Canadians are people who are identified with Canada through residential, legal, historical, or cultural means. This list groups people by their area of notability.

Architects

  • Hans Blumenfeld <small>OC</small> (1892–1988) – architect and city planner
  • Joan Burt (1930–2021) – architect
  • Douglas Cardinal <small>OC RAIC</small> (born 1934) – architect of Canadian Museum of Civilization
  • Mary Clark (born 1936) – architect and transportation planner
  • Ernest Cormier <small>OC RAIC</small> (1885–1980) – architect of Supreme Court of Canada building
  • A. J. Diamond <small>OC RAIC</small> (1934–2022) – architect of Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts
  • Margaret Synge Dryer (1921–1963) – architect
  • Arthur Erickson <small>CC RAIC</small> (1924–2008) – architect of Simon Fraser University, Robson Square, and the Embassy of Canada in Washington
  • David Ewart <small>ISO</small> (1841–1921) – Chief Dominion Architect (1896 to 1914), architect of Dominion Archives Building, Royal Canadian Mint, Victoria Memorial Museum, Connaught Building in Ottawa
  • Étienne Gaboury <small>RAIC OAA</small> (1930–2022) – architect of the Embassy of Canada in Mexico and the Royal Canadian Mint building in Winnipeg
  • Frank Gehry <small>CC LLD (hc) PhD (hc) DEng (hc) DArch (hc) DA (hc) AIA</small> (1929–2025) – architect of Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Experience Music Project, Walt Disney Concert Hall, and the Art Gallery of Ontario
  • Dan Hanganu <small>OQ DArch (hc) RAIC OAQ</small> (1939–2017) – architect of Pointe-à-Callière Museum and Montreal Archival Centre
  • Gregory Henriquez <small>FRAIC OAA AIA</small> (born 1963) RAIC – architect of the Woodward's Building, TELUS Garden, and redevelopment of Honest Ed's location
  • Stephen Irwin <small>RAIC RIBA OAA</small> (1939–2019) – architect of Purdy's Wharf
  • Bruce Kuwabara <small>FRAIC OAA AIA</small> (born 1949) RAIC – architect of the Gardiner Museum, and Kitchener City Hall
  • E. J. Lennox <small>RAIC OAA</small> (1854–1933) – architect of Old City Hall in Toronto, and Casa Loma
  • John M. Lyle <small>FRIBA OAA</small> (1872–1945) RAIC – architect of the New York Public Library, the Royal Alexandra Theatre, and Toronto's Union Station
  • Raymond Moriyama <small>CC OOnt</small> (1929–2023) – architect of the Ontario Science Centre, Ottawa City Hall, and Canadian War Museum
  • Samuel Oghale Oboh <small>FAIA, FRAIC, Architect, AAA</small> (born 1971) – 2015 president of the RAIC – architect of the International Law Enforcement Academy Botswana and the Botswana Police College; Lead Architect of the Alberta Legislature Centre Redevelopment Master Plan
  • John Ostell (1813–1892) – architect of the McGill University Arts Building, and the Montreal Custom House
  • Joseph Perrault (1866–1923) – architect of Centre d'histoire de Montréal
  • Francis Rattenbury <small>RAIC AIBC</small> (1867–1935) – architect of the British Columbia Parliament Buildings, and the Empress Hotel
  • Moshe Safdie <small>CC LLD (hc) FRAIC FAIA</small> (born 1938) – architect of Habitat 67, the National Gallery of Canada, and Vancouver Library Square
  • Fariborz Sahba (born 1948) – master's degree from Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Tehran, architect of Lotus Temple, and Terraces (Baháʼí)
  • Henry Sears (1929–2003) – Massey medal-winning architect, urban and gallery planner
  • Brigitte Shim (born 1958) – Order of Canada for architecture, and Integral House
  • Bing Thom <small>CM FRAIC AIBC</small> (1940–2016) – architect of Central City Centre
  • Ronald Thom <small>FRAIC AIBC</small> (1923–1986) – architect of Massey College, the Shaw Theatre, and Trent University
  • Douglas A. Webber (1901–1971) – architect of several buildings in Nova Scotia

Artists

Actors

Animators

  • Ryan Larkin (1943–2007) – nominated for an Academy Award for Best Short Film, Walking, 1969

Broadcasters

Comedians

Musicians

Photographers

  • Ivaan Kotulsky (1944–2008)

Visual arts

Cartoonists

  • Michael de Adder (born 1967) – editorial cartoonist and caricaturist
  • Danny Antonucci (born 1957) – creator of Ed Edd n Eddy
  • Kate Beaton (born 1983) – creator of Hark! A Vagrant
  • Chester Brown (born 1960) – creator of Yummy Fur, Underwater and Louis Riel
  • John Byrne (born 1950) – influenced superhero characters like The Fantastic Four and Superman
  • Andy Donato (born 1937) – editorial cartoonist for the Toronto Sun
  • Hal Foster (1892–1982) – artist for Tarzan comic strip, creator of Prince Valiant
  • J.D. Frazer (born 1965) (moniker: Illiad) – creator of the webcomic User Friendly
  • Gregory Gallant (born 1962) (moniker: Seth) – creator of Palookaville
  • Lynn Johnston <small>CM OM</small> (born 1947) – creator of For Better or For Worse
  • John Kricfalusi (born 1955) (moniker: John K.) – creator of Ren and Stimpy
  • Graeme MacKay (born 1968) – editorial cartoonist
  • Sean Martin (1950–2020) – creator of the print and webcomic "Doc and Raider"
  • Todd McFarlane (born 1961) – creator of Spawn
  • Win Mortimer (1919–1998) – illustrator for DC Comics' Superman and Batman
  • Terry Mosher <small>OC DLitt (hc)</small> (born 1942) (moniker: Aislin) – Montreal Gazette newspaper
  • Len Norris (1919–1997) – long-time editorial columnist for the Vancouver Sun
  • Ryan North (born 1980) – creator of the webcomic Dinosaur Comics
  • Scott Ramsoomair (born 1981) – creator of the webcomic VG Cats
  • Joe Shuster (1914–1992) – co-creator of Superman
  • Dave Sim (born 1956) – creator of Cerebus the Aardvark
  • Fiona Staples (born 1984) – co-creator of Saga
  • Paul Szep (born 1941) – editorial cartoonist for the Boston Globe 1967–2001
  • Ben Wicks <small>CM</small> (1926–2000) – illustrator, comic strip cartoonist, and humanitarian

Astronauts

thumb|[[Roberta Bondar]]

  • Roberta Bondar <small>OC OOnt ScD (hc) FRCP(C) FRSC</small> (born 1945) – first Canadian woman in space
  • Marc Garneau <small>CC CD ScD (hc)</small> (1949–2025) – first Canadian man in space
  • Chris Hadfield <small>OOnt MSC LLD (hc) DEng (hc)</small> (born 1959) – first Canadian to walk in space, first Canadian to command the International Space Station
  • Jeremy Hansen (born 1976), flew around the Moon on the 2026 Artemis II mission, first non-American to fly above low Earth orbit and to the Moon's vicinity
  • Steven MacLean <small>ScD (hc)</small> (born 1954)
  • Julie Payette <small>CQ FMC</small> (born 1963)
  • David Saint-Jacques (born 1970), B.Eng., Ph.D., M.D.
  • Robert Thirsk (born 1953) – holds Canadian record for longest time spent in space (204 days)
  • Bjarni Tryggvason <small>ScD (hc)</small> (1945–2022)

Athletes

Businesspeople and entrepreneurs

  • Max Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook, Baron Beaverbrook <small>PC</small> (1879–1964) – publishing baron, entrepreneur
  • Francesco Aquilini (born 1969) – chairman of the Aquilini Investment Group and owner of the Vancouver Canucks
  • David Asper (born 1958) – chairman, Canwest Global Communications
  • Izzy Asper <small>OC QC OM</small> (1932–2003) – chairman, Canwest Global Communications
  • Meghan Athavale – entrepreneur and visual artist
  • Jeannine Bailliu – economist, policy advisor at the Bank of Canada
  • Keenan Beavis (born 1995) – entrepreneur and investor, founder of Longhouse
  • Conrad Black (born 1944) – Lord Black of Crossharbour <small>KCSG LLD (hc)</small> (born 1944) – entrepreneur, publisher
  • Willard Boyle (1924–2011) – invented charge-coupled device
  • Sophie Brochu (born 1963) – economist and businesswoman, president and CEO of Gaz Métro/Énergir and Hydro-Québec
  • Edgar Bronfman, Sr. (1929–2013) – head of Seagram's and long-time president of the World Jewish Congress
  • Samuel Bronfman <small>CC</small> (1889–1971) – founder of Seagram's
  • Robert Campeau (1923–2017) – real-estate mogul
  • Jack Kent Cooke (1912–1997) – owner of the Los Angeles Lakers, Los Angeles Kings, Washington Redskins and the Chrysler Building
  • James Alexander Cowan (1901–1978) – public relations consultant and founder of Stratford Shakespeare Festival
  • Samuel Cunard <small>Bt</small> (1787–1865) – founder of Cunard Line
  • William Davidson (1740–1790) – lumberman, shipbuilder, merchant
  • Christine M. Day (born 1962) – former CEO of the Canadian clothing company Lululemon Athletica
  • Michael DeGroote <small>OC</small> (1932–2022) – businessman and philanthropist
  • Paul Desmarais <small>PC CC</small> (1927–2013) – chairman, Power Corporation of Canada

thumb|[[Timothy Eaton]]

