Showing 4085 results

Authority Record

Warner, Paul

  • Person
Paul Warner became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes because their video recording “Arms Control” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Warden, Rick

  • Person
Rick Warden became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2008 because their video “Front Page Challenged” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Ward, Richard, (fl.1888-1977)

  • Person
Richard Ward was an insurance agent who also enjoyed going to the theatre. He flourished around 1888-1977.

Ward, Andrea

  • Person
Andrea Ward is an England-born Canadian illustrator, who specializes in children’s book illustration. Her education includes a MFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and an education at the Ontario College of Art and Design. Ward became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1992 because her video works “Saved by Isis” and "Commuting with Nature" became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Ward, Amos P.

  • Person
Amos P. Ward was born in Maine in 1849 to Seth Ward and Eunice Cole. Circa 1878 he married Loretta Tower from Rockport, New Brunswick, with whom he had eleven children between 1879-1903. They settled in Upper Rockport, New Brunswick, where he and his sons worked at shipbuilding. Ward was captain of several vessels, including the Rowena (1903-07), Lizzie Rich (1905), Stella Maud (1907-10), and the Carrie C. Ware (1913-15). He sailed to and traded in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Maine, Massachusetts and Connecticut.

Wanzel, Grant

  • Person
Grant Wanzel is past Chair and board member of the Affordable Housing Association of Nova Scotia, and professor emeritus at Dalhousie University School of Architecture. He was acting Dean of the Faculty of Architecture and Planning from 1996-1997, and Dean from 2003-2008.

Wan, Theodore, 1953-1987

  • Person
  • 1953-1987
Theodore Wan was born in Hong Kong in 1973, and moved to British Columbia in 1967. Wan received a BFA from the University of British Columbia in 1975 and a MFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in 1978. During his time in Halifax, Wan became a photographer for the School of Dentistry at Dalhousie for a year. Wan’s work commonly featured elements of medical procedures, which was created during his time as a graduate student. Wan returned to Vancouver in 1979, and remained there working in his art practice or the local Chinatown businesses and organizations until his death in 1987.

Wamboldt-Waterfield Photography Limited

  • Corporate body
  • 1965 - [ca. 2003]

Wamboldt-Waterfield Photography Ltd. was founded by former Halifax Herald employees Lee Wamboldt and Terry Waterfield in September 1965. Lee Wamboldt began at the Herald as a copyboy, cub reporter and photographer in 1957, working nights and doing freelance photography during the day. Terry Waterfield’s career as a Herald photographer began two years later.

In 1963 the Halifax Herald began to outsource their photography. Lee Wamboldt found employment with Halifax Photo Service Ltd., and then joined Waterfield and Bill Duggan to form Duggan Enterprises. This partnership and business dissolved in 1964, and in 1965 Wamboldt-Waterfield was founded.

Wamboldt-Waterfield provided commercial and press photographic services to a diverse group of corporate, government and individual clients including the Dartmouth Free Press, Time Magazine, United Press International, Star Weekly Magazine, Moirs, Maritime Tel & Tel, National Film Board, and a number of advertising and public relations firms. In 1968 Halifax Herald accepted their tender to provide photographic services for the newspaper and a lucrative relationship followed. Wamboldt-Waterfield expanded to include a retail camera store on Gottigen Street—North End Cameraland, which they ran from 1965-1985.

Jim Clark joined Wamboldt-Waterfield as an intermittent staff photographer in 1971. He returned full-time in 1978 and became a partner in 1979. On Lee Wamboldt's retirement in 1985, Clark bought the business. Terry Waterfield, who had sold his shares in 1975, remained active as a company photographer until his own retirement in 1990, at which time Clark changed the name to Clark Photographic Ltd.

Business declined steadily from 1989-1994 as personal camera use rose and work for the Herald decreased. Clark cancelled the Herald contract late in 1994 and continued the business as a freelancer, investing increasing amounts of time and energy to keep abreast with the latest digital technologies. In 1988 these changes led him to establish Digiscan Photographic Services with Gary Castle.

Wamboldt-Waterfield Photography and Clark Photographic both remained trade names under the company Digiscan Photographic Ltd. Although the company name was filed with the Registry of Joint Stock Companies until 2018, the business was effectively closed from around 2003.

Walton, Evelyn A., fl. 1941

  • Person

Mrs. Evelyn A. Walton lived in Staplecross, Sussex ca. 1941.

Bryce McMaster was a British war poet. Educated at Oxford University, his collection The Stranger And Other Poems was published by Edward Arnold in 1923.

