Heritage Minutes: Avro Arrow 1997
Canadian aerospace engineers design and test the world's fastest, most advanced interceptor aircraft.
Canadian aerospace engineers design and test the world's fastest, most advanced interceptor aircraft.
The first woman licensed to practice medicine in Canada faces prejudice in the classroom.
A one-minute vignette on renowned neurosurgeon Dr. Wilder Penfield's pioneering procedure to cure epilepsy.
The surprise victory of the Paris Crew, a group of unheralded Canadian rowers, at the 1867 World Championships.
A Canadian soldier's bear becomes the object of adoration and inspiration for a young boy and his father, A.A. Milne.
New France, under the leadership of French governor Louis de Buade de Frontenac, repels the British invasion at the Battle of Quebec
The formation of the Iroquois Confederacy presented by a First Nations grandfather explaining the significance of the Great Peace to his granddaughter.
Jacques Plante becomes the first NHL player to wear a goaltender mask in regular play.
Inventor Joseph-Armand Bombardier and the beginnings of his passion for engineering.
Queen Victoria decides to grant Canada responsible government after the crushing of the Rebellions of 1837.
The town of Myrnam, Alberta forms a non-denominational hospital.
Prairie settlers build a house of sod.
A volunteer teacher brings basic literacy and mathematical skills to a lumber and work camp in the Canadian bush.
The ferry command pilot delivers fighter planes to Britain during the Second World War, and plans her post-war career as Canada's first female flight school operator.
Philosopher of communication theory Marshall McLuhan coins the phrases "the medium is the message" and "global village."
Native American Chief Sitting Bull seeks refuge in Canada.
The first woman to be elected to the Canadian House of Commons Agnes Macphail fights for penal reform.
An African American escapes to Canada along the Underground Railroad.
Train dispatcher Vince Coleman sacrifices his own life to save a train from the Halifax Explosion.
Three men from Pine Street in Winnipeg win the Victoria Cross in World War I, and the street's name is changed to Valour Road in their honour.