List of vicereines in Canada
A total of twenty women have served, or are currently serving, as vicereine in Canada. An additional seven women have performed as territorial commissioners similar function to the monarch and viceroys.
Canada is a constitutional monarchy with Queen Elizabeth II as the reigning Canadian monarch. As the Queen does not always reside in Canada, her daily responsibilities in the country are in the federal jurisdiction undertaken by the Governor General of Canada and by a lieutenant governor in each of the ten provincial jurisdictions. Collectively, these individuals are the Queen's official viceregal representatives; as women, they are described as vicereine, the female variant of viceroy.
Governors general
A total of three women have served as the Governor General of Canada.
Name | Home Province | Start of Mandate | End of Mandate | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jeanne Sauvé | Saskatchewan | 14 May 1984 | 28 January 1990 | First female governor general in Canadian history; appointed by Queen Elizabeth II on the advice of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau; member of the Fransaskois community. |
Adrienne Clarkson | Ontario | 7 October 1999 | 27 September 2005 | First visible minority and first Chinese Canadian to be appointed governor general; first governor general without a military or political background. |
Michaëlle Jean | Québec | 27 September 2005 | 1 October 2010 | First Black Canadian woman to serve as a vicereine in Canada. |
Lieutenant governors
A total of fifteen women have served, or are currently serving, as the lieutenant governor of a province. As of 2013, all of the provinces except Newfoundland and Labrador have had at least one woman serve as lieutenant governor. As of 2015, there are five vicereines currently serving.
Name | Province | Start of Mandate | End of Mandate | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pauline McGibbon | Ontario | 10 April 1974 | 15 September 1980 | First vicereine in Canadian and Commonwealth history; appointed Lieutenant Governor of Ontario by Governor General Jules Léger upon the advice of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. |
Pearl McGonigal | Manitoba | 23 October 1981 | 11 December 1986 | First female lieutenant governor in Western Canada. |
Wilma Helen Hunley | Alberta | 22 January 1985 | 11 March 1991 | First female lieutenant governor in Alberta. |
Sylvia Fedoruk | Saskatchewan | 7 September 1988 | 31 May 1994 | First female lieutenant governor in Saskatchewan. |
Marion Reid | Prince Edward Island | 16 August 1990 | 30 August 1995 | First female lieutenant governor in Atlantic Canada. |
Margaret McCain | New Brunswick | 21 June 1994 | 18 April 1997 | First female lieutenant governor in New Brunswick. |
Lise Thibault | Québec | 30 January 1997 | 7 June 2007 | First physically disabled person to serve as a viceroy in Canada. |
Marilyn Trenholme Counsell | New Brunswick | 18 April 1997 | 26 August 2003 | Succeeded Margaret McCain as Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick; first woman to succeed another female vicereine in Canada. |
Hilary Weston | Ontario | 24 January 1997 | 7 March 2002 | |
Lois Hole | Alberta | 11 February 2000 | 6 January 2005 | Died while in office at the age of 75. |
Lynda Haverstock | Saskatchewan | 21 February 2000 | 1 August 2006 | |
Myra Freeman | Nova Scotia | 17 May 2000 | 7 September 2006 | First female lieutenant governor in Nova Scotia. |
Iona Campagnolo | British Columbia | 25 September 2001 | 30 September 2007 | First female lieutenant governor in British Columbia. |
Barbara Oliver Hagerman | Prince Edward Island | 31 July 2006 | 15 August 2011 | |
Mayann Francis | Nova Scotia | 7 September 2006 | 12 April 2012 | Second Black Canadian to serve as a vicereine in Canada, after Governor General Michaëlle Jean. |
Judith Guichon | British Columbia | 2 November 2012 | incumbent | |
Vaughn Solomon Schofield | Saskatchewan | 22 March 2012 | incumbent | |
Elizabeth Dowdeswell | Ontario | 23 September 2014 | incumbent | |
Jocelyne Roy-Vienneau | New Brunswick | 23 October 2014 | incumbent | |
Lois Mitchell | Alberta | 12 June 2015 | incumbent | |
Janice Filmon | Manitoba | 19 June 2015 | incumbent |
Territorial commissioners
In each of the three territories of Canada, a commissioner is the formal head of state. Unlike the governor general or a lieutenant governor, who are officially representatives of the Queen of Canada, the commissioners are appointed by the Government of Canada and therefore, they are not technically viceregal representatives. However, they too perform duties akin to a viceroy.
A total of eight women have served, or are currently serving, as a commissioner; one woman has served terms as a commissioner in two territories.
Name | Territory | Start of Mandate | End of Mandate | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ione Christensen | Yukon | 20 January 1979 | 10 October 1979 [1] | First female territorial commissioner in Canadian history; resigned from position within one year to run for public office in the 1980 Canadian federal election. |
Helen Maksagak | Northwest Territories | 16 January 1995 | 26 March 1999 | Last official Commissioner of the Northwest Territories before its partition to create the territory of Nunavut. |
Helen Maksagak | Nunavut | 1 April 1999 | 1 April 2000 | First Commissioner of Nunavut following its creation on April 1, 1999. |
Judy Gingell | Yukon | 23 June 1995 | 1 October 2000 | |
Glenna Hansen | Northwest Territories | 31 March 2000 | 29 April 2005 | |
Ann Meekitjuk Hanson | Nunavut | 21 April 2005 | 10 April 2010 | |
Geraldine Van Bibber | Yukon | 1 December 2005 | 17 December 2010 | |
Nellie Kusugak | Nunavut | 10 April 2010 (acting) | 10 May 2010 | |
Edna Elias | Nunavut | 10 May 2010 | 11 May 2015 | |
Nellie Kusugak | Nunavut | 11 May 2015 (acting); 23 June 2015 (official) |
incumbent |
See also
- List of female premiers in Canada
- List of elected and appointed female heads of state
- List of Canadian monarchs