Showing 2266 results

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Person

MacEachern, Ronnie.

  • Person
Ronnie MacEachern is a recording artist who is known to have recorded songs at Solar Audio & Recording Limited in the late 1970s.

MacEachern, Stanley

  • Person
Stanley MacEachern is a former farmer who grew up in Mabou, Cape Breton, and who now lives in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. Stanley has been hospitalized several times for bipolar disorder and lived on the street for a brief period. He was also institutionalized at one point in the Nova Scotia Rehabilitation Centre. Today, Stanley leads a full life, working part time, running his own yard work and gardening service, serving on mental health-related committees, attending New Beginnings Clubhouse, and socializing with friends. He attributes his recovery from mental illness to his positive attitude, healthy lifestyle and spiritual practice.

MacGillivray, Dougald, 1862-1937

  • Person
  • 1862-1937
Dougald MacGillivray was a founder and financial and literary supporter of The Dalhousie Review. He was born in Collingwood, Ontario, and moved to Halifax in 1906 to take up an appointment as manager of the Halifax branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce. MacGillivray was also the president and founder of the Canadian Club in Halifax. He died on 9 August 1937.

MacGregor, James Gordon

  • Person
  • 1759–1830
James Gordon MacGregor was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, on 31 March 1852 to the Reverend Peter Gordon MacGregor and Caroline McColl. He was educated in Halifax at the Free Church Academy and Dalhousie University, from which he received his BA in 1871 and MA in 1874. He went on to study natural philosophy (physics) at the University of Edinburgh, Leipzig University and the University of London, where he took his DSC in 1876. In 1877 he returned to Dalhousie to lecture in physics before being appointed George Munro professor at the age of 27. In 1901 MacGregor left Dalhousie to take up the chair of natural philosophy at Edinburgh, where he died in 1913.

MacInnis, Daniel Finlayson

  • Person
  • 1889-1973
Daniel MacInnis was a 1918 graduate of Dalhousie Medical School. He was born in Middle River, Nova Scotia, in 1889. He moved to Saskatchewan to teach school, but returned to Nova Scotia to attend medical school. On staff as Senior Houseman at the Victoria General Hospital in 1917, he helped many victims of the Halifax Explosion. Two years later he joined the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps and served overseas. After the war, he settled in Shubenacadie and opened a medical practice, which he maintained until his retirement in 1963. He was also on staff at the Colchester County Hospital. Dr. MacInnis was a senior member of the Canadian Medical Association and honorary president of the Dalhousie Medical Alumni Association. He died in May 1973.

MacInnis, Neil

  • Person
Neil MacInnis is a Montreal artist whose work revolves around the themes of LGBTQ. MacInnis was associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in Halifax because of his video “Gay Generations”. He also curated the 5th Annual Art by Gay Men exhibition with Jim MacSwain in the 1980s.

MacIntosh, George Arthur

  • Person
  • 1878-1945
George Arthur MacIntosh was a 1905 graduate of Dalhousie Medical School. He was born in 1878 in Argyle, Nova Scotia, and educated at Pictou Academy before entering Dalhousie Medical School in 1901. After graduation he worked at the Nova Scotia Hospital for four years, working under Dr. W.H. Hattie and completing the first study of Huntington's Chorea made in Nova Scotia. He spent a year at Saint Bartholomew's Hospital, London, and six months at the Rotunda Hospital in Dublin before setting up a general practice back in Halifax. After suffering a serious infection, resulting in the amputation of an arm, Dr. MacIntosh began work at the Victoria General Hospital, with a brief interruption from 1928-1930 when he served as Chief Medical Officer for the province. In 1930 he returned to the Victoria General as superintendent, a position he retained until his death in 1945.

MacIntosh, James

  • Person
  • fl. 1800
James MacIntosh lived in Pictou, Nova Scotia, and died in the 1820s. His executors were George Glennie and Mary Ann MacIntosh.

MacIntosh, James, fl. 1800

  • Person
James MacIntosh lived in Pictou and died in the 1820s. His executors were George Glennie and Mary Ann MacIntosh.

