Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox order
The Saskatchewan Order of MeritTemplate:Efn is a civilian honour for merit in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Instituted in 1985 by Lieutenant Governor Frederick Johnson,<ref name=CE>Template:Cite book</ref> on the advice of the Cabinet under Premier Grant Devine, the order is administered by the Governor-in-Council and is intended to honour current or former Saskatchewan residents for conspicuous achievements in any field,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> being thus described in law as the highest honour amongst all others conferred by the Saskatchewan Crown.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
Structure and appointmentEdit
The Saskatchewan Order of Merit is intended to honour any Canadian citizen currently or formerly resident in Saskatchewan who has demonstrated a high level of individual excellence and achievement in any field, improving the "social, cultural and economic well-being of the province and its residents"; the process of finding such individuals begins with call for nominations put out each spring by the Saskatchewan Honours Advisory Council.<ref name=CE /> There are no limitations on population, but only ten new members may be created each year.<ref name=CE />
After the annual call for nominations,<ref name=CE /> the Saskatchewan Honours Advisory Council makes its recommendations to the lieutenant governor. Posthumous nominations are accepted within one year of the date of death, and in 2001 the Provincial Emblems and Honours Act was amended to allow for honorary membership in the order,<ref name=SOM /> granted to those who are neither current nor former residents of Saskatchewan; Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, was the first honorary member of the Saskatchewan Order of Merit, appointed on 24 April 2001.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref> The lieutenant governor of Saskatchewan, who is {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} a member and the chancellor of the Saskatchewan Order of Merit and remains a member following his or her departure from viceregal office,<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> then makes all appointments into the fellowship's single grade of membership by letters patent bearing the viceroyal sign-manual and the Great Seal of the province;<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> thereafter, the new members are entitled to use the post-nominal letters SOM and have their portrait added to the Athabasca Gallery at the Saskatchewan Legislative Building.<ref name=SOM>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
InsigniaEdit
Upon admission into the Saskatchewan Order of Merit, members are presented with the order's insignia at a ceremony held either at Government House in Regina or at a venue in Saskatoon.<ref name=SOM /> According to The Provincial Emblems and Honours Act, which stipulates the design of the order's badges and ribbon and how they are worn, the main emblem of the order is a silver medallion in the form of a six pointed star—an abstract rendition of a western red lilly, the province's official flower. The obverse is coated in white enamel and bears the escutcheon of Coat of arms of Saskatchewan within a circular ribbon that displays the provincial motto—Template:Langnf<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>—all topped by St. Edward's Crown symbolizing the Canadian monarch's role as the fount of honour.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This medallion is hung from a ribbon with a green-gold-green, vertical striped pattern, at the collar for men, and on a bow pinned at the left chest for women. Members also receive for wear on informal clothing a lapel pin in the form of a stylized western red lily bearing St. Edward's Crown.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
InducteesEdit
Template:Main category The following are some notable appointees of the Saskatchewan Order of Merit:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Murad Al-Katib, agricultural entrepreneur, appointed 2017
- Freda Ahenakew Template:Post-nominals, author and academic, appointed 2005
- John Hall Archer Template:Post-nominals, librarian and historian, appointed 1987
- Don Atchison SOM, Mayor of Saskatoon, appointed 2019
- Lorne Allan Babiuk Template:Post-nominals, immunologist, molecular virologist, and vaccinologist, appointed 2003
- Marcel Alter Baltzan Template:Post-nominals, physician and nephrologist, appointed 1999
- Lloyd Ingram Barber Template:Post-nominals, Chancellor of the University of Regina, appointed 1995
- Byrna Barclay Template:Post-nominals, author, appointed 2004
- Edward Dmytro Bayda Template:Post-nominals, Chief Justice of Saskatchewan, appointed 2008
- Bruce W. Beatty, graphic designer, posthumously appointed 2011
- Allan Emrys Blakeney Template:Post-nominals, Premier of Saskatchewan, appointed 2000
- Elizabeth Winifred Brewster Template:Post-nominals, poet and academic, appointed 2008
- Sharon Butala Template:Post-nominals, writer and conservationist, appointed 2009
- Angus Daniel Campbell Template:Post-nominals, founder of the Northern Ontario Hockey Association, appointed 1996
- Maria Campbell Template:Post-nominals, author, playwright, broadcaster, filmmaker, appointed 2005
- Roger Colenso Carter Template:Post-nominals, Dean, University of Saskatchewan College of Law, appointed 1998
- Edward Milton Culliton Template:Post-nominals, Chief Justice of Saskatchewan, appointed 1988
- Donald Grant Devine, Premier of Saskatchewan, appointed 2009
- Thomas Clement Douglas Template:Post-nominals, Premier of Saskatchewan, appointed 1985
- Joseph Fafard Template:Post-nominals, sculpture artist, appointed 2002
- Walter Henry Farquharson Template:Post-nominals, Moderator of the United Church of Canada, appointed 2007
- David Leon Kaplan Template:Post-nominals, professor, performer, and conductor, appointed 2006
- Dorothy Knowles Template:Post-nominals, landscape artist, appointed 1987.
- John Victor Hicks Template:Post-nominals, poet, appointed 1992
- Frederick W. Hill Template:Post-nominals, appointed 1999, businessman
- Gordon MacMurchy Template:Post-nominals, politician, appointed 1999
- Peggy McKercher Template:Post-nominals, Chancellor of the University of Saskatchewan, appointed 2001
- Kenneth Alexander Mitchell Template:Post-nominals, actor, appointed 2001
- Robert Joseph Ogle Template:Post-nominals, Roman Catholic priest, broadcaster, and politician, appointed 1995
- Thelma Pepper Template:Post-nominals, artist, appointed 2018
- William Perehudoff Template:Post-nominals, artist, appointed 1994
- Elizabeth Raum, oboist and composer, appointed 2010
- Edward Rawlinson Template:Post-nominals, broadcaster, appointed 1989
- Garnet "Sam" Richardson Template:Post-nominals, Curler, appointed 2005
- Roy John Romanow Template:Post-nominals, Premier of Saskatchewan, appointed 2003
- Allen Sapp Template:Post-nominals, artist, appointed 1985
- Sandra Marie Schmirler Template:Post-nominals, Olympic athlete, posthumously appointed 2000
- Morris Cyril Shumiatcher Template:Post-nominals, civil rights lawyer, appointed 1996
- John William Tranter Spinks Template:Post-nominals, appointed 1996
- Savella Stechishin Template:Post-nominals, home economist and writer, appointed 1998
- Anne Szumigalski Template:Post-nominals, poet, appointed 1989
- Guy Clarence Vanderhaeghe Template:Post-nominals, author, appointed 2003
- Charles III, King of Canada, appointed 2001
- Ernest Walker Template:Post-nominals, archaeologist and academic, appointed 2001
- Pamela Wallin Template:Post-nominals, television journalist and diplomat, appointed 1999
- James Vernon Weisgerber Template:Post-nominals, prelate of the Roman Catholic Church, appointed 2005
- Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh Template:Post-nominals, member of the Canadian Royal Family, appointed 2005
- Stephen Worobetz Template:Post-nominals, Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan, appointed 1999
- Clifford Emerson Wright Template:Post-nominals, Mayor of Saskatoon, appointed 1999
- Sylvia Fedoruk, Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan, appointed 1986
See alsoEdit
- Symbols of Saskatchewan
- Orders, decorations, and medals of the Canadian provinces
- Canadian honours order of wearing