Education
Pauline Mills studied at Victoria College, University of Toronto and later worked with community and national organizations such as the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire, for which she served as National President.
Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
Pauline Mills studied at Victoria College, University of Toronto and later worked with community and national organizations such as the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire, for which she served as National President.
In addition to being the first woman to occupy that position, she was also the first woman to serve as a viceregal representative in Canadian history. A lifelong volunteer and supporter of the arts, Mistress McGibbon also became president of the Dominion Drama Festival in 1948.
She was the first woman to lead such organizations as the Canadian Conference of the Arts (1972) and the National Arts Centre (1980).
Mistress McGibbon served as Chancellor of the universities of Toronto and Guelph, Chairman of the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, honorary colonel of 25 (Toronto) Service Battalion and was a Director of Massey Hall and Roy Thomson Hall. Mistress McGibbon was installed as the first female Lieutenant Governor of Ontario on January 17, 1974, and thus became the first female Governor in Canada.
(The first female Governor in the Commonwealth was Dame Hilda Bynoe, Governor of Grenada 1968-1974) She held the Office until 1980. A particular focus of her mandate was the arts in Ontario.
She died in Toronto in 2001, aged 91.
She was buried in the family plot in the Lakeview Cemetery in Sarnia, Ontario.