Governor General of the Province of Canada — James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin
Colonial Governor of Newfoundland — Charles Henry Darling
Governor of New Brunswick — Edmund Walker Head
Governor of Nova Scotia — John Gaspard Le Marchant
Governor of Prince Edward Island — Dominick Daly
Premiers
Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada —
Francis Hincks, Canada West Premier
Augustin-Norbert Morin, Canada East Premier
Premier of Nova Scotia — James Boyle Uniacke
Premier of Prince Edward Island — John Holl
Events
February 23 – A description of the proposed bridge across the St. Lawrence is published.
June 6 – Gavazzi Riot in Quebec are quelled by military.[2]
June 26 – Investigation of the riot proceeds, at Montreal.
July – Irregular calling of jurors delays trial for riot.
July 15 – The Grand Trunk Railway merges numerous smaller Canadian railways into a conglomerate, while also leasing an American railway, the Atlantic and St. Lawrence Railroad, giving it access to the year-round Atlantic port at Portland, Maine.[3]
Full date unknown
Mary Ann Shadd becomes the first woman in North America to become editor of a newspaper. Working out of Chatham, Ontario, she publishes, edits and writes in the Provincial Freeman, a newspaper serving the Black community in Ontario.
Russian explorer-trappers find oil seeps in Cook Inlet.
Births
February 15 – Rodmond Roblin, businessman, politician and 9th Premier of Manitoba (died 1937)
March 23 – Donald Mann, railway contractor and entrepreneur (died 1934)
July 18 – William McGuigan, politician and 10th Mayor of Vancouver (died 1908)
August 10 – Pierre-Évariste Leblanc, politician and Lieutenant Governor of Quebec (died 1918)
September 25 – Henry Emmerson, lawyer, businessman, politician, philanthropist and 8th Premier of New Brunswick (died 1914)
November 13 – Joseph Boutin Bourassa, politician (died 1943)
December 19 – Charles Fitzpatrick, lawyer, politician and 5th Chief Justice of Canada (died 1942)
Deaths
February 5 – Thomas Talbot, army and militia officer, settlement promoter, office holder, and politician (born 1771)
March 31 – William Crane, merchant, justice of the peace, judge, and politician (born 1785)
June 7 – Norbert Provencher, clergyman, missionary and Bishop (born 1787)
June 28 – Benjamin Eby, Mennonite bishop and founder of Ebytown in Upper Canada (born 1785)
July 11 – William Allan, banker and politician (born 1770)
November 8 – Friedrich Gaukel, farmer, distiller and innkeeper who helped to transform the pioneer settlement of Ebytown into Berlin, Ontario[4]