitney's Conservatives win a majority, defeating G. W. Ross's Liberals
- February 8 – Sir James Whitney becomes premier of Ontario, replacing George Ross
- February 27 – Clifford Sifton resigns from cabinet
- March 23 – Lomer Gouin becomes premier of Quebec, replacing Simon-Napoléon Parent
- July 20 – The Saskatchewan Act receives Royal Assent
- August 26 – Roald Amundsen begins the first to travel through the Northwest Passage
- September 1 – The Autonomy Act is passed, thus creating Saskatchewan and Alberta.
- September 2 – Alexander Rutherford becomes the first premier of Alberta.
- September 5 – Walter Scott becomes the first premier of Saskatchewan.
- November 9 – 1st Alberta General Election: Alexander Rutherford's Liberals win a majority in the first Alberta election
- November 24 – The Canadian Northern Railway is completed to Edmonton
- December 13 – 1905 Saskatchewan election: Walter Scott's Liberals win a majority in the first Saskatchewan election
Arts and literature
Births
January to June
- January 21 – George Laurence, nuclear physicist
- January 28 – Ellen Fairclough, politician and first female member of the Canadian Cabinet
- February 8 – Louis-Philippe Pigeon, judge of the Supreme Court of Canada
- March 27 – Elsie MacGill, the world's first female aircraft designer
- April 30 – John Peters Humphrey, legal scholar, jurist and human rights advocate
- May 1 – Paul Desruisseaux, lawyer and politician
- May 23 – Donald Fleming, politician, International Monetary Fund official and lawyer
- June 8 – Ralph Steinhauer, native leader, first Aboriginal to become the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta
- June 23 – Jack Pickersgill, civil servant and politician
July to December
- July 25 – Grace MacInnis, politician and feminist
- August 1 – Helen Hogg-Priestley, astronomer
- August 31 – William Anderson, politician and businessman
- August 15 – E.K. Brown, literary critic
- September 21 – Loran Ellis Baker, politician
- November 1 – Paul-Émile Borduas, painter
- December 1 – Alex Wilson, track and field athlete and Olympic silver medallist
- December 24 – Milt Dunnell, sportswriter
Full date unknown
- Nat Taylor, inventor of the cineplex
Deaths
- April 23 – Gédéon Ouimet, politician and 2nd Premier of Quebec
- May 23 – Fletcher Bath Wade, politician and barrister
- May 29 – William McDougall, lawyer, politician and a Father of Confederation
- August 1 – John Brown, politician, miller, mining consultant and prospector
- August 7 – Alexander Melville Bell, educator
- September 8 – David Howard Harrison, farmer, physician, politician and 6th Premier of Manitoba
- October 29 – Étienne Desmarteau, athlete and Olympic gold medallist
Historical Documents
Call for Calgary to become Alberta capital
Socialist Party brochure for Ontario election, with party platform
Mounties report to Ottawa on dance halls and prostitution in Dawson City, Yukon
McGill University principal addresses Canadian Club on role of university in commerce
Description of Peterborough Lift Lock on Trent Canal in Ontario