, Ontario was named for Agnes Macphail
Firsts Electoral & Parliamentary Firsts • First female Member of Parliament (MP) in Canadian history. (elected in the 1921 federal election). • One of the first women elected to the Ontario Legislature (alongside Rae Luckock, 1943).
Civic honours and named awards In 1993, marking the 50th anniversary of Macphail's election to the Ontario legislature,
Michael Prue, then mayor of
East York, proclaimed March 24 to be observed annually as Agnes Macphail Day. The following year,
East York Council established the Agnes Macphail Award. Presented annually, the award recognizes a resident of East York who has made outstanding contributions to equality rights and social justice and who exemplifies Macphail's tradition of principled leadership. In 1997, East York also inaugurated the annual Agnes Macphail public speaking contest for students.
Public places and infrastructure Numerous public spaces and community organizations in East York bear Macphail's name, reflecting her lasting association with the area. These include Agnes Macphail Parkette at the corner of Mortimer Street and Pape Avenue, the Agnes Macphail Playground, the Agnes MacPhail Youth Resource Centre, and the Agnes MacPhail Food Bank, all located at 444 Lumsden Avenue. In 1999, a townhome development built by Brownstone Homes in East York named a street Macphail Avenue, near the intersection of Pape Avenue and Mortimer Street. On June 24, 2006, a cairn and bronze bust commemorating Macphail's life were unveiled in
Hopeville, Ontario. That same year, highway signs reading "You are now entering Agnes Macphail Country" were installed near the hamlet of Ceylon and east of Hopeville. Grey County Road 9, between Highway 6 and Highway 10, was also renamed Agnes MacPhail Road. An apartment building at 860 Mercer Street in
Windsor, Ontario, is named Agnes Macphail Manor.
Public recognition and commemoration In 2005, Macphail was voted the Greatest Ontario Woman in a public contest organized by former Ontario MPP
Marilyn Churley. She is also featured on the Canada 150 commemorative edition of the
Canadian ten-dollar note, issued in 2017, alongside
John A. Macdonald,
George-Étienne Cartier, and
James Gladstone. Macphail is the first woman other than the sovereign to appear permanently on Canadian currency.
In popular culture Macphail has also appeared in dramatized portrayals of early 20th-century Canadian political life. A 2015 episode of
Murdoch Mysteries (season 8, episode 17, "Election Day") depicts a young Agnes Macphail, played by Zoe Fraser, showing an early interest in the suffrage movement. == Archives ==