  • Craig Dobbin <small>OC</small> (1935–2006) – founder, chairman and CEO of CHC Helicopter Corporation
  • Denzil Doyle (born 1932/1933) – founding president of Digital Equipment Corporation's Canadian subsidiary
  • James Hamet Dunn <small>Bt</small> (1874–1956) – financier, steel magnate
  • Timothy Eaton (1834–1907) – founder of Eaton's department stores
  • Bernie Ebbers (1941–2020) – former CEO of WorldCom
  • Sam Feldman <small></small> (born 1949) – music executive
  • Alfred Fuller (1885–1973) – Fuller Brush Company
  • Arcadi Gaydamak (born 1952) – owner of Beitar Jerusalem
  • Percy Girouard <small>KSMG</small> (1867–1932) – railway builder, governor
  • Angèle Grenier – maple syrup producer known for her legal battles with the Federation of Quebec Maple Syrup Producers
  • Elliot Grove, founder of Raindance Film Festival, British Independent Film Awards and the Independent Film Trust
  • Charles Guillimin (1676–1739) – shipbuilder, merchant and moneylender
  • Zabeen Hirji (born 1960) – speaker, writer, former Chief Human Resources Officer, Royal Bank of Canada
  • Janet Holder – business executive, head of Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines
  • K. C. Irving <small>OC ONB</small> (1899–1992) – industrialist
  • Suresh Joachim (born 1968) – co-founder of WBBAS, No Poverty No Disease No War, World Peace Marathon, and Suresh Joachim International Group of Companies
  • F. Ross Johnson (1931–2016) – former CEO of RJR Nabisco
  • Ron Joyce <small>CM</small> (1930–2019) – original partner with Horton in Tim Hortons, primary builder of the chain
  • Moez Kassam (born 1980) – hedge fund manager, founder of Anson Group
  • Izaak Walton Killam (1885–1955) – major financier
  • James L. Kraft (1874–1953) – entrepreneur and inventor, founder of L. Kraft & Bros. Company, which later became Kraft Foods Inc
  • Richard L'Abbé <small>OC</small> (born 1956 or 1957) – co-founder and former CEO of Med-Eng Systems Inc, a company specializing in bomb disposal suits and helmets
  • Guy Laliberté <small>OC CQ</small> (born 1959) – founder and owner of the Cirque du Soleil
  • Bernard Lamarre (1931–2016) – chairman & C.E.O., Lavalin Group, 1972–1991; senior advisor, SNC-Lavalin Inc., 1991–2016
  • Cindy Lee – founder of T & T Supermarket
  • Michael Lee-Chin <small>LLD (hc)</small> (born 1951) – CEO of AIC Diversified Canada Split Corp. and the National Commercial Bank of Jamaica
  • Li Ka-shing (born 1928) – chairman of the board of Cheung Kong Holdings and Hutchison Whampoa
  • Victor Li (born 1964) – deputy chairman of Cheung Kong (Holdings) Limited
  • William Secondo Lombardo (1930–2009) – owner of Lombardo Construction and CEO of Peerless-Cascade Plastics
  • Pete Luckett (born 1953) – owner of Pete's Frootique and host of The Food Hunter
  • William Christopher Macdonald (1831–1917) – tobacco manufacturer, education philanthropist
  • Terry Matthews <small>OC FREng</small> (born 1943) – entrepreneur, chairman of Mitel and Wesley Clover
  • Louis B. Mayer (1885–1957) – co-founder of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) Studios
  • Harrison McCain <small>CC ONB</small> (1927–2004) – New Brunswick potato magnate
  • Colonel Samuel McLaughlin <small>CC CD ED</small> (1871–1972) – Buick automobile manufacturer
  • Simon McTavish (1750–1804) – fur trader
  • Hartland Molson <small>OC GOQ OBE</small> (1907–2002) – senator, president of Molson Breweries
  • John Molson (1763–1836) – founder of Molson Breweries
  • Peter Munk <small>OC</small> (1927–2018) – founder of Barrick Gold
  • Saadia Muzaffar – entrepreneur, author and founder of TechGirls Canada
  • Stephan Ouaknine – businessman in telecommunications and renewable energy
  • Jim Pattison <small>CM OBC</small> (born 1928) – chairman, president, CEO, and owner of the Jim Pattison Group
  • Pierre Péladeau <small>CM OQ</small> (1925–1997) – founder of Quebecor Inc.
  • Pierre Karl Péladeau (born 1961) – president, CEO of Quebecor Inc., Québecor Média Inc. and Sun Media Corporation
  • Marie Penny (died 1970) – owner and operator of one of the largest 20th-century frozen fish companies in Newfoundland
  • John Draper Perrin (1890–1967) – entrepreneur, financier, mining executive
  • Richard Porritt <small>OC</small> (1901–1985) – mining industry executive
  • Jean Pouliot (1923–2004) – founder of CFCF et Télévision Quatre Saisons
  • John Redpath (1796–1869) – canal builder, sugar refinery founder
  • Paul Reichmann (1930–2013) – developer of Canary Wharf
  • Edward Samuel Rogers <small>OC</small> (1933–2008) – president and CEO of Rogers Communications
  • John Roth (born 1942) – former CEO of Nortel Networks
  • Lino Saputo (born 1937) – founder of Saputo
  • Isadore Sharp <small>OC</small> (born 1931) – founder of the Four Seasons Hotel chain
  • E. D. Smith (1858–1943) – founder of E. D. Smith & Sons Ltd
  • Levy Solomons (1730–1792) – merchant and fur trader
  • Paul Soubry (born 1963) ceo of New Flyers
  • John F. Stairs (1848–1904) – entrepreneur, statesman
  • Frank Stronach <small>CM</small> (born 1932) – entrepreneur, founder of Magna International
  • E. P. Taylor (1901–1989) – entrepreneur, thoroughbred horse breeder
  • Nat Taylor (1906–2004) – originator of Cineplex Entertainment
  • Kenneth Thomson, Baron Thomson of Fleet (1923–2006)
  • Roy Thomson, Baron Thomson of Fleet <small>GBE </small> (1894–1976) – entrepreneur, publisher
  • William Cornelius Van Horne <small>KCMG</small> (1843–1915) – constructed the Canadian Pacific Railway
  • Jack L. Warner (1892–1978) – founder of Warner Bros. Studios
  • Galen Weston <small>OC OOnt</small> (1940–2021) – owner of Loblaws, Holt Renfrew, and Selfridges
  • Chip Wilson (born 1956) – founder of Lululemon Athletica
  • Walter Wolf (born 1939) – oil drilling equipment supplier and Formula 1 team owner
  • Bob Young (born 1953/1954) – self-publishing website, owner of CFL Hamilton Tiger Cats

