List of Royal Military College of Canada people


This is a list of notable individuals who have been, or are involved with the Royal Military College of Canada.
Many RMC alumni have served Canada in war and peace. Billy Bishop was a leading ace of the First World War, won the Victoria Cross and helped to create the Canadian Flying Corps. Charles Merritt was a lawyer and militia officer who won the Victoria Cross at Dieppe during the Second World War. Leonard Birchall, the "Saviour of Ceylon", discovered the approach of the Japanese fleet during the Second World War and showed courage and leadership as a prisoner of war in Japan. Ex-cadets also helped with the peace process. John de Chastelain was twice Chief of Defence Staff and helped to monitor the Peace Accords in Northern Ireland. Romeo Dallaire headed the United Nation forces in Rwanda. Many former cadets gave their lives during both world wars, and in Afghanistan.
Many RMC alumni have had careers in the public or private sectors. Marc Garneau was the first Canadian in space and now is a Member of Parliament. Chris Hadfield became a test pilot, astronaut, the first Canadian to walk in space and the first Canadian commander of the International Space Station. Jack Granatstein became a historian and headed the Canadian War Museum.

Old-eighteen

The term "Old Eighteen" refers to the first class of cadets accepted into the Royal Military College of Canada.
Alfred George Godfrey WurteleHarry Cortlandt FreerHenry Ellison Wise
William Mahlon DavisThomas Laurence ReedSeptimus Julius Augustus Denison
Lukin Homphrey IrvingFrederick DavisCharles Albert DesBrisay
Victor Brereton RiversJames SpelmanDr. Charles Oliver Fairbank
Aylesworth Bowen PerryJohn Bray CochraneFrancis Joseph Dixon
George Edwin PerleyHarold Waldruf KeeferDuncan MacPherson

