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Events from the year 1965 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
- Governor General – Georges Vanier[2]
 - Prime Minister – Lester B. Pearson
 - Chief Justice – Robert Taschereau (Quebec)
 - Parliament – 26th (until September 8) then 27th (from December 9)
 
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – John Percy Page
 - Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – George Pearkes
 - Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Errick Willis (until November 1) then Richard Spink Bowles
 - Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Joseph Leonard O'Brien (until June 9) then John B. McNair
 - Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland – Fabian O'Dea
 - Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Henry Poole MacKeen
 - Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – William Earl Rowe
 - Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Willibald Joseph MacDonald
 - Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Paul Comtois
 - Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Robert Hanbidge
 
Premiers
- Premier of Alberta – Ernest Manning
 - Premier of British Columbia – W.A.C. Bennett
 - Premier of Manitoba – Dufferin Roblin
 - Premier of New Brunswick – Louis Robichaud
 - Premier of Newfoundland – Joey Smallwood
 - Premier of Nova Scotia – Robert Stanfield
 - Premier of Ontario – John Robarts
 - Premier of Prince Edward Island – Walter Shaw
 - Premier of Quebec – Jean Lesage
 - Premier of Saskatchewan – Ross Thatcher
 
Territorial governments
Commissioners
Events
- January 1 – Trans-Canada Airlines is renamed Air Canada.
 - January 9 – The Hope Slide, the largest landslide ever recorded in Canada, kills four.
 - January 16 – The Canada-United States Automotive Agreement is signed
 - January 28 – The Queen issues a royal proclamation, effective February 15, making the Maple Leaf flag the National Flag of Canada.
 - February 15 – Canada adopts the maple leaf for the national flag.
 - March 2 – Lucien Rivard escapes from a Montreal area jail
 - March 7 – Canadian Roman Catholic churches celebrate mass in the vernacular for the first time due to the reforms of Vatican II
 - March 20 – Peter Lougheed is elected leader of the Alberta Progressive Conservative Party
 - April 2 – Lester Pearson gives a speech at Temple University in the United States that calls for a stop to the bombing of North Vietnam, infuriating President Lyndon Johnson
 - May 16 – Cross Country Checkup debuts on radio
 - June 7 – Navy, army, and air force commands are replaced by six functional commands
 - July 8 – A crash of a Canadian Pacific Airlines flight in British Columbia kills 52.
 - September 9 – The Fowler Report is released. It advocates creation of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC)
 

Toronto City Hall opens
- September 13 - The new Toronto City Hall is opened.[3]
 - November 8 – Federal election: Lester Pearson's Liberals win a second consecutive minority
 - November 9 – A failure at an Ontario power station causes the 1965 Blackout that stretches from Florida to Chicago and all of southern Ontario.
 - November 29 – Alouette 2 is launched.
 
Full date unknown
- Eligibility age for pensions is lowered from 70 to 65
 
Arts and literature
New books
- George Grant: Lament for a Nation
 - John Newlove: Moving in Alone
 - Robert Kroetsch: But We Are Exiles
 - Farley Mowat: West Viking
 - Gilles Archambault: La vie à trois
 - Hubert Aquin: Prochain épisode
 
Awards
- Gordon R. Dickson's Soldier, Ask Not wins a Hugo Award
 - See 1965 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
 - Stephen Leacock Award: Gregory Clark, War Stories
 - Vicky Metcalf Award: Roderick Haig-Brown
 
Music
- Karel Ančerl replaces Seiji Ozawa as artistic director of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra
 
Film
- October 13 – The Canadian Film Development Agency is formed
 - Christopher Plummer stars as Captain von Trapp in The Sound of Music
 - William Shatner stars in Incubus
 
Sport
- March 11 – The NHL admits the California Seals, Los Angeles Kings, Minnesota North Stars, Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, and the St. Louis Blues into the league through expansion
 - March 13 - Manitoba Bisons won their First University Cup be defeating the St. Dunstan's Saints 9 to 2, the Final game was played the Winnipeg Arena
 - May 1 - The Montreal Canadiens won their Thirteenth Stanley Cup by defeating the Chicago Black Hawks 4 games to 3. The deciding Game 7 was played at the Montreal Forum. Trois-Rivières, Quebec's Jean Beliveau is awarded the First Conn Smythe Trophy as the 1965 Playoffs MVP
 - September 10 - Future hall of fame baseball player Ferguson Jenkins plays his first major league game for the Philadelphia Phillies in Connie Mack Stadium
 - May 11 - Ontario Hockey Association's Niagara Falls Flyers won their First Memorial Cup by defeating the Central Alberta Hockey League's Edmonton Oil Kings 4 games to 0. All games were played at Edmonton Gardens
 - November 20 - Toronto Varsity Blues defeated the Alberta Golden Bears 14–7 in the 1st Vanier Cup played at Varsity Stadium in Toronto
 - November 27 - The Hamilton Tiger-Cats won their 4th Grey Cup by defeating the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 22–16 in the 53rd Grey Cup in Toronto's CNE Stadium.
 