Criminals and suspects

  • Marie-Joseph Angélique (1710–1734) – executed for setting the city of Montreal on fire
  • Johnson Aziga (born 1956) – first person to be charged with first-degree murder in Canada for spreading HIV
  • Paul Bernardo (born 1964) – serial killer, serial rapist
  • Richard Blass (1945–1975) – multiple murderer
  • Edwin Alonzo Boyd (1914–2002) – bank robber
  • Alfonso Caruana (born 1946) – mobster
  • Paul Joseph Cini (born 1944) – Canada's first skyjacker, sentenced to life imprisonment
  • John Etter Clark (1915–1956) – provincial politician, teacher, farmer, mass murderer
  • Robert Cook (1937–1960) – mass murderer
  • Jacques Cossette-Trudel (1947–2023) – FLQ terrorist
  • Louise Cossette-Trudel (born 1947) – FLQ terrorist
  • Vincenzo Cotroni (1911–1984) – mobster
  • Frank Cotroni (1931–2004) – mobster
  • John Martin Crawford (1962–2020) – serial killer
  • Matthew de Grood (born 1993) – mass murderer
  • Raynald Desjardins (born 1953) – mobster
  • Evelyn Dick (1920–?) – convicted of infanticide; convicted and acquitted of having murdered her husband
  • Terry Driver (1965–2021) – murderer
  • Valery Fabrikant (born 1940) – former university professor and mass murderer
  • Larry Fisher (1949–2015) – convicted of the murder for which David Milgaard (see "Wrongfully convicted", below) was originally convicted and subsequently exonerated
  • Charles Guité (born c. 1943) – fraud
  • John Hamilton (1899–1934) – bank robber, killer
  • Victor Hoffman (1946–2004) – mass murderer
  • Karla Homolka (born 1970) – serial killer
  • Bindy Johal (1971–1998) – Vancouver gangster
  • David Michael Krueger (1939–2010) – serial killer and child rapist
  • Jacques Lanctôt (born 1945) – FLQ terrorist
  • Yves Langlois (born 1947) – FLQ terrorist
  • Robert Latimer (born 1953) – convicted of second-degree murder
  • Allan Legere (1948–2026) – serial killer
  • Blake Leibel (born 1981) – murderer
  • Marc Lépine (1964–1989) – mass murderer
  • Denis Lortie (born 1959) – murderer
  • Luka Rocco Magnotta (born 1982) – murderer
  • Grace Marks (c. 1828–after c. 1873) – convicted of murder in 1843
  • Bruce McArthur (born 1951) – serial killer
  • Allan McLean (1855–1881) – son of Fort Kamloops Chief Trader and leader and eldest of the group known as the Wild McLean Boys, who went on a killing spree with his brothers and accomplice Alex Hare in the British Columbia Interior in 1876<!--1877-->
  • Paddy Mitchell (1942–2007) – bank robber, leader of The Stopwatch Gang
  • Kenneth Murdock (born 1963) – hitman
  • Dale Nelson (1939–1999) – cannibal and mass murderer
  • Clifford Olson (1940–2011) – serial child murderer
  • Johnny Papalia (1924–1997) – mobster
  • Rocco Perri (1887–c. 1944) – gangster, bootlegger
  • Robert Pickton (1949–2024) – serial murderer
  • Monica Proietti (1940–1967) – bank robber
  • Kenneth Ratte (born 1963) – career criminal
  • Louis Riel (1844–1885) – executed for treason
  • Lucien Rivard (c. 1915–2002) – narcotics smuggler
  • Nicolo Rizzuto (1924–2010) – mobster
  • Vito Rizzuto (1946–2013) – mobster
  • Paul Rose (1943–2013) – FLQ terrorist
  • Frank "Dunie" Ryan (1942–1984) – gangster
  • Pietro Scarcella (born 1950) – mobster
  • Jeffrey Shuman (born 1962) – bank robber
  • Francis Simard (1946–2015) – FLQ terrorist
  • Slumach (died 1891) – Katzie man convicted and hung for the murder of Louis Bee, a Kanaka (Hawaiian) half-breed
  • Cathy Smith (1947–2020) – convicted of manslaughter in death of John Belushi
  • Stanley James Tippett – kidnapper and rapist
  • Colin Thatcher (born 1938) – murderer
  • Mark Twitchell (born 1979) – murderer
  • Paolo Violi (1931–1978) – mobster
  • Paul Volpe (1927–1983) – mobster
  • Elizabeth Wettlaufer (born 1967) – serial killer
  • Russell Williams (born 1963) – former RCAF military pilot and wing commander; convicted murderer, rank and decorations revoked upon conviction
  • Gabriel Wortman (1968–2020) – spree killer
  • Thomas Young (1931–1959) – rapist and mass murderer
  • Rocco Zito (1928–2016) – mobster

Wrongfully convicted or lynched

  • Robert Baltovich (born 1965) – wrongfully convicted of murder
  • Donald Marshall, Jr. (1953–2009) – wrongfully convicted of murder
  • David Milgaard (1952–2022) – wrongfully convicted of murder
  • Guy Paul Morin (born 1961) – wrongfully convicted of murder
  • Louie Sam (c. 1870–1884) – wrongfully accused of murder and hanged by lynch mob in Whatcom County, Washington
  • Steven Truscott (born 1945) – wrongfully convicted of murder

Directors

Educators

  • J. Willis Ambrose (1911–1974) – professor at the Queen's University at Kingston
  • Sonia Aïssa – professor at the Institut national de la recherche scientifique
  • Richard Lee Armstrong <small>FRSC</small> (1937–1991) – University of British Columbia professor, geochemist
  • Annie Mottram Craig Batten (1883–1964) – professor in the Vocal Faculty of the College of Music, University of Southern California
  • Martha Black (1945–2024) – art historian, curator and author
  • Marguerite Bourgeoys (1620–1700) – founder of the Congregation of Notre Dame of Montreal
  • Stephen E. Calvert <small>FRSC</small> (born 1935) – University of British Columbia emeritus professor, geologist, oceanographer
  • Petr Cerny (1934–2018) <small>ScD (hc) FRSC</small> – University of Manitoba professor, mineralogist and crystallographer
  • Aleksis Dreimanis (1914–2011) – University of Western Ontario emeritus professor, quaternary geologist
  • George Georgiou (living) – university professor
  • James E. Gill (1901–1980) – McGill University professor, geologist
  • Henry C. Gunning <small>ScD (hc) FRSC</small> (1901–1991) – University of British Columbia professor, geologist
  • James Edwin Hawley (1897–1965) – professor at Queen's, geologist (Hawleyite)
  • Frank Hawthorne <small>OC FRSC</small> (born 1946) – University of Manitoba professor, mineralogist and crystallographer
  • Adelaide Hoodless (1858–1910) – education and women's activist
  • Michael Ignatieff (born 1947) – University of Toronto, Harvard University, University of Oxford and University of Cambridge professor, political science
  • Sue Johanson <small>CM</small> (1930–2023) – sex educator
  • Michael John Keen (1935–1991) – Dalhousie University professor, marine geoscientist
  • Sean Kelly (1940–2022) – Pratt Institute, NYC, Humanities & Media Studies, writer
  • J. Ross Mackay <small>OC FRSC</small> (1915–2014) – University of British Columbia professor, geologist
  • Eric W. Mountjoy <small>FRSC</small> (1931–2010) – McGill University professor, geologist
  • Gerard V. Middleton <small>FRSC</small> (1931–2021) – McMaster University professor, geologist
  • Anthony J. Naldrett <small>FRSC</small> (1933–2020) – University of Toronto emeritus professor, geologist
  • Santa J. Ono <small>FCAHS</small> (born c. 1962) – University of British Columbia 15th president & vice-chancellor, professor, medical scientist
  • William Richard Peltier <small>ScD (hc) FRSC</small> (born c. 1942) – University of Toronto professor, physicist
  • Jordan Peterson (born 1962) – Canadian clinical psychologist and professor of psychology at the University of Toronto
  • Paula Rochon – chair in Geriatric Medicine at the University of Toronto in 2022
  • Egerton Ryerson (1803–1882) – public education advocate
  • Dora Sakayan (born 1931) – full professor, Department of German Studies, McGill University; Armenology, Contrastive Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Translation, Genocide Studies
  • Colin Simpson (born c. 1965) – George Brown College, best-selling author
  • Charles R. Stelck <small>OC ScD (hc) FRSC</small> (1917–2016) – University of Alberta professor, petroleum geologist, paleontologist, stratigrapher
  • David Strangway <small>OC ScD (hc) FRSC</small> (1934–2016) – geophysicist and university administrator
  • Thomas Symons <small>CC OOnt</small> (1929–2021) – founding president of Trent University, professor of Canadian Studies
  • Claude Vivier (1948–1983) – organ pedagogue and professor at Collège Montmorency
  • Roger G. Walker <small>FRSC</small> – McMaster University emeritus professor
  • William Winegard <small>PC OC</small> (1924–2019) – educator, engineer, scientist and former member of Parliament

Environmentalists

See Canadian environmentalists.

Fashion

  • Jeanne Beker (born 1952) – reporter
  • Sahar Biniaz (born November 17, 1985) – model
  • Dean and Dan Caten (born 1965) – designers known as Dsquared
  • Keshia Chanté (born 1988) – model and singer
  • Steven Cojocaru (born 1970) (known as Cojo) – critic and correspondent on Entertainment Tonight
  • Taryn Davidson (born 1991) – model
  • Linda Evangelista (born 1965) – model
  • Shalom Harlow (born 1973) – model and actress
  • Winnie Harlow (born 1994) – model
  • Irina Lazareanu (born 1982) – model
  • Jay Manuel (born 1972) – expert on America's Next Top Model and Canada's Next Top Model
  • Heather Marks (born 1988) – model
  • Kenneth G. Mills (1923–2004) – designer
  • Peter Nygard (born 1941) – designer
  • Lana Ogilvie (born 1968) – model
  • Coco Rocha (born 1988) – model
  • Monika Schnarre (born 1971) – model
  • Jessica Stam (born 1986) – model
  • Daria Werbowy (born 1983) – Polish-born Canadian model
  • Jason Wu (born 1982) – fashion designer, dolls artist

Humanitarians

  • Louise Arbour (born 1947) – former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, former justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda
  • J. Esmonde Barry (1923–2007) – healthcare activist and political commentator in New Brunswick
  • Norman Bethune (1890–1939) – physician and medical innovator
  • Richard Maurice Bucke <small>FRSC</small> (1837–1902) – psychiatrist, philosopher, early author on human development and human potentials
  • Steve Fonyo <small>OC Rescinded 2010</small> (born 1966) – retraced and completed Terry Fox's cross country cancer research fundraising marathon
  • Terry Fox <small>CC OD</small> (1958–1981) – attempted one-legged cross country run for cancer research
  • Marc Kielburger (born 1977) – author, social entrepreneur, columnist, humanitarian and activist for children's rights; co-founder, with his brother Craig, of the We Movement
  • Grey Owl (1888–1938) (real name Archibald Stanfield Belaney) – conservationist who falsely presented himself as an Aboriginal person and worked to save the beavers of Saskatchewan and Manitoba
  • Rick Hansen <small>CC OBC LLD (hc) DLitt (hc)</small> (born 1957) – paraplegic athlete who completed an around-the-world marathon for spinal cord injury research
  • Stephen Lewis <small>CC</small> (1937–2026) – AIDS activist, United Nations special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa
  • Harold A. Rogers <small>OC OBE</small> (1899–1994) – founder of Kin Canada
  • Jean Vanier <small>CC GOQ</small> (1928–2019) – activist for the mentally disabled, founder of L'Arche

Inventors

  • Scott Abbott – co-inventor of Trivial Pursuit
  • Thomas Ahearn PC (1855–1938) – invented the electric cooking range and the electric car heater
  • Anthony R. Barringer (1925–2009) – holds 70 patents for mineral exploration technology
  • Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995) – co-invented rodeo's side-delivery chute, invented reverse-opening side-delivery chute, hornless bronc saddle, one-hand bareback rigging and high-cut chaps
  • Alexander Graham Bell (1847–1922) – born in Scotland, invented the telephone in Canada and developed it in the United States
  • Joseph-Armand Bombardier (1907–1964) – invented the snowmobile
  • Gerald Bull (1928–1990) – invented the G5 howitzer and the Iraqi supergun
  • Herbert Henry Dow (1866–1930) – invented a method of bromine extraction known as the Dow process
  • Mathew Evans – co-inventor of the first electric light bulb
  • Charles Fenerty (c. 1821–1892) – inventor of the wood pulp process for making paper
  • Reginald Fessenden (1866–1932) – radio inventor who made the first radio-transmitted audio transmission and the first two-way transatlantic radio transmission; also invented sonar and patented the first television system
  • Sir Sandford Fleming <small>KCMG DSc (hc) FRSC</small> (1827–1915) – inventor of the system of Standard Time zones
  • Wilbur R. Franks <small>OBE</small> (1901–1986) – invented the anti-black-out-suit (the G-suit)
  • Abraham Pineo Gesner (1797–1864) – inventor of kerosene; known as the "father of the petroleum industry"
  • James Gosling <small>OC</small> (born 1955) – invented Java computer language
  • Chris Haney (1950–2010) – co-inventor of Trivial Pursuit
  • Sam Jacks (1915–1975) – inventor of ringette
  • George Klein <small>OC MBE LLD (hc)</small> (1904–1992) – developed: electric wheelchairs, microsurgical staple gun, the ZEEP nuclear reactor, and the Canadarm
  • James L Kraft (1874–1953) – entrepreneur and inventor, founder of L. Kraft & Bros. Company, which later became Kraft Foods Inc; patented processed cheese (AKA American cheese)
  • Thomas Edvard Krogh <small>ScD (hc) FRSC</small> (1936–2008) – developed technique of radiometric uranium-lead dating to further the precision of geochronology
  • Hugh Le Caine (1914–1977) – invented the music synthesizer in 1945
  • Cluny MacPherson (1879–1966) – invented the first general-issue gas mask used by the British Army in World War I
  • Wilson Markle (1938–2020) – invented film colorization process in 1983
  • Elijah McCoy (1844–1929) – developed automatic machinery lubricator, lawn sprinkler, the "Real McCoy"
  • James Naismith (1861–1939) – invented basketball
  • P. L. Robertson (1879–1951) – invented the Robertson screw
  • Henry Ruttan (1792–1871) – invented air-conditioned railway coach
  • Thomas F. Ryan (1872–1971) – invented five-pin bowling
  • Arthur Sicard (1876–1946) – invented the snowblower in 1925
  • Lewis Urry (1927–2004) – invented the long-lasting alkaline battery
  • Harry Wasylyk (1925–2013) – invented the disposable green polyethylene garbage bag in 1950
  • Thomas Willson (1860–1915) – invented arc lamps and process for creating calcium carbide
  • Henry Woodward – co-inventor of the first electric light bulb

Law

  • J. S. Ewart (1849–1933) – lawyer, advocate for Canadian independence
  • Frances Fish (1888–1975) – first woman to be called to the bar of Nova Scotia
  • Mabel French (1881– 1955) – the first woman to practice law in two separate Canadian provinces: New Brunswick and British Columbia
  • Catherine Latimer – lawyer and criminologist
  • Alfred Scow (1927–2013) – First Nations judge

Media

  • Samantha Bee (born 1969) – host of Full Frontal with Samantha Bee
  • Stephen Brunt (born 1959) – lead sports columnist for The Globe and Mail since 1989
  • Stevie Cameron (1943–2024) – journalist, author
  • Richard Gizbert (born 1960) cable network journalist of Al Jazeera English
  • Gordon Donaldson (1926–2001) – amateur historian, journalist
  • Barbara Frum <small>OC LLD (hc)</small> (1937–1992) – CBC radio and television journalist
  • Jian Ghomeshi (born 1967) – former musician and radio broadcaster
  • Ken Hechtman (born 1967) – maverick journalist jailed by Afghanistan's Taliban government as a suspected United States spy in 2001
  • Kenny Hotz (born 1967) – only registered Canadian journalist to cover the Gulf War
  • Mark Irwin CSC/ASC (born 1950) – Hollywood Director of Photography
  • Peter Jennings <small>CM</small> (1938–2005) – ABC news anchor
  • Jason Jones (born 1967) – senior correspondent for The Daily Show
  • Pat Kiernan (born 1968) – morning anchor of NY1 since 1997
  • Michael Kesterton (1946–2018) – The Globe and Mail columnist
  • Lisa LaFlamme (born 1964) – journalist, occasional chief anchor, and senior editor for CTV National News
  • L. Ian MacDonald (born 1947) – author, columnist, broadcaster, and diplomat
  • Neil Macdonald (born 1957) – CBC reporter
  • Robert MacNeil (1931–2024) – journalist, author, longtime co-anchor of The MacNeil/Lehrer Report on PBS
  • Peter Mansbridge <small>OC LLD (hc)</small> (born 1948) – news anchor of CBC's The National
  • Rick Mercer <small>OC </small> (born 1969) – comedian, TV personality, political satirist and author
  • Mosha Michael (c. 1948–2009) – Canada's first Inuk filmmaker
  • Cory Morgan (born 1971) – blogger, Alberta independence politician and activist, and columnist
  • Margaret Lally "Ma" Murray (1888–1982) – editor and co-publisher of the Bridge River-Lillooet News
  • Peter C. Newman <small>CC CD LLD (hc)</small> (1929–2023) – eminent journalist and writer
  • Sydney Newman <small>OC</small> (1917–1997) – supervisor of drama at the CBC, head of drama at the BBC, creator of the Doctor Who television series, chairman of the NFB
  • David Oancia (1929–1995) – journalist
  • Steve Paikin (born 1960) – journalist, film producer and author, best known for hosting TVOntario's Studio 2
  • Pete Parker (1895–1991) – made the first ever broadcast of a professional hockey game
  • Sandie Rinaldo (born 1950) – journalist and occasional news anchor for CTV National News
  • John Roberts (born 1956) – Fox News Channel reporter, previously a CNN reporter and host of The New Music on MuchMusic
  • Lloyd Robertson <small>OC LLD (hc)</small> (born 1934) – senior editor and former longtime anchor for CTV National News
  • Morley Safer (1931–2016) – investigative journalist for CBS News and 60 Minutes
  • Linus Sebastian (born 1986) – owner and founder of Linus Media Group
  • Shane Smith (born 1969) – founder of Vice
  • George Stroumboulopoulos (born 1972) – television journalist
  • Scott Taylor (born 1960) – publisher, Esprit de Corps magazine
  • Peter Trueman <small>OC</small> (1934–2021) – original newsman on Global TV
  • Robyn Urback (born 1988) – journalist and political commentator
  • Jan Wong (born 1952) – journalist

