Iconic woman with northwestern Ontario connection a finalist for next series of bank notes - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:31 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Thunder BayAudio

Iconic woman with northwestern Ontario connection a finalist for next series of bank notes

A pioneering female aerospace engineer who worked in the city of Fort William (now Thunder Bay, Ont.) during the Second World War, is one of the women being considered by the Bank of Canada for a new series of bank notes.

Elsie MacGill, 'Queen of the Hurricanes,' among 12 women being considered by the Bank of Canada

Elsie MacGill (1905-1980), a pioneering engineer and feminist, is one of twelve people being considered by the Bank of Canada for a new series of bank notes featuring women.
She was known as the Queen of The Hurricanes. Elsie MacGill rose to fame working at the Can Car plant in Fort William during the Second World War.Now she's one of 12 women who could be on a new set of Canadian bank notes. Kelly Saxberg knows her story

A pioneering female aerospace engineer who rose to fame while workingin the city of Fort William (now Thunder Bay, Ont.) is one of a dozen women being considered by the Bank of Canada for a new series of bank notes.

ElsieMacGillbecame known as the "Queen of the Hurricanes," while leading the effort to manufacture more than 1,000Hawker Hurricane airplanesat the Canadian Car and Foundry plant in Fort William during the Second World War.

For Thunder BayfilmmakerKellySaxberg,MacGillis an obvious choice to grace Canadian currency.

"I can't imagine anyone more deserving," saidSaxberg,who chronicledMacGill'sstory in her 1999 documentary filmRosiesof the North.

"It's thrilling."

A symbol of wartime effort

ElsieMacGillwas born in B.C. and became the first woman to graduate with an electrical engineering degree from the University of Toronto.

She went on to become the first woman to earn a master's degree in aeronautical engineeringand to rise to the top of her male-dominated field.

During her time at the Canadian Car plant, MacGill became a symbol of the wartime effortand was even featured in a comic book in 1942.

After the war, MacGillbecame a leading activist for women's rights in Canada, and was named to the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in the 1960s.

MacGill died in 1980.

During the Second World War, Elsie MacGill was featured in an American series of comic books about wartime heroes. (Kelly Saxberg)

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this article stated that thousands of Hurricane airplanes were produced at the Canadian Car and Foundry plant in Fort William. In fact the number was close to 1,400.
    May 04, 2016 10:19 AM ET