List of Scottish Canadians
The following is a list of notable Scottish Canadians.
List
- H. Montagu Allan (1860–1951), banker, ship owner, sportsman
 - Hugh Allan (1810–1882), financier and shipping magnate
 - Richard B. Angus (1831-1922), banker and philanthropist
 - Drew Arnott, singer/songwriter and musician
 - Frederick Grant Banting (1891-1941), medical scientist, physician and painter, co-discoverer of insulin, 1923 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
 - Alexander Graham Bell (1847–1922), eminent scientist, credited with inventing the first practical telephone
 - John Bethune (1751-1815), founded the first Presbyterian Church in Montreal
 - Norman Bethune (1890–1939), medical innovator and supporter of the Chinese Communist Revolution
 - Bill Blaikie, former Member of Parliament (MP), deputy leader of the New Democratic Party and Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada
 - Daniel Blaikie, Member of Parliament (MP) of the New Democratic Party
 - Rebecca Blaikie, former president of the New Democratic Party
 - George Brown (1818–1880), founder of the Toronto Globe, Father of Confederation and first de facto leader of the Liberal Party of Canada
 - James Cameron, film director and producer
 - Douglas Campbell (1922-2009), stage actor
 - Gordon Campbell, Premier of British Columbia
 - Kim Campbell, first female Prime Minister of Canada
 - Neve Campbell, actress (Scottish father)
 - John Candy (1950–1994), actor and comedian, father was of Scottish descent
 - Wilf Carter (1904-1996), Nova Scotia-born country musician
 - Jim Carrey, actor and comedian (his mother is Scottish Canadian from the Gordon Clan)[1][2])
 - James Cockburn (1819-1883), first Speaker of the House in Canada (Conservative Party)
 - William Davidson (1740-1790), pioneer settler in New Brunswick
 - Stu Davis (1921–2007), singer/songwriter, radio and television performer aka Canada's Cowboy Troubadour (b. David Alexander Stewart)
 - John William Dawson (1820–1899), scientist, educator
 - Richard Dobie (1731–1805), fur trader, businessman
 - Sir James Douglas (1803-1877), chief factor of the HBC's Columbia District (1843–1858) and Governor of the colonies of the Colony of Vancouver Island (1851–64) and the Colony of British Columbia (1858–62)
 - Tommy Douglas (1904–1986), Premier of Saskatchewan and first leader of the New Democratic Party
 - Shirley Douglas (1934-2000), actress (daughter of Tommy Douglas)
 - William Dow (1800–1868), brewer and businessman
 - George Alexander Drummond (1829–1910), businessman and senator
 - Timothy Eaton (1834-1907), founded Eaton's (Scottish ancestry)
 - David Ewart (1841-1921), Chief Dominion Architect
 - Sandford Fleming (1827–1915), railway engineer and proponent of standard time zones
 - Simon Fraser (1776–1862), Northwest Company trader and explorer
 - John Kenneth Galbraith (1908–2006), Ontario, California and Massachusetts academic and economist, U.S. and Canadian diplomat
 - Alexander Tilloch Galt (1817–1893), politician and a Father of Confederation (father was of Scottish ancestry)
 - Donald Gordon (1904-1969), Chairman, Wartime Prices and Trade Board, Chairman and President, Canadian National Railways, builder of Churchill Falls
 - Ryan Gosling, actor and musician
 - Laurie Gough, Canadian-American travel writer
 - Hugh Graham (1848–1938), newspaper publisher
 - George Monro Grant (1835-1902), President of the Royal Society of Canada
 - Iain Hume, Canadian international football (soccer) player
 - Michael Ironside, actor and voice actor
 - Ted Irvine, ice hockey player
 - Chris Jericho, professional wrestler and singer
 - Alexander Keith, (1795-1873) brewer (Alexander Keith's Brewery)
 - William Lyon Mackenzie King (1874–1950), longest-serving Prime Minister of Canada
 - Kaylyn Kyle, Canadian soccer player of Scottish descent
 - Avril Lavigne, Canadian singer-songwriter, mother of Scottish descent
 - Grace Annie Lockhart (1855-1916), first woman in the British Empire to graduate from university (May 25, 1875)
 - Angus MacAskill (1825-1863), tallest non-pathological person
 - J. E. H. MacDonald (1873–1932), painter, member of the Group of Seven
 - John MacDonald of Glenaladale (1742-1810), colonist
 - John A. Macdonald (1815-1891), first Prime Minister of Canada
 - John Sandfield Macdonald (1812-1872), first Premier of Ontario
 - Norm Macdonald (1959-2021), stand-up comedian, writer and actor of Irish and Scottish descent
 - Rodney MacDonald, former Premier of Nova Scotia
 - William Christopher Macdonald (1831-1917), tobacco manufacturer and philanthropist
 - Peter MacKay, Minister of National Defence
 - Robert Mackay (1840–1916), businessman and statesman
