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Events from the year 1904 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
- Governor General – Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 4th Earl of Minto (until December 10) then Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey
 - Prime Minister – Wilfrid Laurier
 - Chief Justice – Henri Elzéar Taschereau (Quebec)
 - Parliament – 9th (until 29 September)
 
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
- 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 – Peter A. McIntyre (until October 3) then Donald Alexander MacKinnon
 - Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Louis-Amable Jetté
 
Premiers
- 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
 - Premier of Prince Edward Island – Arthur Peters
 - Premier of Quebec – Simon-Napoléon Parent
 
Territorial governments
Commissioners
- Commissioner of Yukon – Frederick Tennyson Congdon (until October 29) then Zachary Taylor Wood (acting)
 
Lieutenant governors
Premiers
Events
- April 8 – In the Lansdowne-Cambon Convention France gives up some of its longstanding rights in Newfoundland
 - April 19 – The Great Toronto Fire destroys much of that city's downtown, but kills no one.
 - June 24 – The North-West Mounted Police become the Royal Northwest Mounted Police
 - September 10 – American criminal Bill Miner stages Canada's first-ever train robbery
 - October 8 – Edmonton is incorporated as a city of the North-West Territories.
 
Full date unknown
- Henry Ford opens an automobile manufacturing plant in Windsor, Ontario
 - Assiniboine Park in Winnipeg opens
 
Births
January to June
- January 4 – Pegi Nicol MacLeod, artist (d.1949)
 - January 14 – Walter Harris, politician and lawyer (d.1999)
 - February 29 – Lloyd Stinson, politician (d.1976)
 - March 6 – Farquhar Oliver, politician (d.1989)
 - March 26 – Gustave Biéler, Special Operations Executive agent during World War II (d.1944)
 - April 16 – Fifi D'Orsay, actress (d.1983)
 - April 26 – Paul-Émile Léger, Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church (d.1991)
 - May 1 – Wally Downer, politician (d.1994)
 - May 13 – Earle Birney, poet (d.1995)
 

Eugene Forsey
- May 29 – Eugene Forsey, politician and constitutional expert (d.1991)
 - June 26 – Frank Scott Hogg, astrophysicist (d.1951)
 
July to December
- July 22 – Donald O. Hebb, psychologist (d.1985)
 - August 15 – George Klein, inventor (d. 1992)
 - September 7 – Matthew Halton, radio and television journalist (d.1956)
 - September 14 – Frank Amyot, sprint canoer and Olympic gold medallist (d.1962)
 - September 23 – Geoffrey Waddington, conductor
 - September 29 – Robert Legget, civil engineer, historian and non-fiction writer (d.1994)
 - October 20 – Tommy Douglas, politician and Premier of Saskatchewan (d.1986)
 - November 18 – Jean Paul Lemieux, painter (d.1990)
 - November 26 – Armand Frappier, physician and microbiologist (d.1991)
 - December 18 – Wilf Carter, country music singer, songwriter, guitarist and yodeller (d.1996)
 - December 25 – Gerhard Herzberg, physicist and physical chemist (d.1999)
 - December 28 – Bobbie Rosenfeld, athlete and Olympic gold medallist (d.1969)
 - December 29 – Léo Gauthier, politician (d.1964)
 
Deaths
- January 9 – Christian Kumpf, mayor of Waterloo, Ontario (b. 1838)
 - February 9 – Erastus Wiman, journalist and businessman (b.1834)
 - March 9 – Robert Machray, clergyman, missionary and first Primate of the Church of England in Canada (b.1831)
 - April 17 – Joseph Brunet, politician and businessman (b.1834)
 - May 11 – David Breakenridge Read, lawyer and 14th Mayor of Toronto (b. 1823)
 - August 8 – James Cox Aikins, politician, Minister and Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba (b.1823)
 - August 31 – Jean-Baptiste Blanchet, politician (b.1842)
 - September 26 – John Fitzwilliam Stairs, entrepreneur and statesman (b.1848)
 
Historical documents
Great Toronto Fire and its aftermath, in eyewitness accounts and critical postmortem[2]
Film of Great Toronto Fire[3]
Photo of Toronto fire ruins[4]
Anaconda, B.C. forest fire starts in "dry brush several feet thick" made of fallen trees amid much scrubby pine and fir killed by smelter smoke[5]
Dubious story about people smuggling prompts editorial on journalistic accuracy[6]
Burrowing owl increasing and Passenger pigeon disappearing in Manitoba[7]
Manitoba Free Press special Christmas issue contains goose quill pen[8]
References
- ↑ Tidridge, Nathan (15 November 2011). Canada's Constitutional Monarchy. Dundurn. p. 235. ISBN 978-1-55488-980-8.
 - ↑ Fergus Kyle, "Incidents at a Great Fire" The Canadian Magazine, Vol. XXIII, No. 2 (June 1904), pgs. 136-40. Norman Patterson, "Toronto's Great Fire" The Canadian Magazine, Vol. XXIII, No. 2 (June 1904), pgs. 128-35. Accessed 24 January 2020
 - ↑ "Century Snapshots;(...)The Great Toronto Fire" Accessed 24 January 2020
 - ↑ "Toronto Fire Ruins, Front Street" (April 19, 1904), British Library. Accessed 23 December 2021
 - ↑ "Forest Fire; Breaks Out in Woods Below Anaconda — Property Burned" The Anaconda News, Vol. 4, No. 25 (June 1, 1904), pgs. 1, 6. Accessed 1 August 2021
 - ↑ "Plea for Accuracy" The Canadian Printer and Publisher, Vol. XIV, No. 4 (April 1905), pg. 10. Accessed 24 January 2020
 - ↑ George E. Atkinson, Rare Bird Records of Manitoba (1904), pgs. 6-8 Accessed 24 January 2020
 - ↑ Manitoba Free Press, "A Quill from a Canada Wild Goose: With the Cree Legend of Nih-Ka, the Wild Goose, Set Forth for the First Time in Print" (1904). Accessed 24 January 2020
 
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