Quotations

#NameQuotation
General Maurice Baril
  • "Thousands of young officers have marched off its parade square and gone on to great achievements in politics, business and most importantly, on the battlefield"
7269Robert E. Brown interviewed by Konrad Yakabuski
  • "A well-aged dankness in the Stone Frigate, the oldest dormitory at Kingston's Royal Military College, is reputed to be ideally suited to the cultivation of spiders, the common cold and a strong character. Residents of the 180-year-old former naval warehouse, which is separated from the other dorms by Parade Square, have long seen the ability to endure their barracks' inhospitable clime as a mark of fortitude."
  • Sir Andrew Clarke, British inspector-general of fortifications, deceased
  • "one of the best of its class in the world... And the Americans themselves, I understand, say better than at West Point." In 1893 Clarke commented that RMC graduates were better than those from the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich.
  • H22982Twenty-sixth Governor-General Adrienne Clarkson C.C., C.M.M., C.O.M., C.D.
  • "You will be called upon to take your place in modern Canada and in the modern world.... You will also be called upon to lead...and a leader must stand for something. You must not only be aware of who you are. You must also be defined by what you do."
  • Brooke Claxton, former Defence Minister, deceased
  • "The role of the officer in modern war can only be properly discharged if they have education and standing in the community comparable to that of any of the other professions as well as high qualities of character and physique." In 1947, Claxton reopened RMC as a 3-service cadet college offering a 4-year academic program.
  • H24263Dr. John Scott Cowan
  • "his is an exercise in Nation Building: In the way that water transforms into ice by building around a single crystal, perhaps the new Canada could do worse than to build around the experiences and values of the new RMC."..."We educate those who pass through this place Royal Military College of Canada exactly so that they will fully understand and be a part of the culture they are called upon to defend."
  • 749General Harry Crerar CH, CB, DSO, KStJ, CD, deceased
  • "I am confident that The RMC Battalion of Gentlemen Cadets, which will be re-born after this war is over will typify in the future all the best College tradition we have known in the past"
  • Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Currie, deceased
  • the "spirit" of the Royal Military College of Canada's graduates, "no less than their military attainments, exercised a potent influence in fashioning a force which, in fighting efficiency, has never been excelled."
  • Captain A.G. Douglas, deceased
  • Suggested, in 1816, the establishment of a Canadian military college in Trois-Rivières to unify the population, "to begin to work upon young minds of different... parties and persuasions" so "old prejudices would vanish not only among the students, but even among their relations, and a common interest would ensue"
  • Henry Charles Fletcher deceased
  • suggested, in an 1874 report to Governor-General Frederick Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava, the establishment of three permanent officer training schools to serve all arms "the great contribution West Point had made could be duplicated in Canada by a similar institution in which officers of all arms would be trained together".
  • S140Robert J. Giroux C.M., MSc
  • "A degree from the Royal Military College is a living testament to the value of service and dedication."
  • S147Hon. Bill Graham, Defence Minister
  • "RMC has a proud history of excellence and is fundamental in training future leaders of the Canadian Forces,"
  • 19033Major Nick Grimshaw
  • "Overall, the training that I was involved in since graduating from RMC prepared me very well for my tour in Afghanistan. I found myself constantly relying on the basic principles of leadership. Leading by example was by far the most important aspect."
  • Hon Albina Guarnieri, P.C.,
  • "The professionalism of the Canadian Forces is, in large part, founded on learning and knowledge. The Canadian Defence Academy, the Military and Staff Colleges and the Royal Military College of Canada, all play a critical role in creating and ensuring knowledge in the defence community."
  • S148General Rick Hillier, Chief of the Defence Staff
  • " the Royal Military College where a bulk of our new officers start their career, start their education, we have 200 spots open for August . We have 1,500 people who have applied and completed the application process to go to those 200 spots. That is a 7½ to one ratio and we get the opportunity to select the very best from it. As a result, our quality of applicants and the quality of the recruits, the level of fitness and the imagination and the success in completing the courses has skyrocketed in a way that we couldn't even dream about before." 2007 Speech at the National Managers' Forum
  • 22862Captain Jeremy A. Hiltz
  • "...RMC never taught me how to lead a platoon attack or conduct a Shurah with local Afghan elders, but it has taught me three vital ideas that all officers should adhere to. Truth means leading soldiers from the front and being honest to them at all times. Duty means being there at the front when the bullets start flying because the private soldier that I have just told to assault an enemy position needs to know that I am committed to achieving the mission with him. Valour means taking the difficult orders and making them my own, in spite of the fear of the unknown or the chances that we are taking." Veritas article July 2007, p38
  • Sir John Keegan OBE,* Kingston,..., is pure British imperial.... Watching cadets parade there, I saw them perform a drill movement I knew only from sepia Victorian photographs – it has long been abolished in Britain – while I listened to a running stream of criticism from a sergeant in bottleglass-brilliant boots of their minor imperfections in marching. He hated, he told me after the parade, the adoption by Canada's army of the naval salute – 'the wave, I call it' – he hated the universal green uniform, he hated the use of common ranks – 'How can the captain of a ship be a colonel?' – he hated the disappearance of polished brass – the metal of his pacestick glittered with burnishing – he hated rubber soles, non-iron shirts, nylon uniforms and being mistaken by civilians for an airman. Kipling and he would have got on like a house on fire: 'Ship me somewheres east of Suez, where... a man can raise a thirst' were almost the next words I expected to hear at the crescendo of his relentless tirade. Spiritually he belonged with the Royal Canadians who had gone to fight the Boers for Queen Victoria; his cadets were unlikely to be allowed to forget that her great-great-granddaughter was Queen of Canada or that he had learnt his drill at the depot of her Foot Guards.' -
    Lt. Col. John McCrae
  • "...I have a manservant.. Quite a nobby place it is, in fact.. My windows look right out across the bay, and are just near the water's edge; there is a good deal of shipping at present in the port; and the river looks very pretty.’ letter while on an Artilleryman course
  • Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie, deceased
  • Wrote Governor-General Dufferin, in 1878 "This belief led me to propose the establishment of a Military College modelled on existing similar institutions in England and the United States, with the expectation that when the first batch of Graduates were leaving the College. Means would be found to employ the Graduates in the Canadian Military Service"
  • 490Brigadier F. H. Maynard, deceased
  • "I have always remembered with pride that I was a graduate of the RMC. What I learned there carried me through many dangers and difficulties and I wish to record here my gratitude to all who taught me and with whom I served at the RMC, Canada."
  • Hon. Peter MacKay, Minister of National Defence
  • "The Royal Military College is a higher education institution that plays an essential role for the Canadian Forces and for our country ... Throughout the ranks, the leadership of the Canadian Forces is smart, flexible and adaptive. And a good deal of the credit for this should go to the Royal Military College ... This is a vital national institution. Here, today, much of tomorrow's military leadership is being forged ... RMC will continue to provide the professional development that the CF needs to successfully face the challenges that surely lay ahead."
  • Twentieth Governor-General Roland Michener, P.C., C.C., C.M.M., C.D., LL.D. deceased
  • "RMC, which is only nine years younger than Confederation, has been a powerful factor in the growth and security of the country"
  • Colonel Sir Frederick Dobson Middleton deceased
  • "there are very few institutions of a similar character equal to it in Europe and none that are better."
  • S149Hon Peter Milliken, Member of Parliament 2001
  • The motto of the Royal Military College is, "Truth, Duty, Valour". Your admission to the ranks of this institution, whether it occurred this year or two decades ago, as cadets or as staff, presupposes that you are already possessed of these qualities. That having been said, there is always room for improvement, and the college's role in this regard is to inculcate in its cadets a sense of integrity, responsibility, self-discipline, teamwork, and leadership.
  • 8850Rear Admiral David C. Morse
  • "We have a lot to be proud of and the graduates are making a tremendous contribution to Canadian society. We need to tell this story again and again. We need to make sure the graduates who have reached levels of prestige are recognized."
  • "RMC makes engineers literate and artsmen numerate."
  • S157Honourable Gordon O'Connor
  • "RMC is one of the best military colleges in the world, and it takes motivation and discipline to succeed here."
  • 13511Bernard JG Ouellette, RMC's director of cadets
  • "I’m very proud of these young men and women. They put in months of rigorous training on top of an already demanding schedule, and today, their dedication, fitness and teamwork paid off"
  • H16511Dr. Richard A. Preston, deceased
  • "The supreme test of a military college is the success of its graduates in war ... There were some who believed that the stronger academic program must inevitably have weakened the old military spirit and efficiency. But the success of the graduates who went directly to Korea quickly disabused them."
  • Dr. Michael Sullivan, deceased
  • 1872 petition recommended the military college for Kingston "remarkable healthfulness...not without historical fame in the annals of the country which would render it the more proper site for a military college"
  • Kevin Sylvester, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Radio, Sounds Like Canada 2007/07/26
  • "Like its counterparts Sandhurst in the U.K, West Point in the U.S. and l'École militaire in France, Canada's Royal Military College is the school of choice for many of this country's future military leaders."
  • Rt. Hon. Sir Charles Tupper, deceased
  • "I regard the Canadian Military College as one of the best of its class in the world. The training and results are in every way of a high order, and the Americans themselves, I understand, say better than at West Point."
  • 2951General Ramsey Muir Withers
  • "... The College must also promote a common vision of the profession of arms, the common military ethos underpinning leadership in the CF and the increasingly joint nature of all foreseeable operations."
  • Unknown
  • By 1900, hardly a Canadian "bridge, road, or railway line was built without the assistance of an engineering graduate of RMC."
  • Alumni who were knighted

    During the Convocation Ceremony on Wednesday 14 May, H24263 Dr. John S. Cowan said to the Class of 2008 "Of the first 170 cadets who entered RMC from 1876 to 1883 eight received knightships for feats of leadership in many fields of endeavor on at least four continents." After 1919 Canadian were no longer eligible for knighthood. Those ex-cadets serving in the British forces were not under any such restriction and so we have the later appointments.
    # 25 Major General Sir William Throsby Bridges KCB, CMG;# 88 Major General Sir Philip Geoffrey Twining KCMG, CB, MVO, RE;
    # 123 Major General Sir Dudley Howard Ridout, KBE, CB, CMG;# 138 General Sir George Kirkpatrick KCB, KCSI;
    # 147 Sir Edouard Percy Cranwill Girouard KCMC DSO;# 151 Lieutenant-General Sir Archibald Cameron Macdonell KCB, CMG, DSO;
    # 162 Major General Sir Casimir Cartwright van Straubenzee, KBE, CBE, CMG;# 168 General Sir William Charles Giffard Heneker KCB, KCMG, DSO;
    # 221 Lieutenant General Sir Charles Macpherson Dobell, KCB, CMG, DSO;# 246 Major General Sir Henry Edward Burstall, KCB, KCMG;
    # 323 Lieutenant-General Sir George Norton Cory, KCB, KBE, CB, DSO;# 665 Brigadier Sir Godfrey D. Rhodes, CBE, DSO, RE;
    # 703 Brigadier Sir Charles Frederick Carson, CBE, MC, RE;# 729 Lieutenant General Sir Arthur Edward Grassett, KBE, CB, DSO, MC, RE;
    # 758 Brigadier Sir Edward Oliver Wheeler MC, RE;#1246 General Sir Charles Loewen, GCB, KBE, DSO;
    #2585 Captain Sir Edwin Hartley Cameron Leather MP;

    Notable graduates

    is prestigious and has had many notable alumni.