MacIsaac, Dave

  • Person
  • 1955-
Dave MacIsaac, born 1955, is an internationally recognized musician known for playing such stringed instruments as the guitar, fiddle, mandolin, and dobro. MacIsaac grew up in a musical household with his father Alex Dan being a fiddler. His introduction to the music was also through the generous fiddlers visiting his home and through listening to Cape Breton 78 rpm recordings. He fashioned his guitar accompaniment after the piano playing of Mary Jessie MacDonald, developing his own techniques to imitate her walking bass lines and, like Mary Jessie, he is daring in his interplay between chording and melody. MacIsaac provided guitar accompaniment for Buddy MacMaster at Cape Breton Club dances in Halifax, performed with him on the "Ceilidh" television shows and many times at Glencoe Hall in Glencoe Station, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.

MacIsaac, Dorothy

  • Person
Dorothy MacIsaac is a recording artist known to have make sound recordings at Solar Audio in the 1970's.

Mack, Jason M.

  • Person
  • 1843-1927
Jason M. Mack was born in Mill Village, Nova Scotia, the son of Jason Mack and Augusta Miller of United Empire Loyalist descent. He served as stipendiary magistrate for the Liverpool police district.

MacKay, Alexander Howard

  • Person
  • 1848-1929
Alexander Howard MacKay graduated from Dalhousie University in 1873 with a Bachelor of Arts degree and an Honors Certificate of the second class in Mathematics. He was the first student to graduate from Dalhousie University with Honours. MacKay delivered the valedictory address at convocation on April 30, 1873.

Mackay, D.C.

  • Person
  • 1906-1979

D.C. (Donald Cameron) Mackay was born in 1906 in Fredericton, New Brunswick, son of William and Jane. The family moved to Nova Scotia in 1912 and Mackay began his education at Halifax Academy. After a brief period of study at Dalhousie University, Mackay entered the Nova Scotia College of Art, graduating in 1928. In 1929 he began graduate studies at the Chelsea School of Art in London, England, and took classes at the Académie Colorossi in Paris.

In 1930 MacKay moved to Toronto, Ontario. He worked as an illustrator while studying at the University of Toronto, then taught illustration and etching at the Northern Vocational School and at the Art Gallery of Toronto. In 1934 he was married to Mollie Bell and returned to Halifax, where he began work as an instructor and later served as vice-principal at the Nova Scotia College of Art. He also held an appointment as special lecturer in the Department of Fine Arts at Dalhousie.

Mackay joined the Canadian Navy at the beginning of World War Two and in 1943 he was appointed an Official War Artist. He retired from service in 1945 and returned to the Nova Scotia College of Art as principal, also taking up his lecturing position at Dalhousie. After the death of his wife, Mollie, he was remarried in 1966 to Margaret MacNeil, with whom he had one daughter, Margot. Mackay remained principal of the Nova Scotia College of Art until his retirement in 1971. He was the illustrator and co-author, with Harry Pier, of Master Goldsmiths and Silversmiths of Nova Scotia and their Marks (1948) and Silversmiths and Related Craftsmen of the Atlantic Provinces (1973). Mackay illustrated many other books and periodicals, especially those related to Canadian history. He died in 1979.

MacKay, Duncan Oliver

  • Person
  • 1871 - [before 1937]
Duncan Oliver MacKay was a Dalhousie student who received his BA in 1890, graduated from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1891, and served as a Presbyterian minister.

MacKay, Ebenezer

  • Person
  • ?-1920
Ebenezer MacKay graduated from Dalhousie University in 1886 with First Rank Honours in Experimental Physics and Chemistry and the McKenzie Gold Medal. He also won prizes in Classics and Mathematics. He went on to receive a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University. He was appointed the Alexander McLeod Professor of Chemistry at Dalhousie University in 1896 and stayed there until his sudden death in 1920.

MacKay, Frank

  • Person
  • 1944-
Frank MacKay is a recording artist who is known to have recorded songs at Solar Audio & Recording Limited in the late 1980s.

