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1987 in Canada
Last updated
March 15, 2025
Contents
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
Provincial governments
Territorial governments
Events
Arts and literature
New works
Awards
Music
Sport
Births
Deaths
January to June
July to December
See also
References
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1986
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1987
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1988
1989
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History of Canada
Timeline of Canadian history
List of years in Canada
Part of
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The Canadian Encyclopedia
Canada
portal
v
t
e
Events from the year
1987 in Canada
.
Incumbents
Main article:
1987 Canadian incumbents
Crown
Monarch
–
Elizabeth II
[
1
]
Federal government
Governor General
–
Jeanne Sauvé
[
2
]
Prime Minister
–
Brian Mulroney
Chief Justice
–
Brian Dickson
(
Manitoba
)
Parliament
–
33rd
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Alberta
–
Helen Hunley
Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia
–
Robert Gordon Rogers
Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba
–
George Johnson
Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick
–
George Stanley
(until August 20) then
Gilbert Finn
Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland
–
James McGrath
Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia
–
Alan Abraham
Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
–
Lincoln Alexander
Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island
–
Lloyd MacPhail
Lieutenant Governor of Quebec
–
Gilles Lamontagne
Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan
–
Frederick Johnson
Premiers
Premier of Alberta
–
Don Getty
Premier of British Columbia
–
Bill Vander Zalm
Premier of Manitoba
–
Howard Pawley
Premier of New Brunswick
–
Richard Hatfield
(until October 27) then
Frank McKenna
Premier of Newfoundland
–
Brian Peckford
Premier of Nova Scotia
–
John Buchanan
Premier of Ontario
–
David Peterson
Premier of Prince Edward Island
–
Joe Ghiz
Premier of Quebec
–
Robert Bourassa
Premier of Saskatchewan
–
Grant Devine
Territorial governments
Commissioners
Commissioner of Yukon
–
John Kenneth McKinnon
Commissioner of Northwest Territories
–
John Havelock Parker
Premiers
Premier of the Northwest Territories
–
Nick Sibbeston
(until November 12) then
Dennis Patterson
Premier of Yukon
–
Tony Penikett
Events
January 1
–
Frobisher Bay changes its name to
Iqaluit
.
April 21
–
The lifeless body of
Claude Jutra
was finally found in the
Saint Lawrence River
near
Cap-Santé
.
[
3
]
April 30
–
Provincial premiers agree to
Meech Lake Accord
.
May 22
–
Rick Hansen
returns home to
Vancouver
after his Man in Motion world tour.
June 30
–
Canada introduces a $1 coin, commonly called
loonie
; the dollar bill is withdrawn in 1989.
a bill to restore the death penalty was defeated by the
House of Commons
in a 148–127 vote, in which Prime Minister
Brian Mulroney
,
Minister of Justice
Ray Hnatyshyn
, and
Minister of External Affairs
Joe Clark
opposed the bill, whereas Deputy Prime Minister
Donald Mazankowski
and a majority of
Progressive Conservative
MPs supported it.
[
4
]
[
5
]
[
6
]
[
7
]
July 3
–
Quebec City
becomes the first city in North America to become a
UNESCO
World Heritage Site
.
July 14
–
Montreal is hit by a series of severe thunderstorms during the
Montreal Flood of 1987
.
July 31
–
The
Edmonton Tornado
kills 27 people.
September 10
–
Ontario election:
David Peterson
's Liberals win a majority.
September 20
–
Pope John Paul II
visits the
Northwest Territories
.
October
–
Canadian and American negotiators reach agreement on the
Canadian-American Free Trade Agreement
.
October 27
–
Frank McKenna
becomes premier of New Brunswick, replacing
Richard Hatfield
.
October 31
–
The
Reform Party of Canada
is founded.
November 12
–
Dennis Patterson
becomes government leader of the Northwest Territories, replacing
Nick Sibbeston
.
November 30
–
Several new Canadian specialty channels are licensed:
YTV
,
VisionTV
,
CBC Newsworld
,
The Weather Network
/
MeteoMedia
, and one pay-television channel:
The Family Channel
.
December 16
–
Chartwell Technology
company is founded in British Columbia.