Medical

  • Evan Adams (born 1966) – First Nations medical doctor, medical advisor, Deputy Provincial Health Advisor (BC), and actor
  • Maria Louisa Angwin (1849–1898) – first woman licensed to practice medicine in Nova Scotia
  • Elizabeth Bagshaw <small>CM</small> (1881–1982) – physician and birth control activist
  • Frederick Banting <small>KBE MC LLD (hc) ScD (hc) FRSC</small> (1891–1941) – Nobel laureate, co-discoverer of insulin
  • John Cameron Bell (born 1953) – pioneer of oncolytic virus therapies for cancer
  • Norman Bethune (1890–1939) – surgeon, inventor, socialist, battlefield doctor in Spain and China
  • Wilfred Bigelow <small>OC LLD (hc) FRSC</small> (1913–2005) – inventor of the first artificial pacemaker
  • Yvette Bonny (born 1938) – pediatrician
  • Basil Boulton (1938–2008) – pediatrician and child health advocate
  • Anna L. Brown (died 1924) – leading authority on health for girls
  • John Callaghan <small>OC AOE</small> (1923–2004) – pioneer of open-heart surgery
  • John Dick <small>FRSC</small> (born 1954) – credited with discovery of cancer stem cell
  • Tommy Douglas <small>PC CC SOM LLD (hc)</small> (1904–1986) – introduced publicly funded health care in Canada; commonly known as the "father of Medicare"
  • Carl Goresky <small>OC</small> (1932–1996) – physician and scientist
  • David H. Hubel (1926–2013) – Nobel Prize winner in medicine for mapping the visual cortex
  • Harold E. Johns <small>OC</small> (1915–1998) – medical physicist, noted for his extensive contributions to the use of ionizing radiation to treat cancer
  • Doreen Kimura (1933–2013) – behavioural psychologist, world expert on sex differences in the brain
  • William Harding le Riche (1916–2010) – epidemiologist
  • Jeanne Mance (1606–1673) – established the first hospital in North America – the Hôtel-Dieu de Montréal – in 1644
  • Ernest McCulloch <small>CM OOnt FRSC FRS</small> (1926–2011) – cellular biologist credited with the discovery of stem cell with James Till
  • Frances Gertrude McGill (1882–1959) – pioneering forensic pathologist and criminologist
  • Henry Morgentaler <small>CM LLD (hc)</small> (1923–2013) – abortion care provider who helped legalize abortion in Canada and strengthen the power of jury nullification
  • William Osler <small>Bt</small> (1849–1919) – physician, called the "father of modern medicine"; wrote Principles and Practice of Medicine
  • Daniel David Palmer (1845–1913) – founded the chiropractic profession
  • Edgar Randolph Parker (1871–1951) (known as "Painless" Parker) – flamboyant dentist
  • Wilder Penfield <small>OM CC CMG FRS</small> (1891–1976) – neurosurgeon, discovered electrical stimulation of the brain
  • Jack Pickup (1919–1996) – general practitioner and surgeon, also known as the "Flying Doctor of British Columbia"
  • Octavia Ritchie (1868–1948) – physician, suffragist and the first woman to receive a medical degree in Québec
  • David Sackett <small> CC FRSC </small> (1934–2015) – founded the first department of clinical epidemiology in Canada at McMaster University
  • Mary Elizabeth MacCallum Scott (1865–1941) – physician and missionary in Ceylon
  • Sydney Segal (1920–1997) – pediatrician and neonatologist particularly known for his work with sudden infant death syndrome
  • James Till <small>OC OOnt FRSC FRS</small> (1931–2025) – biophysicist, credited for the discovery of stem cell with Ernest McCulloch
  • A. Ross Tilley (1904–1988) <small> MD FRCS(C) OBE OC</small> – plastic surgeon
  • Irene Ayako Uchida <small>OC</small> (1917–2013) – cytogenticist, Down syndrome researcher
  • Amelia Yeomans (1842–1913) – physician and suffragist, first female physician in Manitoba

Military figures

thumb|[[Billy Bishop]]

thumb|[[John McCrae]]

  • General Maurice Baril <small>OMM CD</small> (born 1943) – military advisor to the United Nations Secretary-General, head of the Military Division of the Department of Peacekeeping Operations of the United Nations, and Chief of the Defence Staff
  • Gustave Biéler <small>DSO MBE</small> (1904–1944) – Special Operations Executive agent, executed by the Nazis
  • Louis-Nicolas-Emmanuel de Bigault d'Aubreville – head of the nightwatch in Montreal
  • Air Commodore Leonard Birchall <small>CM OBE DFC OOnt CD DMSc (hc) LLD (hc)</small> (1915–2004) – war hero
  • Air Marshall Billy Bishop <small>VC CB DSO* MC DFC ED</small> (1894–1956) (commonly known as Billy Bishop) –World War I flying ace
  • Brigadier-General Jean Boyle <small>CMM CD</small> (born 1947) – fighter pilot, and businessman
  • Major General Sir Isaac Brock <small>KB</small> (1769–1812) – War of 1812 general
  • Captain Roy Brown <small>DSC* RNAS</small> (1893–1944) – World War I fighter pilot officially credited with shooting down the Red Baron
  • Colonel Lawrence Moore Cosgrave <small>DSO*</small> (1890–1971) – Canadian signatory to the Japanese Instrument of Surrender
  • General Harry Crerar <small>CH CB DSO CD PC</small> (1888–1965) – "leading field commander" in World War II
  • Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Currie <small>KCB GCMG</small> (1875–1933) – first Canadian commander of the Canadian Expeditionary Force
  • Lieutenant-General Roméo Dallaire <small>OC CMM GOQ MSC CD LLD (hc) ScDHum (hc) DHL (hc)</small> (born 1946) – UN peacekeeping General, attempted to prevent the Rwandan genocide
  • Guy D'Artois <small>DSO GM</small> (1917–1999) – SOE agent, recipient of the Croix de Guerre
  • General John de Chastelain <small>CH OC CMM CD LLD (hc) ScDMil (hc) FLMH</small> (born 1937) – head of the Independent International Commission on Decommissioning
  • Peter Dmytruk (1920–1943) – WWII flight sergeant and member of the French Resistance
  • Brigadier-General Dury, Charles <small>PC OC QC CBE DSO</small> (1912–1991) – soldier, businessman, and politician
  • John Weir Foote <small>VC CD</small> (1904–1988) – military chaplain, Ontario cabinet minister, and recipient of the Victoria Cross
  • Captain Nichola Goddard <small>MSM</small> (1980–2006) – first female Canadian soldier killed in combat
  • William Hall <small>VC</small> (1827–1904) – first Nova Scotian recipient of the Victoria Cross
  • John Kenneth Macalister (1914–1944) – SOE agent, executed by the Nazis
  • Vice-Admiral Bruce MacLean CMM, CD – chief of the Maritime Staff 2004–2006
  • Captain Simon Mailloux (born 1983) – first Canadian soldier with an amputation to deploy on a combat mission; recipient of the Sacrifice Medal
  • Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae (1872–1918) – soldier, poet, author of In Flanders' Fields
  • Alan Arnett McLeod <small>VC</small> (1899–1918) – fighter pilot, youngest Canadian-born winner of the Victoria Cross
  • General Andrew McNaughton <small>CH CB CMG DSO CD PC</small> (1887–1966) – Co-Minister of Defence during World War II
  • Lieutenant Colonel Theodore Meighen (1905–1979) – lawyer and philanthropist
  • Lieutenant Colonel Charles Merritt <small>VC</small> (1908–2000) – recipient of the Victoria Cross
  • Major General Sydney Chilton Mewburn <small>PC</small> (1863–1956) – lawyer and politician, Minister of Militia and Defence
  • Minnie "Jerri" Mumford (1909–2002) – serving member of the Canadian Women's Army Corps (CWAC) during World War II
  • Rear Admiral Leonard W. Murray (1896–1971) – commander-in-chief of the Canadian Northwest Atlantic during World War II
  • Henry Norwest <small>MM & Bar</small> (1884–1918) – sniper in World War I
  • Lieutenant-Colonel George Pearkes <small>VC PC CC CB DSO MC CD</small> (1888–1984) – recipient of the Victoria Cross, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia
  • Francis Pegahmagabow <small>MM**</small> (1891–1952) – the most highly decorated aboriginal Canadian soldier of World War I
  • Frank Pickersgill (1915–1944) – SOE agent, executed by the Nazis
  • Rear Admiral Desmond Piers <small>CM DSC CD ScDMil (hc)</small> (1913–2005) – war hero
  • George Lawrence Price (1898–1918) – last soldier killed in World War I
  • Tommy Prince <small>MM</small> (1915–1977) – one of Canada's most decorated soldiers, member of the Devil's Brigade
  • James Ralston <small>PC</small> (1881–1948) – Co-Minister of Defence during World War II
  • Thomas Ricketts <small>VC</small> (1901–1967) – recipient of the Victoria Cross (Newfoundlander at the time of his award)
  • Harold A. Rogers <small>OC OBE</small> (1889–1994) – founder of Kin Canada
  • Roméo Sabourin (1923–1944) – SOE agent, executed by the Nazis
  • General Guy Simonds <small>CC CB CBE DSO CD</small> (1903–1974) – commander of the II Canadian Corps
  • Ernest Smith (1914–2005) – VC, CM, OBC, CD, Seaforth Highlander Private/ Sergeant, the last living Canadian recipient of the Victoria Cross, awarded for gallantry in actions at the River Savio, Northern Italy 1944
  • Sam Steele <small>CB KCMG MVO</small> (1851–1919) – member of the North-West Mounted Police, commander of Yukon detachment
  • William Stephenson <small>CC MC DFC</small> (1897–1989) (codename: Intrepid) – senior representative of British intelligence for the Western Hemisphere in World War II
  • Lieutenant-General Kenneth Stuart <small>CB DSO MC</small> (1891–1945) – Chief of the General Staff 1941–1943, educator
  • Tecumseh (1768–1813) – Leader of First Nations British Allies, War of 1812, died defeating American invasion
  • Rear Admiral Robert Timbrell <small>CMM DSC CD</small> (1920–2006) – first Canadian to be decorated with the Distinguished Service Cross
  • General Christopher Vokes <small>CB CBE DSO CD</small> (1904–1985) – General Officer commanding the Canadian Army Occupation Force in Europe
  • Brigadier Sir Edward Oliver Wheeler (1890–1962) – Corps of Royal Engineers surveyor
  • General Ramsey Muir Withers <small>CMM CD LLD (hc)</small> (1930–2014) – Chief of the Defense Staff
  • Sir James Lucas Yeo (1782–1818) – commander of Royal Navy forces in Canada during the War of 1812

