Showing 4085 results

Authority Record

United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees & Railway Shop Labourers Local 396.

  • Corporate body
The Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes is a Division of the Rail Conference of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters representing and protecting the rights of rail workers who build and maintain the track and structures on railroads throughout the United States of America. The history of the advance and growth of American railroads is an episode in the saga of a people's restless urge to explore and to move on. Heeding that urge, these people expanded into the far corners of the North American Continent, moving as slow or as fast as their means of transportation allowed. Once the rail system was established, the great construction gangs began to settle down and maintain that which they had built. But, while the robber barons of the early railroads amassed great fortunes, their employees worked from dawn to dusk for pennies a day without insurance, vacations or means of support after years of hard work. It was these conditions that inspired early rail workers to organize collectively and form unions to protect their common interests. Rail labor leaders continue the fight today for job security, better working conditions, fair wages and benefits, improved safety conditions and elimination of massive cutbacks. The benevolent society that started with a few trackmen on a hot July day in Alabama has shown that it can meet the challenges and problems of an everchanging industry and will continue to protect its members' rights as it has for more than a century.

Uniacke, A.M., 1808-1895

  • Person
Andrew Mitchell Uniacke was born in Halifax in 1808, the youngest son of Richard John Uniacke and his second wife, Elizabeth Newton. He was educated at King's College, Windsor and went on to study law, eventually working as a lawyer, a banker, and a politician. He was president of the Bank of Nova Scotia from 1872 to 1874 and represented Halifax township in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly between 1843 to 1847. In 1834 he married Elizabeth Fraser, with whom he had three children. He passed away in Dover, England in 1895.

Underhill, Richard

  • Person
Richard Underhill became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1980s because of their involvement in a video recording which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Ulrich, Ron

  • Person

Ron Ulrich has worked as a director and artistic director with many major theatre companies across Canada, and is perhaps best known for his work with American comedies and musicals. He received a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Saskatchewan and graduated from the National Theatre School of County.

He was the artistic director of various theatre companies across Canada, including the Huron Country Playhouse in Grand Bend, Ontario (1983-1985); Stage West Canada (1985-1993); the Muskoka Festival, Gravenhurst, Ontario (1992-1994); the Mayfield Theatre in Edmonton, Alberta (1994-2000); and Neptune Theatre in Halifax, Nova Scotia (2000-2008). Since 2008, he has been the artistic director of Theatre Aquarius in Hamilton, Ontario.

Ueda, Junko

  • Person
Junko Ueda is a Japanese singer and satsumas-biwa player, presenting Japanese traditional biwa music and shomyo Buddhist chanting. Ueda studied piano and composition at the Tokyo College of Music. Ueda has been based in Europe since 1988 and has been performing in various exhibitions, concerts and festivals.

Tyers, Dianne

  • Person
  • [196-]-
Dianne Tyers was appointed Dean of Continuing Education at Dalhousie University in 2019. She completed her PhD at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) and holds an MBA from the Ivey School of Business, University of Western Ontario, and an MA from University of Queensland, Australia. She is a Fellow of the Business Excellence Institute, a member of Lead5050 for women in international education, and a member of The Academy of International Business.

Two Planks and a Passion Theatre Company

  • Corporate body
  • 1992-

Two Planks and a Passion Theatre Company was founded in 1992 by Chris O'Neill and Ken Schwartz, with a mandate to produce new Canadian works with strong female roles and community relevance. The company's original home was a small community hall in Sheffield Mills, Nova Scotia, and, as such, Two Planks became an itinerant company, bringing theatre to rural communities throughout Canada with regular regional and national tours.

In 2003 O'Neill and Schwartz began construction of a multi-disciplinary arts centre, and Two Planks and a Passion found a fixed address on a former cattle farm on 178 acres of field and forest overlooking the Bay of Fundy. In addition to providing an outdoor summer theatre venue, Ross Creek Centre for the Arts offers programming and space for arts-focused residential summer camps, workshops for youth and families, and retreats for emerging and established artists.

Two Planks' first production was a one-woman show, See Bob run, by Daniel MacIvor (1992); two years later the company received national recognition with its groundbreaking production of Butterbox babies, adapted by Chris O'Neill from the novel by Bette L. Cahill (1994). During its years of touring, the company produced many plays with Atlantic Canadian themes and/or playrights, including Westray: The long way home, by Chris O'Neill and Ken Schwartz (1995; 1996; 2002), which had an extensive national tour sponsored in part by the United Steelworkers of America. Other plays included Halo, by Josh MacDonald (1999), and Hockey mom, hockey dad, by Michael Melski (1999; 2001-2002).

Once in its permanent home, Two Plank's productions were able to feature larger casts and the "theatre off the grid"series were rooted in their natural surroundings. Productions such as The Odyssey, adapted by Rick Chafe (2007), Our town, by Thornton Wilder (2008), Rockbound, by Allen Cole (2009), The crucible, by Arthur Miller (2011), and Beowulf, adapted by Rick Chafe (2012), all received awards and/or nominations for Robert Merritt Awards.

Turquand, Peter

  • Person
  • [17--] - [18--]
Peter Turquand was the Commissary General at Quebec City in the early 1820s.

Tupper, Francis Freeman

  • Person
Francis Freeman Tupper was born in Milton, Nova Scotia, c. 1889 to Henry and Teresa Tupper. He married Verta Laura Freeman in 1913. From 1908-1909 he studied engineering at Dalhousie University, working later as a land surveyor in Liverpool, Nova Scotia, where he also served as Justice of the Peace. He had a strong research interest in the history of the Liverpool area and in the broader history of Nova Scotia.

