1978 in Canada
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Years in Canada: | 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 |
Centuries: | 19th century · 20th century · 21st century |
Decades: | 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s |
Years: | 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 |
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Events from the year 1978 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
- Head of state (monarch) – Queen Elizabeth II (consort – Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh)
Federal government
- Governor general – Jules Léger (viceregal consort – Gabrielle Léger)
- Prime minister – Pierre Trudeau
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – Ralph Steinhauer
- Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Walter Stewart Owen (until May 18) then Henry Pybus Bell-Irving
- Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Francis Lawrence Jobin
- Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Hédard Robichaud
- Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland – Gordon Arnaud Winter
- Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Clarence Gosse (until December 23) then John Elvin Shaffner
- Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Pauline Mills McGibbon
- Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Gordon Lockhart Bennett
- Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Hugues Lapointe (until April 27) then Jean-Pierre Côté
- Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – George Porteous (until February 6) then Irwin McIntosh (from February 22)
Premiers
- Premier of Alberta – Peter Lougheed
- Premier of British Columbia – Bill Bennett
- Premier of Manitoba – Sterling Lyon
- Premier of New Brunswick – Richard Hatfield
- Premier of Newfoundland – Frank Moores
- Premier of Nova Scotia – Gerald Regan (until October 5) then John Buchanan
- Premier of Ontario – Bill Davis
- Premier of Prince Edward Island – Alexander B. Campbell (until September 18) then Bennett Campbell
- Premier of Quebec – René Lévesque
- Premier of Saskatchewan – Allan Blakeney
Territorial governments
Commissioners
- Commissioner of Yukon – Arthur MacDonald Pearson (until November 1) then Frank Fingland (interim)
- Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Stuart Milton Hodgson
Premiers
- Premier of Yukon – Chris Pearson (from November 20)
Events
- January 24 - Cosmos 954 a Soviet satellite breaks up over northern Canada.
- June 26 - Air Canada DC-9 overruns runway in Toronto, 2 people die.
- August 4 - 41 are killed when a bus plunges into a lake near Eastman, Quebec.
- September 15 - The Sudbury Strike of 1978 begins.
- September 18 - Bennett Campbell becomes premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing Alexander B. Campbell
- October 5 - John MacLennan Buchanan becomes premier of Nova Scotia, replacing Gerald Regan
- October 16 - Fifteen federal by-elections are held across the country. The governing Liberals lose five seats, which leads to a general election the following May.
- October 18 - Saskatchewan election: Allan Blakeney's NDP win a third consecutive majority
Full date unknown
- Supreme Court of Canada declares unilingual legislatures and courts unconstitutional
- Chris Pearson becomes government leader of Yukon as responsible government is instituted
- Under the new immigration act homosexuals are no longer an inadmissible class
- Via Rail is established
- Despite accusations of marital infidelity, Colin Thatcher, who would later become famous for his involvement in the murder of his ex-wife, is re-elected to the Saskatchewan Legislative Assembly.
Arts and literature
New works
- Margaret Atwood: Up in the Tree
- Mordecai Richler: The Great Comic Book Heroes and Other Essays
- John Newlove: The Fat Man: Selected Poems (1962–1972)
- John Gray and Eric Peterson: Billy Bishop Goes to War
- Henry Beissel: Goya
Awards
- Alice Munro's Who Do You Think You Are? is nominated for the Booker Prize
- See 1979 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
- Stephen Leacock Award: Ernest Buckler, Whirligig
- Vicky Metcalf Award: Lyn Cook
Sport
- The Commonwealth Games are held in Edmonton, Alberta.
Births
January to March
- January 3 - Daryn Jones, comedian and television and radio personality
- January 27 - Pete Laforest, Canadian-American baseball player and manager
- February 20 - Andrea Moody, swimmer
- February 26 - Kyle Hamilton, rower, Olympic gold medalist and World Champion
- March 9 - Chris Phillips, ice hockey player
April to June
- April 6 - Thomas Herschmiller, rower, Olympic silver medalist and World Champion
- April 18 - Alexis Mazurin, comedian and radio personality (d.2005)
- April 26 - Tyler Labine, actor
- May 3 - Autumn Kelly the wife of Peter Phillips
- May 12 - Amy Sloan, actress
- May 15 - Dwayne De Rosario, soccer player
- May 15 - Caroline Dhavernas, actress
- June 2 - Shane Niemi, sprint athlete
- June 13 - Matt Bradley, ice hockey player
- June 14 - Steve Bégin, ice hockey player
- June 28 - Simon Larose, tennis player
July to December
- July 4 - Marie Luc Arpin, water polo player
- July 11 - Kathleen Edwards, singer-songwriter
- July 15 - Kim Buker, field hockey player
- July 22 - A. J. Cook, actress
- August 4 - Karine Legault, swimmer
- September 1 - Joe Stankevicius, rower and World Champion
- September 5 - Laura Bertram, actress
- September 6 - Amy Agulay, field hockey player
- September 7 - Matt Cooke, ice hockey player
- September 7 - Devon Sawa, actor
- September 20 - Jason Bay, baseball player
- September 21 - Paulo Costanzo, actor
- September 22 - Steve Moore, ice hockey player
- October 17 - Erin Karpluk, actress
- November 2 - Nelly Furtado, singer-songwriter, record producer and actress
- November 16 - Steve Omischl, freestyle skier
- November 17 - Rachel McAdams, actress
- December 23 - Esthero, singer-songwriter
Deaths
- March 25 - Charles Alexander Best, politician (b.1931)
- March 31 - Charles Best, medical scientist, co-discoverer of insulin (b.1899)
- April 13 - Jack Chambers, artist and filmmaker (b.1931)
- July 18 - Claude P. Dettloff, photographer (b. 1899)
- September 9 - Jack L. Warner, studio mogul (b.1892)
- September 28 - Thane Campbell, jurist, politician and Premier of Prince Edward Island (b.1895)
- October 23 - Joe Greene, politician (b.1920)