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Opinion | Sir Graham Day, one of the last Canadian knights who never let his business armour rust

3 min read
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Sir Graham Day, left, pictured in 1993 with his successor at PowerGen, was among a small cadre of Canadians who moved to the U.K. to become an executive or proprietor, writes Rod McQueen.


Rod McQueen is a freelance contributing columnist for the Star鈥檚 Business section. McQueen spent a career talking to successful CEOs and power players. In an ongoing series, he reflects on the lessons he learned from those past interviews. McQueen is based in Toronto. Reach him via email: rmq@rogers.com

The first indication he was about to become a knight arrived in a brown envelope along with the rest of the mail.

Said the letter from the secretary to the then prime minister, Margaret Thatcher: 鈥淭he Prime Minister is minded to recommend to the Queen to confer a knighthood upon you. If this were to occur, would you please indicate whetheryou would accept.鈥

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Rod McQueen

Rod McQueen is a freelance contributing columnist for the Star鈥檚 Business section. McQueen spent a career talking to successful CEOs and power players. In an ongoing series, he reflects on the lessons he learned from those past interviews. McQueen is based in Toronto. Reach him via email: rmq@rogers.com

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