The following is a full list of members of the Order of Ontario, both past and current, in order of their date of appointment.
John Black Aird – 23rd Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
Aline Akeson – poverty activist
J. M. S. Careless – historian
Hon. William G. Davis – Premier of Ontario (1971–1985)
Celia Franca – founder of National Ballet of Canada
Harry Gairey – civil rights activist
Duncan Gordon
Roger Guindon – university administrator
Dianne Harkin – founder of Women for the Survival of Agriculture
Cleeve Horne – portrait painter and sculptor
Benjamin Sinclair Johnson – sprinter
Franc Joubin – prospector and geologist
Johnny Lombardi – pioneer of multicultural broadcasting in Canada
Clifford McIntosh – public speaker, author and founder of the Quetico Centre
Oskar Morawetz – composer
John Polanyi – Nobel laureate
Al Purdy – poet
James Swail – researcher and developer of assistive devices for the blind
Bessie Touzel – social worker and teacher
Whipper Billy Watson – professional wrestler, supporter of children's charities
Alex Baumann – competitive swimmer, Olympic medalist
June Callwood – journalist, author and social activist
Floyd Chalmers – editor, publisher and philanthropist
Robertson Davies – novelist, playwright, critic, journalist, professor, founding Master of Massey College
Reva Gerstein – first woman Chancellor of the University of Western Ontario (1992–96)
Charlotte Lemieux – teacher and public servant
Walter Frederick Light – business executive
Gordon Lightfoot – singer and songwriter
Dennis McDermott – trade unionist, Canadian Director of the United Auto Workers (1968–78), and president of the Canadian Labour Congress (1978–86)
Pauline McGibbon – 22nd Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario
Don Moore – activist and immigration advocate
Bernice Noblitt – President of the Federated Women's Institute of Canada, women's rights activist and teacher
John C. Parkin – architect
Beryl Potter – activist for the rights of people with disabilities
John Josiah Robinette – lawyer
Murray Ross – founding president of York University
Robert B.
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Marlène Leroux, doctorante au LAMU, avec Francis Jacquier (bureau archiplein). Leur démarche propose une analyse critique et prospective de la réalité, se concentrant sur la mémoire des lieux et les cultures locales comme composantes méthodologiques communes à chacun de leurs projets.