Order of Ontario
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- This article is about the Canadian order. Oont is Urdu for "camel" and was adopted as an Anglo-Indian term for the animal during British rule of India.
The Order of Ontario is a prestigious society in the Canadian province of Ontario. Created in 1986 by then Lieutenant Governor Lincoln Alexander, induction into the order is the highest official honour in the province. The order recognizes individual excellence and achievement in any field, but is not awarded for acts of bravery.
When a Lieutenant Governor is sworn in, he or she automatically becomes Chancellor of the order during the terms of office, and, as such, a member for life.
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[edit] Description
Each year, inductees are selected by an advisory council consisting of the Chief Justice of Ontario (chair), the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, and the Secretary of the Cabinet, as well as other members of the order. The order can be awarded to residents or former long-term residents of Ontario, who are not sitting elected federal, provincial, or municipal representatives. The order may not be awarded posthumously; however, candidates who are alive when they are nominated but who die before being inducted into the order remain eligible. Members of the order may use the post-nominal letters OOnt following their names.
The insignia of the order is a stylized trillium, in white and green enamel, edged in gold. In the centre of the trillium is the provincial shield of arms, surmounted by a Crown. The ribbons are red (the colour of the Ontario Ensign), white, green and gold.
[edit] Members
[edit] 1986
[edit] 1991
[edit] 1996
- Arlette Lefebvre — Child psychologist at the Hospital for Sick Children
[edit] 1997
[edit] 1998
- Marion Anderson — Aboriginal band councillor
- Bluma Appel — Philanthropist and patron of the arts
- Jean Ashworth Bartle — Founder and director of the Toronto Children's Chorus
- Allan Leslie Beattie — Lawyer and former chairman of the board for the Hospital for Sick Children
- Irene Broadfoot — Community activist
- Norman Campbell — Composer
- Armando Felice DeLuca — Community activist
- Claire O. Dimock — Community activist
- Ydessa Hendeles — Founder, director and curator of the Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation and Grand Founder of the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO)
- Dr. Kenneth C. Hobbs — Physician and international humanitarian
- Hon. Henry N. R. Jackman — Business leader, philanthropist, former Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, Chair of the Ontario Arts Council and Chancellor of the University of Toronto
- Maureen Kempston Darkes — President and General Manager of General Motors Canada Ltd. and community activist
- Marvelle Koffler — Founder of the Marvelle Koffler Breast Centre at Mount Sinai Hospital and the Koffler Centre for the Arts
- Dr. Lap Cheung Lee — Community activist
- Andrée Lortie — Advocate of the francophone community
- Knowlton Nash — Journalist
- Alfred U. Oakie — Pioneer in the field of traffic safety
- Lloyd Seivright — International activist
- Masami Tsuruoka — Sports
- Thomas Leonard Wells — Politician
[edit] 1999
- William Blake — Community activist
- Doris Boissoneau — Ojibwe language activist
- Paul Michel Bosc — Wine-maker
- Mavis Elaine Burke — Educator, advocate for early childhood education and community activist
- Clarice Chalmers — Philanthropist
- Keshav Chandaria — Philanthropist
- Susan Charness — Activist with persons with disabilities
- Sam John Ciccolini — Entrepreneur and philanthropist
- Esther Farlinger — Charity fundraiser
- Victor Feldbrill — Violinist, orchestral conductor and champion of Canadian music
- Dr. James Ferguson — Medical researcher
- Maxwell Goldhar — Businessman, philanthropist
- Doris Lau — Financial adviser, charity fundraiser, goodwill ambassador for Ontario and scholarship sponsor
- Eileen McGregor — Community activist
- Winnie "Roach" Leuszler — First Canadian to swim the English Channel, sportswoman
- Alice King Sculthorpe — Community activist