 - Sir Alexander MacKenzie (1764–1820) Northwest Company trader and explorer
 - Alexander Mackenzie (1822-1892), second Prime Minister of Canada
 - William Lyon Mackenzie (1795-1861), journalist and politician
 - Colin Francis MacKinnon (1851-1877), founded St. Francis Xavier College, which grew into St. Francis Xavier University
 - Alistair MacLeod (1936-2014), writer, recipient of the Order of Canada
 - Kevin S. MacLeod, current Canadian Secretary to the Queen
 - David MacNaughton, ambassador and businessman
 - Peter MacNeill, actor
 - Agnes Macphail (1890-1954), first woman seated into the House of Commons of Canada
 - Abraham Martin (1589-1664), St. Lawrence River pilot
 - Eric McCormack, award-winning Canadian actor, television producer and writer, best known for his role as Will Truman in the American sitcom Will & Grace
 - John McDermott, vocal tenor with Irish roots
 - William McDougall (1822-1905), one of the Fathers of Confederation
 - Todd McFarlane, comic book writer, filmmaker and entrepreneur
 - James McGill (1744–1813), fur trader and merchant
 - Peter McGill (1789–1860), businessman and politician
 - William McGillivray (1764–1825), fur trader
 - Gavin McInnes (born 1970), writer, actor, comedian, commentator, co-founder of Vice Media and Vice Magazine
 - Duncan McIntyre (1834–1894), businessman
 - Sarah McLachlan, singer-songwriter and musician
 - Beverley McLachlin, Chief Justice of Canada
 - Norman McLaren (1914–1987), film animation pioneer
 - Tara MacLean, singer-songwriter
 - Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980), communication and media theorist
 - Bobby McMahon, football analyst for Fox Soccer Channel
 - Craig McMorris, snowboarding
 - Mark McMorris, snowboarding
 - Anna Mcnulty, YouTuber
 - Simon McTavish (1750–1804), fur trader, sawmill and flour mill operator
 - Colin Mochrie, actor and comedian
 - Henry Morgan (1819–1893), built the first department store in Canada
 - Donald Morrow (1908-1995), Ontario politician, soldier and teacher
 - Farley Mowat (1921-2014), author, Scottish ancestry
 - Oliver Mowat (1820-1903), third Premier of Ontario
 - Alice Munro, Nobel laureate author and short story writer
 - George Murdoch (1850-1910), first mayor of Calgary
 - James Murray (1721-1794), first civil governor of the Province of Quebec
 - Anne Murray, singer and entertainer
 - James Naismith (1861-1939), inventor of basketball
 - Alexander Walker Ogilvie (1829–1902), miller and statesman
 - Roddy Piper (1954–2015), WWE wrestler and actor
 - Christopher Plummer (1929-2021), Academy Award-winning actor
 - Francine Racette, actress
 - John Redpath (1796–1869), contractor and industrialist
 - Peter Redpath (1821–1894), businessman and philanthropist
 - Callum Keith Rennie, actor
 - John Robertson (1934-2014), sports journalist, covered Expos and Blue Jays, and coined the term "Rider Pride" (son of Scots immigrant)
 - Bernie Shaw, lead singer of rock band Uriah Heep since 1986
 - George Simpson (1787–1860), executive and fur trader
 - Donald Smith, 1st Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal (1820-1914)
 - Dayne St. Clair, professional soccer player, Scottish-Canadian mother
 - George Stephen, 1st Baron Mount Stephen (1829-1921)
 - Arran Stephens, founder of Nature's Path Foods
 - David Stirling (1822–1887), architect; associate architect of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts
 - Daniel Sutherland (1756–1832), businessman and politician
 - Donald Sutherland, actor
 - Kiefer Sutherland, actor (grandson of NDP leader Tommy Douglas, who was born in Scotland)
 - Rossif Sutherland, actor
 - Tamara Taylor, actress
 - Dave Thomas (born 1949), actor and comedian, Scottish-born mother
 - Ian Thomas (born 1950), singer-songwriter and actor, Scottish-born mother
 - William Fraser Tolmie (1812-1886), member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia
 - Justin Trudeau, 23rd Prime Minister of Canada (his mother, Margaret, is daughter of Scots immigrant Jimmy Sinclair)
 - Pierre Trudeau (1919–2000), 15th Prime Minister of Canada (his mother, Grace Elliott, was of Scottish ancestry)
 - Tessa Virtue, Olympian ice dancer
 - Johnny Reid (born 1974), songwriter and recording artist
 
See also
- Scottish diaspora
 - Scottish placenames in Canada
 - Scots-Quebecer
 - Anglo-Métis
 - English Canadians
 - European Canadians
 - Scottish people
 - Scottish Americans
 - Ulster-Scottish Canadians
 - Celtic music in Canada
 - Glengarry Highland Games
 
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Canadians of Scottish descent.
- ^ "Jim Carrey Online • View topic – Scottish Interview & Clip". www.jimcarreyonline.com.
 - ^ Movie Juice Interview STV Production 2006 (Carrey states he's part Scottish on his mother's side