Monarchs and Canadian royal family

Main articles:

  • List of Canadian monarchs
  • Canadian Royal Family

Magicians

  • Shawn Farquhar (born 1962) – magician, winner of the Grand Prix Close Up at the 2009 FISM World Championship of Magic
  • Doug Henning (1947–2000) – credited with reviving the magic show in North America
  • Leon Mandrake (1911–1993) – Mandrake the Great; and his sons Lon and Ron, born in 1948 and 1949, respectively
  • James Randi (1928–2020) – magician, writer, skeptical investigator of paranormal and pseudo-scientific claims, founder of the James Randi Educational Foundation
  • Dai Vernon (1894–1992) – magician, known as "the man who fooled Houdini"

Musicians

Politicians

thumb|[[Jean Chrétien]]

  • Lloyd Axworthy <small>PC OC OM</small> (born 1939) – former Cabinet minister
  • Thomas Bain (1834–1915) – former speaker of the Canadian House of Commons
  • Robert Baldwin (1804–1858)
  • Maude Barlow <small>LLD (hc) DHL (hc)</small> (born 1947) – activist, chairperson of the Council of Canadians
  • Perrin Beatty <small>PC</small> (born 1950) – former cabinet minister, president of CBC
  • Monique Bégin <small>PC OC ScD (hc) FRSC</small> (1936–2023) – former cabinet minister
  • Thomas R. Berger <small>OC OBC</small> (1933–2021) – jurist
  • Ethel Blondin-Andrew <small>PC</small> (born 1951) – former Cabinet minister
  • Henri Bourassa (1868–1952) – Quebec politician
  • Pierre Bourgault (1934–2003) – president of Rassemblement pour l'indépendance nationale
  • Ed Broadbent <small>PC CC</small> (1936–2024) – former New Democratic Party leader
  • George Brown (1818–1880)
  • Rosemary Brown <small>PC CC OBC LLD (hc)</small> (1930–2003)
  • Tim Buck (1891–1973) – leader of the Canadian Communist Party
  • George-Étienne Cartier <small>Bt KSMG PC</small> (1814–1873) – Cabinet minister
  • Brock Chisholm <small>CC MC* LLD (hc)</small> (1896–1971) – first director-general of the World Health Organization
  • Joe Clark (born 1939) – 16th prime minister of Canada, leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada 1976–1983, and again 1998–2003
  • Sheila Copps <small>PC</small> (born 1952)
  • Victor Copps (1919–1988) – mayor of Hamilton
  • John Lambton, 1st Earl of Durham, Earl of Durham <small>GCB PC</small> (1792–1840)
  • Ellen Fairclough <small>PC CC OOnt</small> (1905–2004) – first female member of the Canadian Cabinet
  • The Famous Five – 1920s women's rights activists
  • Janice Filmon (born 1943) – lieutenant governor of Manitoba since 2015
  • Iqwinder Singh Gaheer (born 1993) – member of Parliament for the riding of Mississauga—Malton
  • Jennifer Granholm (born 1959) – first female governor of Michigan
  • Gurmant Grewal (born 1957) – the "Ironman of Canadian Parliament"
  • Nina Grewal (born 1958) – first South Asian and Sikh woman elected to Parliament; with her husband Gurmant, the Grewals are the first married couple to concurrently serve in Canadian Parliament
  • Elijah Harper (1949–2013) – Cree chief (Red Sucker Lake Nation), MLA Manitoba, successfully blocked the Meech Lake Accord (proposed Constitutional amendment)
  • C. D. Howe <small>PC</small> (1886–1960) – Cabinet minister
  • Joseph Howe <small>PC</small> (1804–1873) – "father of Confederation"
  • Michael Kerzner – Solicitor General of Ontario
  • Stan Keyes <small>PC</small> (born 1953)
  • Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine <small>Bt</small> (1807–1864) – co-premier of the United Province of Canada
  • Franklin K. Lane (1864–1921) – 1910s United States Secretary of the Interior (1913–1920)
  • Jack Layton <small>PC</small> (1950–2011) – leader of the New Democratic Party
  • William Lyon Mackenzie (1795–1861) – mayor of Toronto
  • Allan MacNab <small>Bt</small> (1798–1862) – prime minister of Upper Canada
  • Agnes Macphail (1890–1954) – first female member of Parliament (MP)
  • Thomas D'Arcy McGee <small>PC</small> (1825–1868)
  • Beverley McLachlin <small>PC LLD (hc)</small> (born 1943) – chief justice of Canada
  • James McMillan (1838–1902) – US senator from Michigan
  • Cory Morgan (born 1971) – Alberta independence politician
  • John Munro <small>PC</small> (1931–2003)
  • Papineau (1786–1871) – reformer and 1837 rebellion leader
  • Pierre Poilievre (born 1979) – member of Parliament, leader of the Conservative Party of Canada and the leader of the Official Opposition
  • Allan Studholme (1846–1919)
  • Nathan Eldon Tanner (1898–1982)

Provincial premiers

:Main articles:

  • List of premiers of Alberta
  • List of premiers of British Columbia
  • List of premiers of Manitoba
  • List of premiers of New Brunswick
  • List of premiers of Newfoundland and Labrador
  • List of premiers of Nova Scotia
  • List of premiers of Ontario
  • List of premiers of Prince Edward Island
  • List of premiers of Quebec
  • List of premiers of Saskatchewan

Territorial premiers

:Main articles:

  • List of premiers of the Northwest Territories
  • List of premiers of Nunavut
  • List of premiers of Yukon

Indigenous leaders

thumb|right|alt=A sepia photograph of Aatsista-Mahkan (Running Rabbit). He is wearing what is usually described as a buckskin outfit. It is elaborate and he is holding a pole.|[[Aatsista-Mahkan, taken by Edward Curtis]]

thumb|right|alt="A bust portrait of Métis leader Louis Riel c1870 after a carte de visite in 1884."|[[Louis Riel, leader of the Red River Rebellion and North-West Rebellion]]

  • Shawn Atleo (born 1967)
  • William Beynon (1888–1958)
  • Big Bear (1825–1888) – Cree leader
  • Joseph Brant (1742–1807) – Mohawk leader
  • Mary Brant (1736–1796) – leader of Six Nations women's federation
  • Frank Calder (1877–1943) – Nisga'a
  • Joe Capilano (c. 1854–1910) – Squamish
  • Rose Charlie (1930–2018)
  • Arthur Wellington Clah (1831–1916)
  • Heber Clifton (1871–1964)
  • Cumshewa – 18th-century Haida chief at the inlet now bearing his name
  • Harley Desjarlais
  • Alfred Dudoward (ca. 1850–1914)
  • Dan George (1899–1981) – Tsleil-Waututh (Burrard)
  • Joseph Gosnell (1936–2020) – Nisga'a
  • Simon Gunanoot (1874–1933) – Gitxsan
  • Guujaaw (born 1953) – modern-day Haida leader
  • Elijah Harper (1949–2013) – Cree<!--Ojbiwa?-->
  • Chief Hunter Jack (died 1905) – St'at'imc
  • Mary John, Sr. (1913–2004)
  • August Jack Khatsahlano (1877–1971) – Squamish
  • Klattasine (died 1864) – Tsilhqot'in war chief, surrendered on terms of amnesty in times of war, hanged for murder
  • Koyah (fl. 1787–1795) – 18th-century chief of the Haida <!--at Skungwai I think-->
  • George Manuel (1921–1989)
  • Maquinna – 18th-century Nuu-chah-nulth chief (Yuquot/Mowachaht)
  • Harriet Nahanee (1935–2007) – Squamish and Nuu-chah-nulth (Pacheedaht)
  • Nicola (1780/1785–c. 1865) – Grand chief of the Okanagan people, and jointly chief of the Nlaka'pamux-Okanagan-Nicola Athapaskan alliance in the Nicola Valley and of the Kamloops group of the Secwepemc
  • Andy Paull (1892–1959) – Squamish
  • Stewart Phillip – Okanagan leader
  • Chief Poundmaker (c. 1842–1886) – Cree chief
  • Piapot (c. 1816–1908) – Cree chief
  • Steven Point (born 1951) – modern Sto:lo leader, current Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia
  • Louis Riel (1844–1885) – leader of two Métis rebellions before being hung for treason
  • James Sewid (1913–1988) – Kwakwaka'wakw
  • Tecumseh (1768–1813) – Shawnee leader
  • Alec Thomas (1894–?) – Tseshaht politician
  • Wickanninish – 19th-century Nuu-chah-nulth chief (Opitsaht/Tla-o-qui-aht)
  • Walter Wright (died 1949)
  • Muriel Stanley Venne (1937–2024) – Métis community leader and Indigenous rights activist

