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List of McGill University people

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List of McGill University people
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The following is a list of chancellors, principals, and noted alumni and professors of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

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McGill University's coat of arms

List of chancellors

  1. Charles Dewey Day (1864–1884)[1]
  2. James Ferrier (1884–1888)[1]
  3. Sir Donald Alexander Smith, Lord Strathcona (1889–1914)[1]
  4. Sir William Christopher Macdonald (1914–1917)[1]
  5. Sir Robert Laird Borden (1918–1920)[1]
  6. Sir Edward Wentworth Beatty (1921–1942)[1]
  7. Morris Watson Wilson (1943–1946)[1]
  8. Orville Sievwright Tyndale (BA 1908, MA 1909, BCL 1915) (1946–1952)[1]
  9. Bertie Charles Gardner (1952–1957)[1]
  10. Ray Edwin Powell (1957–1964)[1]
  11. Howard Irwin Ross (BA 1930) (1964–1970)[1]
  12. Donald Olding Hebb (MA, 1932) (1970–1974)[1]
  13. Stuart Milner Finlayson (1975)[1]
  14. Conrad Fetherstonhaugh Harrington (BA 1933, BCL 1936) (1976–1984)[1]
  15. A. Jean de Grandpré (BCL 1943) (1984–1991)[1]
  16. Gretta Chambers (BA 1947) (1991–1999)[2]
  17. Richard W. Pound (BCom 1962, LAcc 1964, BCL 1967) (1999–2009)[3]
  18. H. Arnold Steinberg (BCom 1954) (2009–2014)
  19. Michael A. Meighen (BA 1960) (2014–2021)
  20. John McCall MacBain (2021–2024)
  21. Pierre Boivin (2024–present)
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List of principals/president

  1. George Jehoshaphat Mountain (1824–1835)[4]
  2. John Bethune (1835–1846)[4]
  3. Edmund Allen Meredith (1846–1853)[4]
  4. Sir John William Dawson (1855–1893)[4]
  5. Sir William Peterson (1895–1919)[4]
  6. Sir Auckland Campbell Geddes (1919–1920)[4]
  7. General Sir Arthur Currie (1920–1933)[4]
  8. Arthur Eustace Morgan (1935–1937)[4]
  9. Lewis Williams Douglas (1938–1939)[4]
  10. Frank Cyril James (1939–1962)[4]
  11. Harold Rocke Robertson (BSc 1932, MD 1936) (1962–1970)[4]
  12. Robert Edward Bell (PhD 1948) (1970–1979)[4]
  13. David Lloyd Johnston (1979–1994)[4]
  14. Bernard Shapiro (BA 1956) (1994–2002)[4]
  15. Heather Munroe-Blum (2003–2013)[5]
  16. Suzanne Fortier (BSc 1972, PhD 1976) (2013–2022)
  17. H. Deep Saini (2023–present)[6]
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Noted alumni and professors

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Sir John Abbott, 3rd Prime Minister of Canada
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Sir Wilfrid Laurier, 7th Prime Minister of Canada
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Justin Trudeau, 23rd and former Prime Minister of Canada
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Julie Payette, astronaut and former Governor General of Canada
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Timothy Harris, current Prime Minister of Saint Kitts and Nevis
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Daniel Oduber Quirós, 37th President of Costa Rica
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Vaira Vike-Freiberga, 6th and first female President of Latvia
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Ahmed Nazif, 48th Prime Minister of Egypt
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Paula Ann Cox, 10th Prime Minister of Bermuda
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John Rankin, former Governor-General of Bermuda, the 143rd
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Marc Tessier-Lavigne, neuroscientist and 11th President of Stanford University
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Stephen Toope, legal scholar and current President of the University of Cambridge
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Wendy Thomson, social work professor and current President of the University of London
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Santa J. Ono, immunologist, 28th President of the University of Cincinnati, 15th President of the University of Michigan; 15th President & Vice-Chancellor of the University of British Columbia
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Harold Tafler Shapiro, former President of both Princeton University and the University of Michigan
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Suzanne Fortier, crystallographer and former Principal of McGill University
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S. I. Hayakawa, internationally renowned linguist, served as U.S. Senator and President of San Francisco State University
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Mortimer Zuckerman, owner-publisher of U.S. News & World Report and New York Daily News, founder-CEO of Boston Properties
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Edgar Bronfman Sr., President-CEO of Seagram and recipient of the US Presidential Medal of Freedom
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Aldo Bensadoun, retail magnate, founder-chairman of ALDO Shoes and ALDO Racing Team sponsor
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Conrad Black, media tycoon, and current Member of the House of Lords in the British Parliament
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R. DeLisle Worrell, econometrician and Governor of the Central Bank of Barbados
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David Lametti, current Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of Canada
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Catherine McKenna, Canada's current Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, and Member of Parliament
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Clément Gascon, current Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada
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Sheilah Martin, current Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada
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Gordon Wasserman, The Lord Wasserman, current Member of the House of Lords in the British Parliament
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Chase Going Woodhouse, U.S. Congresswoman, early feminist leader, and suffragist
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Sir William Osler, "Father of Modern Medicine", co-founded the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
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Wilder Penfield, neurosurgeon, discovered electrical stimulation of the human brain
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Ernest Rutherford, awarded the 1908 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for path-breaking work in atomic physics
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Frederick Soddy received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discovering isotopes
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James Naismith, inventor of the sport of basketball
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Zbigniew Brzezinski, US National Security Advisor and US Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient
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Charles Taylor, multi-awarded philosopher
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Leonard Cohen, novelist, singer-songwriter, and poet
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Burt Bacharach, six-time Grammy Award-winning composer and musician
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William Shatner, film director and actor best known as Captain James T. Kirk in Star Trek
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Mia Kirshner, movie and TV actress
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R. Tait McKenzie, renowned sculptor and pioneer in collegiate physical education
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Charles Krauthammer won the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for "witty and insightful columns on national issues"
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Yoshua Bengio, 2018 recipient of the Turing Award for engineering breakthroughs in deep neural networks as critical component of computing
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Louis Nirenberg, world-acclaimed mathematician, won the 2015 Abel Prize for "striking and seminal" work on nonlinear partial differential equations
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Victor J. Dzau, former chairman, National Institutes of Health (NIH), and current President of the US National Academy of Medicine
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Andrew Schally, awarded the 1977 Nobel Prize in Medicine for pioneering work on hormones
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Val Logsdon Fitch, 1980 Nobel Prize in Physics for disproving that particle interaction is indifferent to the direction of time
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David H. Hubel received the 1981 Nobel Prize in Medicine for discoveries of information processing in the visual system
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Rudolph A. Marcus, winner of the 1992 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for groundbreaking theory of electron transfer
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Willard Boyle, 2009 Nobel Prize in Physics for inventing "an imaging semiconductor circuit" as "core technology behind the digital photography revolution"
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Jack W. Szostak, 2009 Nobel Prize in Medicine for discovering how the body protects chromosomes housing genetic code
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Ralph Steinman won the 2011 Nobel Prize in Medicine for discovering dendritic cells and their role in immunity
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John O'Keefe received the 2014 Nobel Prize in Medicine for discovering the brain's positioning system
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Thomas Chang, inventor of the artificial cell and three-time nominee for the Nobel Prize in Medicine

