List of Upper Canada College alumni

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of prominent Upper Canada College (UCC) alumni; many notable men are graduates of the school. UCC's alumni are usually known simply as Old Boys (as is common with most all-male private schools). They include:

Academia[]

  • Arthur, James Greig (1962) – world's leading mathematician in representation theory and creator of the General Trace Formula[1]
  • Assikinack, Francis (1848)  – Ojibwe historian and treaty negotiator[2]
  • Bethune, Charles James Stewart (1856) – Headmaster of Trinity College School; co-founder of Entomological Society of Canada[1]
  • Biggar, James H. ρ (1926) – founder of Visites Interprovinviales, later the [1]
  • Clarkson, Stephen FRSC ρ (1954) – foreign policy and Canadian history expert and Governor General's Award winner, ex-husband of Adrienne Clarkson.
  • Cooper, John Julius, 2nd Viscount Norwich CVO (1942) – British historian, travel writer, and television personality
  • Crean, John Gale (1932) – founding President of the Ontario Science Centre and the first Canadian director of International Chamber of Commerce
  • Crooks, Adam – first Chancellor of the University of Toronto and Attorney General of Canada
  • Cruikshank, Ernest Alexander (1872) – Canadian historian and founder of the Ontario Historical Society
  • Denison, George Taylor III FRSC (1856) – founder of Canada First and the Canadian National Association
  • Eayrs, James (1938) – political scientist; Governor General's Award winner
  • Eksteins, Modris ρ (1961) – historian of Germany
  • Endicott, Timothy (1979) – first Dean of Law, University of Oxford[3]
  • Ewart, John S. QC – lawyer, Canadian historian, and advocate of Canadian independence[1]
  • Fleming, James Henry (1892) – ornithologist
  • Grant, George P. OC FRSC (1936) – philosopher and author
  • Grier, Terry (c. 1954) – President of Ryerson University and New Democratic Party member of parliament
  • Hayhurst, Jim (1959) – Chairman of Outward Bound, member of the Canadian Mount Everest expedition; co-founder of Trails Youth Initiatives
  • Hayhurst, Jim Jr. (1987) – member of the Canadian Mount Everest expedition
  • Ignatieff, Nicholas – warden of Hart House, at the University of Toronto
  • Jennings, William Tyndale – civil engineer, city engineer for Toronto, and President of the Canadian Society of Civil Engineers (later the Engineering Institute of Canada)[4]
  • Keefer, Thomas (1838) – aquatics civil engineer, president of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and founder of the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering
  • Kilbourn, William CM FRSC (c. 1946) – author, historian, and executive of the Canada Council and Canadian commission for UNESCO
  • Kilbourn, William Morley (1944) – Toronto historian and first president of The Word on the Street
  • Loudin, James FRSC (1858) – first physics professor at the University of Toronto and president of the Royal Society of Canada
  • MacInnis, Dr. Joseph CM (1956) – explorer, leader of the dive to film the RMS Titanic in IMAX, and the first person to dive under the North Pole[5]
  • Macklem, Michael CM – founder of Oberon Press
  • McNaught, Kenneth OC (c. 1936) – historian and author
  • Parmenter, Ross (1929) – music editor at the New York Times and expert on indigenous Mexican culture
  • Patterson, John Andrew – President of the Astronomical and Physical Society of Toronto and prominent lawyer[6]
  • Ryerson, Stanley Bréhaut (c. 1929) – historian and communist activist
  • Singer, Peter (1978) – Director of Joint Centre for Bioethics at the University of Toronto and programme director at the Canadian Program on Genomics
  • Stupart, Sir Robert Fredrick (1872) – pioneer of public weather forecasts; director of the National Meteorological Society
  • Tyrell, Joseph FRSC (1878) – discoverer of dinosaur bones in Alberta and in whose honour the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology is named
  • Wright, Sir Charles Seymour (1904) – team physicist on Robert Scott's Antarctic expedition and developer of the "trench wireless" during World War I

Arts and media[]

Literature and journalism[]

