celebrates
Dominion Day in 1917, the
golden jubilee of
Confederation The enactment of the
British North America Act, 1867 (today called the
Constitution Act, 1867), which
confederated Canada, was celebrated on July 1, 1867, with the ringing of the bells at the
Cathedral Church of St James in Toronto and "bonfires, fireworks, and illuminations, excursions, military displays, and musical and other entertainments", as described in contemporary accounts. On June 20 of the following year,
Governor General the Viscount Monck issued a royal
proclamation asking for
Canadians to celebrate the anniversary of Confederation, However, the holiday was not established statutorily until May 15, 1879, when it was designated as
Dominion Day, alluding to the reference in the British North America Act to the country as a
dominion. The holiday was initially not dominant in the national calendar; any celebrations were mounted by local communities and the governor general hosted a party at
Rideau Hall. In 1946,
Philéas Côté, a Quebec member of the
House of Commons, introduced a
private member's bill to rename Dominion Day as
Canada Day. The bill was passed quickly by the lower chamber but was stalled by the
Senate, which returned it to the commons with the recommendation that the holiday be renamed
The National Holiday of Canada, an amendment that effectively killed the bill. The Canadian government began in 1958 to orchestrate Dominion Day celebrations. That year, then-Prime Minister
John Diefenbaker requested that
Secretary of State Ellen Fairclough organize appropriate events, with a budget of $14,000. Parliament was traditionally in session on July 1, but Fairclough persuaded Diefenbaker and the rest of the
federal cabinet to attend. Some Canadians were, by the early 1980s, informally referring to the holiday as
Canada Day, a practice that caused some controversy: Columnist
Andrew Cohen called
Canada Day a term of "crushing banality" and criticized it as "a renunciation of the past [and] a misreading of history, laden with political correctness and historical ignorance". The holiday was officially renamed as a result of a private member's bill that was passed through the House of Commons on July 9, 1982, two years after its
first reading. The group passed the bill in five minutes, without debate, inspiring "grumblings about the underhandedness of the process". With the granting of
royal assent, the holiday's name was officially changed to Canada Day on October 27, 1982, and first celebrated under that name July 1, 1983. , a
state order inaugurated on July 1, 1967 As the anniversary of Confederation, Dominion Day, and later Canada Day, was the date set for a number of important events, such as the first national radio network hookup by the
Canadian National Railway (1927); the inauguration of the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's cross-country television broadcast, with Governor General
Vincent Massey's Dominion Day speech from Parliament Hill (1958); The
COVID-19 pandemic led to the cancellation in 2020 of all in-person Canada Day festivities nationwide, due to
social distancing and restrictions on public gatherings. Some were converted to
virtual events. The same cancellations occurred the following year; though, some also
for political reasons. In-person festivities in Ottawa returned in 2022, being re-located from Parliament Hill to
LeBreton Flats due to construction associated with the
Parliament Hill Rehabilitation project.—and the enactment of the
Chinese Immigration Act in 1923, leading
Chinese-Canadians to refer to July 1 as
Humiliation Day () and boycott Dominion Day celebrations with shop closures, flying the
Canadian flag on
half-mast, or hanging
wreaths in front of home and shop entrances until the act was repealed in 1947. Canada Day also coincides with Quebec's
Moving Day, when many fixed-lease apartment rental terms expire. The bill changing the province's moving day from May 1 to July 1 was introduced by a federalist member of the
Quebec National Assembly,
Jérôme Choquette, in 1973, in order not to affect children still in school in the month of May. ==Activities==