    #NameGradSignificance
    6508Major General John L. Adams 1965Chief, Communications Security Establishment
    626Major Augustus Waterous Agnew1904Canadian soldier, Died 17 September 1916, during the Great War
    Colonel W. J. Aitchison OMM, .1963Former Colonel of the Regiment, Royal Canadian Regiment.
    Lieutenant Wallace Lloyd Algie VCc 1898 – 1902Victoria Cross citation, The London Gazette, 31 January 1919
    2510Brigadier General Edward Amy ‘Ned’ DSO, an OBE, MC, Canadian Decoration, American Bronze Star, Legion d'honneur1936one of Canada's most decorated soldiers
    Captain Frederick Anderson 1890chief hydrographer of Canada
    12662nd Lieutenant Frederick Henry Anderson MC1916Canadian soldier, died 15 May 1918, during the Great War
    433Major General Thomas Victor Anderson, DSO, CD1900Canadian soldier, Chief of the General Staff, head of Canadian Army 1938–1940
    951Captain Edward Davey Ashcroft1912Canadian soldier, died on 30 November 1917, during the Great War
    1007Captain Frederick Graeme Avery MC1913Soldier died 13 April 1918, during Great War;
    427Captain Edward C Baker1900Canadian soldier, died on 19 September 1916, during the Great War
    7632Lieutenant Colonel Gunars Balodis 1968co-founder of Music for Young Children with his wife Frances Balodis
    1828Brigadier Ted G.E. Beament, CM OBE, GCStJ, ED, Czechoslovakian MC1925–1929lawyer, Officer Commanding Khaki University during World War II
    2671Lieutenant Duncan Peter Bell-Irving1913BC Land Surveyors Roll of Honour
    Brigadier-General George Gray Bell, OC, M.B.E., CD, PhD 1943Canadian soldier, civil servant, and academic
    765Staff Captain James Knowles Bertram1909
    940Captain Henry Ewart Bethune MC1912Killed 30 September 1918, during the Great War
    1472Judge Sherburne Tupper Bigelow1918Canadian Horseracing Hall of Fame,
    2364Air Commodore Leonard Birchall CM, OBE, DFC, CD, OofO 1933Second World War hero, "Saviour of Ceylon", Executive Officer at York University
    6219Dr. Robin Boadway1964economist, author, Rhodes Scholar 1964
    543Lieutenant Colonel Howard L Bodwell Companion of the CMG DSO1901soldier, died 15 January 1919, during the Great War
    1016Captain William Otway Boger DFC1913soldier, died 10 August 1918, during the Great War
    845Captain Hedleigh St George BondRMC 1912soldier, died 15 August 1917, during the Great War
    1434Dr. Hugh Samuel BostockRMC 1918geologist
    2310Colonel Harry Fitz-Gibbon Boswell, OBE1933–1937Awarded War Cross with Sword, highest ranking Norwegian gallantry decoration:
    8790General Jean Boyle CMM, CD1971fighter pilot, short-term Chief of the Defence Staff, and businessman
    2375Lieutenant-Colonel Norman Buchanan MC with 2 bars1934soldier, politician
    1032Lieutenant-General E. L. M. Burns C0C, DSO, OBE, MC, CD 1914World War II Corps Commander, 1981 recipient of the Pearson Medal of Peace
    246Major General Sir Henry Edward Burstall CB,1887–1889Canadian general, Burstall, Saskatchewan is named in his honour.
    Brigadier General James Sutherland BrownCanadian military officer who drafted a contingency war plan in 1921 to invade and occupy several American border cities.
    1325Captain Lorne Carr-Harris1917goalie on the Britain team which won the bronze medal at the 1924 Winter Olympics.
    82Wallace Bruce Matthews Carruthers1883militia officer; founder of the Canadian Signal Corps; governor of Queen's College School of Mining and Kingston General Hospital
    703Brigadier Sir Charles Frederick Carson, CBE, MC,1905–1909
    18095Dr. Sylvain Charlebois1992Dean, professor, Researcher in food distribution and policy, Known columnist for La Presse and The Globe and Mail, Dalhousie University
    2272Brigadier General Arthur G. Chubb DSO, CD1932Soldier, author, Senior Military Advisor of the Canadian Delegation to the International Truce Commission in Vietnam
    6523Ambassador Terence Colfer 1965former Canadian ambassador to Iran 1999–2003 and to Kuwait 1996–1999
    323Lieutenant-General Sir George Norton Cory KBE, CB, DSO1891–1895
    851Colonel Lawrence Moore Cosgrave DSO1912Representing Canada, signed WWII Japanese Instrument of Surrender
    749General, The Honourable Harry Crerar PC, CH, CB, DSO, KStJ, CD1909army officer, Chief of the Defence Staff in 1940
    2277Alexander R. Cross1932rancher, Rothney Farm became Ann and Sandy Cross Conservation area – a day use natural area south west of Calgary, Alberta
    7860Lieutenant General the Hon. Roméo Dallaire OC, CMM, G.O.Q., C.S.M. CD, LL.D.1969Senator, Awarded Vimy Award by the Conference of Defence Associations, June 1995. Awarded the United States Legion of Merit, January 1996; author, academic
    676Captain Robert Clifford Darling1907He was the first Canadian soldier to be killed overseas during the Great War, but buried at home. He died on 23 March 1915 of wounds sustained in defence of Ypres, Belgium.
    Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson1914Novelist and soldier, Canadian Field Artillery
    7543Senator Joseph A. Day1968retired from Royal Canadian Air Force; lawyer, Liberal Senator for New Brunswick 2001.10.04 –
    268Lieutenant Colonel Count Henry Robert Visart de Bury et de Bocarmé CBE,1892soldier, nobleman, academic, director of Canadian Ordnance Services, France
    4860General John de Chastelain OC, CMM, CD, CH1960former Chief of the Defence Staff; participant in Northern Ireland peace process; Scouts Canada's National Council and Substance Abuse Task Force, former Canadian ambassador to the United States
    221Lieutenant-General Sir Charles Macpherson Dobell1886–1890Major-General with the Royal Welch Fusiliers of the British Army
    17324Sharon Donnelly, CD19902000 & 2004 Olympic teams, triathlon
    2082Honorable Brigadier General C. M. Drury PC, QC, CBE, DSO1929former soldier, businessperson, politician
    20743Alex Dumas1997CEO Quebecor Corp
    19828John-James Ford1995diplomat, author of Bonk on the Head which won 2006 Ottawa Book Award
    8276Doctor Marc Garneau CC, CD, PhD, F.C.A.S.I.1970served as first Canadian astronaut aboard space shuttles Challenger and Endeavour, logged nearly 700 hours in space; NASA Exceptional Service Medal in 1997
