Events from the year 1911 in Canada .
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Premiers
Territorial governments
Commissioners
Events
Sport
Full date unknown
Arts and literature
Popular artworks
Births
Unknown date
January to June
January 3 – Jean Bourcier , ice hockey player
January 27 – Blanche Meagher , diplomat
February 3 – Robert Charboneau , writer
March 12 – Stanley Bréhaut Ryerson , historian, educator and political activist (d.1998 )
April 22 – Alexander Bell Patterson , politician (d.1993 )
April 29 – Andrew Hill Clark , geographer
May 11 – William Cecil Ross , politician (d.1998 )
May 11 – Mitchell Sharp , politician and Minister (d.2004 )
June 24 – Portia White , singer (d.1968 )
June 28 – Czeslaw Brzozowicz , engineer (d.1997 )
July to December
Deaths
March 11 – Théotime Blanchard , farmer, merchant and politician (b.1844 )
April 14 – Henri Elzéar Taschereau , jurist and 4th Chief Justice of Canada (b.1836 )
April 29 – Charles Alphonse Pantaléon Pelletier , lawyer, militia officer, politician, publisher, judge, and the 9th Lieutenant Governor of Quebec (b.1837 )
November 6 – John Carling , businessman and politician (b.1828 )
December 12 – Daniel J. Greene , politician and Prime Minister of Newfoundland (b.1850 )
Historical documents
With "unenviable record for deaths," residential school principal blames drafty building and its "sanitary and heating appliances"[ 3]
Henri Bourassa denounces prejudiced attacks on French Canadian nationalism [ 4]
Order in Council cancels previous order prohibiting entry for one year of "any immigrant belonging to the Negro race"[ 5]
Cartoon: anti-reciprocity depiction of Johnny Canuck and Uncle Sam cutting up watermelon (Note: racial stereotypes and blackface )[ 6]
Saskatchewan premier and farmers disappointed federal election has ruled out reciprocity with U.S.A. [ 7]
Nellie McClung speaks on importance of social life in rural areas[ 8]
Fruit co-operative manager says co-ops would do better if farmers valued business methods more and self-reliance less[ 9]
British woman fired from first au pair job on her undercover investigation of domestic work in Manitoba[ 10]
U.S. reporter explains how church-going, law-abiding Canadians had no Wild West [ 11]
U.S. reporter calls Quebec City economic backwater with fine sightseeing[ 12]
Ancient farms and conservative rural ways on St. Lawrence River near Quebec City[ 13]
Terrible fire does not discourage exploitation of immense mineral wealth in Timmins area of northern Ontario[ 14]
Great healing powers (and products) found in Manitou Lake , near Watrous, Saskatchewan[ 15]
Mackenzie King falls for his ideal woman[ 16]
References
^ "King George V | The Canadian Encyclopedia" . www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca . Retrieved 4 December 2022 .
^ Baldissera, Lisa. "AUTUMN IN FRANCE 1911" . aci-iac.ca/ .
^ Letter of Walter McLaren (December 26, 1911), United Church of Canada Central Archives, in Denise Hildebrand, Staff Perspectives of the Aboriginal Residential School Experience: A Study of Four Presbyterian Schools, 1888-1923 pg. 171. Accessed 10 June 2021
^ Henri Bourassa, "To the English Speaking Reader" The Reciprocity Agreement and Its Consequences As Viewed from the Nationalist Standpoint (1911), pgs. I-IV. Accessed 21 February 2020
^ "Negro Immigration cancellation O.C. 1911/08/12 prohibiting - M. Int. 1911/10/04" (October 5, 1911), Library and Archives Canada. Accessed 12 November 2021
^ Newton McConnell, "Uncle Sam: 'Lemme divide tha mellion foh yo' Johnnie I'se had sperience'" (ca. 1911). Accessed 2 May 2021 https://www.picturingpolitics.com/whose-story/ (scroll down to Racism in Editorial Cartoons)
^ Walter Scott, "Address to the People of Saskatchewan" (1911). Accessed 21 February 2020
^ Nellie McClung, "The Importance of Social Life in Country Homes" Report of the First Annual Convention of the Homemakers' Club of Saskatchewan[....] (1911), pgs. 36-9. Accessed 21 February 2020
^ James E. Johnson, "Co-Operative Fruit Culture; Why Co-Operation Is Not More Successful among Farmers" (February 1, 1911), Report of the [House] Select Standing Committee on Agriculture and Colonization[;] 1910-11, pgs. 90-1. Accessed 14 October 2020
^ Ella Constance Sykes, "My First Post as a Home-Help" A Home-Help in Canada (1912), pgs. 43-52. Accessed 21 February 2020
^ William E. Curtis, "Western Canada Life Free from Disorder" (September 25, 1911), Letters on Canada, pgs. 139-42. Accessed 21 February 2020
^ William E. Curtis, "Yankee Visitors' Dollars Help to Support Quebec" (August 22, 1911), Letters on Canada, pgs. 11-16. Accessed 21 February 2020
^ William E. Curtis, "Farm in Quebec Is Like a Ribbon, Ending at River" (August 28, 1911), Letters on Canada, pgs. 33-7. Accessed 21 February 2020
^ William E. Curtis, "Mines of Ontario Set a High Mark by Their Output" (September 5, 1911), Letters on Canada, pgs. 77-9. Accessed 21 February 2020
^ William E. Curtis, "Lake of Healing Aid in Boosting Watrous, Canada" (September 21, 1911), Letters on Canada, pgs. 125-9. Accessed 21 February 2020
^ Diaries of William Lyon Mackenzie King; 1911, pgs. "13-17" (one page is reproduced twice). Accessed 21 February 2020
1911 in North America
Sovereign states Dependencies and other territories