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Catholic Church

  • CA QUA00695
  • Pessoa coletiva
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Chipman, George F.

  • CA QUA00696
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1882-1935

George F. Chipman was born at Nictaux West, Nova Scotia, on 28 January, 1882, the son of F. Miles Chipman, a member of the first directorate of the United Fruit Companies. Chipman attended the Provincial Training School for teachers at Truro for one year and at the age of eighteen went to River Herbert, Cumberland County, as the principal of the high school. He held this post for three years before moving to Alberta to teach school in the fall of 1903. In 1905 he joined the editorial staff of the Free Press and in 1909, when the farmers of Manitoba united to form the Grain Growers Association, he became involved in the publication of the Grain Growers' Guide. Two years after he joined the Guide he was promoted to editor. Chipman was active politically in the formation of the National Farmers' platform in 1918 and supported T.A. Crerar and the Progressives in the 1920's. From 1923 on, Chipman also investigated the growing of hardier fruits for western climates. In 1923 he was also appointed, by the Manitoba government, to examine the provincial educational system. Chipman died in 1935.

Chown Wholesale Hardware Limited

  • CA QUA00697
  • Pessoa coletiva
  • n.d.

The name of Chown has been identified with the hardware business in Kingston, Ontario for over a hundred years. In the 1830's, Edwin, George and Arthur Chown learned the tinsmith trade. Edwin and Arthur opened a tin shop in 1845. Two years later they moved to larger quarters and added hardware to their line. During the 1850's Edwin became a partner in Eagle Foundry and sold stoves, ploughs and other agricultural implements along with tin and copper ware. Arthur , in the meantime, dealt in shelf hardware. Towards the end of the fifties Edwin Chown formed a partnership with Henry Cunningham as wholesale and retail hardware merchants. Arthur together with his brother Samuel also was engaged in this line. Samuel eventually established his own business, while Arthur, during the 1880's, took his sons Fred and Oliver into partnership under the name of A. Chown and Company. Chown and Cunningham by then was known as Edwin Chown & Son. In 1938 the various family interests were merged into a Limited Company and operated until 1967.

Clark, Arthur Lewis

  • CA QUA00701
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1873-1956

Born at Worcester, Massachusetts on February 19, 1873, Arthur Lewis Clark was educated at the Worcester Polytechnic and at Clark University (Ph.D. 1905). He came to Canada as a professor of Physics at Queen's University and in 1919 he became Dean of the Faculty of Applied Science before retiring in 1943. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1915 and he was the author of a history of the Science Faculty at Queen's, entitled The First 50 Years. He died at Kingston on September 1, 1956.

Clark, Duncan

  • CA QUA00702
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1785-1850?

Duncan Clark was born in 1785 and lived in Matilda Township. As a fur trader and soldier, he was a clerk with the Hudson's Bay and North West Companies, 1818-1824, and served during the War of 1812. Later he was active in the militia.

Clarke, Kenneth S.

  • CA QUA00705
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1886-1956

Queen's Alumnus, B.Sc. Honours, Chemical Engineering, mining and metallurgy, 1910. Avid outdoorsman, President of the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters, 1953-56.

Clarke, Muriel (Shortt)

  • CA QUA00706
  • Pessoa singular
  • n.d.

Muriel Clarke (née Shortt) was a Queen's Alumnus, who graduated with her B.A. in 1909.

Coleman,Herbert Thomas John

  • CA QUA00709
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1872-?

No information available on this creator.

Connell, Dr. Walter Ford

  • CA QUA00717
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1906-1998

Dr. Walter Ford Connell, best known as Ford Connell, was a graduate of Queen's Medical School earning his M.D.C.M in 1929, along with the gold medal in both medicine and surgery. After some time spent overseas, he returned to Queen's in 1935, joining his father Dr. W.T Connell in the Department of Medicine. At this time, he also bought the Kingston General Hospital its first portable electrocardiograph and established its division of cardiology. Connell became the head of the Department of Medicine in 1942, and was a leader in the decision to allow women back into Queen's Medical School in 1943. By the early 1950s, Connell had built up the department of medicine to provide for teaching, research and patient care in many subspecialties. Connell retired in 1968 as an emeritus professor and Queen's awarded him an honorary degree in 1973. Ford Connell passed away in October 1998 in Kingston.

Court of King's Bench

  • CA QUA00729
  • Pessoa coletiva
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

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