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Provincial flag of Quebec
Map and location of Quebec in Canada
This is a list of
English-speaking Quebecers . To be included on this list, a person must satisfy the following criteria:
The person was resident in
Quebec for some period of time. English was the primary language the person used while in Quebec The person meets the general notability requirements and has an article about them. If they have left Quebec, their notability must be based at least in part on their activity or career in Quebec.
The start date for inclusion on this list is July 1, 1867, the date the current province of Quebec was created. The person must have been active in Quebec after that date.
This list is not based on ethnicity, but on language spoken.
A
Douglas Abbott (1899–1987), politician and justice of the
Supreme Court of Canada
John Abbott (1821–1893), Prime Minister of Canada
Maude Abbott (1869–1940), physician and scientist
Elie Abel (1920–2004), journalist and author
Mark Abley (born 1955), poet, journalist and author
Marianne Ackerman (born 1952), novelist, playwright and journalist
Frank Dawson Adams (1859–1942), geologist
Ben Addelman (born 1977), film director
H. Montagu Allan (1860–1951), businessman and philanthropist
Hugh Allan (1810–1882) shipping magnate, financier and capitalist
Moyra Allen (1921–1996), professor of nursing, McGill University
Melissa Altro (born 1982), actress, voice actress
Jasey-Jay Anderson (born 1975), snowboarder and Olympic gold medalist
Joel Anthony (born 1982), basketball player
Alex Anthopoulos (born 1977), baseball general manager
Michael Applebaum (born 1963), interim and first Anglophone mayor of Montreal in over a century
[1]
David Morrison Armstrong (1805–1873), merchant, insurance agent and Legislative Councillor
Melissa Auf der Maur (born 1972), vocalist and musician
Nick Auf der Maur (1942–1998), journalist and politician
Thomas Cushing Aylwin (1806–1871), lawyer, politician, judge
B
Jay Baruchel (born 1982), actor
[2]
[3]
[4]
Joe Beef (1835–1889), tavern owner
Tyrone Benskin (born 1958), actor and politician
Conrad Black (born 1944), entrepreneur
Henry Black (1798–1873) lawyer, politician, and judge
Mike Bossy (1957–2022), National Hockey League player
Scotty Bowman , National Hockey League coach and executive
Bowser and Blue , musical comedy and satire duo
Charles Bronfman (born 1931), businessman and philanthropist
Edgar Bronfman, Sr. (1929–2013), businessman and philanthropist
Samuel Bronfman (1889–1971), businessman and philanthropist
Wally Buono (born 1950), Canadian Football League player and coach
Pat Burns (1952–2010), National Hockey League coach
C
D
E
F
G
H
J
K
L
M
Anna McGarrigle (born 1944), singer-songwriter
Kate McGarrigle (1946–2010), singer-songwriter
Stuart McLean (1948–2017), journalist, broadcaster, storyteller, author
Gerry McNeil (1926–2004), National Hockey League player
Torrey Mitchell (born 1985), National Hockey League player
Hartland Molson (1907–2002, brewer, sportsman, senator
Dickie Moore (1931–2015), National Hockey League player
Terry Mosher (born 1942), caricaturist
Thomas Mulcair (born 1954), politician
[5]
Brian Mulroney (1939-2024), Prime Minister of Canada
[5]
N
P
R
S
T
W
References
^ Piritz, Ingrid (November 23, 2012).
"Michael Applebaum: Montreal's unconventional choice for mayor" . The Globe and Mail . Retrieved November 11, 2017 .
^
"'I won’t lie — Quebec’s politics did my head in': Jay Baruchel on why he left Montreal for Toronto –Montreal's biggest star talks about what prompted him to make the move down the 401", National Post , June 1, 2015.
^
Brendan Kelly, "Jay Baruchel passionate about the Habs, Canada and the film BlackBerry 'The nationalist in me was pretty excited to do whatever we could to make this story immortal,' Baruchel says", Montreal Gazette , May 11, 2023.
^
"Jay Baruchel talks about his Habs fandom (and Leafs hatred) in new book", CTV Montreal , November 5, 2018.
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
"English-Speaking Quebecers | The Canadian Encyclopedia" . www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca . Retrieved 2023-11-30 .
^ Canada, Supreme Court of (2001-01-01).
"Supreme Court of Canada - Biography - Nicholas Kasirer" . www.scc-csc.ca .
Archived from the original on 2020-04-24. Retrieved 2020-06-02 .