Clark Davey is the recipient of the 2009
Michener Special Award
Ottawa, June 10, 2009 - The Governor General of Canada, Michaëlle Jean, presented
the 'Special Michener Award' to
former publisher, managing editor, and reporter
Clark Davey in
recognition of his lifetime achievement in the field of journalism.
He was praised for contributing 'his talents and dedication in
abundance through a lifetime that has exemplified the best in
public interest journalism'. The award was presented during the
2008 Michener Awards ceremony
held at Government House in Ottawa.
Clark Davey's career, includes terms as publisher of The Vancouver Sun, The
Ottawa Citizen and The Montreal Gazette. He is also a former
Managing Editor of the Globe and Mail and past president and chair
of Canadian Press. For the past 25 years he has served as a founding
board member, president, and continuing executive secretary of the
Michener Awards Foundation.
Born in Chatham, Ontario, Mr. Davey was a member of the first
graduating class in Journalism at the University of Western Ontario
in 1948. He would later receive an honourary Bachelor of Laws from
the same University for his contribution to Canadian journalism.
After starting his career as a reporter for the Chatham Daily
News and later, managing editor of the Kirkland Lake Northern Daily News,
he joined the Globe and Mail
in the early fifties where he served as a Parliamentary Press Gallery correspondent
and covered the election campaigns of John Diefenbaker and Lester
Pearson. At the United Nations in New York he
reported extensively on then Minister of External Affairs Lester
Pearson and his successful diplomatic mission to diffuse the 1956
Suez Crisis. Clark Davey was one of only three journalists with John
Diefenbaker in Prince Albert in June of 1957 on the night he won
election as prime minister.
Mr. Davey rose though the editorial ranks at
the Globe and Mail to become Managing Editor - a position he held for
his
last 15 years at the newspaper before moving to the west coast and Pacific Press in 1978.
He has also served as a director of the National Newspaper
Awards, the Canadian Daily Newspaper Association, among other
organizations, and has lectured at various Canadian Universities and
Colleges.
David Humphreys, the President of the Michener Awards Foundation
said that throughout his career in the newspaper business Mr. Davey
"has been highly supportive of the kind of investigative journalism
the Michener Award encourages and honours. His contribution in that
regard has been inspirational".
Clark Davey makes his home in Ottawa where he lives with his wife of 56 years, Joyce.
They have three sons.
The Michener Special Award

The Michener 'Special Award'
was established in 1983 by then Foundation President Paul Deacon,
former editor and publisher of the Financial Post. At that time, the
Michener Awards
Foundation decided that in addition to the regular annual award
which goes to a
media organization, another award would be created to honour an
individual whose lifetime work exemplified the best in public
service journalism. It would be presented only occasionally and at
the discretion of the Foundation's board of directors. The award was
crafted in 1983 by sculptor John Matthews
In 1984, the first Special Award was presented to Anne Todd in
recognition of her husband’s contribution to public service
journalism. CTV correspondent Clark Todd had died of shrapnel wounds
in 1983 while covering the civil war in Lebanon.
Return to 2008 Michener
Award Page