WikiMili
List of people from Cape Breton
Last updated
February 24, 2025
This is a list of
notable
people who have lived on
Cape Breton Island
.
Contents
Arts
Athletics
Politics, the law, and business
Religion
Sciences
Other
See also
References
This is a
dynamic list
and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by
adding missing items
with
reliable sources
.
Arts
Steve Arbuckle
, actor from Donkin
The Barra MacNeils
, singing group
John Beardman
, abstract painter
Kate Beaton
, webcomic artist from
Mabou
, winner of the 2009
Doug Wright Award
for "Best Emerging Talent"
Nathan Bishop
, singer-songwriter from
Celtae
Kay Boutilier
, singer, perhaps better known as "My Name is Kay"
John Allan Cameron
, singer-songwriter, from Glencoe Station, credited as the "godfather" of Cape Breton's modern Celtic music revival
Ronald Caplan
, historian, publisher, member of the Order of Canada
Lynn Coady
, author, winner of the 2013
Scotiabank Giller Prize
Nathan Cohen
, theatre critic, broadcaster, publisher
J. P. Cormier
, singer-songwriter; fiddle, mandolin, banjo, guitar player; Chéticamp
Lee Cremo
, fiddle player
[
1
]
Mark Day
, film and television actor, writer, and producer
Aselin Debison
, singer-songwriter
Don Domanski
, poet
Carolyn Dunn
, film and television actor from Whitney Pier
Winston "Scotty" Fitzgerald
, fiddle player from White Point
Robert Frank
, photographer
Danny Gallivan
,
Hockey Night in Canada
sportscaster
John Gracie
, singer-songwriter
Bruce Guthro
, singer-songwriter
Drake Jensen
, singer-songwriter
Rita Joe
, Mi'kmaw poet and songwriter
Angus MacAskill
, giant and circus performer
Allie MacDonald
, actress
Frankie MacDonald
, YouTube phenomenon and winner of the Vital Cape Breton Excellence Award
Martin MacDonald
, orchestral conductor
Mitch MacDonald
, singer-songwriter
Linden MacIntyre
, journalist, broadcaster, novelist, winner of 2009
Giller Prize
Ashley MacIsaac
, fiddle player
Daniel MacIvor
, actor, playwright, theatre director and film director
Billy MacLellan
, actor (
Nobody
,
Defiance
,
Murdoch Mysteries
)
Hugh MacLennan
,
Governor General's Awards
-winning author, professor of English at
McGill University
. He won five
Governor General's Awards
and a Royal Bank Award
Alistair MacLeod
, author
Buddy MacMaster
, fiddle player
Natalie MacMaster
, fiddle player
Rita MacNeil
, singer-songwriter
Matt Minglewood
, musician
Farley Mowat
, writer, had his summer residence in Cape Breton
[
2
]
Scott Oake
, sportscaster
Daniel Petrie
, Hollywood filmmaker
The Rankin Family
, singers-songwriters
Molly Rankin
, musician from Inverness
Rick Ravanello
, actor,
Hart's War
; various TV series, including
24
,
CSI
and
Desperate Housewives
Harold Russell
,
Academy Award
-winning actor for his portrayal of Homer Parrish in the 1946 film
The Best Years of Our Lives
Gordie Sampson
, singer-songwriter
Douglas September
, singer-songwriter
Richard Serra
, sculptor
Slowcoaster
, rock band
Amy Spurway
, author
Tom Fun Orchestra
, rock band
Morgan Toney
, Mi'kmaw fiddle player
Scott Turner
, songwriter
Athletics
Paul Boutilier
Norm Ferguson
Trevor Fahey
Aaron Johnson
Andrew MacDonald
Al MacInnis
Mike McPhee
Johnny Miles
Ryan Rozicki
Bobby Smith
Doug Sulliman
Kevin Morrison
Logan Shaw
Politics, the law, and business
John George Bourinot (younger)
, 3rd
Clerk of the House of Commons (Canada)
John Buchanan
,
Premier of Nova Scotia
Gerald Butts
, former
Principal Secretary
to Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau
William Davis
, coal miner murdered by
British Empire Steel Corporation
police and namesake of
Davis Day
in
New Waterford, Nova Scotia
Mayann Francis
, first Black
Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia
Clarence Gillis
,
Member of Parliament
Ruth Goldbloom
, philanthropist, member of the
Order of Canada
Alasdair Graham
,
Senator
Gordon Sidney Harrington
, Premier of Nova Scotia
Alexander Graham Bell
Angus L. MacDonald
, Premier of Nova Scotia
Donald MacDonald
, President of the
Canadian Labour Congress
and
MLA
Finlay MacDonald
, Senator
Rodney MacDonald
, Premier of Nova Scotia
Allan MacEachen
,
Deputy Prime Minister
, Finance Minister
Russell MacLellan
, Premier of Nova Scotia
Kevin S. MacLeod
,
Canadian Secretary to the Queen
Donald Marshall, Jr.
, wrongly convicted Mi’kmaq activist
David Mathews
, former
Mayor of New York City
under the British during the
American Revolution
Elizabeth May
, leader of the
Green Party of Canada
J.B. McLachlan
, trade-unionist, journalist, political activist, and revolutionary
John W. Morgan
, Mayor of
Cape Breton Regional Municipality
Robert Muir
, Member of Parliament; Senator
George Henry Murray
, Premier of Nova Scotia
Lisa Raitt
, Conservative MP and former federal Minister of Transport, Labour and Natural Resources
Irving Schwartz
, businessman, philanthropist, member of the
Order of Canada
Alexander S. Williams
, NYPD officer, candidate for
US Senate
Religion
Moses Coady
, Roman Catholic priest, helped found the Co-operative
Antigonish Movement
at
St. Francis Xavier University
Moses E. Kiley
,
Roman Catholic
archbishop of the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee
,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Reverend Norman McLeod
, Presbyterian minister, St Ann's; migrated in the 1850s with 800 settlers from surrounding communities to Waipu, New Zealand
James "Father Jimmy" Tompkins
, Roman Catholic priest, helped found the Co-operative Antigonish Movement at St. Francis Xavier University
Sciences
Walter Mackenzie
, Dr. - Dean of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton
Arthur B. McDonald
, astrophysicist and joint winner of the 2015
Nobel Prize in Physics
Other
John Bernard Croak
V.C.
Neil McLean
, a New Zealand public works contractor and sportsman
[
3
]
Isaac Phills
,
Order of Canada
recipient
See also
List of people from Nova Scotia
References
↑
"Cremo, Lee"
.
The Canadian Encyclopedia
. Historica Canada / Mel Hurtig
. Retrieved
2014-07-08
.
↑
"Finding Farley - crossing Canada by canoe"
.
Calgary Herald
. 9 May 2007. Archived from
the original
on 9 November 2012
. Retrieved
24 August
2010
.
↑
McLean, John.
"Neil McLean"
.
Dictionary of New Zealand Biography
.
Ministry for Culture and Heritage
. Retrieved
23 April
2017
.
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