Walsh, Mary

  • Person
  • 1952-
Mary Walsh is an actor, director, writer, and social activist from St. John's, Newfoundland. She studied theatre at Ryerson College, in Toronto, Ontario but left to pursue her acting career before graduation. She appeared in performances with the satricial comedy troupe Codco until they disbanded in 1992, at which point she started to work on CBC's "This Hour Has Twenty-Two Minutes," playing the character Marg Delahunty, among others. She has also appeared in plays produced by Centaur Theatre, Factory Theatre, Grand Theatre, and many others. She has won 18 Gemini Awards for her work in television and was awarded the Order of Canada in 2000. In 2008, she received an Honorary Degree from McGill University an in 2012, she was awarded a Governor General's Performing Arts Award for Lifetime Artistic Achievement. She has been married to Memorial University English professor Don Nichols since 2002.

Walsh, Frederick Waldemar

  • Person
  • 1897-1984
Frederick Waldemar (Waldo) Walsh was a provincially and nationally recognized agronomist. Born in Moncton, New Brunswick, on 8 November 1897, he was raised on his family's farm in Coverdale, New Brunswick, before studying at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College (1917) and the Ontario Agricultural College (1922). He was employed as Superintendent of Agriculture for the Canadian National Railway until 1934, when he became a senior agriculturalist with the Nova Scotia Department of Agriculture, retiring in 1962 as Deputy Minister. He was active in 4-H clubs, local shipping clubs, and grain marketing organizations. As a civil servant he was involved in the development of the Fishermen’s Loan Board, the Marshland Reclamation Act, acceptance of grading standards, rail-grade for hogs, cattle and lambs, and the Natural Products Marketing Act of 1946. He died in 1984 and in 2007 he was posthumously awarded the Order of Canada for his service to the agricultural industry.

Walsh, Dan

  • Person
Dan Walsh became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1990s because his audio recording “Lovin’ an Elevator” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Walmsley, Charles

  • Person
  • 1891 - 1962
Professor Charles Walmsley taught in the Department of Mathematics at Dalhousie University from September 1930 to August 1959. He was born 23 September 1891 in England and was educated at Manchester Grammar School and King's College, Cambridge. He taught at the University of Birmingham, University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, and Manchester University before moving to Halifax to take up a Carnegie professorship at the University of King's College-Dalhousie University. In 1930 he was appointed assistant professor of mathematics at Dalhousie, promoted to associate in 1934 and to full professor in 1950. He returned to England after his retirement, where he died on 27 March 1962.

Wallace, Jordan

  • Person
Jordan Wallace became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2002 because their video recording “Division Equation Observatory” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Walker, Kevin

  • Person
Kevin Walker became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1991 because their video recording “Fourty Years of Service” was featured on a CFAT compilation tape which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Waldren Photographic Studios

  • ca. 1870-1955
In the 1870s, Louis Rice established a photography studio New Glasgow, Nova Scotia after emigrating to the region from Montreal. The studio was purchased around 1890 by G.R. Waldren, who soon opened a second studio in Antigonish, Nova Scotia. For close to five decades, Waldren documented the people and places of north-eastern Nova Scotia. He took photos of many groups, including townspeople and their rural counterparts, the descendants of Scots and Black Loyalists, and later immigrants. He took hundreds of photographs at the Eastern Car Company, which opened in 1913 and began exporting rail cars. Waldren also took portraits--of individuals, teams, teachers, and graduating classes at St. F.X. and at Mount St. Bernard, the girl's school adjacent to the university campus. When Canada went to war, Waldren Studios took portraits of departing soldiers. He captured Nova Scotians at work and at play, documenting the industry of the region while also taking group portraits of the many lodge groups, fraternal organizations, religious communities, trade unions, musical groups and sports teams that were active in the area. Waldren died in 1939. The business was taken over by Corson MacKenzie. MacKenzie continued to take photos and his family continues in the business to this day.

Waite, Peter B.

  • Person
  • 1922-2020

Peter Busby Waite was born in Toronto, Ontario, in 1922, to Cyril and Mary (Craig) Waite. He graduated from high school in 1937 while living in Saint John, New Brunswick. Peter received both his B. A. (1948) and M. A. (1950) in History from the University of British Columbia followed by completion of his Ph.D at the University of Toronto in 1954. Peter married Masha Gropuzzo in 1958. He has two daughters: Alica Nina and Anya Mary. He married Lorraine (Conrad) Hurtig in 2005.

