• March 1 –
Harlan Brewster,
premier of British Columbia, dies in office • March 6 –
John Oliver becomes premier of British Columbia • March 28 – April 1 – In the
Easter Riots in Quebec City, the Militia suppress anti-conscription protesters. Four civilians are killed. • March 30 – C Squadron of
Lord Strathcona's Horse (Royal Canadians) conducts a cavalry charge against the Germans at
Moreuil Wood. The squadron suffers atrocious casualties, but the action is one of the keys of halting the German advance in
Operation Michael. Lieutenant
Gordon Flowerdew will be awarded the
Victoria Cross posthumously. • April 21 – Canadian Captain
Roy Brown (
209 Squadron, RAF) supposedly shoots down the famed
Red Baron. More accepted theories credit either Sergeant
Cedric Popkin (Australian 24th Machine Gun Company), Gunner
Snowy Evans or Gunner Robert Buie (both of 53rd Battery, 14th Field Artillery Brigade,
RAA) with the kill. • May 24 – Canadian women (except status Indians) obtain the right to vote in federal elections (even if they did not yet have the right to vote in provincial elections); some limited women's suffrage had been granted the year earlier. Status Indians gained federal suffrage in 1960. • August 2 – The
Vancouver general strike, the first
general strike in Canada, triggered by the killing of
Ginger Goodwin by police. • August 8 – World War I: At the
Battle of Amiens superior Canadian gunners assist a great allied breakthrough (also called
Canada's 100 Days) • August 26 – September 3 –
Battle of Arras, 1918 • September – Canadian forces
arrive in northern Russia to assist the
White movement against the
Bolsheviks in the Russian Civil War • September 2–3 –
Battle of Drocourt–Quéant Line. Seven
Victoria Crosses will be awarded to Canadians for their valour on September 2. • September 9–12 –
Battle of the Hindenburg Line • September 27 – October 2 –
Battle of Canal du Nord • October 8–9 –
Battle of Cambrai (1918) • October 10 – Two squadrons of the
Canadian Light Horse charge the enemy at
Iwuy, northeast of Cambrai. This was the last combat charge in the history of Canadian cavalry. • October 26 – The
Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force arrives in
Vladivostok to aid the White movement in the Russian Civil War • November 1–2 –
Battle of Valenciennes • November 11 – The
Armistice goes into effect, ending combat on the
Western Front. Over Canadians fought in Europe: were killed and were wounded. • December 4 – The lead elements of the Canadian Corps enter Germany. • December 13 – The Canadian Corps parades across bridges over the Rhine, the 1st Division at
South Bridge (Cologne) and the 2nd Division at
Bonn. The Canadians participate in the
Occupation of the Rhineland until gradually withdrawn starting in January 1919.
Full date unknown • The
Statistics Act is passed, creating the
Dominion Bureau of Statistics • Canada demands and receives – over the initial opposition of Britain, France and the USA – the right to participate in the
Versailles Peace Conference and in the
League of Nations. ==Arts and literature==