    805Lieut.-Colonel the Honourable Colin W. G. Gibson PC, MC, VD, Croix de guerre, LL.D.1909–1911lawyer, Member of Parliament, Judge of the Ontario Court of Appeal
    147Colonel Sir Edouard Percy Cranwill Girouard, K.C.M.G.1882–1886National Historic Person of Canada ; military engineer, constructed railways in Africa
    22458Captain Nichola Goddard, MSM 2002First female Canadian soldier killed in action, in Afghanistan, Nichola Goddard scholarship in her honour
    599Lt. Col. Leroy F. Grant 1905inducted in 1998 into Kingston and District Sports Hall of Fame as Builder Sailing
    Major General Garnet Hughes CB; DSO1909Canadian Expeditionary Force 1914–1918 1st Canadian Division; 5th Canadian Division
    Awards
    23350Captain Simon Mailloux2006First Canadian soldier amputee to deploy on a combat mission. Was previously injured on a tour as platoon commander in Kandahar.
    2087Senator John Morrow Godfrey1929Canadian lawyer and politician
    1681Walter L. Gordon1926public servant, politician, author
    5105Doctor Jack "JL" Granatstein OC, PhD, LL.D., F.R.S.C.1961Canadian historian
    729Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Edward Grassett CB, DSO, MC1906–1909Royal Engineers, knighted 1945
    8816Ambassador Marius Grinius1971Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations Office at Geneva, Switzerland
    13738Colonel Chris Hadfield CD 1982Canadian astronaut
    8919Ronald Halpin1971former Ambassador to Hungary
    313George Henry Ronald Harris, C.E.1894mining engineer, lived at Eldon House
    Hon John Gabriel Hearn1884businessman and political figure in Quebec
    1976Hon George Hees PC, OC 1927former Minister of Veterans Affairs Canada, Ambassador-at-large for the Canadian International Development Agency Food Aid Program
    1104Wilfrid Heighington K.C.1915lawyer, poet, soldier
    Lt. Alexis Helmerwas killed in action the Second Battle of Ypres. His burial inspired John McCrae to write the poem "In Flanders Fields" on 3 May 1915.
    168General Sir William Charles Gifford Heneker1884–1888
    2XXColonel William Josiah Hartley Holmes1891Canadian soldier, surveyor, civil engineer; Holmes Inlet on the coast of British Columbia was named in his honour in 1934
    2162Brigadier General John Richard Hyde 1930 to 1934.Canadian soldier, lawyer, provincial politician, judge
    21364Captain Jeremy Hansen1999Canadian astronaut, CF-18 fighter pilot
    175Brigadier General George Napier Johnston CB CMG, DSO1888Canadian Army officer, New Zealand General,
    Major-General Rod Keller CD, CBECanadian Army Officer, 3rd Canadian Infantry Division; Kelowna, British Columbia alderman
    138General Sir George Macaulay Kirkpatrick K.C.B., K.C.S.I.1882–1885Canadian soldier, Royal Engineers knighted
    Lawrence Lambe1883Invertebrate Palaeontologist, Geological Survey
    2399Rear-Admiral William Landymore1934Canadian naval officer
    2774Bert Lawrence1952Canadian politician and lawyer.
    2585Sir Edwin Leather KCompanion of the Order of St Michael and St George, KCVO1937–1939Former governor of Bermuda, former chair of the executive committee of Canadian Red Cross
    313John "Jack" Edwards Leckie, DSO, French Croix de Guerre1889–1893soldier, mining engineer, explorer, Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society
    14872Lieutenant Colonel Pierre Lemieux1985federal politician, Conservative Party Whip
    87Lieutenant Colonel Reuben Wells Leonard1883soldier, civil engineer, railroad and mining executive, philanthropist
    1246General Sir Charles Loewen, GCB, KBE, DSO1916–1918military leader, knighted
    151Major Gen Sir Archibald Cameron Macdonell KCB, CMG, DSO1883–1886military leader, knighted, police officer, soldier
    2102Lieut.-Colonel the Hon. John Keiller MacKay] DSO, VD, QC, DCL, LL.D.] 1909Lawyer, judge, justice of appeal, former lieutenant governor of Ontario O.R. 778]
    236Brigadier General Duncan Sayre MacInnes DSO CMG1887–1891military leader, aviation engineer, Duncan Sayre MacInnes scholarship
    3528General Paul David Manson OC, CMM, CD 1956military leader, business executive and volunteer; former Chief of Defence Staff
    Paul C. MarrinerDirector, Fly Fishing Canada; Team Canada member at 10 World Fly Fishing Championships
    H17417John Ross Matheson, OC, CD, QC, LL.M., LL.D.1936Canadian lawyer, judge, and politician who helped develop Canadian flag and Order of Canada
    Brigadier George Arnold McCarter CBE1916
    • CBE for recognition of gallant and distinguished services in Italy
    • Mentioned in recognition of gallant and distinguished services in North West Europe
    1921Commissioner George McClellan1929former commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police 1963–1967
    Colonel Charles Wesley Weldon McLean DSO1899Member of Parliament, UK
    1865Lieutenant-Colonel Theodore Meighen1925Lawyer and philanthropist
    1925Maxwell Charles Gordon Meighen,05216financier, businessman
    2290Brigadier General Dollard Ménard 1932Story of bravery at Dieppe inspired a Canadian WWII poster "Ce qu’il faut pour vaincre"
    H1866Lieutenant Colonel Cecil Merritt, VC 1925Politician, awarded a Victoria Cross
    1800Hartland Molson, OC, OBE, D.C.L.1924Former brewer, owner of the Montreal Canadiens
    7301Earle Morris19673-time Brier representative, coach of the Australian national curling team
    G0053Lieutenant Colonel Alex Morrison, MSC, CD 1980awarded 2002 Pearson Medal of Peace
    4393Doctor Desmond Morton OC, PhD, F.R.S.C.1959Canadian historian, awarded the first RMC degree Rhodes Scholar 1959
    Lieutenant-General John Carl Murchie CB, CBE, CD 1915Canadian Chief of the General Staff
    Leonard Nicholson CM, MBECommissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
    G0957Doctor Aryeh Nusbacher 1994Canadian military historian
    2592Edmund Boyd Osler1937Pilot, Squadron Leader, Member of Parliament for Winnipeg, Manitoba South Centre 1968–72 Insurance executive, writer
    13Commissioner/Major General Aylesworth Bowen Perry1876Commissioner North-West Mounted Police Royal Canadian Mounted Police 1890–1923
    5__Frederic Hatheway Peters OBE1904Surveyor-General of Canada ; Mount Peters, BC and Lake Peters, AB named in his honour