- Dr. Bette M. Stephenson — Physician, founding member of the College of Family Physicians Canada, former Ontario Progressive Conservative MPP and cabinet minister
- Hin Cheung Tam — Community activist
- Gordie Tapp — Entertainer
- Anthony Toldo — Industrialist and philanthropist
- Lisette Véron-Rainu — Children's activitist
- Ken Watts — Founder of the Ontario Collegiate Drama Festival
[edit] 2000
- Danielle Allen and Normand Pellerin — Educators
- Maggie Atkinson — Lawyer and AIDS activist
- Marilyn Brooks — Fashion designer and philanthropist
- Nickie Cassidy — Activist with Multiple Sclerosis sufferers
- Ernie Checkeris — Educator and activist, Chancellor of Thorneloe University, Sudbury
- George A. Cohon — Chicago-born lawyer and Founder and Senior Chairman of McDonald's Restaurants of Canada and philanthropist
- Lloyd Dennis — Educator
- William Andrew Dimma — Businessman and educator
- Kildare Dobbs — Writer and journalist
- Joyce Fee — Educator and community activist
- Dr. Robert Freedom — Physician, professor and author
- Donald H. Harron — Journalist, author and actor
- Jane Jacobs — American-born author and Toronto urban philosopher
- Stephan Lewar — Venture capitalist, financier and philanthropist
- Janet MacInnis — Fundraiser and volunteer
- Frank Miller — Politician (former Premier of Ontario)
- Betty Oliphant — Founder of the National Ballet School of Canada
- J. Robert S. Prichard — Educator, author and former President of the University of Toronto
- Joseph Radmore — Athlete, member of the Canadian Paralympic Team
- Margaret M. Risk — Nurse
- Haroon Siddiqui — Journalist and columnist
- Dr. Calvin Stiller — Physician
- Donald A. Stuart — Gold and silversmith
- Dr. Lap-Chee Tsui — Molecular geneticist and vice-chancellor of the University of Hong Kong
- Irving Ungerman — Entrepreneur, boxer and activist
[edit] 2001
- Richard M. Alway — President and Vice-Chancellor of St. Michael's College, promoter of Catholic-Anglican dialogue in Canada.
- Gwen M. Boniface — First female Ontario Provincial Police Commissioner
- Rita Burak — Public servant
- Danielle Campo — Athlete, member of the Canadian Paralympic Team
- Michael "Pinball" Clemons — President and former player of the Toronto Argonauts
- Ken Danby — Artist
- Terry Daynard — Researcher and teacher
- Terrence J. Donnelly — Fundraiser for cardiac research and development
- Gail J. Donner — Dean of the Faculty of Nursing at the University of Toronto, and Executive Director of the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario
- Fredrik Stefan Eaton — Businessman and a community volunteer
- C. Dennis Flynn — Elected official, fundraiser, community volunteer and war veteran
- Nicolas D. Georganas — Pioneer in multimedia medical communications and tele-learning
- Helen Haddow — Community activist
- Paul Kells — Workplace safety advocate
- Jake Lamoureux — Volunteer with young people
- Alexina Louie — Composer of classical music
- Lewis W. MacKenzie, Major General (Retired) — Ontario Director of ICROSS Canada, the International Community for the Relief of Starvation and Suffering
- Signe and Robert McMichael — Builders and donors of the McMichael Canadian Art Collection of Group of Seven paintings in Kleinburg
- Dusty Miller — Patron of the arts, artistic director of the Cambrian Players
- David Mirvish — Leader in the development and promotion of the visual arts in Ontario
- Peter Nesbitt Oliver — Historian
- James S. Redpath — Chancellor of Nipissing University
- Dr. Donald T. Stuss — Clinical psychologist, educator, neuropsychologists and behavioural neuroscientists
- Bhausaheb Ubale — Human rights activist
- Dr. Carin Wittnich — University of Toronto professor and researcher
- Madeline Ziniak — Vice-president and executive producer of CFMT television, promoter of multiculturalism
[edit] 2002
- Peggy Baker — Dancer, choreographer and teacher; founder of the Toronto-based Dancemakers
- James K. Bartleman — Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- Marilyn Bell DiLascio — First person to swim Lake Ontario (1954)
- David Blackwood — Artist
- Frederick M. Catzman — Lawyer
- Austin Clarke — Author, teacher, mentor, writer-in-residence at the University of Toronto, and recipient of the 2002 Giller Prize
- Barbara Chilcott — Actress