MacKay, Frank

  • Person
  • 1946-2019
Frank MacKay was the lead singer of The Lincolns, an R&B band formed in Truro, Nova Scotia in 1961. Fellow band members included Layne Francis, Lee Taylor, Rod Norrie, and Brain Chrisholm whom MacKay had met at school at age fifteen. He was mentored by Murray Dorrington. MacKay started pursuing a solo career around 1970 while still performing with The Lincolns which became known as one of Nova Scotia's most popular dance bands of the 60's. Frank MacKay passed away in May of 2019 following surgery.

MacKay, Laura

  • Person
Laura MacKay became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2003 because their video recording "Manufactuary" became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

MacKay, Robert William Murray

  • Person
  • 1902-1977
Robert William "Murray" MacKay was a professor of psychiatry at Dalhousie University and superintendent of the Nova Scotia Hospital. Born in Pictou County, Nova Scotia, on 17 February 1902, he was educated at West Branch Elementary School, Pictou Academy and Dalhousie Medical School, graduating in 1928. He studied psychiatry at Brandon Mental Hospital in Manitoba and at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, MI. In 1931 MacKay returned to Halifax for a position as Assistant Superintendent of the Nova Scotia Hospital. He was appointed Acting Superintendent in 1935 and Administrator-Superintendent in 1937, a post he held until his retirement in 1967. He lectured on psychiatry at the Faculty of Medicine until 1940, when the department was founded and he became a full-time professor. Dr. MacKay was a member of Canadian and American psychiatric associations, a fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, and a member of the Board of Governors of Pine Hill Divinity Hall. The Nova Scotia Hospital named the Children's Unit after Murray MacKay following his retirement. He died on 9 May 1977.

MacKay, W. Andrew

  • Person
  • 1929-2013

William Andrew MacKay was a Canadian lawyer and former judge, civil servant, legal academic and eighth president of Dalhousie University.

He was born on 20 March 1929 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Robert Alexander and Mary Kathleen MacKay. He began his schooling in Halifax and received his high school diploma in Ottawa before returning home to Dalhousie University, where he earned a BA (1950), JD (1953), and LLM (1954). He was admitted to the Nova Scotia Bar in 1954 and appointed Queen’s Council in 1973.

MacKay began his professional career in 1954 with the Canadian Department of External Affairs. In 1957 he was hired as an assistant professor of law at Dalhousie University, promoted to associate professor in 1959 and full professor in 1961. He received a Ford Foundation Fellowship to study at Harvard University in 1961 and was appointed George Munro Professor of Law. From 1964-1969 he served as Dean of Law and Weldon Law Professor, and in 1969 became Vice-President of Dalhousie under the administration of Henry D. Hicks. MacKay was appointed president and vice-chancellor on Hicks' retirement in 1980, positions he held until 1986. Throughout his administrative career he continued to teach constitutional and international law. After retiring from Dalhousie he served as Ombudsman for Nova Scotia from 1986-1988 and became a judge in the Federal Court of Canada (Trial Division) in 1988, where he served until 2004. From 2004-2007 he was a Deputy Judge of the Federal Court.

Andrew MacKay married Alexa Eaton Wright in July 1954, with whom he had one daughter, Margaret Kathleen. He died on 12 January 2013.

MacKeen, John Crerar

  • Person
  • 1898-1972
Lieutenant-colonel John Crerar (Jack) MacKeen was a prominent Nova Scotia businessman and a protégé of Izaak Walton Killam, the financier and educational philanthropist. The son of David E. MacKeen and Jane Kate Crerar, he was born 15 December 1898 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. After serving in the First World War, he attended Halifax County Academy and the Royal Military College in Kingston, Ontario. He later received an honourary law degree from Dalhousie University. MacKeen was the chairman and executive of many companies, including Nova Scotia Light and Power, where he was employed for four decades. From 1931 he served as president, assuming the title of chairman of the board in 1961, a post he held until January 1972, nine months before his death.