Tupper, Charles, Sir, 1821-1915

  • Person

Sir Charles Tupper was born in Amherst, Nova Scotia on July 2, 1821. He was educated at Horton Academy in Wolfville and graduated with his M.D. from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland in 1843. On his return to Canada he established a medical practice and pharmacy in Amherst. In 1846 he married Frances Morse, with whom he had six children.

Tupper’s political career began in 1855 when he was elected as a Conservative candidate in the provincial legislature. He went on to serve as Premier of Nova Scotia between 1864 to 1867 and is considered largely responsible for the province joining Confederation. In 1867 Tupper successfully ran for Federal Parliament and became an important figure in national politics, leading the Conservative Party from 1896 to 1901 and serving briefly as Prime Minister in 1896. Tupper died in England on October 30, 1915.

Tsistinas, Harold

  • Person
Harold Tsistinas, born June 22, 1944 in Chatham, New Brunswick, was a recording engineer known to have worked with Solar Audio & Recording Limited. He moved to Halifax in the early 1970s and was seen as a great contributor to the East Coast music scene and was respected for his knowledge and expertise in the many projects on which we worked. Tsistinas passed away at his home in the subdivision of Cowie Hill, Nova Scotia on June 10, 2013. He was 68 years old.

Truchan, Kim

  • Person
Kim Truchan became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1990s because of their involvement in a video recording, “Conjunctions” which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Troupenas

  • Corporate body
  • 1825-1850
Troupenas was a publishing house founded in Paris by Eugène-Théodore Troupenas (1799-1850) in 1825, when he acquired the publishers Veuve Nicolo & Isouard. Six months after his death in April 1850, his catalogue was taken over by Brandus.

Trost, Walter

  • Person
Walter Trost came to Dalhousie in 1948 with a PhD from McGill and an Oxford post-doctoral fellowship. In 1959 he founded the Atlantic Provinces Inter-University Committee of the Sciences (APICS), which was Dalhousie's first effort at coordinating post-graduate science work with other Canadian universities. He served as Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies from 1961-1966, when he left Dalhousie to become the vice-president of the University of Calgary.

Troop, Jared Douglas Eric, 1897 -

  • Person
J.D. Eric Troop was born in Toronto in 1897, son of Jared Grassie Carter and Minnie Plenderleath Troop. He married Marjorie Helen Morton in 1925, with whom he had one daughter.

Trobak, Del

  • Person
Del Trobak became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1990s because their video travel recordings “Samples of..." became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Tribe, Julia

  • Person
Julia Tribe is a set and costume designer based in Toronto, Ontario. She has designed fr various theatre, opera, and dance companies across Canada, including 4th Line Theatre, Theatre Archipelago, Tapestry New Opera Works, Red Sky Productions, Canadian Stage Company, Mirvish Productions, Lorraine Kimsa Theatre for Young People, National Arts Centre, Soulpepper, and the Canadian Opera Company. She is a founding member of the Contrary Theatre Company and an educator of theatre design and communication at York University.

Trepanier, Tania

  • Person
Tania Trepanier is a video and multi-media Canadian artist. Trepanier is a bilingual, bi-national, bisexual woman who grew up in the Comorro Islands, Malawa and Trinidad; much of her artistic and academic work addresses issues around cultural and sexual identity. Trepanier became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1990s because her video recordings became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Traves, Tom

  • Person
  • 1948-
Tom Traves was the tenth president of Dalhousie University. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, he received a BA from the University of Manitoba in 1971, and an MA (1971) and PhD (1976) from York University. In 1974 he was hired as a lecturer at York, appointed assistant professor in 1976 and associate professor in 1976. From 1981-1983, he served as Chair of Social Science; from 1983-1991, he was Dean of the Faculty of Arts; from 1991-1995, he was Vice President (Academic) at the University of New Brunswick. In 1995 he was appointed to a six-year term as President and Vice-Chancellor of Dalhousie University. He was appointed to a second six-year term in 2000 and another three-year term starting in 2007. During his tenure as president, enrollments at Dalhousie grew by over 40 per cent and external research grant and contract income increased by 300 per cent.

Tratt, William R.

  • Person
  • 1850-1934
William R. Tratt was born in England in 1850. After being ordained as a Methodist minister, he and his wife Naomi Ann Tratt (née Heal) immigrated to Newfoundland around 1876. In 1899 they moved to Nova Scotia and served in various churches around the province. In 1914 they settled in Wentworth, Cumberland County, where Tratt died in 1934. He and his wife were survived by their son, Herber.

Tourbin, Dennis

  • Person
Dennis Tourbin became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1986 because of their involvement in the Audio by Artists’ Festival audio recording “A good listen” which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Tonks, Robert

  • Person
  • August 13, 1928 - April 17, 2012
Robert Tonks served as Director of the College of Pharmacy from 1973-1977, and was Dean of the Faculty of Health Professions from 1977-1988. He was born on August 13, 1928 in Aberystwyth, Wales. He was active in the Naval Cadets, and served in the Royal Navy from 1946-48 in the Pacific fleet aboard HMS Gambia. Tonks completed a B.Pharm and a Ph.D., FRPS at University College, Cardiff, Wales. He collaborated with Aneurin Hughes on significant research involving platelets, aspirin and infarctoid cardiopathy. He continued doing research in the Division of Geriatric Medicine in the Department of Medicine at Dalhousie until 2003. Tonks died on April 17, 2012 in Ajax, Ontario.

Tondino, Guido

  • Person
  • 1951-
Guido Tondino is a Canadian designer who has worked with various theatre companies, including Neptune Theatre, Centaur Theatre, Saidye Bronfman Centre, Tarragon Theatre, Theatre Calgary, Soulpepper Theatre Company, and Winnipeg Jewish Theatre. He studied at Tulane University and the National Theatre School of Canada. He was the director of design at the National Theatre School from 1998 to 2002 and now teaches in the University of Alberta Drama Department.
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