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Grace MacInnis
- Sechelt
 Mrs.
Grace MacInnis and Mr. Oscar Orr, who were unable to attend the
Investiture Ceremony, were invested into the Order in private ceremonies
in their respective homes.
After graduating
from the University of Manitoba and attending the Sorbonne in Paris,
following in the footsteps of her father, J.S. Woodsworth, founder
of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, Grace MacInnis became
one of its key members.
She married
a prominent member of the C.C.F., Angus MacInnis, M.P. and in the
early days of her marriage, Mrs. MacInnis, motivated by her strong
belief in democratic socialism, spoke on behalf of the Party all
across Canada. She was a delegate to the Party's founding convention
in Regina in 1933 and subsequently held many senior offices with
both the C.C.F. and later the NDP, provincially and federally.
Between 1941
to 1945, she was a member of the provincial legislature for Vancouver
Burrard. She, along with only one other, are the only surviving
members of the Legislature elected in 1941.
In 1965, Grace
MacInnis was elected to the House of Commons in the riding of Vancouver
Kingsway to become B.C.'s first woman member of Parliament and served
until her retirement in 1974.
Throughout her
lifetime, Grace MacInnis has been recognized as a champion of women's
rights. She served on a federal committee inquiring into post war
problems of women and was a delegate to the International Assembly
of Women convened in 1946.
During her years
in Parliament she was her party's spokesperson on consumer affairs
and was a strong and effective advocate for social reform. Through
it all, her efforts have always been marked by her quick wit and
good grace.
Included in
her several articles and publications is her best-selling biography,
"J.S. Woodsworth - A Man to Remember", published in 1953.
She was appointed
an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1974 in recognition of her
service to others.
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