MacKenzie, Arthur Stanley

  • Person
  • 1865-1938

Arthur Stanley MacKenzie was an important figure in education in Nova Scotia for over forty years. He was born in Pictou on 20 September 1865, the son of George Augustus and Catherine Denoon Mackenzie. He was educated in public schools in Pictou, New Glasgow and Halifax before studying at Dalhousie, where he won the George Munro Bursary and exhibition and the Sir William Young gold medal and honours in mathematics and mathematical physics; he received is B.A. at Dalhousie in 1885. He received his doctorate from Johns Hopkins University in 1894. In 1895 MacKenzie married Mary Lewis Taylor, of Indianapolis, who died one year later. MacKenzie subsequently raised their daughter, Marjorie, on his own.

MacKenzie taught at Yarmouth Seminary from 1885-1887. He was hired as a tutor in mathematics and physics at Dalhousie from 1887-1889 and then spent two years at Johns Hopkins as a scholar and teaching fellow. From 1891-1905 he taught physics at Bryn Mawr College and then returned to Dalhousie University as George Munro professor of physics. He was appointed university president in 1911, a position he held until his retirement in 1931.

MacKenzie was widely recognized for his research contributions. He was a member of the Nova Scotia Institute of Science, the American Physical Society, and the National Research Council of Canada. He was a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and of the Royal Society of Canada. He took an active role in his community, serving as president of both Ashburn Golf Club and the Halifax Curling Club. MacKenzie received an honorary degree from McGill University in 1921 and Dalhousie University in 1931. Arthur Stanley Mackenzie died in Halifax on 2 October 1938.

MacKenzie, Arthur Whittier

  • Person
  • 1898-1986
Arthur Whittier MacKenzie was a politician and Liberal member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. Born on 15 June 1898 in Nine Mile River, Nova Scotia, he graduated from the Nova Scotia Agricultural College in 1915 before joining the Army and serving overseas during the First World War. He remained in the Army through the Second World World War, retiring as a Lieutenant-Colonel. From 1945-1956 he represented Guysborough as a Liberal MLA, serving in the province's Executive Council as Minister of Agriculture and Minister of Lands and Forests from 1945-1954, and as Minister of Highways and Public Works from 1954-1956. He died in 1986.

MacKenzie, Charles Guy, Reverend, 1895-19??

  • Person
Charles Guy MacKenzie was born in 1889 in Sackville, New Brunswick. He graduated from Dalhousie University in 1915 and became a United Church minister. From 1936-1940 he served at Sackville United Church in New Brunswick.

MacKenzie, Colin

  • Person
Colin MacKenzie became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2006 because their film “Train Train” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

MacKenzie, Ian

  • Person
  • 1910-1966
Ian MacKenzie was professor of surgery at Dalhousie University from 1957-1967 and head of the department of surgery at Victoria General Hospital, Halifax. Born in 1910 in Scotland, he graduated from medical school at the University of Edinburgh in 1933. In 1939 he was awarded a Commonwealth Research Scholarship to study cancer at the Rockefeller Institute in New York. Returning to Britain at the outbreak of World War Two, he served in France and the Middle East, first with the 9th Lancers and later with the RAMC, before being posted for special duties in 1942. He was parachuted into Yugoslavia to serve with Marshal Tito at partisan headquarters, and was later dropped into occupied France for service with the French resistance movement. For his services he was awarded the Croix de Guerre with gold star and mentioned in dispatches. He was also appointed MBE.After demobilization in 1946 he returned to the department of surgery at Edinburgh University, and later moved to the department of surgery at Durham University. He joined Dalhousie Faculty of Medicine in 1957. In Halifax, he also served as consultant surgeon to the Canadian Forces Hospital and to the Camp Hill Hospital. Before his death in 1967 he was engaged in cancer research.

MacKenzie, Jemima (Mina), Dr.

