1215    Signing of Magna Carta in England


1497    European exploration began with the expedition of John Cabot, who was the first to draw a map of Canada’s East Coast


1534 to 1542    Jacques Cartier made three voyages across the Atlantic, claiming the land for King Francis I of France

1550s    The name of Canada began appearing on maps


1604    The first European settlement north of Florida was established by French explorers Pierre de Monts and Samuel de Champlain

1608    Samuel de Champlain built a fortress at what is now Quebec City

1610    English settlement began

1670    King Charles II of England granted the Hudson’s Bay Company exclusive trading rights over the watershed draining into Hudson Bay


1700s    The maple leaf was adopted as a symbol in Canada

1701    The French and the Iroquois made peace

1755 to 1763    “Great Upheaval”: during the war between Britain and France, more than two-thirds of the Acadians were deported from their homeland.

1758    The first representative assembly was elected in Halifax, Nova Scotia

1759    The British defeated the French in the Battle of the Plains of Abraham at Quebec City — marking the end of France’s empire in America

1763    The Aboriginal territorial rights were first guaranteed

1774    The British Parliament passed the Quebec Act

1776    – The thirteen British colonies to the south of Quebec declared independence and formed the United States

– Joseph Brant lead thousands of loyalist Mohawk Indians into Canada

1791    – The Constitutional Act was passed and divided the Province of Quebec into Upper Canada (later Ontario)

– The name “Canada” became official

1793    Upper Canada became the first province in the Empire to move toward abolition


1800s    Ice hockey was developed in Canada

1805    The defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte’s fleet in the Battle of Trafalgar

1812    The United States launched an invasion in June to conquer Canada

1814    The American attempt to conquer Canada failed

1815    The Duke of Wellington defeated Napoleon

1832    The Montreal Stock Exchange opened

1833    British Parliament abolished slavery throughout the Empire

1840    Upper and Lower Canada were united as the Province of Canada

1847 to 1848    Nova Scotia became the first British North American colony to attain full responsible government 

1849    Sir Louis-Hippolyte La Fontaine, a champion of French language rights, became the first head of a responsible government

1854    The Victoria Cross, the highest honour available to Canadians, started to be awarded that year

1857    Ottawa, located on the Ottawa River, was chosen as the capital by Queen Victoria

1860s    The Parliament buildings were completed

1864    Sir Leonard Tilley suggested the term “Dominion of Canada”

1867    – On July 1st, the Fathers of Confederation established the Dominion of Canada, the birth of the country that we know today

– The British Parliament passed the British North America Act, now known as the Constitution Act

– Sir John Alexander Macdonald, a Father of Confederation, became Canada’s first Prime Minister

– Canada became a constitutional monarchy

                – The responsibilities of the federal and provincial governments were defined

1869    Canada took over the vast Northwest region from the Hudson’s Bay Company

1873    The RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) was created

1890s    Yukon Gold Rush

1891    Basketball was invented by Canadian James Naismith


1916    Manitoba became the first province to grant voting rights to women

1917    The Canadian Corps captured Vimy Ridge, securing the Canadians’ reputation for valour as the “shock troops of the British Empire.”

1918    Most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over were granted the right to vote in federal elections

1920    Foundation of the Group of Seven, who developed a style of painting to capture the rugged wilderness landscapes

1921    King George V assigned Canada’s national colours (white and red)

1927    – The Peace Tower was completed, in memory of the First World War

– Old Age Security was devised

1929    Stock market crashed which lead to the Great Depression or the “Dirty Thirties”

1934    The Bank of Canada was created

1940    Unemployment insurance (now called “employment insurance”) was introduced by the federal government

1944    In the Second World War, the Canadians captured Juno Beach on June 6, as part of the Allied invasion of Normandy on D-Day

1947    The discovery of oil in Alberta began Canada’s modern energy industry

1948    The Japanese-Canadians gained the right to vote

1951    For the first time, a majority of Canadians were able to afford adequate food, shelter and clothing

1952    Queen Elizabeth II became Queen of Canada

1960s    Quebec experienced an era of rapid change known as the Quiet Revolution

1960    Aboriginal people were granted the right to vote

1965    – The new Canadian flag, as we know today, was raised for the first time

– The Canada and Quebec Pension Plans were devised

1967    Canada started its own honours system with the Order of Canada

1969    Parliament passed the Official Languages Act, which guarantees French and English services in the federal government across Canada

1970s    The term First Nations began to be used

1980    – Terry Fox, a British Columbian who lost his right leg to cancer at the age of 18, began a cross-country run, the “Marathon of Hope,” to raise money for cancer research. He became a hero to Canadians

                – O Canada was proclaimed as the national anthem

1982    – The Constitution of Canada was amended to entrench the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms

                – Queen Elizabeth II proclaimed the amended Constitution in Ottawa

1988    Canada enacted free trade with the United States


2006    The House of Commons recognized that the Quebecois form a nation within a united Canada

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