This is a list of people from Mississauga, Ontario . The list includes people from Toronto Township, the Village and Town of Port Credit, and the Village and Town of Streetsville, predecessors of the modern community.
.
Trinidadian and Tobagonian Canadians are Canadian citizens who are fully or partially of Trinidadian and Tobagonian descent or people born in Trinidad and Tobago. There were 105,965 Trinidadian and Tobagonian Canadians in 2021, with the majority of them living in Toronto, Peel Region, and Durham Region.
Jamaican Canadians are Canadian citizens of Jamaican descent or Jamaican-born permanent residents of Canada. The population, according to Canada's 2021 Census, is 249,070. Jamaican Canadians comprise about 30% of the entire Black Canadian population.
"I'd have to say missing the podium in Sweden once was a low point," the Mississauga native said from his adopted home town of Calgary.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)Hawley: Mississauga native came home to win the Canadian International Championship at Greenwood. (photo caption)
Walt Neubrand was born in Mississauga, just west of Toronto, and learned his hockey on the frozen surface of the Credit River.
Newman grew up in Mississauga, Ontario with two younger sisters... The urge to get out of Mississauga and get on with life was strong.
She attended the arts-focused Cawthra Park Secondary School and maintains it was "the best decision ever." ... Peck went on to study at UTM as well as Sheridan College before leaving...
Sanders, who moved to Mississauga in 1964, donated $1 million in 1998, to former Mississauga Hospital (now Trillium Health Centre) on behalf of the Colonel Harland Sanders Charitable Organization. The Harland Sanders Centre for Family Care opened in 1999 at Trillium.
Enter Mississauga science fiction writer Robert J. Sawyer.
Stakusic, from nearby Mississauga, Ont., was the only Canadian to advance to the second round of the National Bank Open's qualifying tournament.
...the Mississauga native said he was surprised by even nearing the record.
For the last few years, the Cawthra Park Secondary School graduate has been developing and refining her singing while coming into her own as a performer.
Jim Unger, who turned his accidental career as a cartoonist drawing for The Mississauga Times into the worldwide Everyman cartoon character known as Herman, died in his sleep on Tuesday (May 28) at his home in Saanich, B.C.