These are the jobs women typically held during the 1920s.
What are: secretaries, nurses, clerks?
100
These are considered to be the two most important technological advancements of the 1920s.
What are the radio and the airplane?
100
Canada's Prime Minister during the 1920s.
Who is William Lyon Mackenzie King?
100
This notorious American gangster used Canada to get alchohol to help his illegal activities.
Who is Al Capone?
100
This association of artists aimed to represent the beauty of Canadian nature in a unique way.
What is the Group of Seven?
200
These women symbolized radical change in the 1920s. They adopted a new lifestyle which involved drinking alcohol, smoking, attending jazz clubs, and dressing in revealing clothing.
Who are flappers?
200
Frederick Banting is famous for inventing this treatment for diabetes.
What is insulin?
200
This 1926 report recognized the equal status between Britain and the rest of the Dominion, including Canada.
What is the Balfour Report?
200
These people made and sold illegal alchohol.
Who are bootleggers?
200
This athlete won two gold medals during the 1928 Olympics and was considered to be the greatest sprinter the world had ever seen.
Who is Percy Williams?
300
The first woman in Canada to be elected into Parliament?
Who is Agnes Campbell Macphail?
300
This Canadian compnay which focused on servicing the automobile, was founded by the Billes Brothers.
What is Canadian Tire Inc.?
300
In this year, the Canadian government passed this law that forbade people from Chine to come to Canada.
What is the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923?
300
Many people attended these illegal establishments that secretly sold alcohol.
What are speakeasies?
300
Canadians often enjoyed these types of activities during the 1920s.
What are: going to the movies, attending church, going on picnics, snowshoeing, skiing, skating, etc.
400
A group of women who opposed the inequalities endured by women all over Canada. They are best known for their contributions to the "Persons Case" whereby women were finally recognized as persons.
Who are Alberta's "Famous Five"?
400
Ted Rogers is famous for inventing this.
What is the batteryless radio?
400
By 1929, many provinces in Canada passed a law that made it illegal to do this.
What is employ children under the age of 14?
400
A person who smuggled alchohol across the border during prohibition years.
What is a rumrunner?
400
By 1927, only people of British descent or those who lived in Canada for twenty or more years were elegible for this.
What is old-age pension?
500
In this year, this woman became the first ever to be appointed to the Canadian senate.
Who is Cairine Wilson in 1930?
500
This was the first mass produced automobile.
What is the Model T Ford?
500
This was an important document the first that Canada signed without the co-signing of Britain.
What is the Halibut Treaty of 1923?
500
This small Canadian city was the centre of illegal transport of bootleg liquor into the United States?
What is Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan?
500
In this place, Aboriginal children were forced to live, work, and study - an important tool in the government's "assimilation" policy