- Mario Cortellucci — Fundraiser
- Patricia Freeman Marshall — Community activist
- Irving R. Gerstein — Businessman and philanthropist
- Joan Goldfarb — Teacher of adults with disabilities
- Walter Gretzky — Ambassador for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind and the Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation and father of Wayne Gretzky
- Phyllis M. Grosskurth — Professor emerita and fellow of Massey College at the University of Toronto; winner of the Governor General's Award for non-fiction in 1965
- Dr. Raymond O. Heimbecker — Cardiovascular surgeon
- Patrick John Keenan — Volunteer
- Tom Kneebone — Actor and playwright
- Burton Kramer — Graphic designer
- Dr. Benson Lau — Physician and teacher
- J. Douglas Lawson — Volunteer, Vice-Chairman of the Ontario Arts Council
- Rhéal Leroux — Volunteer, former president of the Festival Franco-Ontarien
- Dr. William K. Lindsay — Surgeon and professor
- Joan Murray — Art historian, former director of the Robert McLaughlin Gallery in Oshawa
- Mark Poznansky — Researcher, President and Scientific Director of the Robarts Research Institute
- Dr. Joanna Santa Barbara — Physician, national president of the Physicians for Global Survival
- Thomas H. B. Symons — Founder of Trent University and its president and vice-chancellor from 1961 to 1972
- Lela Wilson — Champion of artists' rights
[edit] 2003
- Joseph J. Barnicke — Business leader, pioneer and philanthropist
- John Kim Bell — Musician and promoter of Aboriginal culture
- Col. Archibald J. D. Brown — Businessman, community activist
- Dorothy Ellen Duncan — Teacher, curator, Executive Director of The Ontario Historical Society
- Julian Fantino — Police officer, former Chief of Police for London, York Region and Toronto; now Ontario's Commissioner Of Emergency Management
- Mary Germain — Community activist
- Dr. Avis E. Glaze — Teacher, administrator, author and international educator
- Dr. Benjamin Goldberg — Psychiatrist
- Doris Grinspun — Executive Director of the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario (RNAO)
- George Gross — Corporate Sports Editor of Sun Media Corporation, activist
- Macklin Hancock — Pioneer in urban planning, urban design and landscape architecture
- Ryan Hreljac — Elementary school student; committed to raising funds for clean water and sanitation projects around the world since the age of six
- Dr. Frederic Jackman — Psychologist
- Laura Louise Legge — Lawyer and community activist
- Helen Lu — Volunteer, organizer and fundraiser for charitable organizations in Toronto
- Dr. Donald Mackay — Environmental scientist, Professor of Environmental and Resource Studies at Trent University, and director of the Canadian Environmental Modelling Centre
- Hon. Jack Marshall — Second World War veteran, Member of Parliament, Senator, and activist
- Anna Porter — Publisher and author
- Hon. Robert Keith Rae — Lawyer, Member of Parliament, former Premier of Ontario
- Eric Wilfrid Robinson — Promoter of adult education in Canada
- Diane Simard Broadfoot — Community activist
- Joan Thompson — Volunteer
- Rita Tsang — Businesswoman
- Hon. Mabel Van Camp — Scholar, lawyer, Supreme Court Justice
- Mike Weir — Golfer, first Canadian to win the Masters Golf Tournament
- Kirk A. Wipper — Environmentalist, heritage conservationist and fitness advocate
- William John Withrow — Former director of the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO)
[edit] 2004
- Dr. Tyseer Aboulnasr — respected leader in engineering
- Jeff Adams — paralympian and world champion in wheelchair sports
- Mohammad Azhar Ali Khan — journalist and multiculturalism expert
- Diana Alli — outreach worker
- Patricia Ann Arato — aphasia care volunteer
- Dr. Robin F. Badgley — sociologist, founder of Department of Behavioural Science at the University of Toronto
- Iain Baxter — conceptual artist
- Louise Binder — speaker on HIV/AIDS issues
- Richard Bradshaw — director of the Canadian Opera Company
- Leonard A. Braithwaite — lawyer and former MPP
- Dr. Inez Elliston — educator and community volunteer
- Adele Fifield — director of The War Amps
- Joan Francolini — community volunteer
- Sheldon Galbraith — figure skating coach
