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Events from the year 1871 in Canada .
Provincial governments [ edit ]
Canada provinces 1871–1873
Lieutenant governors [ edit ]
Territorial governments [ edit ]
Lieutenant governors [ edit ]
July 15 – Phoebe Campbell murders her husband with an axe. She is hanged the next year.
July 20 – British Columbia joins Confederation.
July 25 – Treaty 1 , the first of a number of treaties with western Canada's First Nations, is signed
August 17 – Treaty 2 is signed
November 11 – The last of the British Army leaves Canada
November 13 – John McCreight becomes the first premier of British Columbia
December 14 – Marc-Amable Girard becomes the first Franco-Manitoban of premier of Manitoba, replacing Alfred Boyd
December 20 – Edward Blake becomes premier of Ontario, replacing J. S. Macdonald.
George Stewart Henry
January 30 – Wilfred Lucas , actor, film director and screenwriter (d.1940 )
May 14 – Walter Stanley Monroe , businessman, politician and Prime Minister of Newfoundland (d.1952 )
July 16 – George Stewart Henry , politician and 10th Premier of Ontario (d.1958 )
July 25 – Richard Ernest William Turner , soldier and recipient of the Victoria Cross (d.1961 )
August 4 – Robert Hamilton Butts , politician (d.1943 )
September 8 – Samuel McLaughlin , businessman and philanthropist (d.1972 )
September 9 – Hugh Robson , politician and judge
October 31 – Alexander Stirling MacMillan , businessman, politician and Premier of Nova Scotia (d.1955 )
December 2 – Stanislas Blanchard , politician (d.1949 )
December 13 – Emily Carr , artist and writer (d.1945 )
Modeste Demers
January 29 – Philippe-Joseph Aubert de Gaspé , lawyer, writer, fifth and last seigneur of Saint-Jean-Port-Joli (L'Islet County) (b.1786 )
January 31 – John Ross , lawyer, politician, and businessman. (b. 1818 )
February 20 – Paul Kane , artist (b.1810 )
March 11 – John Heckman , political figure (b.1785 )
July 28 – Modeste Demers , missionary (b.1809 )
September 23 – Louis-Joseph Papineau , lawyer, politician and reformist (b.1786 )
November 18 – Enos Collins , seaman, merchant, financier, and legislator (b.1774 )
Historical documents [ edit ]
Editorial says Confederation is British Columbia 's chance to remake itself[ 3]
Canada should refuse to permanently share its inshore fishery with U.S.A.[ 4]
Manitoba Lieutenant Governor Archibald agrees to release four Indigenous prisoners before negotiating Treaty 1 [ 5]
Archibald urges Indigenous people to "adopt the habits of the whites " (farming) for more comfort and safety from famine and sickness[ 6]
Commissioner Simpson says in Manitoba's "immense cultivable acres ," large reserves are not allowed, and treaty terms are "a present"[ 7]
Treaty terms with large reserves are demanded by Indigenous leaders, with one calling himself "the lawful owner " of his people's land[ 8]
Indigenous leaders continue to make "extravagant demands" and Commissioner Simpson says take it or leave it, settlers are coming[ 9]
Fenian raid on Manitoba stopped at the border[ 10]
Manitoba Lieutenant Governor thanks residents for rising to resist the Fenian invasion[ 11]
^ "Queen Victoria | The Canadian Encyclopedia" . www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca . Retrieved 5 December 2022 .
^ "Electoral History of British Columbia 1871–1986" (PDF) . Elections British Columbia .
^ "The Great Duty of the Hour" The Daily British Colonist and Victoria Chronicle, Vol. 25, No. 117 (April 28, 1871), pg. 2. Accessed 11 September 2018
^ Joseph Pope, Memoirs of the Right Honourable Sir John Alexander Macdonald, G.C.B., First Prime Minister of the Dominion of Canada (1894), pgs. 90-1 Accessed 11 September 2018
^ Report of the Indian Branch of the Department of the Secretary of State for the Provinces, 1871, pgs. 14-15 Accessed 30 January 2020 (See "An Obstacle" for details of incarceration and release (pg. 2, columns 3-4))
^ "The Chippewa Treaty; Second Day's Proceedings" The Manitoban, Vol. I, No. 43 (August 5, 1871), pg. 2 (column 4). Accessed 16 August 2021
^ "The Chippewa Treaty; Second Day's Proceedings" The Manitoban, Vol. I, No. 43 (August 5, 1871), pg. 2 (columns 4-5). Accessed 16 August 2021
^ "Fourth Day's Proceedings" The Manitoban, Vol. I, No. 44 (August 12, 1871), pg. 2 (columns 4-5). Accessed 16 August 2021
^ Further arguments on Treaty 1 The Manitoban, Vol. I, No. 44 (August 12, 1871), pg. 3 (columns 1-3). Accessed 16 August 2021
^ Adams George Archibald, Return to an Address of the House of Commons...for Copies of All Correspondence with Lieut.-Governor A.G. Archibald, of Manitoba...Regarding the Fenian Invasion of Manitoba, pgs. 4–5 Accessed 11 September 2018
^ House of Commons, Report of the Select Committee on the Causes of the Difficulties in the North-West Territory in 1869–70 (1874), pgs. 147-9 Accessed 11 September 2018
1871 in North America
Sovereign states Dependencies and other territories