Showing 2266 results

Authority Record
Person

Lucas, Clarence

  • Person
  • 1866-1947
Clarence Lucas was a Canadian composer, writer, and conductor. The son of a Methodist minister, he was born at the Six Nations Reserve near Brantford, Ontario on October 19, 1866. The family moved to Montreal, Quebec in 1878 where he studied piano, organ, and violin. In 1885, he went to Europe to study in Paris and married the pianist Clara Asher, a student of Clara Schumann. They returned to Canada in 1888 and taught at the Toronto College of Music. Lucas also worked as the music director of the Wesleyan Ladies College in Hamilton (1889) and conducted the Hamilton Philharmonic Society (1889). In 1893, he moved to London, England to teach. From 1903 until 1933, he worked as a correspondent and photographer for the Musical Courier of New York. His own compositions range from solo instrumental works to chamber music to symphonic overtures. He died at Sevres, near Paris, on July 1, 1947.

Lucas, Steve

  • Person
Steve Lucas is a set, lighting, and projection designer who has designed for over 300 productions of theatre, dance, and performance art in theatres internationally for 27 years. He lives in Dunedin, Ontario.

Lumsden, Brock

  • Person
Brock Lumsden worked as a set, lighting, and costume designer with various companies across Canada from 1987 to 1997. He then worked for the Fireworks Marketing Group (1996-2001), BL Design Inc. (1993-2009) and for BOLD Event Creative (2006-present). He studied theatre design at the University of Alberta (graduated 1988). He is now based in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Lund, Alan

  • Person
  • 1925-1992
Alan Wilfred Lund was born on May 23, 1923 in Toronto, Canada. He and his wife Blanche were famous dancers in Canada in the 1940s and 1950s, and he is best known for his dance performances, directing, and choreography work. He began dance training at the age of seven in Toronto, and at age 13 he partnered with his future wife, Blanche Harris, who was 14. They later married and went to England in 1945 to perform in a navy dance production, “Meet the Navy.” Alan was recognized with an Order of Canada on June 21 1982 for his contributions to dance in Canada. He died on July 1, 1992 in Toronto, Canada.

Lund, Blanche

  • Person
  • 1922-
Blanche Harris Lund was born in 1922 in Toronto, Canada. She also had a long career in dance and choreography.Blanche contracted polio while she was in England to perform in a navy dance production, "Meet the Navy." The polio nearly ended her dance career. She recovered, and went on, with Alan, to become the first CBC contract dancers. She retired to Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Lyadov, Anatoly

  • Person
  • 1855-1914
Anatoly Lyadov was born in St. Petersburg where he studied music with his stepfather, Konstantin Lyadov (1860-1868), before entering the St. Petersburg Conservatory for piano and violin. During the 1870s, he became associated with a group of Russian composers known as "The Mighty Handful" and studied composition with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

Lyall, William, Reverend

  • Person
  • 1811-1890
William Lyall was born June 11, 1811 in Paisley, Scotland. He was educated at the universities of Glasgow and Edinburgh, where he developed an interest in philosophy. Lyall was an ordained minister of the Free Church of Scotland and served several congregations before immigrating to British North America in 1848. Lyall was known as a student of the “philosophy of common sense” and viewed philosophy and theology as inseparable. He published Intellect, the emotions, and the moral nature in 1855, which was one of the first Canadian books in this field. After immigrating to British North American, Lyall taught at Knox College in Toronto, the Free Church College in Halifax, and the Theological Seminary in Truro. Lyall was one of six professors appointed at Dalhousie College when it reopened in 1863, as professor of metaphysics. Lyall remained at Dalhousie until his death in 1890.

Lynch, Shannon

  • Person
Shannon Lynch became associated with the Center for Art Tapes in the 1990s because their sound recording “Father and Son Go Shopping” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Lynch, William (Bill)

  • Person
  • 1900-1972

William P. Lynch (Bill) operated the only carnival to be operated exclusively out of Atlantic Canada. Bill Lynch was born on 25 August 1900 and moved to McNabs Island in 1905 with his parents, Matthew and Josephine (Palmer) Lynch. After the 1917 Halifax Explosion damaged the island and destroyed existing carnival businesses, Lynch decided to revive the shows, purchasing his first merry-go-round in 1920. He managed the ride alone until 1924, when he partnered with Ray Rogers and began to travel around Nova Scotia, establishing the Bill Lynch Shows in 1925. The partnership did not last, but, by 1928, he had acquired a few concessions and a Ferris wheel. In 1929, Lynch won the bid for the Halifax Exhibition and was asked to return in 1930.

