1937 in Canada
Events from the year 1937 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
- Monarch – George VI
Federal government
- Governor general – John Buchan
- Prime minister – William Lyon Mackenzie King
- Chief Justice – Lyman Poore Duff
- Parliament – 18th
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – Philip Primrose then John C. Bowen
- Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Eric Hamber
- Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – William Johnston Tupper
- Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Murray MacLaren
- Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Walter Harold Covert then Robert Irwin
- Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Herbert Alexander Bruce then Albert Edward Matthews
- Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – George Des Brisay de Blois
- Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Esioff-Léon Patenaude
- Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Archibald Peter McNab
Premiers
- Premier of Alberta – William Aberhart
- Premier of British Columbia – Thomas Dufferin Pattullo
- Premier of Manitoba – John Bracken
- Premier of New Brunswick – Allison Dysart
- Premier of Nova Scotia – Angus Lewis Macdonald
- Premier of Ontario – Mitchell Hepburn
- Premier of Prince Edward Island – Thane Campbell
- Premier of Quebec – Maurice Duplessis
- Premier of Saskatchewan – William John Patterson
Territorial governments
Commissioners
- Controller of Yukon – George A. Jeckell
- Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Charles Camsell
Events
- April 10 – Trans-Canada Airlines, the predecessor of Air Canada, was created as a subsidiary of Canadian National Railway
- July 5 – Midale, Saskatchewan and Yellow Grass record the highest temperature ever in Canada, with a record high of 45 °C.
- August 15 – The Rowell-Sirois Commission is formed
- September 1 – Regular flights of Trans-Canada Air Lines begin
- October 6 – Ontario election: Mitchell Hepburn's Liberals win a second consecutive majority
- November 24 – The first Governor General's Awards are given.
- First ascent of Mount Lucania, third highest mountain in Canada.
Arts and literature
Sport
- April 17 – Manitoba Junior Hockey League's Winnipeg Monarchs won their Second Memorial Cup by defeating the Northern Ontario Hockey Association's Copper Cliff Redmen 3 games to 1. The deciding Game 4 was played at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto
- December 11 – Toronto Argonauts won their Fourth Grey Cup by defeating the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 4 to 3 in the 25th Grey Cup played at Varsity Stadium in Toronto
Births
January to June
- January 5 – Richard Cashin, lawyer, politician and trade union leader
- January 21 – Jim Unger, cartoonist
- January 24 – Suzanne Tremblay, politician
- January 26 – Maureen Hemphill, politician
- January 29 – Frank Iacobucci, jurist and Puisne Justice on the Supreme Court of Canada
- January 31 – Andrée Boucher, politician and 39th Mayor of Quebec City
- February 10 – Archibald Roy Megarry, publisher
- February 26 – Hagood Hardy, composer, pianist and vibraphonist
- March 2 – Joseph B. MacInnis, diver
- March 9
- *Bernard Landry, lawyer, teacher, politician and 28th Premier of Quebec
- * Harry Neale, ice hockey coach and broadcaster
- March 10 – Tommy Hunter, country music singer
- March 16 – Brian Browne, jazz pianist and composer
- March 26 – James Lee, politician and 28th Premier of Prince Edward Island
- April 29 - Jean Gauthier, ice hockey player
- May 9 - Jim Walding, politician
- May 13 - Roch Carrier, novelist
- June 15 - Toby Tarnow, actress
July to December
- July 30 - John de Chastelain, general, diplomat and Chairman of the Independent International Commission on Decommissioning
- August 16 - David Anderson, politician and Minister
- August 16 - Ian Deans, politician
- August 25 - John G. Bryden, lawyer, public servant, businessman and Senator
- September 2 – Len Carlson, voice actor
- September 3 - Gerry Brisson, ice hockey player
- September 5 – John Dahmer, politician
- September 8 - Barbara Frum, radio and television journalist
- September 9 - Jean Augustine, politician
- September 12 - George Chuvalo, boxer
- September 19 - Neil Gaudry, politician
- September 23 - Jacques Poulin, novelist
- October 19 - Marilyn Bell, long-distance swimmer, first person to swim across Lake Ontario
- October 19 - Stanley Faulder, murderer and first Canadian citizen to be executed in the United States since 1952
- November 4 - Michael Wilson, politician and diplomat
- November 6 - Gerry St. Germain, politician
- November 11 - Stephen Lewis, politician, broadcaster and diplomat
- November 12
- *Barbara McDougall, politician and Minister
- *Glen Shortliffe, Clerk of the Privy Council
- December 4 – Donnelly Rhodes, actor
- December 19 – Wayne Maunder, Canadian-born American actor
Deaths
January to June
- January 21 - Marie Prevost, actress
- January 29 - Marc-Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté, painter and sculptor
- February 16 - Rodmond Roblin, businessman, politician and 9th Premier of Manitoba
- March 8 - Howie Morenz, ice hockey player
- June 10 - Robert Borden, lawyer, politician and 8th Prime Minister of Canada
July to December
- July 25 - Charles E. Saunders, agronomist
- October 13 - Simon Fraser Tolmie, politician and 21st Premier of British Columbia
- November 21 - Matthew Robert Blake, politician
- December 27 - John Douglas Hazen, politician and 12th Premier of New Brunswick
Historical Documents
Peace league calls national congress because "Human life, Liberty, Social Culture and the Arts hang in terrible jeopardy"
Ontario Lieutenant-Governor endorses Youth Crusade for Peace: "Youth of the world should have a decisive voice"
Commons debates Trans-Canada Air Lines
Call for more British immigrants to allow West "to develop a race of people that is strong, sturdy and self-reliant"
Alberta Social Credit government's "accurate news" bill amended in face of "almostFascism" and "dictatorship" criticism
Britain's debt to Newfoundland, in its history of exploiting and leaving it underdeveloped, balances assuming its liabilities currently
Calling him "sly" and "delightful," newspaper profiles judge representing Canada on Trail, B.C. fumes tribunal
Canadian studying at Harvard writes about friends fighting in Spain and his fervour for communism
Report of cooperative Canadian and U.S. work done on site of Champlain's Habitation of Port Royal in Nova Scotia
Advertisement for Westinghouse World Cruiser Radio - "Tonal Fidelity Reflects the Living Image of Each Broadcast Note"
Two Canadian Pacific Railway dining car menus