[
8
]
Undated
ElderTreks
, Canadian adventure travel company is founded.
Arts and literature
New works
William Bell
:
Metal Head
Dave Duncan
:
A Rose-Red City
Michael Ignatieff
:
The Russian Album
Irving Layton
:
Fortunate Exile
Donald Jack
:
This One's on Me
Steve McCaffery
:
Evoba
Antonine Maillet
:
Margot la folle
Farley Mowat
:
Virunga: The Passion of Dian Fossey
Paul Quarrington
,
King Leary
Mordecai Richler
:
Jacob Two-Two and the Dinosaur
Awards
See
1987 Governor General's Awards
for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
Books in Canada First Novel Award
:
Karen Lawrence
,
The Life of Helen Alone
Gerald Lampert Award
:
Rosemary Sullivan
,
The Space a Name Makes
Marian Engel Award
:
Audrey Thomas
Pat Lowther Award
:
Heather Spears
,
How to Read Faces
Stephen Leacock Award
:
W.P. Kinsella
,
The Fencepost Chronicles
Trillium Book Award
:
Michael Ondaatje
,
In the Skin of a Lion
Vicky Metcalf Award
:
Robert Munsch
Music
November 27
–
Rock band
Cowboy Junkies
record their most famous album,
The Trinity Session
, at Toronto's
Church of the Holy Trinity
.
Sport
January 26
–
Calgary
's
Bret Hart
wins his first title when he became the third Canadian to win the
World Wrestling Federation
Tag Team Championship (with
Jim Neidhart
as the
Hart Foundation
) by defeating the
British Bulldogs
in
Tampa
, Florida, for the WWF's
Superstars of Wrestling
May 15
–
The
Medicine Hat Tigers
win their first
Memorial Cup
by defeating the
Oshawa Generals
6 to 2. The final game was played at
Oshawa Civic Auditorium
in
Oshawa
, Ontario
May 31
–
The
Edmonton Oilers
win their third
Stanley Cup
by defeating the
Philadelphia Flyers
4 games to 3. The deciding Game 7 was played at
Northlands Coliseum
in
Edmonton
.
Brandon, Manitoba
's
Ron Hextall
was awarded the
Conn Smythe Trophy
in a losing effort.
June 24
–
The "new"
Montreal Allouettes
cease operations
August 30
–
Canadian
sprinter
Ben Johnson
sets a new world record in the
100-metre dash
.
November 21
–
The
McGill Redmen
win their first
Vanier Cup
by defeating the
UBC Thunderbirds
by a score of 47
–
11 in the
23rd Vanier Cup
November 29
–
The
Edmonton Eskimos
win their tenth
Grey Cup
by defeating the
Toronto Argonauts
38 to 36 in the
75th Grey Cup
played at
BC Place Stadium
in
Vancouver
Births
January 1
Gilbert Brulé
, ice hockey player
Devin Setoguchi
, ice hockey player
January 15
Kelleigh Ryan
, fencer
[
9
]
Michael Seater
, actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
January 16
–
Jake Epstein
, actor
January 19
–
Alexandra Orlando
, rhythmic gymnast
January 21
–
Andrew Forde, engineering graduate student and musician
[
10
]
February 12
–
Anna Hopkins
, actress
February 21
–
Elliot Page
, actor
[
11
]
February 25
Andrew Poje
, figure skater
Eva Avila
, singer
March 31
–
Winston Venable
, American football player
April 1
–
Mackenzie Davis
, actress
April 4
–
Sarah Gadon
, actress
April 9
–
Felix Cartal
, DJ and producer
April 10
–
Shay Mitchell
, actress, model, entrepreneur, and author
April 11
–
Lights
(Valerie Poxleitner), singer and songwriter
April 27
Joëlle Békhazi
, water polo player
Alexandra Carter
, voice actress
Emma Taylor-Isherwood
, actress
April 30
–
Jeremy Bordeleau
, canoeist
May 1
–
Marissa Ponich
, fencer
[
12
]
May 16
–
Kylie Stone
, artistic gymnast
May 17
–
Con Kudaba
, water polo player
May 29
–
Noah Reid
, actor and musician
June 18
–
Niels Schneider
, French-Canadian actor
June 22
–
Melanie Banville
, artistic gymnast
July 7
Mylène Mackay
, actress
