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Normdatei
Familie

Mallory (family)

  • CA QUA01944
  • Familie
  • n.d.

No information is available on the creator of this fonds.

Coombs (family)

  • CA QUA00721
  • Familie
  • n.d.

The family includes W.H. Coombs, a teacher, and A.A. Coombs, a daguerreotype photographer.

Fairfield (family)

  • CA QUA00753
  • Familie
  • n.d.

The Fairfields were a well-known United Empire Loyalist family. William Fairfield, the first settler, chose the location of the Fairfield homestead near where Amherstview is today when he came to Canada from Vermont in 1784.William Senior was the father of six sons and six daughters, of whom three were born at the Fairfield homestead. Stephen Fairfield, the fifth son of William Senior, and his son and grandson were the only descendants who stayed on the original homestead. During the war of 1812, some interesting family ties provided correspondence between Major Brown of Brownsville, N.Y., husband of Clara, William Senior's youngest daughter, and brother of General Brown who commanded the American forces, and his Canadian in-laws. About 1840, Stephen, now "land-poor" and without Negro help, turned his house into a tavern run by tenants. With an increase in his personal fortune the old house was restored to its original use.

Givins (family)

  • CA QUA00785
  • Familie
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Grass (family)

  • CA QUA00804
  • Familie
  • n.d.

The Grass family were among the founding Loyalist families in Kingston.

Landon (family)

  • CA QUA00824
  • Familie
  • n.d.

The Landon family lived in the township of Lansdown, County of Leeds, District of Johnstown in the province of Upper Canada. Both Joseph and Abner Landon served as Town Clerks for a number of years.

McGowan (family)

  • CA QUA00866
  • Familie
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Parrot (family)

  • CA QUA00965
  • Familie
  • n.d.

The Parrot family were United Empire Loyalists who settled in the Bay of Quinte district. The family included John Parrot, a mariner who owned property in Beverly and New Boston at the time of the American Revolution, and his sons James and John. The two sons came to Canada, where James became a farmer and a colonel in the militia and John became a school teacher.

Power (family)

  • CA QUA00988
  • Familie
  • n.d.

John Power (1816-1882) came to Kingston from England in 1846. Given the lack of formal training facilities, it might be assumed that John Power's early architectural training and experience was gained under his father, an architect/builder in Devonshire. In Kingston, it is thought that John Power first assisted in architectural work in the offices of Edward Horsey, a fellow emigrant from Devonshire and probably the brother of John Horsey, with whom Power travelled to Canada. The first professional mention of Power working on his own is an 1850 item in the Kingston Daily News (March 22). Throughout the 1850s, '60s and '70s, Power's practice diversified including designs for houses, both single and multiple, several churches and schoolhouses. In 1862 he began what was to become a series of associations with governmental clients by assuming responsibility as joint architect with William Coverdale for the Watkins Wing of the Kingston General Hospital.

In 1873 Joseph Power (1849-1925) became a partner in his father's architectural firm, which then became known as Power & Son. This name was continued until 1919, in spite of John Power's death in 1882. Around 1880 a younger son, Thomas R.P. Power (1859-1930) also joined the practice although the name of the firm was never changed to reflect this addition to the practice. Colin Drever (1887-1975), educated at Heriot Watt College in Edinburgh and emigrated to Canada in 1911, worked for Power & Son from 1912 to 1915 and again in 1818. He was taken in as a partner in 1919, at which time drawings in the Power Collection began to be signed Power Son & Drever. Powers retired in 1923 leaving Drever on his own until 1945 when he was joined by Harry P. Smith (1905-1983), a graduate of the University of Toronto with a Bachelor of Architecture degree (1929). Drever retired in 1967.

Pringle (family)

  • CA QUA00993
  • Familie
  • n.d.

George Pringle was the son of James Pringle, a Justice of the Peace of Cornwall. He attended Queen's University in Arts from 1849 to 1850 and obtained a medical degree later from McGill. He took further medical training in England during 1857 and 1858.

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