Background
Stephenson, Bette Mildred was born on July 31, 1924 in Aurora, Ontario, Canada. Daughter of Carl Melvin and Clara Mildred (Draper) Stephenson.
Stephenson, Bette Mildred was born on July 31, 1924 in Aurora, Ontario, Canada. Daughter of Carl Melvin and Clara Mildred (Draper) Stephenson.
Graduate, Earl Haig College Institute. Doctor of Medicine, University Toronto, 1946.
She served in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1975 to 1987, and was a cabinet minister in the Progressive Conservative governments of Bill Davis and Frank Miller. Stephenson practised medicine for more than 40 years. Stephenson was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1975 provincial election, representing the constituency of York Mills in North New York
She was appointed to Bill Davis" cabinet as Minister of Labour on October 7, 1975.
On August 18, 1978, she was named Minister of Education and Minister of Colleges and Universities. As Minister, she ordered Toronto schools to use the Lord"s Prayer during opening or closing exercise instead of silent meditation.
Stephenson was not informed of Davis"s decision to extend full-funding to Catholic high schools until the policy had already been decided, and was privately opposed. She was returned to the legislature was the largest majority of her career in the 1981 provincial election.
When Miller replaced Davis as Premier of Ontario on February 8, 1985, he named Stephenson as the Chair of the Management Board of Cabinet.
Under Miller"s leadership, the Progressive Conservatives were reduced to a tenuous minority government in the 1985 provincial election. Stephenson, who was personally re-elected without difficulty, was named as Ontario"s first female Treasurer and Deputy Premier on May 17. She is the only Finance Minister/Treasurer who has not presented a budget in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
In opposition, she served as her party"s Critic for Health.
She retired from politics at the 1987 provincial election. Cabinet positions In the 1990s, Stephenson was appointed as a Board Member on the province"s new Education Quality and Accountability Office, which monitors and reports to the public on the performance of the education system.
From 1997 to 2005, she was Chairman of the Learning Opportunities Task Force.
Stephenson was a prominent supporter of Frank Miller"s bid to become party leader in 1985.
She was a member of the medical staff, a Director of the Outpatient Department, and Chief of the Department of General Practice at Women"s College Hospital. She was also a member of the medical staff at North York General Hospital. She was a founding member of the College of General Practice in Canada, now known as the College of Family Physicians Canada.
She was also the first female member of the board of directors of the Ontario Medical Association and the Canadian Medical Association, and served as the first female president of both organizations.
She is a founding member of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and is involved with the group, the Gwillimbury Foundation who is attempting to build a university in Queensville, Ontario.
Married Gordon Allan Pengelly, 1948. Children: J. Stephen A., Elizabeth Anne A., C. Christopher A., J. Michael A., P. Timothy A., Mary Katharine A.