  • Bacque, James – author
  • Black, Conrad, Baron Black of Crossharbour KCSG (did not graduate) – author, newspaper baron
  • Bruce, Addington (c. 1892) – journalist and American historian
  • Chewitt, William Cameron (c. 1846) – Canadian publisher; one of the first two members of the University of Toronto to graduate in medicine[7]
  • Colapinto, John (c. 1977) – award-winning journalist, novelist and staff writer for The New Yorker
  • Davies, Robertson CC OOnt FRSC FRSL (1932) – author, playwright, and journalist[8]
  • Fraser, Graham (c. 1964) – Canadian journalist and languages commissioner of Canada
  • Fraser, John CM (1963) – Editor of Saturday Night Magazine; master of Massey College
  • Gilmour, David (1968) – journalist, novelist, winner of the Governor General's Award for English-language fiction
  • Glazebrook, G.P. de T. (George Parkin de Twenebroker) FRSC – Canadian historian
  • Heintzman, Andrew (1986) – founder and editor of Shift magazine
  • Leacock, Stephen FRSC (1882) – writer and economist[8]
  • Macklem, Michael CM (1946) – founder and owner of Oberon Press
  • MacLean, Rory FRSL (1954) – writer and broadcaster
  • Newman, Peter C. CC CD (1947) – Peabody Award-winning journalist; former editor of Macleans and the Toronto Star
  • Robertson, John Ross (1850) – journalist and founder of Toronto Evening Telegram, in whose honour John Ross Robertson Public School is named
  • Scadding, Henry (1833) – educator, rector, and writer
  • Stackhouse, John (1981) – author; editor of The Globe and Mail[8]
  • Steiner, Robert (1987) - Director of Munk School Fellowship in Journalism at University of Toronto
  • Symons, Thomas CC OOnt (1942) – founding president of Trent University and Canadian studies author
  • Walker, Alan – executive editor of Maclean's magazine

Music and radio[]

  • Cuddy, Jim (1974) – founder and member of Blue Rodeo[8]
  • Dako, Del (1972) – jazz musician
  • DuBois, Mark (1972) – opera singer
  • Gibson, Dan OC (1940) – creator of Solitudes
  • Gooderham, Albert Edward (1879) – founder of the Canadian Academy of Music (later the Royal Conservatory of Music) and president of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra
  • Hewitt, Bill (1949) – broadcasting mogul and Hockey Night in Canada announcer
  • Hewitt, Foster OC (1921) – broadcaster and Hockey Hall of Fame inductee
  • Hodgson, Jay (1995) – music critic, EMI Records recording artist and songwriter, and winner of the gold Governor General's Academic Medal
  • Khemani, Rohin (1995) – director of jazz and world music at the Youth Symphony for the United Nations
  • MacDermot, Galt (1942) – Grammy Award-winning musician and co-author of the Broadway musical Hair
  • McFee, Allan (1931) – CBC radio broadcaster and announcer for the Royal Canadian Air Farce
  • McNaught, John (c. 1920) – Canadian radio broadcaster and writer

Visual media[]

