Events from the year 1974 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Premiers
Territorial governments
Commissioners
Events
- January 1
- Maurice Nadon is appointed as the 16th commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), becoming the first French Canadian to hold the post.
- The Canadian Stock Exchange merges with the Montreal Stock Exchange, with the merged entity operating under the latter name.
- Woodsworth College at the University of Toronto is founded, formally integrating part-time degree students into the University.
- January 6 â Global Television becomes Canada's third English-language television network when it begins broadcasting in southern Ontario.
- January 7 â Bora Laskin is sworn in as the 14th chief justice of Canada to replace the retiring Gérald Fauteux. In appointing Laskin, Prime Minister Trudeau breaks with tradition by passing over the more senior justice, Ronald Martland.
- January 14 â Jules Léger is sworn in as the 21st governor general of Canada, succeeding the retiring Roland Michener.
- January 15 â The Knight Street Bridge opens, joining Vancouver and Richmond, British Columbia.
- January 17 â Pauline McGibbon of Ontario becomes the first female lieutenant governor of a province.
- March 13 â A treaty between Canada and Denmark is ratified, establishing the maritime border between Ellesmere Island (Canada) and Greenland (Denmark). Measuring approximately , it is the longest negotiated international continental shelf boundary. However, the boundary line has a gap around Hans Island, with both nations claiming sovereignty.
- April 3 â A tornado strikes Windsor, Ontario, killing 9 people. The tornado was part of the 1974 Super Outbreak.
- May 23 â The RCMP accepts applications from women for regular police duties for the first time. The first 32 women formed Troop 17, were sworn in on September 16, 1974, and graduated on March 3, 1975. Beverly Busson, a member of Troop 17, became the first female RCMP commissioner on December 16, 2006.
- June 20 - Canadian Pacific "Royal Hudson" 2860 hauls her first public excursion train from North Vancouver to Squamish since being restored by the British Columbia government as a tourist attraction.
- June 29 â Soviet ballet dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov defects in Toronto.
- July 2 â Ralph Steinhauer becomes the first Aboriginal person to be a lieutenant governor when he is appointed lieutenant governor of Alberta.
- July 3 â Canada first demands that its territorial waters be extended to .
- Vote of no-confidence in parliament forces election.
- July 8 â Federal election: Pierre Trudeau's Liberals win a majority.
- July 31 â Bill 22 is passed making French the official language of government and business in Quebec.
- August 1 â The Elections Act is passed, limiting campaign contributions.
- August 9 â Nine Canadians are killed when Buffalo 461 is shot down during a peacekeeping mission in Syria.
- September 1 - CFVO-TV commences Broadcasting but later gains a regional scandal.
- November 29 â An aircraft is hijacked over Saskatchewan. It is recovered in Saskatoon.
Full date unknown
Arts and literature
New works
Awards
Sport
Births
January to March
- January 14 â Hugues Legault, swimmer
- January 19 â Diane Cummins, middle-distance runner
- January 21 â Robert Ghiz, politician and 31st Premier of Prince Edward Island
- January 23 â Joel Bouchard, ice hockey player
- January 24 â Kristy Sargeant, pair skater
- January 25 â Robert Budreau, director, producer, and screenwriter
- January 29 â Kris Burley, artistic gymnast
- January 31 â Anna Silk, actress
- February 7 â Steve Nash, basketball player
- February 21 â Mary Fuzesi, rhythmic gymnast
- February 22 â David Pelletier, pair skater
- March 14 â Grace Park, actress
- March 20 â Kevin Sullivan, runner and coach
April to June
- April 11 â Tricia Helfer, model and actress
- April 26 â Jacinthe Pineau, swimmer
- May 9 â Stéphane Yelle, Canadian ice hockey player
- May 10 â Jon Beare, rower and Olympic bronze medalist
- May 16 â Yannick Keith Lizé, water polo player and scientist
- May 18 â Chantal Kreviazuk, singer-songwriter
- May 18 â Carolyn Russell, squash player
- June 1 â Alanis Morissette, singer-songwriter, record producer and actress
- June 6 â Anson Carter, ice hockey player
- June 9 â Jackie Lance, softball player
July to September
- July 4 â Kevin Hanchard, actor
- July 6 â Steve Sullivan, ice hockey player
- July 7
- Patrick Lalime, ice hockey player
- Jennifer Jones, curler
- July 13 â Deborah Cox, singer-songwriter and actress
- July 26 â Daniel Negreanu poker player
- August 9 â Mara Jones, rower
- August 15 â Natasha Henstridge, actress and model
- September 6 â Sarah Strange actress and voice actress
- September 8 â Becky Price, field hockey player
- September 18 â Nicole Haynes, heptathlete
- September 28 â Alison Parrott, murder victim (d. 1986)
October to December
- October 6 â Madonna Gimotea, rhythmic gymnast
- October 10 â Chris Pronger, ice hockey player
- October 11 â Jason Arnott, ice hockey player
- October 16 â Paul Kariya, ice hockey player
- October 22 â Paul Duerden, volleyball player
- November 4 â Amy MacFarlane, field hockey player
- November 10 â Michael Greenspan, filmmaker and writer
- November 15 â Chad Kroeger singer
- November 21 â Casey Patton, boxer
- November 22 â David Pelletier, pair skater
- November 25
- David Cadieux, boxer
- Kenneth Mitchell, actor (d. 2024)
- December 7 â Nicole Appleton, singer
Deaths
See also
References