    2184Rear Admiral Desmond Piers CM, CD, DSC, Mil, KLj, RCN1930first RMC graduate to join the Royal Canadian Navy
    1649Lieutenant-Governor Edward Chester Plow, CBE, DSO, CD, 1921a Canadian soldier and Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia
    1309Mr Richard Porritt1917inducted into Canadian Mining Hall of Fame
    6757Mr Mike U. Potter1966 CMR RMCbusinessman; philanthropist; founded Cognos and Vintage Wings of Canada
    126Philip PrimroseFormer police officer, Lieutenant Governor of Alberta
    14344Captain Bruce Poulin 1992Queen's Jubilee Medal for volunteerism
    E1855Lt. Col David N Quick, SMV, CD,2003Star of Military Valour, Afghanistan
    665Brigadier Sir Godfrey D. Rhodes CB, CBE, and DSO1903–1907knighted
    123Major-General Sir Dudley Howard Ridout, KBE, CB, CMG 1881–1885Boer War and World War soldier knighted
    891Major General John Hamilton Roberts CB, DSO, MC1914Second World War General
    62William H. Robinson1883first Royal Military College of Canada alumnus KIA
    1874Major Edward Britton Rogers1925–1929athlete, soldier killed in action at Caen, France, on 23 July 1944
    2802Robert Gordon Rogers1940Former Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia
    1815Air Commodore Arthur Dwight Ross 1928Second World War George Cross recipient
    Arthur Leith Ross1896awarded the Queen's South African Medal with 4 clasps; died on 26 August 1906, of blackwater fever in Nigeria, where he served as Chief Transport Officer, with the Northern Nigeria Regiment, African Frontier Force
    Jeffrey Russell1920inducted into Canadian Football Hall of Fame
    Major Henri-Thomas Scott1903soldier, educator, businessperson, advocate for physical education, playgrounds, and camps
    Brigadier Gordon Sellar1943served with the Calgary Highlanders during the battle of Walcheren Island, battle of the Scheldt Estuary; command of the Black Watch's 1st Battalion in April 1963
    2420General Frederick Ralph Sharp1934former chief of the defence staff
    1596Lieutenant General Guy Simonds CC, CB, CBE, DSO, CD1925Commander of the 2nd Canadian Corps in NW Europe, 1944–45. Former Chief of the General Staff.
    52William Grant Stairs1882Explorer
    1089Major-General Charles Ramsay Stirling Stein1915Commanding Officer of the 5th Canadian Armored Division from January 1943 to October 1943
    William J. Stewart1883Canada's first Chief Hydrographic Surveyor, 1863–1925. Stewart Island, Algoma and Stewart Rock, Owen Channel, Manitoulin were named after him.
    Lieutenant-General Kenneth Stuart
    Major-General Herbert Cyril Thacker 1890Canada's first military attaché, sent to the Far East during Russo-Japanese War 1904
    RCNSE54Rear Admiral Robert Timbrell1937Awarded Distinguished Service Cross during World War II
    995Captain George Evelyn Tinling MC1913–1915KIA 4 October 1917 during the Great War
    Brigadier-General Kenneth Torrance MC, OBE 1896–19481913–1914
  • OBE in 1942 for his bravery during World War II while serving with the besieged forces in Singapore
  • He spent 3 ½ years in a Japanese POW camp.
  • He owned a Gothic Revival stone mansion named Ker Cavan c. 1850 in Guelph, Ontario as a summer home 1945–48.
  • listed on the Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute Wall of Fame
  • 88Major General Sir Philip Geoffrey Twining KCMG, COB, MVO1880–1883Canadian soldier, knighted
    162Major-General Sir Casimir Cartwright van Straubenzee1883–1886
    General Jonathan VanceChief of the Defence Staff of the Canadian Armed Forces
    14164Lieutenant Colonel Michael VoithCMR 1979–1981 RMC 1981–1983engineering adviser and the DART commanding officer
    1633General Christopher Vokes, CB, CBE, DSO, CD 1925World War II operational commanderChristopher Vokes
    1940Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick Alexander Vokes1926–1930Soldier, Commanding Officer of the 9th Canadian Armoured Regiment wounded in action and died in hospital on 4 September 1944
    11027Brigadier General Ken Watkin1976Judge Advocate General
    2357Brigadier General Denis Whitaker DSO, CM, ED, CD1933leader in military, sport, business and community service, co-author of 2 Canada's military history books
    96James White, Geographer, deceasedProduced 1st edition of Atlas of Canada
    758Brigadier General Sir Edward Oliver Wheeler,1907–1910Military Officer, surveyor, adventurer, 1921 Mount Everest expedition
    2951General Ramsey Muir Withers CMM, CD 1952Military Officer
    352Lieutenant Charles Carroll Wood1896First Canadian Officer to be Killed In Action on 11 November 1899 in the Second Boer War
    Commissioner Stuart Taylor Wood1912former Commissioner of Royal Canadian Mounted Police 1938–1951
    Zachary Taylor Wood1882office holder, militia officer, and Royal Northwest Mounted Policeman
    1Alfred George Godfrey Wurtele1875
    • RMC instructor in mathematics and geometrical drawing and lieutenant of cadets, RMC 1882–97
    • The "Number 1 Fund", which commemorates AGG Wurtele and all of the other Wurteles who have graced this College, is used for the annual maintenance of The Memorial Arch.
    47LCol Ernest Frederick Wurtele1882succeeded the seigniories of Bourg Marie de l'Est and De Guir, commonly known as River David, Yamaska Quebec
    RNCC43Commander Alfred Charles WurteleRNCC 1913Counsellor and Reeve of Esquimalt
    990LCol William Godfrey H. Wurtele M.C.1915awarded a M.C. "For conspicuous gallantry during eight days of the operations, in which he commanded his company."
    2551Group Captain Douglas Wurtele1936fighter pilot during World War II
    2552Major Bill Young1936He and his wife, Joyce Young, are philanthropists.
    G957Lynette Nusbacher1996Military historian, author and strategist
    G3727Jacques Duchesneau, C.M., O.O.M., KStJ, C.Q., C.D., Ph.D.2015Inspector General, City of Saint-Jerome, QC. Former: President and CEO of the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority, Member of Quebec's National Assembly, Director Anti-Collusion Unit, Chief of Police, Colonel Commandant of the Canadian Forces's Military Police, LCol 1 Tactical Aviation Support Squadron, LCol 62nd Canadian Artillery Regiment.