Peter Waite worked at the Dominion Bank from 1937 to 1941. In 1941 he joined the Royal Canadian Navy, attaining the rank of lieutenant by the close of World War II, in 1945. Peter Waite started his teaching career as a lecturer, at Dalhousie University, in 1951. He was hired as an assistant professor in 1955, promoted to an associate professor in 1960, and gained full professorship in 1961. He headed the Dept. of History for nine years, from 1960 to 1968. Upon his retirement in 1988, he gained the title of Professor Emeritus of History, Dalhousie University. He has had numerous appointments as guest lecturer at other institutions. Peter B. Waite received honourary degrees from The University of New Brunswick, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, and Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Peter B. Waite has written 14 books and numerous articles for academic journals. He authored the two volumes of the “The Lives of Dalhousie University”, covering the period 1818 to 1980, published in 1994 and 1998.

Peter Waite is active in the historical community, both on a national and local level. He has been a member of: The Canadian Historical Association and was President, 1968-1969; Chairman of the MacDonald Prize Committee, 1976-1980; Humanities Research Council and was Chairman, 1968-1970; Historical Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, 1968-1977; National Archives Appraisal Board, 1979-1989; Chairman of the Aid to Scholarly Publications Programme, Social Sciences Federation of Canada, 1987-1989; Board of Trustees for the Pubic Archives of Nova Scotia, 1972-1999; the Chalmers Prize Committee, Ontario History, 1987-2005; and the City of Halifax, Advisory Committee on the Preservation of Historic Buildings. Peter Waite is an Officer of the Order of Canada, appointed on October 21, 1992; a Fellow, Royal Society of Canada, elected in 1972; and a Fellow, Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society since 2002. Peter was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2013.

Wainwright, J. Andrew

  • Person
  • 1946-

J. Andrew (Andy) Wainwright is a poet, novelist and McCulloch Professor Emeritus of English at Dalhousie University. He was born 12 May 1946 in Toronto, Ontario, and received his BA in 1969 at the University of Toronto. He spent the early 1970s in Spain, Greece and England before moving to Halifax to pursue his MA (1973) and PhD (1978) in English at Dalhousie University. He began teaching at Dalhousie in 1979, with a focus on modern and postmodern (Canadian) literature, indigenous studies, gender studies, multicultural fiction and poetry, intercultural issues and popular culture.

Wainwright is widely published, with titles including World Enough and Time: Charles Bruce, A Critical Biography (1988); Landscape and Desire: Poems Selected and New (1992); (ed.) A Very Large Soul: Margaret Laurence’s Letters to Canadian Writers (1995); A Deathful Ridge: A Novel of Everest (1997); A Far Time (2001); (ed.) Every Grain of Sand: Canadian Perspectives on Environment and Ecology (2004); The Confluence (2007); and Blazing Figures: A Life of Robert Markle (2009).

He retired from teaching in 2008.

Wadden, Paul

  • Person
Paul Wadden became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1979 because of their involvement in a video recording entitled “Prose readings” which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Waddell, Alfred

  • Person
  • 1896-1953
Alfred Ernest Waddell was born on August 25, 1896 in Trinidad. He and his wife immigrated to the United States in 1923, and then came to Halifax in 1928. Alfred enrolled in Dalhousie Medical School and graduated in 1933, becoming (one of?) the first black graduates of the medical school. He worked in Halifax as a physician and serviced many isolated populations with little access to medical care, and spoke out against racial injustices. Dr. Waddell passed away on March 20, 1953 in Halifax.

V.S. Sweeny Ltd.

  • Corporate body
  • 1860-1973
V.S. Sweeny Ltd. was founded by Jacob Sweeny in 1860 in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. Sweeny was a carpenter and cabinet-maker by trade, and worked for J.G. Allen, a furniture dealer and undertaker. Sweeny bought his business in 1860. Sweeny’s son, Vernon S. Sweeny, took over operations in 1918 and sold the furniture-dealing division to the Rogers Company in 1919. The undertaking business remained in the Sweeny family until 1973, when Layton Goodwin purchased it and added a crematorium in 2011.

Vox Consulting Ltd.

  • Corporate body
Vox Consulting Ltd. is a corporate body known to have recorded audio tracks at Solar Audio & Recording Limited in the early 1990s.

Volpe, Arnold

  • Person
  • 1869-1940
Arnold Volpe was born in Lithuania on July 9, 1869, and immigrated to the United States in 1898. He was a conductor and composer, known mostly for his chamber music. He founded the Lewisohn Stadium Concerts in New York City and the University of Miami Symphony Orchestra.

Vogt, Augustus Stephen

  • Person
  • 1861-1926
Augustus Stephen Vogt was a Canadian choral conductor, teacher, organist, and teacher, born in Washington, Canada West. He is known for founding the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir. He was also the principal of the Toronto Conservatory of Music (appointed in 1913) and served as dean of the Faculty of Music at the University of Toronto from 1918 until his death on September 17, 1926.