Producers

Religious figures

Martyrs

  • St. Marguerite Bourgeoys (1620–1700) – first Canadian saint
  • St. Noël Chabanel (1613–1649) – Jesuit missionary
  • St. Anthony Daniel (1601–1648) – Jesuit missionary
  • St. Jean de Brébeuf (1593–1649) – Jesuit missionary
  • St. Jean de Lalande (died 1646) – Jesuit missionary
  • St. Saint Charles Garnier (1606–1649) – Jesuit missionary
  • St. René Goupil (1608–1642) – first North American martyr of the Roman Catholic Church
  • St. Isaacs Jogues (1607–1646) – Jesuit missionary
  • St. Gabriel Lallemant (1610–1649) – Jesuit missionary

Religious community leaders

  • Alexis André (1832–1893) – Catholic missionary priest, spiritual advisor to Louis Riel
  • Aloysius Matthew Ambrozic (1930–2011) – archbishop emeritus of Toronto
  • André Besette (1845–1937) – Holy Cross Brother known as the "Miracle Man of Montreal"
  • Linda Bond (born 1946) – General of The Salvation Army, 2011–2013
  • Arnold Brown (1913–2002) – General of The Salvation Army, 1977–81
  • Hugh B. Brown (1883–1975) – Latter-day Saint apostle
  • Ranj Dhaliwal (born 1976) – Sikh, writer, activist and co-founder of the Sikh Youth orthodox political party in Surrey, British Columbia
  • Lionel Groulx (1878–1967) – Roman Catholic priest, historian, nationalist, and traditionalist
  • Albert Lacombe (1827–1916) – Roman Catholic missionary
  • John G. Lake (1870–1935) – leader of the Pentecostal Movement, born in St. Marys, Ontario
  • Cardinal Paul-Émile Léger (1904–1991) – Catholic clergyman and humanitarian
  • Merlin Lybbert (1926–2001) – general authority of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
  • David Mainse (1936–2017) – broadcaster, founder of 100 Huntley Street and CITS-TV
  • Aimee Semple McPherson (1890–1944) – founder of the Foursquare Church
  • William D. Morrow – general superintendent of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada
  • Bishop Michael Power (1804–1847) – Roman Catholic bishop of Toronto
  • Alexandre-Antonin Taché (1823–1894) – Roman Catholic priest, missionary of the Oblate order
  • Nathan Eldon Tanner (1898–1982) – Latter-day Saint apostle
  • John Taylor (1808–1887) – president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
  • Kateri Tekakwitha (1656–1680) – "the Lily of the Mohawks", first Native American canonized as a saint by the Catholic Church
  • Rúhíyyih Khanum (1910–2000) – wife of Shoghi Effendi, the head of the Baháʼí Faith until 1957; she was appointed as a Hand of the Cause; in 2004, CBC viewers voted her number 44 on the list of "greatest Canadians" on the television show The Greatest Canadian
  • Bramwell Tillsley (1931–2019) – general of The Salvation Army, 1993–1994
  • Clarence Wiseman (1907–1985) – general of The Salvation Army, 1974–1977

Religious cult figures

  • Roch Thériault (1947–2011) – cult leader
  • Brother XII (1878–1934) – cult leader

Scholars

  • Louise Arbour (born 1947) – jurist
  • Marc van Audenrode (born 1961) – economist
  • Pratima Bansal – economist
  • Timothy Brook (born 1951) – professor, historian and writer
  • Joseph-Alphonse-Paul Cadotte (1897–1979) – professor, author
  • Jack Chambers (1938–2026) – linguist
  • Thomas H. Clark (1893–1996) – McGill geology professor, namesake of Thomasclarkite
  • Gerald Cohen (1941–2009) – Oxford Philosopher
  • Northrop Frye (1912–1991) – influential critic, Shakespeare and Blake scholar
  • John Kenneth Galbraith (1908–2006) – economist
  • George Grant (1918–1988) – philosopher
  • John Peters Humphrey (1905–1995) – legal scholar, principal drafter of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
  • Harold Innis (1894–1952) – political economist; author of seminal works on Canadian economic history, media and communications
  • Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980) – communications theorist, coined phrases "the medium is the message" and "global village"
  • Steven Pinker (born 1954) – psychologist, cognitive scientist, writer of popular science
  • John Ralston Saul (born 1947) – businessman, essayist, diplomat
  • F. R. Scott (1899–1985) – law professor, philosopher, poet
  • Guy Sylvestre (1918–2010) – literary critic
  • David Sztybel (born 1967) – philosopher
  • Charles Taylor (born 1931) – philosopher
  • William R. White (born 1943) – economist
  • Marc Zender – Mayanist

Scientists

  • Robert Campbell Aitken (born 1963) – electrical engineer
  • Judie Alimonti (1960–2017) – immunologist
  • Sidney Altman (1939–2022) – molecular biologist, winner of Nobel Prize in chemistry
  • Brenda Andrews (born 1957) – academic, researcher and biologist specializing in systems biology and molecular genetics.
  • Albert Bandura (1925–2021) – psychologist
  • Neil Banerjee – earth scientist
  • Karen Bailey – plant pathologist
  • Karen Beauchemin (born 1956) – livestock ruminant nutrition
  • Robert Bell <small>FRSC</small> (1841–1917) – geologist
  • Walter A. Bell (1889–1969) – geologist, paleontologist
  • Manjul Bhargava (born 1974) – mathematician and Fields medallist
  • Selwyn G. Blaylock <small>ScD (hc)</small> (1879–1945) – chemist and mining executive
  • Stewart Blusson <small>OC</small> (born 1939) – geologist, diamond prospector, multimillionaire and philanthropist
  • Adolfo J. de Bold (1942–2021) – biomedical scientist, discoverer of hormone secreted by heart muscle cells
  • Willard Boyle (1924–2011) – inventor of the charge coupled device, winner of Nobel Prize in Physics
  • Bertram Brockhouse <small>CC FRSC</small> (1918–2003) – designer of the Triple-Axis Neutron Spectrometer, winner of Nobel Prize for Physics
  • Georges Brossard <small>CM CQ ScD (hc)</small> (1940–2019) – entomologist, television personality and founder of the Montreal Insectarium
  • Moira Brown – North Atlantic right whale researcher and conservationist
  • Vernon Burrows (1930–2020) – oat breeder
  • John J. Clague <small>FRSC</small> (born 1946) – authority in quaternary and environmental earth sciences
  • Kate Crooks (1833–1871) – botanist
  • Claire Cupples – microbiologist
  • Philip J. Currie (born 1949) – palaeontologist
  • John William Dawson <small>CMG FRS FRSC</small> (1820–1899) – first Canadian-born scientist of worldwide reputation
  • Duncan R. Derry <small>LLD (hc)</small> (1906–1987) – economic geologist
  • Raymond Desjardins – agrometeorologist
  • Donald B. Dingwell – earth scientist
  • Martine Dorais – plant physiologist, organic horticulture
  • Robert John Wilson Douglas <small>FRSC</small> (1920–1979) – petroleum geologist
  • Eugenia Duodu – chemist
  • Lorne Elias – chemist, inventor of the explosives vapour detector EVD-1
  • John Charles Fields <small>FRS FRSC</small> (1863–1932) – mathematician and founder of the Fields Medal
  • J. Keith Fraser (born 1922) – geographer
  • Hu Gabrielse (1926–2024) – geologist with the Geological Survey of Canada
  • William Giauque (1895–1982) – Nobel Prize winner in chemistry
  • Anne-Claude Gingras – molecular geneticist
  • Cynthia Grant – soil fertility and crop nutrition specialist
  • Donald O. Hebb FRS (1904–1985) – neuroscientist, published his theory of Hebbian learning
  • Gerhard Herzberg <small>PC CC ScD (hc) LLD (hc) FRSC FRS</small> (1904–1999) – Nobel Prize winner in chemistry for molecular spectroscopy
  • James Hillier <small>OC</small> (1915–2007) – inventor of the electron microscope
  • Vanessa M. Hirsch – veterinary pathologist and virologist
  • Paul F. Hoffman <small>OC FRSC</small> (born 1941) – geologist noted for research into Snowball Earth events
  • Edward A. Irving <small>CM ScD (hc) FRSC FRS</small> (1927–2014) – provided the first physical evidence of continental drift
  • Charles Legge (1829–1881) – civil engineer
  • Victor Ling <small>CC</small> (born 1944) – medicine, drug resistance in cancer
  • Sir William Edmond Logan <small>FRS</small> (1798–1875) – founded the Geological Survey of Canada
  • Mary MacArthur – botanist, cytologist, horticulturalist
  • John Macoun (1831–1920) – botanist
  • Tak Wah Mak (born 1946) – immunologist who discovered the T-cell receptor
  • Claude Hillaire-Marcel <small>FRSC</small> (born 1943) – world leader in quaternary research
  • Rudolph A. Marcus (born 1923) – Nobel Prize in chemistry recipient for electron transfer reactions
  • Jerrold E. Marsden (1942–2010) – applied mathematician, founder of the Fields Institute
  • Ernest McCulloch <small>CC FRSC FRS</small> (1926–2011) – cellular biologist who, with James Till, demonstrated the existence of stem cells
  • Maud Menten (1879–1960) – medical scientist, made groundbreaking work in enzyme kinetics
  • Robert Mundell (1932–2021) – economist and Nobel laureate
  • John Charles Polanyi <small>PC CC FRSC FRS</small> (born 1929) – Nobel Prize in chemistry recipient for infrared chemiluminescence
  • Isabella Preston (1881–1965) – ornamental horticulturalist
  • Raymond A. Price <small>OC ScD (hc) FRSC</small> (1933–2024) – geologist
  • Hubert Reeves <small>CC OQ</small> (1932–2023) – astrophysicist and science popularizer
  • Soon Jai Park (1937–2018) – dry bean breeder
  • Elizabeth Pattey – agricultural micrometeorologist
  • Henry de Puyjalon (1841–1905) – biologist and ecologist
  • Carmelle Robert (born 1962) – astrophysicist
  • Laurie Rousseau-Nepton – astrophysicist, first indigenous woman in Quebec to obtain a PhD in astrophysics
  • Donald F. Sangster <small>LLD (hc) ScD (hc) FRSC</small> – geologist
  • Charles E. Saunders (1867–1937) – agronomist
  • Arthur Schawlow (1921–1999) – Nobel Prize winner in physics (for lasers)
  • David Schindler OC (1940–2021) – limnologist
  • Myron Scholes (born 1941) – Nobel Prize winner in economics
  • Yoshua Bengio (born 1964) – computer scientist and winner of the Turing Award
  • Karen Schwartzkopf-Genswein – animal ethologist
  • Hans Selye <small>CC</small> (1907–1982) – pioneering stress researcher
  • Michael Smith <small>CC OBE</small> (1932–2000) – Nobel Prize winner in chemistry for site-based mutagenesis
  • Ralph M. Steinman (1943–2011) – Nobel Prize winner in Physiology or Medicine for the discovery of the dendritic cell and its role in adaptive immunity
  • Peter A Stewart (1921–1993) – physiologist, quantitative acid-base physiology
  • Donna Strickland (born 1959) – Nobel Prize winner in Physics, optical physicist and pioneer in the field of pulsed lasers
  • Richard Summerbell (born 1956) – mycologist
  • David Suzuki <small>CC OBC LLD (hc) ScD (hc) ScDEnv (hc) ScDComm (hc) DHL (hc)</small> (born 1936) – geneticist and science popularizer
  • Felicitas Svejda (1920–2016) – horticulturalist
  • Henry Taube <small>FRSC</small> (1915–2005) – Nobel Prize in chemistry for electron transfer reactions
  • Richard Taylor <small>CC FRSC FRS</small> (1929–2018) – Nobel Prize in physics recipient for verifying the quark theory
  • James Till <small>CC FRS</small> (1931–2025) – biophysicist who, with Ernest McCulloch, demonstrated the existence of stem cells
  • Joseph Tyrrell (1858–1957) – geologist, cartographer, discoverer of dinosaur bones in Alberta
  • William Vickrey (1914–1996) – Nobel Prize winner in economics
  • Harold Williams <small>FRSC</small> (1934–2010) – geologist, expert on the Appalachian Mountains
  • John Tuzo Wilson <small>CC OBE ScD (hc) FRSC FRS FRSE</small> (1908–1993) – geophysicist, expert in plate tectonics

