Hilary Weston

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Hilary Mary Weston (Template:Nee Frayne; January 12, 1942 – August 2, 2025) was an Irish–Canadian business mogul and writer who served as the 26th lieutenant-governor of Ontario from 1997 to 2002. During her five-year tenure, Weston focused on issues related to women, volunteerism and young people, drawing public attention to people working with the homeless, in hospices and as mentors to at-risk youth.

Biography

Early life

Hilary Mary Frayne was born on January 12, 1942, in Dún Laoghaire, County Dublin, Ireland.[1][2] Her parents William and Noel Frayne raised her and her four siblings in Dublin.[1] She was educated at Loreto Abbey, Dalkey.[3] Her father died when she was 17, so she helped support her family by working as a fashion model before marrying Galen Weston in 1966.[4] They moved to Toronto in 1971, and she became a Canadian citizen.[5] They had two children, Alannah and Galen Jr., and four grandchildren – two girls with Alannah and her husband Alex Cochrane (an interior architect), and two boys with Galen and his wife Alexandra.[6][7][8]

Business career

Weston spent over two decades working in business and the fashion industry. As deputy chair of Holt Renfrew, she promoted Canadian design and merchandise.[9] During the same period, she also served as a director of Brown Thomas & Co. in Ireland.[5]

Lieutenant-governor of Ontario

Prime minister Jean Chretien appointed Weston as lieutenant-governor of Ontario on December 12, 1996.[10] She was the second female to serve as Ontario's vice-regal, after Pauline Mills McGibbon was the first in 1974.[10] During her investiture ceremony, on January 24, 1997, she announced she would donate her $92,000 yearly salary to charity.[11] Her focus, as the province's 26th vice-regal, was to help young people, improve the status of women and extol the virtues of volunteer work.[12]

Charity work

In 1979, Weston founded the Ireland Fund of Canada, a non-partisan, non-denominational organization that funds community projects in Ireland to promote peace. She continued to serve as an honorary patron of the organization for the rest of her life.[5]

An interest in early childhood education led Weston to serve as founding chair of the Mabin School in Toronto.[13] She also co-founded and chaired the Canadian Environment Educational Foundation,[14] and she established the Winter Garden Show at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair.[15]

Weston explored her longstanding interest in homes and gardens as co-author of two best-selling books, In a Canadian Garden (1989) and At Home in Canada (1995).[16]

After her term as Lieutenant Governor, Weston spearheaded the most successful fundraising campaign in Canadian cultural history, which raised more than $250 million for the Royal Ontario Museum.[16] She was patron of several organizations dealing with social issues, such as the Abbeyfield House Society, the Hospice Association of Ontario, the Yonge Street Mission,[17] the Landmine Survivors Network (later known as Survivor Corps), the Ontario March of Dimes[18] and the Prince's Trust Canada.[19] Weston also devoted a significant proportion of her time, as well as her business and fashion expertise, to Selfridges, the London department store of which she was a director.[20]

Later life and death

Weston spent her later years in London, where she died on August 2, 2025.[21] The Government of Ontario held a provincial memorial service on October 17, 2025 at St. Paul's, Bloor Street.[22]

Honours

File:Hilary Weston ribbons.jpg
Weston in 2014, wearing her then-current miniature medals

As Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, Weston automatically received the Order of Ontario (OOnt) in 1997,[23] and she served as ex officio Chancellor of the Order during her term in office.[24] She was also automatically invested as a Dame of Justice of the Venerable Order of St. John (DStJ) in 1997.[18]

Weston was appointed as a Member of the Order of Canada in 2003.[25] She received the Canadian version of the Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal in 2002, and automatically received the Canadian version of the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2012.[26]

In the 2015 Queen's Birthday Honours, she was made a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order,[27] in recognition of donations by the Galen Weston Foundation made to the College of St. George at Windsor Castle.

Ten post-secondary institutions recognized Weston with honorary degrees, including the University of Western Ontario,[28] Concordia University,[18] University of St. Michael's College,[29] University of Toronto, Massey College,[30] Trinity College, Dublin[31] and University College Dublin.[32]

In 2009, Weston received the President's Award at the YWCA Toronto Women of Distinction Awards, for modelling leadership in public and private life.[33]

Ribbon bars

Arms

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References

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External links

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Government offices
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
1997–2002 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by

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