Captain 'Joseph Jean-Pierre Marc Garneau'
CC,
CD,
PhD,
FCASI (born
February 23,
1949) was the first
Canadian in space. He has taken part in three flights aboard
NASA Space shuttles. He was the president of the
Canadian Space Agency until he entered politics as the
Liberal candidate in
Vaudreuil-Soulanges for the
2006 federal election. In 2003 Garneau was installed as the ninth Chancellor of
Carleton University in
Ottawa.
He was born in
Quebec City and was educated there and in
London, England. He gained a degree in engineering physics at the
Royal Military College of Canada in 1970 and a doctorate from
Imperial College London in 1973.
He joined the
Canadian Navy in 1974 to work as an engineer. He first served as a systems engineer aboard until 1976. From there he went as an instructor to the Canadian Forces Fleet School in
Halifax,
Nova Scotia. He worked with the Naval Engineering Unit and in 1982 he was promoted to
commander.
In 1984 he was seconded to the new
Canadian Astronaut Program (CAP), one of six chosen from 4 000 applicants. He flew on the shuttle
Challenger,
STS-41-G from
October 5 to 13,
1984 as payload specialist. He was promoted to captain in 1986 and left the Navy in 1989 to become deputy director of the CAP. In 1992-93 he underwent further training to become a mission specialist. He worked as
CAPCOM for a number of shuttle flights and was on two further flights himself -
STS-77 (
May 19 to 29,
1996) and
STS-97 (to the
ISS,
November 30 to
December 11,
2000). He has logged almost 678 hours in space and is now retired as an astronaut.
In February 2001 he was appointed executive vice-president of the Canadian Space Agency, and became its president in November of the same year.
In August 2003, Captain Garneau was made a Companion of the
Order of Canada, Canada's highest civilian honour. He is also honoured with three high schools named after him, one in Ottawa, one in
Toronto [1] and another one in
Trenton, Ontario.
Captain(N) Garneau is also the Honorary Captain of the
Royal Canadian Sea Cadets. In addition, n
o 599
Royal Canadian Air Cadets squadron is named in his honour.
Garneau resigned from his employment with the Canadian Space Agency to run for the
Liberal Party of Canada in the
January 23,
2006 federal election as a "
star candidate". He ran in
Vaudreuil-Soulanges represented by
Meili Faille of the
Bloc Québécois. It is the former riding of
Nick Discepola, a long-time
Paul Martin supporter. Garneau was dogged by the
sponsorship scandal, which dragged down most Liberal candidates in marginal Quebec ridings. He also made some controversial comments about
Quebec separatism compared with the
Iraq War. He also suggested that he would like to return to space along with separatist leaders
Gilles Duceppe and
André Boisclair, arguing that they would certainly become federalists, seeing the Earth without its artificial borders. This remark was ridiculed as political naivete by his Bloc opponents. In addition, a stronger-than-expected
Conservative candidate siphoned off many federalist votes. Garneau lost to Faille by 9 200 votes. He has remained active in politics, supporting Micheal Ignatieff's bid to lead the Liberal Party. He was rumoured to be among those considered for the Liberal candidacy for the Outremont by-election, but withdrew.
Trivia
★ In 1987, Overlea Secondary School of
Toronto (then
East York) was renamed in Garneau's honour.
See also
★
Canadian Space Agency
External links
★
Canadian Space Agency biography
★
NASA biography
★
Spacefacts biography of Marc Garneau
★
CBC Digital Archives - Marc Garneau: Canadian Space Pioneer