By 1940 the Bill Lynch Shows were Canada’s biggest carnival, including acts such as the Three Maldos, the Rooneys, and Flash McHugh. Lynch was passionate about working with children with disabilities, arranging free visits to the empty carnival and donating to children’s charities. He died on 23 October 1972, after 52 years in the carnival business. Clarence “Soggy” Reid operated the business until his own death in 1995, when John Drummey took over. In 2003 the Bill Lynch Shows were split into Maritime Amusements and Carnival Time.

MacAskill, Wallace R.

  • Person
  • 1893-1956
Wallace Robinson MacAskill was born in 1887 at St. Peters, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. He was the third son of Angus and Mary MacAskill. He graduated from the Wade School of Photography in New York in 1907 and opened photographic studios in St. Peters and then Glace Bay before moving to Halifax in 1915. In 1926, MacAskill married Elva Abriel, a fellow photographer. The famous Bluenose stamp printed in 1929 was based on his photograph, and he became internationally known as a marine photographer. MacAskill published two books, Out of Halifax (1937) and Lure of the Sea (1951). MacAskill was also the recipient of many awards, including the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron's Prince of Wales Cup (1932-1934, 1938), Thunderbird Crest Award for marine photography, and the fellowship from the Photographers Society of America. MacAskill died on 25 January 1956.

MacAulay, Rosemary

  • Person
Rosemary McAulay became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1990s because her numerous video recordings became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

MacDonald, Andrew

  • Person
Andrew MacDonald became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1997 because their video recording “Video Yearbook, Charles P. Allen High School” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Macdonald, Angus Lewis

  • Person
  • 1890-1954
Angus Lewis Macdonald was born in Inverness County, Cape Breton on August 10, 1890. He was from a large family who moved to Port Hood, NS when he was a teenager. He earned his teaching license and taught for two years to earn money to attend St. Francis Xavier University, where he graduated in 1914. He then enlisted in the military, and served as Company Commander of the 185th Battalion of the Cape Breton Highlanders during WWI. He was injured from a sniper days before the Armistice in 1918, and recovered in England for a few months before returning to Nova Scotia. Upon returning, he enrolled in Dalhousie Law School, where he excelled in academic and extra-curricular activities. He graduated Law with High Honours in 1921, and became assistant Deputy Attorney General of Nova Scotia from 1921-1924. In 1922 he married his wife Agnes Foley, who also worked at the Attorney General’s office. She was a poet and has many pieces published in the Dalhousie Review. They had four children. Angus taught in the Dalhousie Law School from 1924-1930. In 1930 he was elected leader of the Liberal party, and in 1933 became the Premier of Nova Scotia. His Premiership was responsible for many infrastructural changes in the province, and saw roads paved, bridges built (ex: the Macdonald bridge and the Canso Causeway), electricity going to more areas of the province, and improvements to education. He also implemented old-age pensions in Nova Scotia. In 1940 he was called to federal politics to serve during WWII as the Minister of Defence for Naval Services. He returned to Nova Scotia in 1945 and became Premier again from 1945-1954. Macdonald died in office on April 13, 1954 at the age of 63. Macdonald has many things named in his honour, including the Angus L. Macdonald Bridge between Halifax and Dartmouth (a project of his during his Premiership), the St. Francis Xavier Angus L. Macdonald Library, and the A.L. Macdonald building on the Dal Sexton campus.

MacDonald, Bertrum

  • Person
Bertrum MacDonald is a Professor of Information Management at Dalhousie, and was the Director of the School of Information Management from 1995-2003, Associate Dean (Research) in the Faculty of Management from 2002-2007, and acting Dean of the Faculty of Management from 2015-2016.

Macdonald, Charles

  • Person
  • 1923-2012
Charles Macdonald was born in 1923 in Cornwall, Ontario. He was a World War II Merchant Marine veteran and a lifelong social activist. In the 1940s he was involved with the Canadian Seamen's Union. Later, as a librarian at Vancouver's Simon Fraser University, he helped to organize and lead the library's section of the faculty union. He died on April 11, 2012 at the Montreal General Hospital.

Macdonald, Charles

  • Person
  • 1828–1901

Charles Macdonald taught mathematics at Dalhousie University from 1862-1901 and was the namesake of the Macdonald Memorial Library. Born in Aberdeen in 1828 to Elizabeth and John Macdonald, he graduated from the University of Aberdeen in 1850, where he distinguished himself as the recipient of the Hutton Prize for the arts curriculum. After receiving his MA, he studied divinity and became a licentiate in the Church of Scotland, but turned his energies to teaching. He was at the Aberdeen Grammar School in 1862 when he was selected by the Church of Scotland in Nova Scotia as its nominee for the chair of mathematics at the newly re-opened Dalhousie College in Halifax.

Beloved among his students and a popular public speaker, Macdonald lectured on whimsical topics such as “On Fun,” as well as giving more contentious addresses on evolution and education. In 1882 he married Susan Morrow, who died after childbirth one year later. Macdonald did not remarry, raising his son as a single father.

Macdonald died in 1901 at the age of seventy-two after contracting pneumonia. In his will he left $2,000 to buy books for the university library, which prompted a movement among alumni to build a proper library in his honour. The Macdonald Library was built in 1916 and served as the university library until the 1970s.

MacDonald, David

  • Person
David McDonald became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1983 because of their involvement in the video recording “The thirty second effect”, which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

MacDonald, Dougie

  • Person
Dougie MacDonald, born 1968, was a fiddler who grew up in the Queensville, Inverness County area of Cape Breton [Nova Scotia], and was inspired by the famous fiddler-composer Dan Hughie MacEachern who was a neighbour, mentor, and close family friend. Over the years, Dougie released four albums and published a book of original fiddle tunes and also recorded songs at Solar Audio & Recording Limited in the late 1980s. His music travelled internationally and his compositions have been played by such notables as Jerry Holland, Sharon Shannon, Howie MacDonald, The Barra MacNeils, Solas, Rodney Miller, Otis Tomas, Liz Doherty and Máire O'Keeffe. Though not a full time professional musician, Dougie did have the opportunity to perform in Ireland, Scotland, Canada and the U.S. and participated in events such as the annual Celtic Colours International Festival and the annual Broad Cove Concert. Sadly, in the last week of 2009, between Christmas and the New Year, MacDonald died in a car accident. He was only 41 years old.

MacDonald, Duncan, Chisholm, 1896-1976

  • Person

Duncan Chisholm MacDonald was born in River Station, Nova Scotia, on 9 February 1896, the son of John R. and Mary Isabel MacDonald. In 1916, after completing his first year of engineering studies at St. Francis Xavier College, he enlisted in the Canadian Overseas Expeditionary Force, serving as a gunner in the 8th Canadian Siege Battery in England and France from 1916-1918. On his return from the war he attended medical school at Dalhousie University, followed by graduate studies in London, England. After a long career in medicine in small-town Saskatchewan, he retired to Saskatoon, where he was married in 1973 and died in 1976.

.

MacDonald, Eva Mader

  • Person
  • 1902-1997
Eva Mader MacDonald was a 1927 graduate of Dalhousie Medical School. She was born in Halifax in 1902. After medical school she worked for one year at the Nova Scotia Sanatorium, before moving to the Toronto Women's College Hospital in 1929, also working as a professor in hygiene for the University of Toronto until 1933. She held multiple positions at the Women's College Hospital, including lab director (1947-1952) and health director (1952-1956). From 1952-1962 she ran a private practice, and in 1963 she created the initiative "Operation Recall" to encourage former women doctors to return to their careers. Dr. Macdonald was appointed Chancellor of the University of Toronto from 1974-1978. Dalhousie University named her Alumnus of the Year in 1974 and granted her an Honorary Doctor of Laws. She died in April 1997.

MacDonald, Matthew

  • Person
Matthew MacDonald became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1998 because their video recording "Uncertain Hope" became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

MacDonald, Quinn

  • Person
Mike Legault became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1992 because their video recording “Terrorism: Is It a Justifiable Force?” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Macdonald, Ronald St. John, 1928-2006

  • Person
  • 1928-2006

Ronald St. John Macdonald was an internationally recognized legal scholar and jurist. He was born 20 August 1928 in Montreal, the son of Col. Ronald St. John Macdonald and Elizabeth Marie (Smith) Macdonald. After finishing his secondary education, he served with the Royal Canadian Navy Volunteer Reserve until his discharge in 1946 as a sub-lieutenant. He earned a BA from St. Francis Xavier University in 1949 and an LLB in 1952 from Dalhousie University. He furthered his legal education at the University of London (LLM, 1954) and Harvard Law School (LLM, 1955). From 1955-1957 he lectured in law at Osgoode Hall (York University), then moved to the University of Western Ontario from 1959-1961. He was appointed to the Faculty of Law at the University of Toronto in 1961, and served there as Dean of the Law from 1967-1972. From 1972-1979 he was Dean of Law at Dalhousie University Law School, where he taught international law from 1979-1990.

He served as a consultant with the Republic of Cyprus from 1974-1978, and was a Canadian representative to the United Nations General Assembly in 1965, 1966, 1968, 1977 and 1990. From 1980-1998 he was the only non-European judge to sit on the European Court of Human Rights, Strasbourg, and in 1984 he was made a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague. He was appointed an Honorary Professor of Law at Peking University from 1986-1998. Other roles included President of the World Academy of Arts and Science (1983-1986). In 1984 he was made an officer of the Order of Canada and in 2000 a Companion of the Order of Canada. Ronald St. John Macdonald died 7 September 2006 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and is buried in the family plot in the St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church parish cemetery in Lismore, Pictou County.

MacDonald, Vincent Christopher

  • Person
  • 1897-1964

Vincent Christopher MacDonald was born in 1897 in Mulgrave, Nova Scotia, to Archibald and Clara MacDonald. He was educated at Dalhousie University where he received a BA (1930) and LLB (1920). In 1927 MacDonald married his first wife, Emily O’Connor, with whom he had three children, David, Peter, and Paul. After Emily’s death in 1937, MacDonald married Hilda Durney in 1938 and had two more children, Brian Henry and Alan Hugh.

MacDonald worked as a lawyer, educator, and civil servant. Called to the bars of Nova Scotia and Ontario in 1920 and 1927 respectively, he practiced law in both provinces; worked as a law clerk in the Nova Scotia Legislature; was a research assistant to the Royal Commission on Maritime Claims; served as secretary to Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King in 1927; and lectured in law at Dalhousie from 1920-1926 and Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto from 1929-1930. In 1930 he returned to Dalhousie to teach law and in 1934 became Dean of the Law School. He also served as Assistant Deputy Minister of Labour of Canada from 1942-1944. He remained at Dalhousie until 1950 when he was appointed a Justice of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia. MacDonald worked with numerous boards and commissions throughout his career, and served as an advisor to the Newfoundland government on union with Canada in 1948. He published numerous papers, frequently on topics related to constitutional and labour law, and edited a variety of publications, including the Dominion Law Reports and Canadian Criminal Cases (1924-1934). He also served on the Board of Governors of Dalhousie University and received honorary degrees from St. Francis Xavier, British Columbia, Dalhousie, and Columbia. MacDonald died in 1964.

MacDougall, Everett, 1858-1938

  • Person

Captain Everett MacDougall was born in 1858 in Maitland, Nova Scotia. He was raised and educated in the community and married Louise C. Tupper of Truro, with whom he had at least two children.

MacDougall was born into a sea-faring family; both his father, Alexander MacDougall, and his brother, Hebert, were captains. His first voyage was in 1877. He sailed on a number of ships throughout his career, including the Sherwood, Gloaming, William Douglas (where he assumed his first command in 1886), Snow Queen, R. Morrow, Strathmuir, Sellasia, and the Trebia.

After retirement, MacDougall briefly operated a wholesale/retail store in Halifax with two partners, but sold his share in the business after a year. He then moved to Winnipeg, where he captained a small passenger boat on the Red River, worked in real estate, and eventually settled into a career in the insurance business. While in Winnipeg, MacDougall also helped to found the Cutty Sark Club, a social group where former mariners could meet and talk about sailing and past adventures. He died in 1938.

MacDougall, Herbert

  • Person
Herbert MacDougall was born in 1860 in Maitland, Nova Scotia, to Captain Alex and Mary MacDougall. In 1892 he married Eunice Hatfield.

MacDougall, Lisa

  • Person
Lisa MacDougall is a keyboardist and vocalist who has performed and recorded in Halifax, Nova Scotia. MacDougall recorded some material at the Solar Audio Recording Studio on Cunard Street in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She currently performs with the Lisa MacDougall Trio. MacDougall is a member of the Atlantic Federation of Musicians.

MacDougall, Liz

  • Person
Liz MacDougall has worked in the media arts since 1984 after completing a degree in Fine Arts at NSCAD with studies at UCSD, San Diego. Concerned about the social distribution of power, she creates her work through playful applications of new technologies. She is the director of several videos, both art and documentary, including “DEBERT BUNKER: by invitation only,” "Time to Heal" and "the Birth of Sybling," for which she won national awards. Liz has been both an employee and a member of several artist-run film and video spaces including Cineworks Film Co-op - Vancouver, the Centre for Art Tapes - Halifax, and Studio XX - Montreal. In 1996 she founded the Incomplete Dislocations Collective, a group of Halifax artists who create and exhibit new media works. She has curated new media exhibitions for the Incomplete Dislocations Collective, Edge Intermedia, the IMAA Atlantic, and the Centre for Art Tapes. Liz has also taught interactive media at NSCAD and works in Halifax as a video editor and digital media creator.

MacEachern, George

  • Person
John Bell was an archivist who worked at the Dalhousie University Archives in the 1970s. George MacEachern was a Cape Breton Labour activist.
Results 1151 to 1200 of 2266