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| Decades: | 
- 1880s
 
- 1890s
 
- 1900s
 
- 1910s
 
- 1920s
  
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| See also: | 
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Events from the year 1906 in Canada.
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Premiers
Territorial governments
Commissioners
Events
Sport
Arts and literature
Births
- January 15 – Edna Staebler, author (d. 2006)
 
- January 27 – Walter L. Gordon, accountant, businessman, politician and writer (d.1987)
 
- January 29 – Joe Primeau, ice hockey player (d.1989)
 
- February 14 – Roland Beaudry, politician, journalist, publicist and publisher (d.1964)
 
- March 10 – Lionel Bertrand, politician, journalist and newspaper editor (d.1979)
 
- May 15 – Robert Methven Petrie, astronomer (d.1966)
 
- May 16 – Alfred Pellan, painter (d.1988)
 
- June 22 – Stanley Fox, politician (d.1984)
 
- June 26 – Marian Scott, painter
 
- July 18 – S. I. Hayakawa, Canadian-born American academic and politician (d. 1992)
 
- September 24 – Leonard Marsh, social scientist and professor (d.1983)
 
- November 20 – John Josiah Robinette, lawyer (d.1996)
 
- December 16 – Barbara Kent, Canadian actress
 
Deaths
- February 2 – Thomas Arkell, politician, farmer and grain merchant (b.1823)
 
- March 31 – James McIntyre, poet (b.1828)
 
- April 12 – Robert Thorburn, merchant, politician and Premier of Newfoundland (b.1836)
 
- May 3 – Peter White, politician (b.1838)
 
- May 19 – Gabriel Dumont, Metis leader (b.1837)
 
- June 9 – William Carpenter Bompas, Church of England clergyman, bishop and missionary (b.1834)
 
- June 11 – Hector-Louis Langevin, lawyer, politician and a Father of Confederation (b.1826)
 
- October 7 – Honoré Beaugrand, journalist, politician, author and folklorist (b.1848)
 
Historical documents
- Rugby School lecture gives somewhat fantastic and imperial picture of life in Canada for immigrant Englishman[3]
 
- Hardships and success of Barr Colony settlers at Lloydminster, Saskatchewan[4]
 
- British printers complain of being tricked into breaking Winnipeg strike[5]
 
- Save Manitoba elk and moose from "the white man's lust for killing"[6]
 
References
- ^ Tidridge, Nathan (15 November 2011). Canada's Constitutional Monarchy. Dundurn. p. 235. ISBN 978-1-55488-980-8.
 
- ^ Department of the Interior, "Memo(...)in regard to homestead entries by Doukhobors" Papers Relating to the Holding of Homestead Entries by Members of the Doukhobor Community[....] (1907), pgs. 6-11. Accessed 3 February 2020
 
- ^ "'Canada.' By O.H. Hanson, Esq." The Meteor, No. 473 (April 3, 1906), pgs. 43-4. Accessed 15 March 2022
 
- ^ "The Barr Colony after 3 Years" Edmonton Bulletin (July 30, 1906). Accessed 3 February 2020
 
- ^ Colonial Office (London), Canada: Correspondence Relating to the Complaint of Certain Printers Who Were Induced to Emigrate to Canada by False Representations (1906). Accessed 3 February 2020
 
- ^ John Percival Turner, "The Moose and Wapiti of Manitoba; A Plea for Their Preservation" The Historical and Scientific Society of Manitoba, Transaction No. 69 (March 8, 1906). Accessed 3 February 2020
 
 
1906 in  North America  | 
|---|
| Sovereign states | 
- Antigua and Barbuda
 
- Bahamas
 
- Barbados
 
- Belize
 
- Costa Rica
 
- Cuba
 
- Dominica
 
- Dominican Republic
 
- El Salvador
 
- Grenada
 
- Guatemala
 
- Haiti
 
- Honduras
 
- Jamaica
 
- Mexico
 
- Nicaragua
 
- Panama
 
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
 
- Saint Lucia
 
- Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
 
- Trinidad and Tobago
 
- United States
  
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Dependencies and other territories  | 
- Anguilla
 
- Aruba
 
- Bermuda
 
- Bonaire
 
- British Virgin Islands
 
- Cayman Islands
 
- Curaçao
 
- Greenland
 
- Guadeloupe
 
- Martinique
 
- Montserrat
 
- Puerto Rico
 
- Saint Barthélemy
 
- Saint Martin
 
- Saint Pierre and Miquelon
 
- Saba
 
- Sint Eustatius
 
- Sint Maarten
 
- Turks and Caicos Islands
 
- United States Virgin Islands
  
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