  • Band, Charles Shaw CC (c. 1903) – philanthropist, art collector, and twice President of the Art Gallery of Ontario[9]
  • Bassett, Douglas OC (1958) – member of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame, president of the CTV Television Network, and founder of CFTO-TV[1]
  • Beaubien, François de Gaspé (1981) – co-owner of Telemedia Corp. and president of the Canadian Magazine Publishers' Association
  • Brooks, Daniel (1976) – playwright and winner of the first Siminovitch Prize in Theatre, awarded in 2001
  • Burke, Edmund W. (1891) – architect of Prince Edward Viaduct and the Simpson's (now Hudson's Bay Company) flagship store in Toronto
  • Campbell, Nicholas (1970) – filmmaker and actor, Canadian film and television
  • Clark, Tom (1971) – television journalist, anchorman, and CTV Washington Bureau chief
  • Daly, Thomas C. OC (1936) – National Film Board of Canada leader and contributor to the Oscar Award-winning film Churchill's Island
  • Darling, Frank RIBA (1859) – architect of the Centre Block on Parliament Hill, Convocation Hall, and Trinity College, and winner of the Royal Gold Medal
  • Davies, Geraint Wyn (1975) – actor
  • (1967) – television journalist and political advisor[10]
  • Dick, Leonard (1982) – Emmy Award, Golden Globe, and Writers Guild Award-winning producer and writer of Lost, House, and many sitcoms[11]
  • Doherty, Brian (1922) – founder of the Shaw Festival
  • Douglas, Melvyn (1913) – Academy Award-winning actor
  • Eckler, Greg (1987) Canadian Screen Award-winning writer, The Rick Mercer Report[12]
  • Felix, Enrique Alvarez (1954) – Mexican actor
  • Flaherty, Robert (1903) – pioneer of documentary films, including Nanook of the North
  • Fraser, Brendan (1987) – actor (left school in final year)
  • Gelber, Arthur CC (1934) – founder of the Ontario Arts Council and chairman of National Arts Centre
  • Gilday, Leonard (1967) – producer of The Nature of Things and for the National Geographic Channel
  • Graham, Patrick W. (1984) – journalist for Harper's and the New York Times Magazine; television correspondent for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
  • Grier, Sir Edmund Wyly (1877) – Portraitist and president of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts
  • Guerrero, Phil (1987) YTV PJ (did not graduate)
  • Hendrie, W. Brett (1997) – Director, Strategic Events, Rotman School of Management (since 2021), formerly Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, Executive Director[13] [14]
  • Kane, Paul (1830) – painter of the Canadian north and other pioneer landscapes
  • Koffman, Jeffrey (1977) – Emmy Award-winning journalist; ABC news anchor and bureau chief[15]
  • Law, Charles Anthony DSC (1935) – official war artist
  • Lewis, Avi (c. 1986) – journalist and television host
  • MacMillan, Michael CM – Academy Award winner; CEO of Alliance Atlantis
  • Massey, Raymond Hart (1910) – actor and Hollywood Walk of Fame inductee
  • Massey, Walter (c. 1945) – actor, voice of Principal Heney on Arthur[16]
  • Massry, Hartland (1935) – architect of Innis College and master planner of Carleton University
  • Mettler, Peter – Genie, National Film Board of Canada, and other awards-winning writer and director
  • Moore, James Mavor CC OBC (1929) – founding head of the Guild of Canadian Playwrights and founder of St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts
  • Pettler, Levi – founder of Ontario Arts Council and the National Arts Centre
  • Snow, Michael CC (1948) – multimedia modern artist
  • Sultanov, Sanzhar (2007)  – film producer and director[17]
  • Taché, Eugène-Étienne ISO (1849) – architect of the Assemblée nationale du Québec building, designer of Québec's Coat of Arms, and author of the province's motto Je me souviens
  • Wachter, Charles (1993) – Emmy Award-winning executive producer of Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution[18]
  • Watier, Martin (1992) – actor and specialist in dubbing[14]

Business[]