Births
January to March
- January 8
- Wendy Fuller, diver
 - Eric Wohlberg, racing cyclist
 
 - January 21 – Brian Bradley, ice hockey player
 - January 23 – Tim Berrett, race walker
 - January 27 – Ross MacDonald, sailor and Olympic silver medallist
 

Alison Redford
- January 28
- Stéphane Bergeron, politician
 - Lynda Boyd, actress
 - Tom Ponting, swimmer and double Olympic silver medallist
 
 - January 31 – Ofra Harnoy, cellist
 - March 1 – Stewart Elliott, jockey
 - March 7 - Alison Redford, politician, and the 14th Premier of Alberta
 - March 15 – Marcel Gery, swimmer and Olympic bronze medallist
 - March 23 – Daren Puppa, ice hockey player
 
April to June

Owen Hart
- April 11 – Chris Pridham, tennis player
 - April 21 – Ed Belfour, ice hockey player
 - April 22 – Peter Zezel, ice hockey player (d. 2009)
 - May 7 – Owen Hart, wrestler (d. 1999)
 - May 9 – Steve Yzerman, ice hockey player
 - May 10 – Linda Evangelista, supermodel
 - May 19 – James Bezan, politician
 - June 19 – Gary Vandermeulen, swimmer
 - June 25 – Julie Daigneault, swimmer
 - June 26 – Gaye Porteous, field hockey player
 
July to September
- July 11 – Michael Wayne McGray, serial killer
 - July 17 – Ken Evraire, television journalist, host and former professional footballer
 - July 26 – Michael Rascher, rower and Olympic gold medallist
 

Peter MacKay attending the 45th Munich Security Conference
- August 4 – James Tupper, actor
 - August 11 – Marc Bergevin, ice hockey player
 - August 22
- Patricia Hy-Boulais, tennis player
 - David Reimer, Canadian man, born male but reassigned female and raised as a girl after a botched circumcision[4]
 
 - August 28 – Shania Twain, singer-songwriter
 - September 8 – Mark Andrews, swimmer
 - September 9 - Eric Tunney, comedian (Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy) (d. 2010)
 

Christy Clark
- September 27
- Bernard Lord, politician and 30th Premier of New Brunswick
 - Peter MacKay, lawyer, politician and Minister
 
 
October to December
- October 1 – Cliff Ronning, ice hockey player
 - October 5
- Mario Lemieux, ice hockey player
 - Patrick Roy, ice hockey player
 
 - October 23 – David Bédard, diver
 

Brad Wall on October 30, 2007
- October 29 – Christy Clark, politician and 35th Premier of British Columbia
 - November 5 – Andrew Crosby, rower and Olympic gold medallist
 - November 13 - Rick Roberts, actor
 - November 20 – John Graham, track and field athlete
 - November 21 – Jon Kelly, swimmer
 - November 24 – Brad Wall, politician and 14th Premier of Saskatchewan
 - November 27 – Kathleen Heddle, rower and triple Olympic gold medallist (d. 2021)
 - December 1 – Jamie Pagendam, boxer
 - December 10 – Jennifer Wyatt, golfer
 - December 18 – Brian Walton, road and track cyclist and coach
 - December 29 - Manon Perreault, politician
 
Full date unknown
- Emanuel Jaques, murder victim (d. 1977)
 
Deaths
- January 17 – Austin Claude Taylor, politician (b.1893)
 - April 1 – Harry Crerar, General (b.1888)
 - June 7 – John Stewart McDiarmid, politician and Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba (b.1882)
 - July 19 - Franklin D. McDowell, author
 - August 23 – George Black, politician (b.1873)
 - August 28 – Jacob Penner, politician (b.1880)
 - September 10 – S. E. Rogers, politician (b.1888)
 - September 20 - Madge Macbeth, author
 - October 8 - Thomas B. Costain, historian (b.1885)
 - November 25 - Gwethalyn Graham, author (b.1913)
 
See also
References
- ↑ "Queen Elizabeth II | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
 - ↑ Lentz, Harris M. (4 February 2014). Heads of States and Governments Since 1945. Routledge. p. 143. ISBN 978-1-134-26490-2.
 - ↑ "Toronto City Hall tour - a brief history". toronto.ca. Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved 2011-08-15.
 - ↑ "David Reimer and John Money Gender Reassignment Controversy: The John/Joan Case - The Embryo Project Encyclopedia". embryo.asu.edu.
 
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