Steven Crowder
, American-Canadian political youtuber
August 7
–
Sidney Crosby
, ice hockey player
August 8
–
Jenn Proske
, actress
August 16
–
Carey Price
, ice hockey goaltender
August 25
Stacey Farber
, actress
La zarra
, singer
September 2
Mazin Elsadig
, American-Canadian actor
Scott Moir
, ice dancer
September 13
–
G.NA
, singer
September 16
–
Christina Schmidt
, actress and model
September 23
–
Shannon Chan-Kent
, actress and voice actress
September 29
–
Kyle Riabko
, pop singer and guitarist
October 6
–
Kia Byers
, canoeist
October 15
Jesse Levine
, Canadian-American tennis player
Chantal Strand
, actress and voice actress
October 16
–
Pascal Wollach
, swimmer
October 29
–
Jessica Dubé
, figure skater
November 12
–
Bryan Little
, ice hockey player
November 15
–
Ludi Lin
, Chinese-Canadian actor
December 12
–
Kate Todd
, actress and singer-songwriter
Deaths
January to June
January 5
–
Margaret Laurence
, novelist and short story writer (b.
1926
)
January 5
–
Herman Smith-Johannsen
, ski pioneer and supercentenarian (b.
1875
)
January 27
–
Norman McLaren
, animator and film director (b.
1914
)
February 19
–
Russell Doern
, politician (b.
1935
)
March 21
–
Walter L. Gordon
, accountant, businessman, politician and writer (b.
1906
)
July to December
September 11
–
Lorne Greene
, actor (b.
1915
)
September 19
–
Ralph Steinhauer
, native leader, first
Aboriginal
to become the
Lieutenant Governor of Alberta
(b.
1905
)
October 5
–
Conrad Bourcier
, ice hockey player (b.
1915
)
October 13
–
Hugh Alexander Bryson
, politician (b.
1912
)
October 15
–
Juda Hirsch Quastel
, biochemist (b.
1899
)
November 1
–
René Lévesque
, politician, Minister and 23rd
Premier of Quebec
(b.
1922
)
November 6
–
George Laurence
, nuclear physicist (b.
1905
)
November 18
–
George Ryga
, playwright and novelist (b.
1932
)
November 29
–
Gwendolyn MacEwen
, novelist and poet (b.
1941
)
See also
1987 in Canadian television
List of Canadian films of 1987
References
↑
"Queen Elizabeth II | The Canadian Encyclopedia"
.
www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca
. Retrieved
4 December
2022
.
↑
Lentz, Harris M. (4 February 2014).
Heads of States and Governments Since 1945
. Routledge. p.
144.
ISBN
978-1-134-26490-2
.
↑
(in French)
Bilan du Siècle
↑
"Abolition upheld"
.
CBC Archives
. 10 April 2013. Archived from
the original
on January 15, 2013
. Retrieved
July 28,
2012
.
↑
"The death penalty in Canada: facts, figures and milestones"
.
Canadian Coalition Against the Death Penalty
. Archived from
the original
on 2011-10-19
. Retrieved
2012-07-28
.
↑
"Majority of Canadians support return of death penalty, poll finds"
.
thestar.com
. 8 February 2012.
↑
"Canada Considers Restoring Death Penalty"
.
tribunedigital-sunsentinel
. Archived from
the original
on August 8, 2014.
↑
"Chartwell Technology Inc"
. www.sec.gov
. Retrieved
3 January
2021
.
↑
"Kelleigh Ryan"
.
Team Canada - Official Olympic Team Website
. 25 October 2011
. Retrieved
17 April
2019
.
↑
"Jerome award winner accomplished on many levels
|
Share News"
. Archived from
the original
on 2012-09-26
. Retrieved
2012-04-05
.
↑
"Elliot Page | The Canadian Encyclopedia"
.
www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca
. Retrieved
19 December
2020
.
↑
"Marissa Ponich"
.
Team Canada - Official Olympic Team Website
. 11 June 2015
. Retrieved
19 December
2020
.
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1987 in North America
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