  • Alexander, Richard Henry  – founder and President of the Vancouver Board of Trade, founder of the Vancouver Club, and Commodore of the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club[19]
  • Beatty, David Ross CM OBE (1959) – international business expert, diplomat, and Chairman of the Board of Governors of Upper Canada College[1]
  • Beatty, William Henry – Director of Gooderham & Worts, vice-president Canada's first trust company, and President of the Bank of Toronto
  • – Controller of Hollinger Inc. and director of the Toronto-Dominion Bank
  • Caldwell, Theo (1991) – President of Caldwell Asset Management, journalist, and radio commentator[20][21]
  • Cameron, Alexander – businessman and founder of Essex, Ontario[22]
  • Cheesbrough, Gordon – Chairman and chief executive officer of Altamira and Chairman of the Board of Governors of Upper Canada College
  • Cumming, James (1861) – chief fur trader for the Hudson's Bay Company
  • Davidson, Richard – President of Brewers Retail Inc.
  • Eaton, Fred (1982) – catamaran designer and winner of the International Catamaran Challenge Trophy[23]
  • Eaton, George – Chief executive officer of the T. Eaton Company
  • Eaton, Sir John Craig (c. 1894) – Chairman and chief executive officer of the T. Eaton Company[24]
  • Eaton, John Craig OOnt – Chairman and chief executive officer of the T. Eaton Company and Chancellor of Ryerson University[25]
  • Eaton, Timothy (c. 1852) – founder of the now-defunct Eaton's department store
  • Facy, Christopher - Founder of Hidden Gem Clothing
  • Fejér, Bela (1963) – developer, including Bank Centre and Four Seasons Hotel in Budapest
  • Gentles, Roy A. – Chairman and chief executive officer of Alcan
  • Gillespie, Ian A. – Chairman and chief executive officer of the Export Development Corporation
  • Gooderham, William George (1867) – owner of Gooderham Worts Distilleries and president of the Bank of Toronto
  • Gould, Stephen A. – Vice-President of American Express
  • Grafstein, Laurence S. – managing director of Lazard
  • Hill, Craig M.D. - MBA Candidate at Schulich School of Business
  • Hiller, Robert W. – President and chief financial officer of the Campbell Soup Company
  • Ho, Lawrence - Chairman and chief executive officer of Melco International
  • Hutcheson, Blake (1980) – President and CEO of Oxford Properties[26]
  • Macaulay, Hugh – Chairman and chief executive officer of the Canadian Tire Corporation
  • Meredith, Gregory P. – Chairman and chief executive officer of HSBC (US)
  • Pellatt, Sir Henry CVOMajor General, financier, and builder of Casa Loma
  • Phelan, Paul D. – Vice Chairman of the Board and Chairman of the Executive Committee of Cara Operations Limited
  • Prichard, Robert OC OOnt – Chief executive officer of Torstar and president of the University of Toronto
  • Rogers, Ted OC KBE (c. 1951) – Canada's ninth wealthiest man, chairman of Rogers Communications, full owner of the Toronto Blue Jays, and eponym of the Rogers Centre[8]
  • Szaky, Tom (2001) – co-founder of TerraCycle[23]
  • Thomson, David, 3rd Baron Thomson of Fleet (c. 1975) – Canada's wealthiest man, sixth wealthiest in the world, and Chairman of Thomson Corporation
  • Thompson, John M.  – Chairman of International Business Machines Corporation
  • Thomson, Kenneth, 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet (c. 1941)  – formerly Canada's wealthiest man; Chairman of Thomson Corporation[8]
  • Weston, Galen OC OOnt (c. 1958) – Canada's second wealthiest man and Chairman of the George Weston Limited
  • Weston, Galen Jr. (1993)  – executive chairman of Loblaw Companies
  • Weston, George  – founder of George Weston Limited
  • Wright, Timothy Rogers  – President of GlaxoSmithKline

Educators[]

  • Barrett, Anthony (1964) – founder of Pollution Probe (Canada's first environmental advocacy organisation); Chancellor of the University of Toronto
  • Best, Henry B.M. (1952) – Knight Italian Order of Merit; president of Laurentian University
  • Connell, George OC FCIC FRSC (1947) – President of the University of Toronto and the University of Western Ontario; director of Allelix Biopharmaceuticals
  • Cowan, John Scott – Principal of the Royal Military College of Canada
  • Crean, John Gale (1928) – founder of the Ontario Science Centre; first Canadian director of the International Chamber of Commerce
  • Dale, Williams (c. 1866) – educationalist; mayor of St. Mary's, Ontario[27]
  • Eaton, Fred OC OOnt FRSC (1957) – High Commissioner to the United Kingdom; Chancellor of the University of New Brunswick
  • Grier, Terry (1953) – Member of Parliament and president of Ryerson University
  • Lafferty, Alfred (1855) – Upper Canada College's first black student; headmaster of the Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute
  • Merritt, Thomas Rodman (c. 1842) – Member of Parliament; founder and president of Ridley College
  • Prichard, Robert OC OOnt (1967) – President of the University of Toronto and president of Star Media Group
  • Ridpath, John (c. 1954) – Objectivist philosopher and retired York University associate Professor of Economics and Intellectual History
  • Wright, Rodger CN (1970) – Headmaster, Trinity College School (1983-2004); Headmaster, Collingwood School (2004–present)

Humanitarians[]

  • Barrett, Anthony (1964) – founder of Pollution Probe; Chief Financial Officer of the World Wildlife Fund of Canada[1]
  • Barton, Eric CM (1957) – founder of a leprosy treatment centre in India; principal of UCC[1]
  • Conacher, Duff (1982) – founder of Democracy Watch; best-selling author
  • Dalglish, Peter (1976) – founder of Street Kids International; recipient of the Outstanding Young Persons of the World award, imprisoned in Nepal for child molestation
  • Douglas, Ian CM CD QC – founding president of the Canadian Epilepsy Association; chairman of the National Board of Governors of the Canadian Corps of Commissionaires
  • Druckman, Miles (1982) – founder of SOS International; named a "Global Leader of Tomorrow" by the World Economic Forum
  • Woods, Ian (1968) – social activist and publisher

