Congratulations David and Christiane Dodge! As exemplary members of the Queens community, David and Christiane Dodge have been recognized with the John Orr Award from the Toronto Branch of the Queens University Alumni Association.
David, Arts65, LLD02, and Christiane, Arts65, have always worked as a team to support Queens and their community through volunteerism, leadership, and philanthropy.
David recently stepped down as Queens 13th Chancellor, and served a seven-year term as Governor of the Bank of Canada. Christiane is now retired from the Treasury Board Secretariat after many years of public service. Their tireless efforts have made an immeasurable impact on Queens and Canada.
Christiane Dodge, Arts65, and David Dodge, Arts65, LLD02, have a long history with Queens.It started in the 1960s when the couple met while studying economics. David went on to become a professor in the economics department and eventually served as Queens 13th Chancellor, running from 2008 to 2014.
Christiane, a former trade negotiator with the federal government, and David, the former governor of the Bank of Canada, maintained close ties to the university as volunteers and donors long after their student days.
Those decades of support are the reasons why the Dodges are this years recipients of the John Orr Award, the highest honour bestowed by the Toronto Branch.
The couple sat down with members of the Toronto Branch executive to talk about their lives, careers and affection for Queens. Here is an edited version of the conversation.
How did you meet?
(Christiane) We first met while studying economics at Queens. After graduation, I went hitchhiking to Europe. When I came back I wanted to visit some friends in Princeton, N.J. David. said I will meet you in Kingston and will drive you down. He came to pick me up at the train station in a Jaguar. I didnt believe that it was his and initially refused to get in. It was during this drive back that we reconnected and the rest is history.
What are some fond memories of being a student?
(David) The university was a lot smaller in the 1960s. It was largely an undergraduate school. The interaction between students and faculty was different because there were few graduate students around. So undergrads were the research assistants. It was a really close community. Faculty and students did lots of things together.
(Christiane) I was happy that I managed to get into Queens. I was a first-generation immigrant from Germany and was taught that apostrophes were bad. Consequently, I applied to the University of the Queen. I went to many Queens formals in Grant Hall and they were very fancy. The residences were very strict with the girls. In first year we had to have letters from our parents to stay out beyond 11 p.m.
(David) We boys had to deal with the witches guarding the doors of the girls residences.
Tell us which Queens events or groups you have been involved with since graduating.
(Christiane) I enjoyed my work with the Agnes Etherington Art Centre. When David and I arrived at Summerhill, it was mostly Victorian art work on the walls. I decided this was highly inappropriate for Queens today and needed to be changed. I worked with the Agnes art rental to showcase local artists a rotating basis. I think promoting town-gown relations is very important. Art is a great bridge.
What has encouraged you to be philanthropic with the university?
(David) Queens should be accessible to all people. Obviously, for people outside of Kingston, its very expensive to attend Queens. So Christiane and I both feel quite strongly that we should do something to make it a little bit easier. We have pretty strong views that Aboriginal students should be able to go to university - so we support Aboriginal students at both Queens and Emily Carr University (in B.C.).
(Christiane)While Davids philanthropy was mostly involved with the economics department, I wanted to fund the Aboriginal scholarship based on my experiences in Saskatchewan and the North (while working with the federal government). I saw how remote parts of the country are, and how difficult it is for students from there to come to university.
(David) The one I liked best was the one we had at the Windsor Arms. It was smaller and more compact. You couldnt accommodate everyone but it was a fun because you got to meet a lot of people. I thought it worked quite well being crammed in together. I fondly remember last years event when John Rae received the award. He and I were undergraduate students together. Its always the people who make the event special.
What advice do you have for current alumni?
(David) Use the Queens Alumni Branch network its a lot better than LinkedIn. Your undergraduate years are a formative experience. So when you go across the country or anywhere in the world, meeting someone else from Queens provides an immediate connection.