    Notable honorary degree recipients

    Notable honorary and special members of the Royal Military College of Canada Club

    Shown with college numbers.
    Name#Significance
    Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Tunisformer Governor General of Canada
    Myriam BédardS120Canadian biathlete, Olympic double Gold medalist
    Charles H. Belzile CM, CMM, CD,H22547distinguished military career; community service: Canadian War Museum Advisory Committee; Conference of Defence Associations; founding member of Canadian Battle of Normandy Foundation
    Thomas R. Berger OC, O.B.C., LL.B., LL.D., PCS153former puisne judge of the supreme Court of British Columbia; leader of MacKenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry; advocate of Canadian unity and equality
    Thomas Brzustowski OC, PhD, D.Sc., F.R.S.C., P.Eng.S143engineer, academic, and civil servant
    John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuirformer Governor General of Canada
    Adrienne Clarkson CC, CMM, C.O.M., CDH22982Twenty-fifth Governor General
    Barney DansonHfounder of Katimavik, former RMC Chancellor
    Senator Joseph A. DayH7543Canadian Senator
    Hon. Art EggletonS128Canadian politician
    Mr. L. Phil Fontaine, Order of ManitobaHAssembly of First Nations National Chief
    Hon. Bill GrahamS147Canadian politician
    Rick HillierS148Former Chief of the Defence Staff
    Ray HenaultS146Former Chief of the Defence Staff
    Ray Hnatyshyn PC, CC, CMM, CD, B.A., LL.B., QCH17416Twenty-fourth Governor General
    Gilles Lamontagne, C.P., OC C.Q., CD, B.A.H15200military officer, prisoner of war during World War II, businessman and politician
    Roméo LeBlanc C.P., CC, CMM, CDH20123Twenty-fifth Governor General
    Hon John Ross MathesonH17417sponsored George Stanley's design for the Canadian flag, helped develop the Order of Canada, soldier, judge, politician
    Hon Peter MillikenS149Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada
    Hon Gordon O'ConnorS157Canadian politician, National Defence Minister
    Ernest Smith VC, CM O.B.C., CDS132Soldier, politician
    Edward Schreyer P.C., CC, CMM, O.M., CD, LL.D.H14513Twenty-second Governor General
    Jeanne Sauvé C.P., CC, CMM, CD, LL.D.H16929Twenty-third Governor General

    Notable non-graduate alumni of the RMC

    NameLeft RMC in:Significance
    #943 Air Marshal Billy Bishop, VC 1894–19561914World War I flying ace designated a National Historic Person of Canada in 1980
    #25 Major General Sir William Throsby Bridges, KCB, CMG1877–1879Major General of the Australian Army and first Commandant of the Royal Military College, Duntroon
    Bill Swan1957children's writer, journalist, college administrator
    George Cuthbertson1914artist
    The Honourable Wilfrid Heighington1915Politician
    35 Lieutenant Colonel Robert Edwin Kent1877soldier, businessman, Mayor of Kingston, Ontario
    Dr. Geoffrey O'Hara, 1900composer, singer, lecturer, songwriter, army singing instructor, ethnomusicologist, pianist and guild organizer
    Hazen Sise 17571923architect, artist, humanitarian
    Edgar William Richard Steacie1921Former president of the National Research Council of Canada
    Lieutenant-Colonel Charlie Stewart1892 to 1894Commanded Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry during World War I.
    Major Alfred Syer Trimmer MC.1903 Military Cross for conspicuous gallantry. London Gazette, Issue 29508 March 15, 1916. KIA on 28 April 1917
    Dai Vernon 11091916–1919 magician
    Thomas Vien 1903lawyer, Speaker of the Senate of Canada; Deputy Speaker of House of Commons of Canada
    Major General Arthur Victor Seymour Williams CMG 1884–1885soldier, mountie, police commissioner, Mount Williams was named in his honour

    Notable professors/educators/staff

    Shown with college numbers.
    Student #NameSignificance
    Arthur Lee, 1st Viscount Lee of Farehampolitician, taught military strategy 1893–1898
    Edwin Tappan AdneyWW1 model-maker, artist, decorated Currie Hall
    S155Willard BoyleBusinessman, invented Charge-coupled device
    Gérard BessetteAuthor and educator
    Captain Joseph-Damaze Chartrandsoldier, accountant, writer, magazine owner, and professor
    Forshaw dayeducator and artist
    Sir Howard Douglas, 1776–1861,professor, British general and colonial administrator: Governor of New Brunswick
    Captain John Moreau Grant CBEExecutive officer, H.M.C.S. Stone Frigate, Commandant HMCS Royal Roads
    Lieutenant-Colonel Roman Jarymowycz OMM, CD, PhDEducator, decorated Canadian soldier, historian, author
    Brigadier-General Frederick Maurice Watson Harvey VC, MC,Received the Victoria Cross; Instructor in Physical Training at RMC
    Lubomyr LuciukProfessor, founding member of Royal Winers, author, human rights advocate, Shevchenko Medal winner, former member of Immigration and Refugee Board, director of research for Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association
    Séraphin Marion archivist, professor, writer and historian who taught French at the RMC 1920–1923
    G0053Alex MorrisonEducator, founding president of Pearson Peacekeeping Centre
    Mohamed Douch Professor, economist and author
    Lieutenant-Colonel George Pearkes VC PC CC CB DSO MC CDStaff officer of RMC
    H8829Col. the Hon. George F.G. StanleyHistorian, author, soldier, educator, public servant, Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, and designer of Canadian flag; Companion of the Order of Canada
    816Brigadier-General Kenneth Stuart DSO, MC, ADCChief of the General Staff 1941–1943, Commandant of RMC 1939–40, educator
    Clarendon Lamb Worrelltaught English at RMC 1891–1901; 5th Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada

