Background
He was born in Ottawa, Ontario and attended Saint Patrick"s High School there.
He was born in Ottawa, Ontario and attended Saint Patrick"s High School there.
Where he attended The Catholic University of America. After receiving a Master of Arts there in 1952, he proceeded to Ann Arbor, Michigan where he earned a Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Michigan in 1958.
Grace then moved to Washington, District of Columbia He remained with that newspaper until its demise in 1980, two years after he became its chief editor and vice-president Grace had directed the Journal"s editorial policy since 1972, after being an associate editor since 1962. After the Ottawa Journal closed, Grace was appointed to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission as a full-time commissioner.
Grace served a seven-year term as the first Privacy Commissioner of Canada, starting in 1983.
This Canadian federal agency is responsible for supervising the private and public management of personal information. In 1990, Prime Minister Brian Mulroney appointed Grace as the Information Commissioner of Canada, but by 1992 Grace confronted the Mulroney government regarding its refusal to release the results of government-funded polls regarding national unity.
Grace remained Information Commissioner until 1998. Grace died following a heart attack at his Ottawa home on 5 February 2009, aged 82.
In 1958, Grace returned to Canada and entered journalism, becoming a member of the Ottawa Journal"s editorial board. Between 1971 and 1977, Grace was also a member of the Canada Council, serving there for two terms. He was a part-time lecturer at the University of Ottawa where he was a member of its board of governors for four terms.