Legal[]

  • Armour, John Douglas QC (c. 1848) – chief justice of Ontario; justice of the Supreme Court of Canada
  • Biggar, Oliver Mowat (1894) – Canada's first chief electoral officer; chief Canadian legal advisor to the Treaty of Versailles[1]
  • Boyd, Sir John Alexander KCMG QC (c. 1855) – Chancellor of the Court of Chancery; president of the High Court of Ontario
  • Burns, Robert Easton  – Puisne judge of the Court of Queen's Bench, Chancellor of the University of Toronto, and Treasurer of the Law Society of Upper Canada[28]
  • Cameron, John Hillyard QC (1833) – Member of Parliament, co-founder of the Canada Life Assurance Company, and solicitor general of Upper Canada
  • Cameron, Sir Matthew Crooks (1838) – Chief Justice of Ontario and Father of Confederation
  • Cartwright, John Robert PC CC MC (1912) – Chief Justice of Canada
  • Cross, Charles Wilson  – first Attorney-General of Alberta; member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta and of the Canadian House of Commons[29]
  • Ewart, J. S. QC (c. 1867) – advocate of Canadian independence
  • Harlan, John Marshall II ρ (1911) – Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court
  • Howland, William (1932) – Chief Justice of Ontario; treasurer of the Law Society of Upper Canada
  • Hughes, Samuel QC, a judge of the Supreme Court of Ontario and Chairman of the Hughes Inquiry[30]
  • Jaffer, Jameel (1990)  – human rights and civil liberties attorney, Deputy Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union, and Director of the ACLU's Center for Democracy[31]
  • Macleod, James Farquharson (1848) – Colonel, pioneer of Alberta and third Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
  • McMurtry, Roy (c. 1950) – Chief Justice of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice and High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
  • Moss, Thomas (1854) – Chief Justice of Ontario
  • Robinson, Christopher (c. 1846) – Attorney General of Canada
  • Wallbridge, Lewis QC (c. 1834) – Chief Justice of Manitoba, speaker of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada, and director of the Bank of Upper Canada

Medicine[]

  • Bethune, Norman Sr. FRCS (c. 1840) – Canadian doctor; father of Norman Bethune
  • Burgess, Thomas Joseph Workman FRSC (1866)  – leader in psychiatry in Canada; President of the Société Médico-Psychologique de Québec and American Medico-Psychological Association (later the American Psychiatric Association)[32]
  • Mack, Theophilus  – leader in obstetrics and gynaecology; founder of St. Catharines General Hospital[33]
  • McCulloch, Ernest OC OOnt FRSC – Lasker Award winner accredited with the discovery of the stem cell; Canadian Medical Hall of Fame inductee[8]
  • Montizambert, Frederick (1859) – developer of Canadian quarantine stations, first director general of public health, and a Canadian Medical Hall of Fame inductee
  • Qaadri, Shafiq (1982) – University of Toronto graduate, medical journalist, and Ontario Member of Provincial Parliament
  • Rao, Vivek – youngest cardiac surgeon and head of heart transplant programme at Toronto General Hospital
  • Robertson, Lawrence Bruce (1902) – introduced blood transfusions for children at the Hospital for Sick Children

Military service[]

