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Vic Roots Run Deep: David Wilson’s Lifetime of Impact Recognized
By Leslie Shepherd
Fifty-seven years ago, Victoria College student David Wilson crossed the stage at Convocation Hall to receive his bachelor of commerce degree. He returned to the same stage on June 20, 2025, to receive an honorary degree recognizing his volunteer service to the University of Toronto.
In the audience then and now were his wife Shelagh, his sister Ann Wilson Vic 7T0 and her husband Robert Pritchard, the 13th president of U of T.
For Wilson, campaign co-chair of Defy Gravity— The Campaign for Victoria University, the honorary degree was not only a matter of personal pride, but a recognition of his family’s deep roots at U of T— and especially Vic.
“The U of T has played an immensely important role in my family history,” Wilson said at the convocation ceremony. “If it weren’t for the U of T, I wouldn’t be standing here addressing you today. In fact, I wouldn’t be standing anywhere!”
That’s because his parents met at the Victoria University library in 1940. His mother, Margaret, was studying English and counted Northrop Frye among her professors. His father, William, studied commerce and finance. They graduated and married in 1941.
One of Wilson’s strongest memories of Vic is the hours he and his younger brother spent in the library, trying to boost their grades after David convinced Kenneth to pledge to a fraternity.
“My brother’s grades suffered, and I felt responsible,” Wilson said. Every Monday to Thursday, they would have dinner at the fraternity and then study in the library until 11 p.m. Kenneth got into medical school, became a pediatric plastic surgeon and received the Order of
Canada, and “his big brother got over his guilt.”
After earning his bachelor of commerce degree in 1968, David Wilson had a distinguished career in banking and the financial services industry. He was vice-chair of Scotiabank and chair of the Ontario Securities Commission.
His honorary degree recognizes his volunteer work for the University of Toronto, where he served on the Governing Council and the Business Board and was chair of the Presidential Search Committee that selected Meric Gertler as the university’s 16th president. He is currently co-chair of the campaign cabinet for Victoria University, part of U of T’s Defy Gravity campaign.
Wilson also volunteered at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health for 14 years. He joined the CAMH board in 2011 and chaired it from 2017 to 2020. He now serves on the board of the CAMH Foundation.
David and his sister Ann, a lawyer who spent most of her career with the Ontario government, are also generous donors to Vic.
In 2004, they established The William and Margaret Wilson Bursary for Vic One students in financial need, named after their parents. In 2005, they created the David and Ann Wilson Professorship in Public Policy and Society in the Lester B. Pearson Stream in the Vic One program.
Recently, the siblings pledged to contribute to Vic’s new VOLT (Victoria Opportunity for Leaders for Tomorrow) Scholars program to help Black, Indigenous and racialized students achieve excellence in STEM and other subjects. He said the program appealed to both of them because of the values they learned from both of their parents.
“Our mother was always very interested in immigrants and new Canadians,” he said in an interview. “When she got older, we gave her taxi receipts to come visit us. She would talk to the taxi drivers about why they came to Canada, and then she would tell us about their stories over dinner. VOLT has that element, diverse students, coming to Vic.”
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