- Dr. Allan Gross — Professor of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto
- Andrea Hansen — violinist
- Joyce Ann Lange — advocate for the hearing impaired
- Delores Lawrence — leading female entrepreneur and philanthropist
- René J. Marin — respected Francophone jurist
- David McGirr — community volunteer in Northern Ontario
- Anthony Pawson — scientist known for research of signal transduction in cells
- Kim Phuc Phan Thi — Vietnamese napalm victim
- John Rochon — marksman
- Chandrakant Shah — public health educator
- Gordon Surgeoner — entomologist specializing in insect transmitted diseases
- Galen Weston — businessman in food services sector
- Reverend Monsignor Lawrence (Wawrzyniec) Anthony Wnuk P.A. — outreach worker in the Polish community
- James Young — former Chief Coroner
- Margaret Zeidler — architect
[edit] 2006
- Naomi Alboim — Public servant
- Ron Barbaro — Community service
- Harold Brathwaite — Educator
- Boris Brott — Conductor, Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra and others
- Donald Carr — Lawyer
- Brian Desbiens — Educator
- Thomas Dignan — Aboriginal healthcare advocate
- Deborah Ellis — Children's author and human rights advocate
- Hughes Eng — Community service
- Brenda L. Gallie — Expert in the treatment of retinoblastoma
- Dorothy Griffiths — Researcher, professor
- William A. Harshaw — Fundraiser, Parkinson's disease
- John Honderich — Former editor and publisher, Toronto Star
- Leon Katz — Engineer, medical inventor
- Gisèle Lalonde — Educator
- Mike Lazaridis — Founder, Research In Motion; inventor, BlackBerry
- Beatrice Levis — Advocate for social justice
- Nancy Lockhart — Chair, Ontario Science Centre
- Ernest McCulloch — Pioneer in stem cell biology
- Lillian McGregor — Teacher of aboriginal languages
- Sher Ali Mirza — Engineer
- Ratna Omidvar — Former president, Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants
- Sandra Rotman — Philanthropist
- Mark Starowicz — Broadcaster and journalist
- Marlene Streit — Professional golfer
- Ronald W. Taylor — Physician in sports medicine; team physician to the Toronto Blue Jays
- James Till — Pioneer in stem cell biology
- John Walker Whiteside — Assistant crown attorney
- Moses Znaimer — Broadcaster
[edit] 2007
- Thomas J. Bitove — Businessman and community activist
- John Richard Bond — University of Toronto astrophysicist and cosmologist
- Bernice and Rolland Desnoyers - Youth activists
- Peter J. George — Economist, author, President and Vice Chancellor of McMaster University in Hamilton and Chair of the Council of Ontario Universities
- Christopher A. Harris — Co-founder of the Ottawa-Carleton Immigrant Services Organization, the National Capital Alliance on Race Relations and the Jamaican Ottawa Community Association
- Peter A. Herrndorf —
- Rebecca F. Jamieson — First Nations activist
- Max Keeping — Ottawa media personality
- M. David Lepofsky — Disability activist
- Dr. Tak W. Mak — Biomedical scientist
- J. William McConkey — University of Windsor professor
- Dr. Roderick R. McInnes — University of Toronto professor and senior scientist with the Hospital for Sick Children
- The Honourable R. Roy McMurtry — Former Chief Justice of Ontario and Attorney General of Ontario
- Lorraine Monk — Author, photographer, and artist
- Albert Kai-Wing Ng — Graphic designer
- Adeena Niazi —
- Gordon M. Nixon — President and CEO of the Royal Bank of Canada
- Margaret Helen Ogilvie — Chancellor’s Professor of Law at Carleton University
- Eva Olsson — Concentration camp survivor
- Marlene Ann Pierre — Aboriginal activist
- Dr. Frances A. Shepherd — University of Toronto professor
- Janice Gross Stein — Scholar
- Paul-François Sylvestre — Novelist, researcher and mentor
- William Thorsell — Director and CEO of the Royal Ontario Museum
- Dr. David Walde — Director of the Oncology Program
- Dr. Paul Walfish — University of Toronto professor and senior consultant
[edit] 2008
- Dr. Sheela Basrur — Former Chief Medical Officer of Ontario[1]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Howlett, Karen. "SARS 'Mighty Mouse' named to Order of Ontario", The Globe and Mail, 2008-04-12. Retrieved on 2008-04-12.
[edit] External links
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