  • Boulton, Charles Arkoll (c. 1859) – leader of the militant opposition against the rebellion led by Louis Riel; later a Canadian Senator
  • Cockburn, Hampden Zane Churchill VC (1881) – recipient of the Victoria Cross
  • Cowan, John Scott – Principal of the Royal Military College of Canada
  • Crerar, Henry Duncan Graham PC CB CH DSO CD HDG (1904) – General, Chief of the General Staff, and Commander of the First Canadian Army
  • Denison, George Taylor II  – Colonel, supporter of the early Canadian militia, and commander during the Fenian Raids[34]
  • Denison, George Taylor III FRSC  – lawyer, commander of the Governor General's Body Guard, founder of the Canada First movement and the British Empire League, and military historian[35]
  • Dunkelman, Ben (1930) – Israeli war hero
  • Dunn, Alexander Roberts VC (1844) – first recipient of the Victoria Cross
  • Geary, George Reginald PC OBE MC (c. 1891) – Lt. Colonel, cabinet minister, commander of the Royal Grenadier Regiment, and mayor of Toronto
  • Gressett, Sir Arthur Edward KBE CB DSO MC Lieutenant-General in the British Army
  • Gordon, James Neil DSO CD, Brigadier General, as a Major he commanded a company of The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada on D-Day landing at Juno Beach, later becoming Commanding Officer of The North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment for the remainder of the war, and post war Commanding Officer and then Honorary Colonel of The Queen's Own Rifles.[36]
  • Little, Charles Herbert CD FRCGS ρ (1926) – Director of naval intelligence during the Second World War
  • Matthews, Albert Bruce AB – Major General, Commander of the II Canadian Corps
  • Pettler, Levi CB OBE DSO – Major General, acclaimed war hero, and commander of the Royal Engineers
  • Williams, David Russell (1982) – former Canadian Forces Air Command colonel, commander of CFB Trenton, and convicted murderer

State affairs, diplomacy, and politics[]

Ambassadors, high commissioners, and diplomats[]

  • Campbell, Arthur Grant
  • Crean, Gordon Gale (1932)  – Ambassador to Yugoslavia, West Germany, and the Vatican Ecumenical Council
  • Eaton, Fredrik Stefan OC OOnt  – Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
  • George, James ρ (1936)  – Canadian ambassador to Iran, high commissioner to India, and world renowned activist[37]
  • (1952)  – diplomat to Cuba, Central Intelligence Agency spy, and first Head of the Organization of American States[38]
  • McCordick, John Alexander (1933)  – Canadian Ambassador to Austria and representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency
  • Smith, Arnold Cantwell CH OC ρ (1932)  – Canadian ambassador to Moscow and Cambodia, and secretary-general of the Commonwealth Secretariat
  • Wilson, Michael PC OC (1955)  – minister of finance, chairman and chief executive officer of UBS AG, chancellor of the University of Trinity College, and Canadian ambassador to the United States[39]
  • Wrong, Hume (1909)  – Canadian ambassador to Washington and part author of the North Atlantic Treaty

Parliamentarians[]

Premiers and mayors[]

Ministers and advisors[]

  • Agnew, John Hume (c. 1881) – Manitoba Cabinet minister
  • Beatty, Perrin PC (1968) – Cabinet minister, president of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and Chancellor of the University of Ontario Institute of Technology
  • Cameron, Matthew Crooks OBE (1838) – Cabinet member of premier John Sandfield Macdonald and provincial secretary and registrar of Ontario
  • Daly, Thomas Mayne PC QC  – Minister of the Interior, Superintendent-General of Indian Affairs, and Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada[43]
  • Gelber, Lionel (1926) – advisor to Prime Minister John Diefenbaker, and founder of the Lionel Gelber Prize
  • Godfrey, John PC (1961) – Canadian minister of state for infrastructure and communities, and editor of the Financial Post
  • Gordon, Walter L. PC CC (1922) – Canadian minister of finance and chancellor of York University
  • Graham, Bill PC QC (1957) – former Liberal Party Member of Parliament and Foreign Affairs Minister
  • Hughes, Sir Samuel PC KCB (c. 1871) – Canadian minister of militia during World War I
  • Ibbs, Sir Robin KBE (1942) – Chairman of Lloyd's Bank and senior advisor to British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
  • Marling, Alexander  – Deputy Minister of Education for Ontario[44]
  • O'Reilly, John (1953)  – Chief Meteorologist of Ontario[45]
  • Rossi, Rocco (1981) – national director of the Liberal Party of Canada, advisor to Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff, businessman[46]

Viceroys[]

Religion[]

Sports[]

