- CA QUA02264
- Persona
- n.d.
Alan Twigg produced this documentary. He is the literary executor of George Woodcock's estate.
Alan Twigg produced this documentary. He is the literary executor of George Woodcock's estate.
Cecil Gertrude McKee married Gordon Jenkin Smith around 1918. They had two children, John G. Smith and Eleanor A. Smith.
William Servos Ball was one of 12 students admitted at the second session of Queen's College, in October 1842 (the first session had opened in March of the same year). The university was unable to honour him publicly due to a clause in the Royal Charter that stipulated that the Senate should only have degree-giving powers when a Principal and four professors were employed in the College. In 1845 only three individuals made up the entire faculty. The formal conferring of degrees began in 1847.
Queen's Medical graduate, 1894. Professor, head of Medical department, pathology pioneer, Queen's University.
German engineer, born in Paris, studied at the Munich Polytechnic. Set about constructing a "rational heat motor," demonstrating the first compression engine in 1897, after solving the problem of feul injection into the cylinder head against enormous pressures by devising a special pump. He spent most of his life at his factory at Augsburg until he vanished from an English channel steamer in September 1913.
Irene (Renie) Marshall came to Wolfe Island from Vancouver, in 1962. In 1974, she opened an antique shop on the island with Mrs. Mildred Walton. She was a member of the Wolfe Island Business and Tourism Association as well as various other organizations. In addition to being a business owner, Renie Marshall was also an author of many poems and stories for children. In 2000, she published a small book on Wolfe Island, entitled "Ganounkouesnot: The Long Island Standing Up". Irene Marshall passed away April 10, 2006.