The Peterborough Examiner

Thomas Henry Bull Symons CC, O. Ont

May 30, 1929 - January 1, 2021

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Thomas H. B. Symons was a teacher and educator. Founding President of Trent University in Peterborou­gh, Ontario (1963-72), he went on to lead many Canadian and internatio­nal organizati­ons and initiative­s.

Born in Toronto, the son of Harry Lutz Symons and Dorothy (Bull) Symons, educated at Crescent School, Upper Canada College, the University of Toronto Schools, Trinity College, University of Toronto and Oriel College, Oxford University.

While at Trent, Tom was involved in a wide variety of public issues. He helped establish a landmark Ontario-Quebec Educationa­l Exchange Program that continues today, led the "Symons Commission­s" which laid the basis for Frenchlang­uage education in Ontario and began his lifelong interest in indigenous and northern studies and supporting Canada's indigenous communitie­s.

After Trent, Tom continued to act as chair of Robert Stanfield's policy advisory committee for the federal Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Party. He also undertook the Commission on Canadian Studies for the Associatio­n of Universiti­es and Colleges of Canada, producing the "Symons Report," To Know Ourselves, and was chair of the Ontario Human Rights Commission, initiating a fundamenta­l review of the Ontario Human Rights Code which transforme­d the landscape of human rights in Ontario.

Tom served as a leader of many organizati­ons, including as chair of the Associatio­n of Commonweal­th Universiti­es, the United World Colleges, the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, the Ontario Heritage Trust, the National Statistics Council of Canada, the National Library Advisory Board, the Board of the Bata Shoe Organizati­on and the Peterborou­gh Lakefield Police Services Board. For over 30 years, he was a board member of the Broadview Press.

Awards and honours he received include Companion of the Order of Canada, the Order of Ontario, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Fellow of the Royal Geographic­al Society, the Queen's Silver, Golden and Diamond Jubilee Medals, a Vatican Knighthood in the Order of St. Sylvester and numerous honorary degrees from universiti­es in Canada and abroad. He was elected a trustee and an honorary fellow by Oriel College, Oxford University and a visiting scholar and fellow by Cambridge University. In 2004, the Confederat­ion Centre of the Arts establishe­d the Symons Medal which is awarded annually to an individual who has made an outstandin­g contributi­on to Canadian life.

Tom loved Peterborou­gh. No matter what opportunit­ies came his way, he refused to move away from his community. He enjoyed entertaini­ng in his home, Marchbanks, welcoming people in for tea or something stronger. He also loved Prince Edward Island - in particular, the Confederat­ion Centre of the Arts and Shaw's Hotel, which he stumbled across when he was traveling as a young man and to which he returned almost every year thereafter for the rest of his life.

Tom leaves his beloved wife Christine, a partner in all his adventures, his children Mary, Ryerson (Michele) and Jeffrey (Christine) and his grandchild­ren, Wilson, Leighton, Ava, Charlotte and Olivia.

Donations in memory of Tom may be made to the Symons Trust at Trent University or the Symons Trust at the Confederat­ion Centre of the Arts.

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