Vingoe, Mary

  • Person
  • 1957-

Mary Vingoe is a Canadian playwright, actor and theatre director. Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, she graduated from Dalhousie University and received the University Medal in Theatre in 1976. She completed her MA in Drama at the University of Toronto in 1977 and lived in Toronto for 13 years before returning to Nova Scotia. She was the founding Artistic Director of the Magnetic North Theatre Festival in Ottawa, and a co-founder of the Toronto feminist theatre company Nightwood Theatre, Ship's Company Theatre in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia, and Eastern Front Theatre in Halifax.

Vingoe has directed at major theatres across the country and has acted and written for stage, radio, television and film. She has been closely associated with the work of many Canadian playwrights, in particular Wendy Lill, for whom she has directed five world premieres, four of which were nominated for Governor General’s awards. She has received the Mayor’s Award for Achievement in Theatre, the Portia White Prize, and the Robert E. Merritt Award for Achievement in Theatre. In 2011 she was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.

Vincent A. White (schooner)

  • Corporate body
  • 1918-1935
The Vincent A. White was a tern schooner built in Alma, New Brunswick, in 1918 and registered in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia. She was launched on 7 August 1918 and assigned flag call TNLC. By the 1920s she was well known as a rum runner. Her name was changed to Estonia in 1926 and her port of registry to Lunenburg. In 1935 the Estonia sailed from Turk’s Island, West Indies, and encountered a heavy storm, losing her sails and rudder, and was abandoned in a sinking condition.

Villa-Lobos, Heitor

  • Person
  • 1887-1957

Heitor Villa-Lobos was one of the foremost composers of the twentieth century, combining elements of music indigenous to Brazil and Latin America with Western classical music. His work is heavily influenced by Johann Sebastian Bach (e.g., Bachianas Brasileiras), Richard Wagner, and Giacomo Puccini).

Born in Rio de Janeiro on March 5, 1887. he started learning the cello at age 6. Although his mother did not approve of his musical aspirations and wanted him to become a doctor, Villa-Lobos left home at the age of 18 and supported himself playing the guitar and cello while travelling around Brazil.

In 1915, his works were featured in a concert in Rio de Janeiro and the publishing firm Artur Napoleão began to publish his compositions. In this year, he also met pianist Artur Rubinstein, who performed his works across the world. From 1923 until 1929, he lived in Paris, composing, and organizing a number of concerts. In 1930, he became director of the São Paulo school system in Brazil and in 1932, he became in charge of music education throughout the country. In 1945, he established the Brazilian Academy of Music with Oscar Lorenzo Fernandez.

By the time of his death, in 1959, Villa-Lobos had written over 2000 compositions, including orchestral, chamber, instrumental, and vocal works. His guitar compositions, in particular, have become part of the standard repertory for the instrument.

Villa-Lobos married Lucília Guimarães, a pianist and teacher, in 1913. In 1936, he left his wife for Arminda Neves d’Almeida, who remained his companion until his death, Arminda took Villa-Lobos' name, although they never married. Many of his works are dedicated to Arminda, or "Mindhinha."

Villa-Lobos, Arminda

  • Person
  • 1912-1985
Arminda Villa-Lobos was a musician and companion to Heitor Villa-Lobos. Arminda became the Director of the Museu Villa-Lobos in 1960 and worked in this capacity until her death in 1985. Arminda was significant help to Villa-Lobos throughout his career and Villa-Lobos dedicated many of his works to her.

Victoria Hotel

  • Corporate body
  • ca. 1800-1971
The Victoria Hotel was founded on Water Street in Windsor, Nova Scotia, during the late eighteenth century by Thomas Doran, an early Irish immigrant following the expulsion of the Acadians in 1755. The original wooden building was replaced in 1896, but destroyed by fire in 1897. It was re-constructed in 1898.

Victoria General Hospital (Halifax, N.S.)

  • Corporate body
  • 1867-
The origins of this hospital are found in the decision of the City of Halifax to build a hospital that was completed in 1859. Various problems delayed the delivery of health care and it was not until April of 1867 when the first patient was received in the restructured Provincial and City Hospital - a joint body of the two levels of government. In 1887 the Province assumed total responsibility for the Hospital which was also renamed, in the year of Royal Jubilee, as the Victoria General Hospital. Consolidation of most Halifax hospitals under one administration happened in 1994 and the Victoria General Hospital became a site under the Queen Elizabeth II Health Science Centre.
Results 151 to 200 of 4085