Â鶹Éç¹ú²ú

Skip to content

Canadian icon Terry Fox to be featured on new $5 bill

OTTAWA — Terry Fox has been selected to appear on the next $5 bank note. The federal government made the revelation in its fall economic statement on Monday.
0d576e1d910f83174cd9f04c306632f5677bbea1cb5fcc9a684383e912d2399d
Terry Fox runs during his "Marathon of Hope" in 1981. Terry Fox has been selected to appear on the next $5 bank note. THE CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO

OTTAWA — Terry Fox has been selected to appear on the next $5 bank note.

The federal government made the revelation in its fall economic statement on Monday.

Fox is a Canadian icon who campaigned for cancer research by running his Marathon of Hope in 1980.

An amputee himself after losing his leg to cancer, Fox's marathon raised more than $24 million dollars — $1 for every Canadian at the time.

He was the youngest person to be named a Companion of the Order of Canada before his death in 1981 when his cancer spread to his lungs.

The annual fundraising run in his name has raised more than $850 million for cancer research.

In 2020 the Bank of Canada held a six-week public consultation, and Fox was among eight "iconic Canadians" who were shortlisted from more than 600 nominations.

The fall economic statement says Fox's addition to the $5 bill is "to inspire more Canadians to give $5 to the cause that Terry Fox championed."

"Through his efforts, the 22-year-old showed Canadians the difference that an ordinary person could make through sheer willpower and determination," reads a passage from the economic update.

Fox will replace Sir Wilfrid Laurier, who will move from the $5 bill to the $50 note. It's unclear what will come of William Lyon Mackenzie King who is currently on the $50 bill.

"Terry Fox’s legacy transcends differences," said Port Coquitlam mayor Brad West in a statement posted to X. The city — Fox's hometown — was behind an effort to get Fox on the $5 bill, with West writing letters to the governor of the Bank of Canada pushing for it.

"On behalf of the people of Port Coquitlam, I want to express our immense pride that our hometown hero is being honoured as the new face on Canada's $5 bill."

This story from The Canadian Press was first published on Dec. 16, 2024

Nick Murray, The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks