Kirkland was born in 1924 in
Palmer, Massachusetts, the daughter of Rose Demers and
Charles-Aimé Kirkland, who was studying at Harvard). (Later he served as a Quebec MLA from 1939 to his death in 1961.). After they moved to Canada, she received a
Bachelor of Arts in 1947 and a
Bachelor of Civil Law in 1950 from
McGill University. She was admitted to the Quebec Bar in 1952 and was made a
Queen's Counsel in 1969. She practiced law in
Montreal From 1952 to 1961. She was elected in a 1961
by-election as a
Liberal in the district of
Jacques-Cartier, which her father had represented up to his death in 1961. She was re-elected in the
1962 general election. She held two cabinet posts in the government of
Jean Lesage: Minister without Portfolio (1962 to 1964) (when she was the first woman to serve in a Quebec provincial cabinet), and Minister of Transport and Communications (1964 to 1966). In
1966, she was elected in the riding of
Marguerite-Bourgeoys and re-elected in
1970. She also held two cabinet posts in the government of
Robert Bourassa: Minister of Tourism, Game and Fishing (1970 to 1972) and Minister of Cultural Affairs (1972 to 1973). She resigned in 1973 to become a judge. She retired in 1991. In 1985, she was made a Knight of the
National Order of Quebec. In 1992, she was made a Member of the
Order of Canada. In 1993, she was the recipient of the Governor General's Award in Commemoration of the Persons Case. She married lawyer Philippe Casgrain, with whom she had three children. After their divorce, she remarried, to Wyndham Strover. She died at the age of 91 on March 24, 2016. ==Legacy==