  • Ballard, Harold (c. 1921) – owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs, Hamilton Tiger-Cats, and Maple Leaf Gardens, and Hockey Hall of Fame inductee
  • Barry, Michael (1993) – professional cyclist and member of Lance Armstrong's Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team
  • Beare, John (1992) – 2008 Olympic bronze medallist in the Men's Four
  • Brown, Sir George McLaren (1880) – member of the International Olympic Committee
  • Cohon, Mark – director of corporate and game development for Major League Baseball International, National Basketball Association vice-president of business development, and chair of the Ontario Science Centre[47][48][49]
  • Conacher, Brian (1961) – member of the 1967 Stanley Cup Toronto Maple Leafs and the 1964 Olympic Canadian hockey team
  • Elder, James OC (1953) – 1956 and 1968 Olympics equestrian gold medallist
  • Elkinson, Kilian (2008) – member of the Toronto FC[3][permanent dead link]
  • Evans, Michael (1984) – 1984 Olympics men's eight gold medallist and chairman of Goldman Sachs Asia
  • Faust, Andre (c. 1987) – member of the Philadelphia Flyers
  • Greening, Colin (2005) – member of the Toronto Maple Leafs
  • Irwin, Brayden (c. 2004)  – former member of the Toronto Maple Leafs
  • Kerr, John (1970) – 1984 Olympics sailing bronze medallist
  • Lang, Stuart (1970) – member of the Canadian Football League Edmonton Eskimos and winner of four Grey Cups
  • Mara, George CM (1941) – Captain of the 1948 Olympic gold medal-winning Canadian hockey team, director of Maple Leaf Gardens, and Canada's Sports Hall of Fame inductee
  • McKee, Mike  – member of the Quebec Nordiques[50]
  • Meredith, Greg  – Member of the Calgary Flames[51]
  • O'Connor, Matt (2010) – member of the Ottawa Senators
  • Edward Ogden (1876) – first-class cricketer
  • Peckover, Doug (1969) – 1997 Laser Master World Champion, 2006 Laser Grand Master World Champion
  • Rumble, John Mitchell (1953) – 1956 Olympics equestrian bronze medallist
  • Smythe, Con (1909) – owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs; founder of Maple Leaf Gardens; coach of the 1928 Winter Olympics gold medal-winning team; namesake of the NHL's Conn Smythe Trophy
  • Sokolowski, Howard – co-owner of the Toronto Argonauts
  • Spencer, Vic – founding director of the BC Lions, Canadian Football League Hall of Fame inductee, and Canadian Football League fullback, and founding partner and director of Delta Hotels
  • (2004) – member of the Canada national rugby union team and Canada East team of the North America 4 rugby union[52]
  • Turner, Pat (1980) – 1984 Olympics men's eight rowing gold medallist
  • Williams, Barney (1996) – 2004 Olympic games men's coxless four silver medallist[8]
  • Willson, Montgomery (1927) – 1932 winter Olympics figure skating bronze medallist
  • Wright, Tom E.S. (1971) – Director of Operations for UFC Canada, former Commissioner of the Canadian Football League and former president of Adidas Canada

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Leaders & Legends". Old Times. Toronto: Upper Canada College (Winter/Spring 2005): 14. 2005.
  2. ^ Leighton, Douglas (1976). "Assikinack, Francis". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IX (1861–1870) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  3. ^ "Legal Eagle". Old Times. Toronto: Upper Canada College (Winter/Spring 2011): 8. 2011.
  4. ^ Millard, J. Rodney (1994). "Jennings, William Tyndale". In Cook, Ramsay; Hamelin, Jean (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XIII (1901–1910) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  5. ^ Roland, Charles. "Joseph B. MacInnis - Undersea Medical Researcher". Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved December 29, 2011.
  6. ^ Broughton, Peter (2005). "Patterson, John Andrew". In Cook, Ramsay; Bélanger, Réal (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XV (1921–1930) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  7. ^ McLeod, Donald W. (1990). "Chewitt, William Cameron". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XII (1891–1900) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Admission > Why UCC?". Upper Canada College. Archived from the original on 21 August 2010. Retrieved 22 October 2010.
  9. ^ Marshall, Amy; Fitzgibbon, Gary (2003), Description & Finding Aid: C. S. Band Fonds (PDF), Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario, p. 2, CA OTAG SC017, retrieved 23 October 2010
  10. ^ "Ask an Old Boy", Old Times, Upper Canada College (Summer/Fall): 28, 2013
  11. ^ Aster, Andrea, "The Good Life", Old Times, Upper Canada College: 11
  12. ^ "CBC's Rick Mercer Report snags 3 Canadian Screen Awards", CBC, 2013
  13. ^ "Executive Director Brett Hendrie to Depart Hot Docs". Hot Docs. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
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