    Commandants

    Shown with college numbers. Ranks indicative of rank while serving as Commandant.
    #NameYearSignificancePhoto
    18777Brigadier General Sébastien Bouchard, OMM, MSM, CD 2017–-
    16855Brigadier General Sean Friday, OMM, MSM, CD 2015–2017
    • Special Staff Assistance Visit – Report on the Climate, Training Environment, Culture and ROTP Programme at the Royal Military College of Canada
    -
    16888Brigadier General Al Meinzinger, CD 2013–2015
    14835Brigadier General J.G. Eric Tremblay CD 2011–2013
  • In 2012, the Commandant's office was filled with balloons in a college skylark.
  • 15181Commodore Bill Truelove, CD 2009–2011
  • initiated a new "Walkout Dress", dictating what Officer Cadets can and cannot wear on leaving the college grounds.
  • 12192Brigadier-General Thomas J. Lawson OMM, CD ADC 2007–2009
  • initiated new structure: Four divisions and 13 squadrons for the cadet wing, and Otter squadron.
  • Removed Sgts from within the Squadrons but added WOs at the Division level.
  • initiated new uniforms
  • E1607Brigadier-General Jocelyn Lacroix CD ADC2005–2007
  • Changed the dress of the day from the traditional 'college dress' to the not-so-traditional CF uniform.
  • initiated the 'live out project' which saw 4th year cadets move off campus to gain more life experience before heading to their first unit.
  • S133Brigadier General Jean Leclerc CD ADC2002–2005Honorary
    8850Rear Admiral David Morse CMM, CD ADC2000–2002
  • Scaled back RMC sport program
  • Changed RMC Redmen logo to the crown and arm of RMC.
  • said, "RMC makes engineers literate and artsmen numerate."
  • implemented a program of community and high school visits
  • launched the Army Technical Warrant Officers' Program, the RMC's first-ever major academic program designed exclusively for non-commissioned members not pursuing an officer career path.
  • 9098BGen Ken Hague 1997–2000
  • Member, Gifting committee, Royal Military Colleges Club Foundation.
  • 6496Brigadier-General Charles Émond CD ADC1995–1997
  • He has served as commandant of both the RMC and le Collège militaire royal de Saint-Jean.
  • RRMC and CMR closed in 1995.
  • Because of a large induction of francophone students from CMR, RMC was transformed into a bilingual university
  • The sport teams were renamed RMC Paladins from RMC Redmen to reflect a bilingual and coed institution.
  • He has served on RMC Board of Governors.
  • S123Colonel Howie Marsh ADC1996–1997
    6719BGen Michel Matte 1993–1996
    8790Brigadier-General Jean Boyle CMM, CD, ADC 1991–1993
  • Later became Chief of Defence Staff
  • 4459Commodore Edward Murray OMM, CD, ADC 1987–1991
    3543BGen Walter Niemy CD, ADC 1985–1987
    3572BGen Frank J. Norman CD, ADC 1982–1985
  • RMC is first and foremost a place of academic learning, set in a military environment
  • higher education and college degrees were more significant to the success of the officer corps in the military
  • Football was dropped as a varsity sport
  • 3173BGen John A. Stewart CD, ADC 1980–1982
  • Women were admitted to RMC
  • Visit by Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, 21 May 1980
  • RMC became co-educational in 1980.
  • Novice boxing was dropped in 1980
  • 4860BGen John de Chastelain, CD, ADC 1977–1980
  • Later became Chief of Defence Staff
  • Later became Canadian ambassador to the US
  • 2816BGen William W. Turner CD, ADC 1973–1977
  • The Cadet Wing paraded on Parliament Hill to celebrate the college's centennial
  • BGen Turner, colonel commandant of The Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery 1 September 1979 – 31 August 1986 provided the W.W. Turner trophy for the Ottawa Gunners to present to the best third-year artillery cadet at the RMC. The trophy is in Observation Post de Hart – Home of the Ottawa Gunners, 2nd floor of the Army Officers Mess in Ottawa.
  • 2530BGen William Kirby Lye MBE CD, ADC 1970–1973
  • Lake Lye William Kirby Lye's honour.
  • cadets were permitted to marry, with the permission of the commandant.
  • RMC was a military institution within an academic environment.
  • 2576Commodore William Prine Hayes CD, ADC1967–1969
  • 4th-year cadets are permitted to wear civilian attire out on leave
  • The Cadet Wing paraded on Parliament Hill to celebrate Canada's centennial
  • 2364Air Commodore Leonard Birchall OBE, DFC, CD, ADC1963–1967Graduate courses were added in 1964.
    2424Brigadier G.H. Spencer OBE, CD, ADC1962–1963
    2265Brigadier William Alexander Beaumont Anderson OBE, CD, ADC1960–1962The `LGen W.A.B. Anderson march` for bagpipes was composed in his honour
    2184Commodore Desmond Piers DSC, CD, ADC1957–1960
  • Commodore Piers participated in the invasion in France during World War II.
  • RMC became a degree-granting institution in 1959.
  • Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip visit 1959
  • 2140Air Commodore Douglas Bradshaw, DFC, CD, ADC1954–1957
  • Air Vice-Marshal Douglas Bradshaw was the first president of Confederation College of Applied Arts and Technology from 6 March 1967, to 1974.
  • 1137Brigadier-General Donald Agnew CB, CD, ADC LLD1947–1954
  • The New One Hundred Opening Ceremonies 20 September 1948
  • The Old Brigade, for alumni celebrating 50 years since they entered one of the military Colleges, was inaugurated by Agnew in 1950.
  • Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip visit 12 October 1951
  • The Collège militaire royal de Saint-Jean was founded in 1952
  • Pipes and Drums founded 1953
  • H-2727Major-General John Whiteley, CB, CBE, MC, ADC1947
    2120Brigadier-General J. Desmond B. Smith, CBE, DSO, ADC1945–1946
  • first postwar Staff Course held June 1946 to June 1947
  • Barriefield Military School Board, first in the Canadian Army, teaches children of personnel
  • Barriefield complex provides housing for 13 married officer students & families.
  • 1841Brigadier D.G. Cunningham DSO, ED, ADC1944–1945
  • He was member of a subcommittee of the RMC Club which urged the reopening of the college.
  • He served as president of the RMC Club of Canada in 1946.
  • H-2727Major General Halfdan Fenton Harboe Hertzberg * CMG, DSO, MC, ADC1940–1944
  • The last class graduated in 1942
  • RRMC in British Columbia founded in 1942.
  • 816Brigadier General Kenneth Stuart, DSO, MC, ADC1939–1940Chief of the General Staff 1941–1943, educator
    749Brigadier General, The Honourable Harry Crerar PC, CH, CB, DSO, CD, KStJ, ADC 1938–1939
  • Commandant of RMC when war broke out in 1939. Crerar commanded the First Canadian Army from 1944 to 1945.
  • RMC closed as a cadet college during World War II.
    • Crerar served as a field commander of First Canadian Army in World War II, 1944 to 1945 and after retirement, served as a diplomat and Privy Councillor.
    Brigadier Henry H. Matthews, CMG, DSO, ADC1935–1938
    624Brigadier William Henry Pferinger Elkins, CB, CBE, DSO, ADC1930–1934
    621Brigadier Charles Francis Constantine, DSO, ADC1925–1930Constantine arena at RMC was named in his honour
    151Lieutenant-General Sir Archibald Macdonell K.C.B., CMG, DSO, ADC, LL.D.1919–1925
  • first Canadian commandant,
  • assembled a Canadian military staff,
  • Professional associations & universities negotiate to accept RMC graduates
  • authorized publication of RMC biannual review
  • Brigadier-General Charles Noel Perreau, CMG, ADC1915–1919
  • Assembled RMC museum artefacts
  • Brigadier-General L. R. Carleton, DSO, ADC1913–1914
  • Assembled RMC museum artefacts
  • Colonel J.H.V. Crowe, ADC1909–1913
  • Every cadet who did not enter the British army or the Canadian Permanent Force on graduation was required to become attached to the Militia within 2 years of leaving the college and to attend two militia camps
  • Reported in 1910 that for the first time, every RMC graduate took a commission.
  • 45Lieutenant-Colonel Edward Thornton Taylor, ADC1905–1909
  • First Canadian commandant of RMC
  • introduced hockey to Kingston as an RMC student in 1877
  • competitive entrance examination, with half-yearly examinations
  • 3-year curriculum: civil engineering, civil & hydrographic surveying, physics, chemistry, French, English, gymnastic drills and outdoor exercises of all kinds
  • five imperial army commissions awarded annually
  • $750–$1,000 cost included board, uniform, materials and extras
  • Colonel Raymond Northland Revell Reade, ADC1901–1905
    Lieutenant-Colonel Gerald C. Kitson, ADC1896–1900
  • replaced British civilian staff with British military personnel,
  • tightened discipline, emphasised military training, cut the curriculum to three years
  • appointed Military Attache of the British Embassy in Washington in November 1900
  • later Major General Sir Gerald C. Kitson ADC; Commandant of Sandhurst
  • Major-General Donald Roderick Cameron, CMG, ADC1888–1896
  • Then commandant, recommended international pigeon post, which provided messenger service from 1891 to 1895 for marine search and rescue and military
  • Major-General John Ryder Oliver, CMG, ADC1886–1888
  • Oliver Rock, Sudbury, Ontario was named in his honour
  • Colonel Edward Osborne Hewett CMG, ADC1875–1886
  • first Commandant of the Military College in Canada, member of Royal Engineers,
  • chose motto, Truth, Duty, Valour
  • assembled a British civilian staff,
  • organized a 4-year curriculum,
  • prepared site for use as a College
  • Hewett Shoal, Sudbury, Ontario, was named in his honour 46°4′23″ North 82°4′14″ West
  • character in opera Leo, the Royal Cadet by Oscar Ferdinand Telgmann was named in his honour.
  • The Commandant of the Royal Military College of Canada is appointed ex officio as honorary Aide-de-Camp to the Governor General of Canada

