1849 in Canada
Events from the year 1849 in Canada.
Incumbents
- Monarch — Victoria
Federal government
- Parliament: Parliament of the Province of Canada|3rd]
Governors
- Governor General of the Province of Canada — Lord Elgin
- Colonial Governor of Newfoundland — Charles Henry Darling
- Governor of New Brunswick — Edmund Walker Head
- Governor of Nova Scotia — Sir John Harvey
- Governor of Prince Edward Island — Dominick Daly
Premiers
- Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada —
- * Robert Baldwin, Canada West Premier
- * Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine, Canada East Premier
- Premier of Nova Scotia — James Boyle Uniacke
Events
- January 1 – King's College becomes the University of Toronto
- February 10 – The Governor, Ministers, MPs and Montreal's council visit St. Hyacinthe, on the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad.
- April 7 – A large fire engulfs Toronto's downtown section. Started at 1 a.m. of an unknown cause, it started behind a tavern in the market section catching some hay then spread rapidly before destroying numerous buildings, including St. James cathedral. Flames could be seen from across Lake Ontario at St. Catharines, 40 km distant.
- April 25 – For sanctioning the Rebellion Losses Bill, Lord Elgin is mobbed by Tories and the Parliament House in Montreal is burned.
- April 29 – Brig Hannah carrying emigrants from Newry in Ireland fleeing the Great Famine to Canada hits ice and sinks in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and her senior officers abandon the passengers to their fate. Around one-third of those on board, 49, die.
- May – The Hayes House in Dalhousie Square leased for Parliamentary purposes. The parliament is to sit alternately in Quebec City and Toronto.
- May 29 – Gen. Rowan, Administrator.
- July – A delegation of Anishinaabe chiefs petition Lord Elgin to address the encroachment of mining interests on the shore of Lake Superior and north shore of Lake Huron in the absence of a formal treaty.
- September 17 – The Stony Monday Riot takes place in Bytown
- October 11 – The Montreal Annexation Manifesto is published
- December 26 – Electors ask J. McConnell, M.P.P. for Stanstead, if he favours annexation, which they believe will, alone, relieve depression.
Full date unknown
- The Beauharnois Canal, just southwest of Montreal is opened.
- The boundary at the 49th parallel is extended to the Pacific Ocean.
- The Courthouse Rebellion is launched by the Red River Métis.
- An Act of Amnesty provides for William Lyon Mackenzie's return from exile in the U.S.
Births
- January 5 – Sam Steele, soldier and member of the North-West Mounted Police
- February 21 – Edouard Deville, cartographer and Surveyor General of Canada
- May 6 – Wyatt Eaton, painter
- July 12 – William Osler, physician
- July 22 – Charles Mickle, politician
- August 1 – George Mercer Dawson, scientist and surveyor
- October 17 – William Mackenzie, railway contractor and entrepreneur
- November 13 – Charles Constantine, North-West Mounted Police officer and superintendent
- November 20 – Francis Haszard, jurist, politician and Premier of Prince Edward Island
- November 28 – Henry Joseph Walker, politician and merchant
- November 30 – Lemuel John Tweedie, politician and 9th Premier of New Brunswick
- December 18 – Henrietta Edwards, women's rights activist and reformer
Deaths
- March 27 – Archibald Acheson, 2nd Earl of Gosford, colonial administrator
- October 6 – Eulalie Durocher, Catholic nun