Showing 1309 results

Authority Record
Corporate body

J. & W. Chester, Ltd.

  • Corporate body
  • 1860-1969
John and William Chester started this publishing firm in the 1860s in Brighton, Sussex, distributing imported editions of classical music. In the early 1900s, the firm was acquired to Otto Marius Kling, who retained the firm's name but moved it to London, England. In the 1960s, Wilhelm Hansen purchased the company and it became part of Music Sales, Ltd.

J. Pillans & Sons

  • Corporate body
  • 1775-1987
James Pillans, an apprentice of William Smellie, opened his own printing shop in Edinburgh in 1775. Soon afterwords, his son Hugh joined the company and it became J. Pillans & Son. In 1827, when another son John merged his company with J. Pillans & Son, it became H. & J. Pillans. In 1886, it became H. & J. Pillans & Wilson with the appointment of W. Scott Wilson as a partner. The company was bought by Colorgraphic PLC from England in 1987.

Jamaica Women's Exchange Project

  • Corporate body
Jamaica Women's Exchange Project became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1990s through their involvement on a tape recording entitled “Black Women: We’re Still Strong”.

James E. Dickie and Company

  • Corporate body
  • 1832-1907

James Edward Dickie, Esq., was a prominent businessman in Stewiake Village (Upper Stewiake), Colchester County, Nova Scotia. The second son of Isaac Patton Dickie and Rebecca Barnhill, he was born in 1832 in Onslow, Colchester County, and was sometimes referred to as Edward. Dickie briefly owned a store in Onslow with his older brother John Barnhill Dickie. The partnership dissolved around 1855 and James Dickie moved to Stewiacke Village in 1856, where he bought a general store from J.L. Walker. With his brothers-in-law, Frederick Tupper and George Fulton, he established J.E. Dickie and Company. Fulton left the company in the mid-1870s to purchase his own store.

James Dickie was active in his community. He was an elder in the Presbyterian Church, held a number of professional appointments and shares in local communities, and served as the Justice of the Peace for Colchester County. He married Harriet Tupper in 1859, with whom he had six children who lived to adulthood: Alfred, Alice, Henry, Edwin, Bessie and Laura. At one time or another all of the children assisted with the operation of the store, working as clerks and communicating with suppliers, customers and employees. Edwin, in particular, was very involved with the business and in 1890 the company was reformed as Messrs J.E. Dickie and Son to reflect this. James Dickie’s health declined shortly after and Edwin took over the business. James Dickie died in August of 1891.

Edwin Dickie began dealing under his own name as a wholesale and retail dealer and direct importer. A branch store at Brookfield, managed by Elijah Leard, was in operation by 1901. Edwin sold the business in 1907 to his cousin Hedley Fulton and settled in Vancouver. In 1924 James R. Fulton was operating the Dickies’ former store in Stewiacke.

James P. Mitchell and Co.

  • Corporate body
  • fl. 1881 - 1903
James P. Mitchell and Co. were lumber merchants in Mill Village and Lawrencetown, Nova Scotia.

J.D. Shatford Memorial Trust

  • Corporate body
  • 1955 -
The J.D. Shatford Memorial Trust is a private foundation that helps young residents of Hubbards, Nova Scotia, with post-secondary education costs. The trust was created by oil magnate Jefferson Davis Shatford, who was born in Hubbards in 1862 and is buried in Hubbards' Pine Hill Cemetery. All high school graduates residing in Hubbards are eligible to receive post-secondary bursaries from the trust. Funds from the trust also built the J.D. Shatford Memorial Library and the Hubbards firehall, and supplied funding to churches and other community facilities.

J.D.B. Fraser & Sons

  • Corporate body
  • 1828-
J.D.B Fraser and Sons is a pharmacy in Pictou, Nova Scotia, known in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as both a chemist and druggist. Located at 21 Water Street on what was originally known as the "jail lot," the pharmacy can trace its history to 1828. Fraser was one of the earliest pharmacists in Nova Scotia and is believed to be the first to have made and used chloroform. Three of his sons became pharmacists.

Jest in Time Theatre.

  • Corporate body

Jest in Time began as the dream of co-founder, Sherry Lee Hunter; who after training in the United States with teacher/mentor Tony Montanaro, joined forces with MaryEllen MacLean and Christian Murray in 1983 to form the beginnings of Jest. In 1986 Shelley Wallace joined the group which became one of the most established troupes in Canada and the longest running physical theatre company in the province.

Over its twenty-year history, the group toured the world, including travel to Japan, Hong Kong, Australia, the United States (including Alaska) and just about every small town in Canada. Troupe members presented a refreshing style of physical theatre, which they then taught to others. Jest created numerous productions including The Best of Jest, Accidental Bloodlines (co-created and directed by Bryden MacDonald), Sleep Tracks, Love Bytes and Trip, as well as three television specials for CBC (Jest (Pop. 4), Jest in Time for Christmas and Jest in Time for Halloween).

In the fall of 2003, Jest in Time, quietly called it quits. Members of the group decided to pursue different artistic directions, and the time seemed right subsequent to the damage wreaked by Hurricane Juan on Jest's Halifax office.

Johann André

  • Corporate body
  • c. 1775-
Johann André was a family publishing firm from the central Rhine-Main region, founded by the composer and pianist Johann André (1741-1799, c. 1775 in Offenbach. His son took over the firm in 1799, followed by his grandson, who emigrated to the United States and established a branch the firm there in 1850. The firm continued to operate in Offenbach until its near total destruction in World War Two (1944) and then reopened in 1948.

Joint Review Panel for the Whites Point Quarry and Marine Terminal Project.

  • Corporate body
  • March 24, 2003-October 22, 2007

On March 24, 2003 Fisheries and Oceans Canada received a proposal from Bilcon of Nova Scotia for the construction of a 152-hectare basalt quarry, processing facility and marine shipping terminal at White’s Point, approximately 35 km southwest of Digby, Nova Scotia, along the shores of the Bay of Fundy.

A joint federal-provincial review panel for the Whites Point Quarry and Marine Terminal Project was announced on November 5, 2004. The three-member panel consisted of Dr. Bob Fournier, Dr. Jill Grant, and Dr. Gunter Muecke. On March 31, 2005 the panel released final guidelines for the preparation of the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), which would provide direction to Bilcon in preparing a statement of the project's anticipated environmental impact.

The joint panel review provided the report to the Ministers on October 22, 2007. The Ministers released the report on October 23, 2007.

After consideration of the report, the Minister of Environment and Labour announced on November 20, 2007 that the project posed unacceptable risk to the environment and to the community. The application to establish Whites Point Quarry and Marine Terminal was not approved.

Journal

  • Corporate body

Keith Hall Investments.

  • Corporate body

Keith Hall Investments was an investment and trading company originally established by the Oland Family as Lindola Investments Limited. The company was established to manage various rental properties and real estate holdings owned by the Oland Family. The company also owned Chester Hotels Limited and also made investments in land and community development businesses such as Halifax Developments. The company mortgaged properties and real estate holdings and negotiated the sale of the Oland residence "Lindola" on Young Avenue in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

In 1979, the company wound down its activities and was struck off by the Nova Scotia Registry of Joint Stocks. Lindwood Holdings continued to register the business name until 2009, when it was revoked by Richard H. Oland.

Khyber Art Society

  • Corporate body
  • 1994-

The Khyber Arts Society is a not-for-profit organization that administers the Khyber Centre for the Arts, an artist-run centre for non-commercial work. The centre was developed in 1994 by the No Money Down Cultural Society, headed by Bill Roberts, who negotiated an agreement with the City of Halifax to maintain an unoccupied three-storey heritage building known as the Church of England Institute for use as an art exhibit and live entertainment space. The society was incorporated on 10 March 1995 as the Halifax Arts Centre Project Society; in September 1995 it changed its name to the Khyber Arts Society. In the mid-2000s the Khyber Centre for the Arts became known as the Khyber Institute of Contemporary Art (Khyber ICA), but the name was changed back in 2012.

Lease negotiations between the Khyber Arts Society and Halifax Regional Municipality have formed a central role in the society's history. In 1995 a widespread campaign to keep the Khyber public and to secure a long-term lease was launched, resulting in the promise of a three-year lease. Structural renovations forced a temporary relocation. In 1996 the Khyber Arts Society signed a new five-year renewable lease and, after obtaining a liquor license, the Khyber Club was opened as a meeting place for visual artists and a venue for Halifax’s emerging music scene.

In 2006 the Khyber Arts Society ceased to be the primary property manager on behalf of the municipality and the Khyber Performance Arts Society was formed to run the club as a non-profit performance space. Musician Lukas Pearse proposed establishing a performing arts society to keep the Khyber Club open after tax issues compelled the Khyber Arts Society to close it. In 2007 the society again negotiated with the City of Halifax to renew its lease and were offered a month-to-month tenancy, which was accepted in April 2008. In 2015 the discovery of asbestos closed down the building, and in 2017 the Khyber Centre for the Arts relocated to Hollis Street.

Killam Brothers.

  • Corporate body
Killam Brothers Limited was a fuel company based in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia.

Kin

  • Corporate body

Kitpu Youth Centre

  • Corporate body
Kitpu Youth Centre is a part of the Mi’kmaq Native Friendship Centre on Gottingen Street in Halifax. The Kiptu Youth centre provides education and activities about aboriginal culture to youth aged 13 to 24. Kitpu Youth Centre became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes because their video recordings became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Kunstwart-Verlag

  • Corporate body
  • 1884-
German publisher founded in Munich by Georg D.W. Callwey.

La Have Outfitting Company.

  • Corporate body
The La Have Outfitting Company was a ship chandlery, fish exporter, general merchant and grocer, and was also involved in buying and selling schooners. The company was founded in the early 1900s and was owned and managed by Fraser Gray of La Have, Nova Scotia. With the decline of the shipping and fishery industry, the company operated primarily as a grocery store into the 1960s.
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