    RMC Club presidents

  • Principals / Director of Studies

    First 32 females to enter college

    Shown with college numbers.
    #Name#Name#Name#Name#Name#Name
    14481Doctor Linda Newton14423Captain Elizabeth E Caswell 14484Jacqueline Pothier14390Captain Kathryn A Armstrong14397Chris Best
    14433Debbie Fowler14396Captain Kathleen Beeman14512Cheryl de Bellefeuille14451Captain Theresa Towns 14467Captain Jo-Anne MacIsaac14478Theresa Murphy
    14448Rebecca Horne14400Sylvie Bonneau14504Captain Brigitte Vachon14412Helen Davies14491Colonel Karen Ritchie14444Captain Dorothy Hector
    14487Lieutenant Colonel Susan Raby14510Sue Wigg14479Sue Nadarozny14460Lorraine Kuzyk14402Charmaine Bulger14501Marie Thomson
    14443Major Kathryn Moore 14508Captain Sheila Cornelisse 14418Marnie Dunsmore14477Brigitte Muehlgassner14411Ann David14394Laura Beare
    14407Captain Marie-Pier Clarke 14419Johanne Durand14507Julia Walsh

    Wall of Honour

    Shown with college numbers.
    #Name#Name#Name#Name#Name#Name
    13Aylesworth Bowen Perry943Billy Bishop1681Walter L. Gordon1800Hartland Molson2399William Landymore2446E. L. M. Burns
    3528Paul David Manson4860John de Chastelain85William J. Stewart2364Air Commodore Leonard Birchall2791Honorary Lieutenant-Colonel Jean P.W. Ostiguy1921RCMP Commissioner George Brinton McClellan, Jr., LL D
    2357Brigadier-General William Denis Whitaker CM, DSO and Bar, ED, CD, DSc Mil 2510Brigadier-General Edward Alfred Charles "Ned" Amy DSO, OBE, MC, CD4377Lieutenant-General Richard Joseph Evraire CMM, CD, BEng, BSc, MPA, DSc Mil 101Maj John Laing Weller1248Gen Sir Charles Falkland Loewen, GCB, KBE, DSO1866LCol Charles Cecil Ingersoll Merritt, VC, ED
    8833Col Lennox John Leggat, CD, PhD13738Colonel Chris Austin Hadfield, OC, OOnt, MSC, CD749General, the Honourable Henry Duncan Graham Crerar CH, CB, DSO, CD, PCH2951General Ramsey Muir Withers, CMM, CD, D Eng, D Mil Sc, P Eng7860Lieutenant-General, the Honourable Roméo Antonius Dallaire, OC, CMM, GOQ, MSC, CDH8829Colonel, the Honorable George Francis Gillman Stanley, CC, CD, DPhil, FRSC, FRHSC

    Rhodes Scholars

    As of 2011 there have been 13 Rhodes Scholars who were ex-cadets of RMC: