Canada officially became a country on July 1, 1867. The term "Dominion" is simply a historical reference to Section 3 of the British North America Act: "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never known officially as "The Dominion of Canada". It found its way into popular venues such as paper currency and school maps. However, on Canadian bills it was meant as "The Dominion Under Canada" and on school maps as "The Queen's Dominion of Canada". It is difficult to say when it stopped being used as it was never really a true title. However, after independent Canadian citizenship was created in 1947 the word "dominion" quickly began to fall out of favour with the public. However, if one really needed to pin down a specific date for the fazing out of the term "dominion" it would be November 8, 1951. On this date, Prime Minister Louis St.Laurent stated in the House of Commons "I can say at once that it is the policy of this government when statutes come up for review or consolidating to replace the word 'dominion' with the word 'Canada.''.
The word "dominion" was never officially part of Canada's name. The confusion has arisen because many more nouns were capitalized in the 1800s than are capitalized today. The word "dominion" was merely a descriptive noun that was capitalized.
Ontario, quebec, New brunswick and Nova scotia
The Old Dominion is the nickname, given by King Charles II, to Virginia.
They come from Canada
The British took Canada from the French during the French and Indian War. The War was over in 1763. In 1867, The colonies of Canada (Ontario and Quebec) with New Brunswick and Nova Scotia became the Dominion of Canada.
Canada officially became a country on July 1, 1867. The first provinces were Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. The term "Dominion" is simply a historical reference to Section 3 of the British North America Act: "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never known officially as "The Dominion of Canada".
Canada became a country ("one dominion under the name of Canada") on July 1, 1867.
The word "dominion" was never officially part of Canada's name. The confusion has arisen because many more nouns were capitalized in the 1800s than are capitalized today. The word "dominion" was merely a descriptive noun that was capitalized.
The word "dominion" was never part of Canada's name. It was merely a term of description. Why the word "dominion" was chosen to describe Canada is the subject of a few legends, none of which have any evidence to support them. The word "dominion" was in common use in the days of Confederation and for a few centuries prior to that. There was a "Dominion of New England" and also a "Dominion of Virginia" as well as a few others. The word "dominion" was used in conformity with its prior uses.
Canada was created by the British North America Act (now the Constitution Act) on July 1, 1867, thereby becoming the first country to be created by legislation.(Note: The word "dominion" was never part of Canada's name. It was merely a term of description.)Canada became a country on July 1, 1867. The term "dominion" is a historical reference to Sec. 3 of the British North America Act which states "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never officially called "The Dominion of Canada".
Dominion Day was the name of the holiday commemorating the formation of Canada as a Dominion on 1 July 1867. The holiday was renamed to Canada Day by Act of Parliament on 27 October 1982.
Canada's name is and always has been, plain and simple: "Canada."The word "dominion" was never part of Canada's name. It was merely a term of description. See section 3 of the British North America Act (now the Constitution Act).
Canada officially became a country on July 1, 1867. The first provinces were Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. (The term "Dominion" is simply a historical reference to Section 3 of the British North America Act: "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never known officially as "The Dominion of Canada". It found its way into popular venues such as paper currency and school maps. However, on Canadian bills it was meant as "The Dominion Under Canada" and on school maps as "The Queen's Dominion of Canada".)
Alliance
It is not a "dominion" it is a Confederation of Nations.
Dominion Day is just the former name of the national holiday celebrated annually on the first of July, the date of Confederation. The national holiday is now called Canada Day. The first Dominion Day national holiday was celebrated in 1879. The name of the national holiday was changed to Canada Day on October 27, 1982.
The 'Dominion of Canada ' has never moved. Early Canada is only enlarged by the addition of the western provinces.