Singers

Viceroys

  • List of governors general of Canada
  • List of lieutenant governors of Alberta
  • List of lieutenant governors of British Columbia
  • List of lieutenant governors of Manitoba
  • List of lieutenant governors of New Brunswick
  • List of lieutenant governors of Newfoundland and Labrador
  • List of lieutenant governors of Nova Scotia
  • List of lieutenant governors of Ontario
  • List of lieutenant governors of Prince Edward Island
  • List of lieutenant governors of Quebec
  • List of lieutenant governors of Saskatchewan

Writers

Other personalities

125px|thumb|right|[[Daniel Negreanu]]

125px|thumb|right|[[Sunny Leone]]

  • Janis Babson (1950–1961) – organ donor, subject of two books
  • Antonio Barichievich (1925–2003) (known as The Great Antonio) – strongman, showman, and eccentric
  • Grant Bristow (born 1958) – CSIS undercover agent who started the Heritage Front, planted as political operative within Reform Party
  • William J. Bruce III – author, producer and celebrity publicist
  • Donnelly family (known as the Black Donnellys) – participants and/or victims of a vicious community feud
  • Dylan Ehler (born 2017) – child who mysteriously disappeared in 2020
  • Josiah Henson (1789–1883) – former slave, believed to be the inspiration for Uncle Tom's Cabin
  • Marshal Iwaasa (born 1993) – man who mysteriously disappeared in 2019
  • Trevor James (born 1988) – YouTuber
  • Harold Kandel (1906–1995) – legendary theatregoer from Toronto, Ontario known for speaking out during theatre events, now commemorated through the Harold Awards
  • Marc Karam (born 1980) – professional poker player
  • Cindy Kenny-Gilday (born 1954) – Indigenous rights activist
  • Anna Ruth Lang <small>CV</small> – recipient of the Cross of Valour
  • Devon Larratt (born 1975) – professional armwrestler
  • Sunny Leone (born 1981) – Canadian and Indian pornographic actress; Bollywood actress
  • René Lepage de Sainte-Claire (1656–1718) – lord-founder of Rimouski, Quebec
  • Bat Masterson (1853–1921) – gunfighter, fight promoter, sports journalist
  • Marie-Louise Meilleur (1880–1998) – oldest Canadian person in history and the 6th oldest known person in history (as of January 2026)
  • Charles Vance Millar (1853–1926) – lawyer, financier, and posthumous practical joker
  • Sorel Mizzi (born 1986) – professional poker player
  • John Wilson Murray (1840–1906) – Canada's first major detective
  • Daniel Negreanu (born 1974) – professional poker player
  • Karen O'Shannacery (born 1950) – homeless advocate
  • Minnie Patterson (died 1911) – heroine noted for her daring rescue of everyone on board the barkentine (barque) Coloma during a severe storm in 1906
  • Sue Rodriguez (1950–1994) – amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) sufferer and right to die advocate
  • Alexander Milton Ross (1832–1897) (known as The Birdman) – pre-American Civil War abolitionist and participant in the Underground Railroad
  • Craig Russell (1948–1990) – female impersonator and actor
  • Laura Secord (1775–1868) – heroine of the War of 1812, warned the British of a surprise American attack at Battle of Beaver Dams
  • Chris Sky (born 1983) – conspiracy theorist
  • Joshua Slocum (1844–1909) – first man to sail around the world solo
  • Byron Sonne, activist
  • Alexandre Trudeau (born 1973) &ndash; author, filmmaker and journalist
  • Margaret Trudeau (born 1948) – widow; former wife of Pierre Elliott Trudeau
  • Sarah Rowell Wright (1862–1930), reformer, newspaper editor, and suffragist

Fictional characters

  • Amuro Ray – main character in the mecha anime Mobile Suit Gundam and varying roles in subsequent sequels
  • Ike Broflovski – character on South Park
  • Tom Evans (known as Captain Canuck) – cartoon character
  • Benton Fraser – Mountie on the 90s television show Due South
  • James Howlett (aka "Logan", aka "Wolverine") – member of the X-Men
  • Justin Jones from Justin Time
  • Rodney McKay – character on Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis
  • Bob and Doug McKenzie – characters on SCTV
  • Darren Oak (known as Captain Canuck) – cartoon character
  • Trevor Philips – one of the three protagonists of Grand Theft Auto V
  • Scott Pilgrim – from the graphic novel series of the same name
  • Sergeant William Preston – heroic Mountie of radio and TV series from the 1950s
  • Peter Puck – Hockey Night in Canada symbol from the 1970s
  • Robin Scherbatsky – supporting character on the sitcom How I Met Your Mother
  • Dave Semple (known as Captain Canuck) – cartoon character
  • Anne Shirley – known as Anne of Green Gables
  • Terrance and Phillip – characters on South Park
  • Wade Wilson (aka "Deadpool") – comic book anti-hero

Other

;National

  • Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)
  • List of companions of the Order of Canada
  • List of inductees of Canada's Walk of Fame
  • The Greatest Canadian

;Groupings and articles of relevance

  • Aboriginal Canadian personalities
  • Asian Canadians
  • Black Canadians
  • European Canadians
  • List of First Nations people
  • List of Canadian Jews
  • List of Canadians by net worth

;Geographic

  • Lists of Canadians by city

;Lists by province/territory

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References

  • The Dictionary of Canadian Biography &nbsp;– biographies of Canadians from 1000 to 1930 CE
  • Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada &nbsp;– biographies of Canadian architects and lists of their buildings from 1800 to 1950
  • "Canada Questions and Answers: Everything You Need to Know About Canada" by canadafaq.ca
  • The Canadian Encyclopedia – click on "people" for links to articles about Canadians; English/French availability