Vincent Seymour Wilson, part of a remarkable cohort of doctoral students from Queen's University, a long-time professor of public administration at Carleton University, and a former Editor of Canadian Public Administration, passed away on January 18, 2023 in Ottawa, just before his 86 th birthday. His career and research interests, in many ways, reflect the evolution of the field of public administration in Canada and many of the issues he flagged in his research and CPSA address remain salient to this day. He also performed great service to the discipline of political science and the field of public administration. What follows focuses more on his many contributions to Canadian public administration, but his other contributions are noteworthy.Born in Trinidad in 1937, Vince Wilson immigrated to Winnipeg at the age of 19 to study at United College for two years, eventually moving to Vancouver and obtaining his BSc in Forestry at the University of British Columbia. There he met his wife, Marilyn, and once Vince graduated, they moved to Victoria so he could work for the BC Forest Service and Marilyn could complete her Education degree. They soon moved to Ottawa to pursue more opportunity; Vince entered Carleton University's new MPA program, and his interests shifted from forestry practice per se towards larger policy, planning, and research issues associated with it. This led to his MA thesis on "The Growth of Scientific Research in Canada: Its Implications for a National Forest Policy and the Planning of Federal Forestry Research" (Wilson, 1966). Vince pursued PhD studies at Queen's University, leading to a dissertation on "Staffing in the Canadian federal bureaucracy: with specific reference to its historical determinants and the socio-cultural variables affecting recruitment and job mobility in the senior echelons" (Wilson, 1970). He was part of a remarkable cohort of PhD students-including Peter Aucoin, Bruce Doern, O.P. Dwivedi, Rick Van Loon, and Richard Phidd-and went on to publish with them and other luminaries of his generation, such as Iain Gow and Paul Pross. Vince returned to Carleton as faculty member in 1969, first in Political Science, then the School of Public Administration, eventually returning to Political Science, for a career that spanned four decades . He was one of the two first Black political scientists hired into a tenure-track position in Canada (Everitt, 2021).Professor Wilson's early teaching and research reflected the trajectory of the rapidly growing field of public policy and public administration during the 1960s and 1970s in Canada. One strand of his early research was part of a significant effort by him and others to develop a foundational Canadian literature on public policy, policy-making, and key institutions (