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Roland Michener - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roland Michener

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Right Honourable
 Daniel Roland Michener
 PC CC CMM CD QC LLD (Oxon) BA
Roland Michener

In office
April 17, 1967 – January 14, 1974
Monarch Elizabeth II
Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, Pierre Trudeau
Preceded by Georges Vanier
Succeeded by Jules Léger

Born April 19, 1900 (1900-04-19)
Lacombe, NWT (now Lacombe, Alberta)
Died August 6, 1991 (aged 91)
Toronto, Ontario
Spouse Norah Michener
Profession Diplomat
Religion Anglican

Daniel Roland Michener PC CC CMM CD QC (April 19, 1900 - August 6, 1991) was Governor General of Canada from 1967 to 1974. His tenure as Canada's Governor General is often considered to be a key turning point in the history of his office. Since his retirement the Governor Generalship has moved dramatically in a less formal direction.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Roland Michener was the son of former Canadian Senator Edward Michener. Roland Michener attended the University of Alberta for his undergraduate degree, then earned graduate degrees at Oxford on a Rhodes Scholarship, where he played for the Oxford University Ice Hockey Club. While he was at Oxford he met Lester B. Pearson – the two men would become lifelong friends. He practised law in Toronto while sitting on the Executive Council of Ontario and became the secretary general for the Rhodes Foundation.

On February 26, 1927, in St. Mary Magdalene Anglican Church in Toronto he married Norah Willis, who, as the spouse of the Governor-General, was made a Companion of the Order of Canada. The couple had three daughters. Sadly, one daughter, Wendy, died at the age of 33 on January 1, 1969, while the Micheners were in office. For her thesis on the French philosopher, Jacques Maritain, Mrs. Michener received her doctorate from the University of Toronto in 1953.

[edit] Political career

Michener first ran for office in the downtown Toronto riding of St. David as a Progressive Conservative in the Ontario provincial election of 1943, but was defeated by William Dennison of the Ontario Co-operative Commonwealth Federation. He defeated Dennison in the 1945 election and took his seat in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario. He was appointed Provincial Secretary in the cabinet of Premier George Drew, and was given the task of formalizing cabinet procedures so that there would be an agenda and minutes. However, he lost again to Dennison in the 1948 provincial election and decided to leave provincial politics.

He ran for a seat in the Canadian House of Commons in the 1949 federal election, but was unsuccessful.

Roland Michener was elected to Parliament in the 1953 election as a Progressive Conservative Party of Canada candidate. He supported Donald Fleming at the 1956 party leadership convention that was won by John Diefenbaker.

When Diefenbaker's Tories won the 1957 election, Michener was not offered a seat in the Canadian Cabinet. He was instead offered the position of Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons after it was turned down by Stanley Knowles.

Michener angered Diefenbaker by allowing the Opposition a great degree of latitude during Question Period, and, at one point on May 25, 1959, Diefenbaker was so flustered that he refused to sit down when called to order by Michener.

Parliamentary observers were more impressed by the Speaker, and a group of university professors began a campaign to make Michener's position as Speaker permanent. They proposed that, as is the tradition with the Speaker of the British House of Commons, he run as an Independent in the general election, and that the political parties agree not to run candidates against him.

Such an agreement failed to materialize and Michener ran for re-election as a Progressive Conservative in the 1962 election, and was defeated. This was the first time since Canadian Confederation in 1867 that a Speaker was defeated in an election in which his party formed government.

Diefenbaker declined to offer Michener an appointment (such as to the Canadian Senate), and he returned to his law practice, Lang Michener LLP, in Toronto.

The Conservatives lost the 1963 election, and the new prime minister, Lester Pearson, appointed Michener as High Commissioner to India and first Canadian Ambassador to Nepal from 1964 to 1967. A close friend of Prime Minister Lester Pearson, Michener had received overtures from the PM that he would be considered among the leading candidates for the Governor Generalship when he returned from his foreign duty.

[edit] Governor General

In 1967, Governor General Georges Vanier died, a few weeks before the scheduled end of his term. Vanier had hoped to have his term extended to serve as Governor General during the upcoming centennial festivities, but Pearson was not prepared to allow it, citing Vanier's deteriorating health. Vanier died the next night, and Chief Justice Robert Taschereau became Administrator (acting Governor General), serving out the last few days of his term.

Michener was officially appointed Governor General on April 17, 1967 by Elizabeth II, the Queen of Canada and Canada's head of state under the Canadian constitution.

Ten days after Michener took office, the celebrations began for the 100th anniversary of the Canadian Confederation. Rideau Hall was rarely empty – 53 heads of state arrived to celebrate the Centennial and visit Expo 67 in Montreal. On April 27, Michener officially opened the fair during the opening ceremonies at Place des nations, along with Expo's Commissioner General, The Mayor of Montreal, The Premier of Quebec and the Prime Minister of Canada.

On July 1, 1967, the Order of Canada was created. Governor General Michener presided over the first presentation ceremony in November of the same year. In 1972, the Order of Military Merit and Decorations for Bravery were introduced, and in 1973 Queen Elizabeth II presented Mr. Michener with the Royal Victorian Chain, one of only two Canadians ever to receive the honour. (The other was former Governor General Vincent Massey in 1960.)

Mr. Michener was an avid sportsman and athlete. His interest in fishing prompted him to create a national award for the sport, called the Michener Tuna Trophy. A long-time friend of many reporters and journalists, in 1970, he created the Michener Award for Journalism.

During their stay at Rideau Hall, Roland Michener and his wife Norah relaxed protocol in a number of ways. The practice of curtseying before the Governor General ended. Michener continued to wear his elaborate viceroy uniform, but he would be the last Governor General to do so.

In 1971, Michener visited Trinidad and Tobago, and became the first Governor General to go on a state visit to another country. This was initially the source of some controversy among Ottawa insiders, who considered state visits inappropriate for a Governor General to do, considering he was not technically Canada's head of state. However, the successes of the visits helped end the controversy, and established a precedent that is followed to this day.

Michener also began a practice of instituted periodic meetings with provincial Lieutenant-Governors, which started in 1973. The meetings were both educational and social, and were meant to help bring awareness to the role of viceregals in Canada.

[edit] Retirement

After his term as Governor General, the couple moved to Toronto, and Mr. Michener served as Chancellor of Queen's University until 1980, while remaining active in business throughout Canada.

In his later years, a mountain in Alberta was named in his honour and, still energetic at age 80, he climbed to the peak to celebrate the naming ceremony.

In the mid-1980s, Michener would become a caretaker for his wife who became afflicted with Alzheimer's disease. She died in Toronto on January 12, 1987 aged 85.[1]

Following Roland Michener's death at the age of 91, his ashes were interred beside those of his wife at St. Bartholomew's Anglican Church in Ottawa, directly across from Rideau Hall.

Adapted from http://www.gg.ca

[edit] References

  1. ^ Delacourt, Susan. "Norah Michener: Philosopher enhanced Rideau Hall", The Globe and Mail, 14 January 1987, pp. pA17. 

[edit] External links

Academic offices
Preceded by
John Bertram Stirling
Chancellor of Queen's University
1973–1980
Succeeded by
Agnes Benidickson
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