Nobel Prize graduates and faculty members

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Academy Awards

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Grammy Awards

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Emmy Awards

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Pulitzer Prize

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Astronauts

Academics and scholars

Business and media


Billionaires

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Politics and government

Canadian politicians and civil servants

McGill alumni have held and continue to hold many positions at the federal and provincial levels in Canadian politics:

Governors-General of Canada
Prime ministers
Cabinet ministers and members of parliament
Supreme Court justices
  • Douglas Abbott (BCL 1918) – appointed to the Court in 1954, previously Minister of National Defence and Minister of Finance[33]
  • Ian Binnie (BA 1960) – appointed to the Court in 1998, formerly Associate Deputy Minister of Justice[32]
  • Louis-Philippe de Grandpré (BCL 1938) – appointed to the Court in 1974, formerly president of the Canadian Bar Association[34]
  • Marie Deschamps (LLM 1983) – appointed to the Court in 2002, previously a Judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal[32]
  • Gérald Fauteux – appointed to the Court in 1949, previously dean of the Faculty of Law.
  • Morris Fish (BA 1959, BCL 1962) – appointed to the Court in 2003, previously a Judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal[32]
  • Clément Gascon (BCL 1981) – appointed to the Court in 2014, previously a Judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal
  • Désiré Girouard (BCL 1860) – appointed to the Court in 1895, previously member of Parliament[35]
  • Charles Gonthier (BCL 1951) – served on the Supreme Court 1989–2003[32]
  • Mahmud Jamal (BCL’93, LLB’93), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada appointed to the Court in 2021, previously a Judge on the Court of Appeal for Ontario[36]
  • Nicholas Kasirer (BCL, LLB 1985) – appointed to the court in 2019, previously a judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal[37]
  • Gerald Le Dain (BCL 1949) – appointed to the Court in 1984, previously a Judge on the Federal Court of Appeal[38]
  • Sheilah Martin (BCL, LLB, 1981), – appointed to the Court in 2017, previously judge of the Court of Appeal of Alberta[39]
  • Pierre-Basile Mignault (BCL 1878) – appointed to the Court in 1918, previously President of the Bar of Montréal[40]
  • Thibaudeau Rinfret (BCL 1900) – appointed to the Court in 1924, previously a Judge on the Superior Court of Quebec[41]
Senators
Members of Parliament (House of Commons)
Auditors-general
Ambassadors
Heads of financial institutions
Others

Foreign politicians and other government officials

McGill alumni have held and continue to hold many top government positions in other countries:

Foreign heads of state/government
Cabinet members
Legislators
Judges
Heads of financial institutions
Ambassadors
Others

Art, music, and film

Architects

For a full list of notable alumni and faculty from the School of Architecture, see:

Inventors

Sports

Fictional characters

  • Major Donald Craig, Canadian commando serving with British special forces during World War II, portrayed by Rock Hudson in the 1967 war movie Tobruk. Though the film was loosely based on real events, it's not clear whether or not Hudson's character was based on a real person. Most likely he was a pastiche character, given a Canadian background as cover for Hudson's inability to emulate a British accent.
  • Dr. Walter Langkowski, researcher from the Marvel Comics Canadian superhero series Alpha Flight; portrayed as a McGill-based biophysicist researching the gamma radiation accident which created the Hulk; his discoveries transformed him into the superhero known as Sasquatch
  • Lieutenant Alan McGregor, played by Gary Cooper, Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935)
  • Dr. Robert Richardson, played by Lew Ayres, Johnny Belinda (1948)
  • Dr. James Wilson, oncologist and best friend to main character Gregory House in the Fox Network TV drama House

Others

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References

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