"An Act to make the first day of July a Public Holiday by the name of Dominion Day"(House of Commons Debates, 1879, Vol.II, p. 2047).
Attached is a copy of the Act of 1879 as printed in the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1886, Chapter III.
Also attached is a brief extract from newspaper reports indicating that citizens left Ottawa, Toronto and Quebec City on July 1, 1879 and there were no public ceremonies.
Attached is a memorandum of reports in the Press of events on Parliament Hill and at Westminster Abbey on Monday, July 2, 1917.
The Committee, called the Corporation comprised about seventy persons including the Governor General and his wife, the lieutenant governors of the provinces, the Prime Minister of Canada and seven members of the Cabinet (but not the Secretary of State), the Chief Justice, several privy councillors including the former prime minister, the speakers of both Houses, the Leader of the Opposition, the premiers of all the provinces, several senators and the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate, the Clerk of the Privy Council, the Under Secretary of State, the Dominion Archivist, the Under Secretary of State for External Affairs and the heads of a number of organizations such as the National Council of Women, the Trades and Labour Congress, the United Farmers of Alberta, I.O.D.E., Bar Association, the National Battlefields Commission, the Canadian Legion, etc.
The objects of the Corporation were to make and carry out necessary arrangements in cooperation with the provinces and other bodies for an effective celebration of the sixtieth anniversary of the formation of the Dominion of Canada, and to administer and distribute a grant of $250,000. The affairs of the corporation were administered by an executive committee; the Secretary of State of Canada convened the first meeting of this committee.
The Committee issued a forty-eight page pamphlet, illustrated in colour, containing suggestions for historical pageants, floats and tableaux for the guidance bibliography of Canadian history.
Extracts from The Canada Gazette and the Citizen on Dominion Day...