  • Person
  • 1872-1940
Dr. Jemima (Mina) MacKenzie was born in Waterside, Nova Scotia on August 18, 1872. She went to Pictou Academy and worked as a school teacher before attending Dalhousie Medical School. She graduated in 1904 and worked an internship in Boston, before leaving to pursue missionary work in India with her sister. She worked in various rural communities in India, started a hospital, and adopted dozens of orphaned children. In 1919 she was awarded the Kaisar-i-Hind medal, India’s highest honour, for her work in medicine in India. She returned to Nova Scotia in 1920 when her father was ill, and practiced medicine out of her home in Pictou County until she returned to India in 1923 after her father’s death. She worked in India until 1939, when she returned to live in Nova Scotia until her death in 1940. During her time in India she started many hospitals and orphanages. Many of her adopted children moved to Canada, where their descendants have continued the work of Dr. Mina through the Dr. Mina MacKenzie Memorial Trust Fund, which continues to provide healthcare and orphanages in rural India.

Mackenzie, John James

  • Person
  • 1847-1879
John James (J.J.) MacKenzie was a graduate of Dalhousie College, earning his BA in 1871 and his MA in 1872. He was born in Greenhill, Pictou County, in 1847. From 1869-1872 he taught at Pictou Academy. He moved to Germany in 1872, earning his PhD at Leipzig University in 1876. In 1877 he returned to Halifax to take up an appointment at Dalhousie as Chair of Physics, a position he held for less than two years, as he died of pneumonia in 1879 at age thirty-one. In addition to teaching, J.J. MacKenzie delivered a popular series of public science lectures in Halifax and was an active promoter of the Technical Institute.

MacKenzie, Karen

  • Person
Karen MacKenzie became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes because their audio recording became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

MacKenzie, Kenneth Alexander

  • Person
  • 1880-1958
Kenneth Alexander MacKenzie was a 1903 graduate of Dalhousie Medical School and Professor of Medicine from 1926-1945. He was born in Pictou, Nova Scotia, in 1880 and received his early education in Pictou and Springhill before going to Dalhousie. After graduation he practiced briefly in Cape Breton and then took up post-graduate studies in internal medicine in England. During World War One he left his studies to serve with the Dalhousie No. 7 Stationary Unit. After the war he retuned to England before moving back to Halifax. In 1926 Dr. MacKenzie was appointed Professor of Medicine at Dalhousie, a post he held until 1945. He was an active member in several professional associations, including president of the Medical Society of Nova Scotia from 1932-1933. In 1950 he received an Honorary Doctor of Laws from Dalhousie University. He died on 12 May 1958.

MacKenzie, Luther Burns

  • Person
  • 1880-1981
Luther Burns MacKenzie was born in West River, Pictou County, in May 1880 and moved to Bedford at the age of two. He earned his BA from Dalhousie University in 1900 and an MD from New York University in 1904, after which he established a private medical practice in New York City. In 1920, he joined the Faculty of Medicine at New York University. MacKenzie played a significant role in the expansion and development of the Bellevue-New York University Medicine Centre. In 1947 he was awarded the NYU Alumni Meritorious Service Medal and was made Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine in 1951. He was appointed to the NYU Board of Governors and awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws in 1957. Dalhousie bestowed this same distinction in 1980, conferred on his 100th birthday. Dr. MacKenzie died in August 1981.

MacKenzie, Norman Archibald MacRae, Hon.

  • Person
  • 1894-1986

Norman MacKenzie, better known as Larry, was born in 1894 in Pugwash, Nova Scotia. He was educated at Pictou Academy before moving to Saskatchewan at the age of fifteen to farm with his brothers. In 1913 he entered Dalhousie, where he studied for one year before enlisting in the army. From 1914-1918 he served overseas, returning to Dalhousie to graduate with his BA in 1921 and his LLB in 1923. He received his LLM from Harvard University, where he also won a Carnegie fellowship to study international law at Cambridge.

Following two years as legal advisor to the International Labour Office in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1927 MacKenzie took up a professorial appointment at University of Toronto, where he taught for thirteen years. In 1940 he became president of the University of New Brunswick, and from 1944-1960 he served as president of the University of British Columbia. He was appointed to the Senate from 1966-1969. MacKenzie and his wife, Margaret Thomas (1903–1987), had three children: Bridget, Susan, and Patrick Thomas. He died in 1986.

Mackenzie, William Roy

  • Person
  • 1883-1957

William Roy Mackenzie (1883-1957) was a Canadian folklorist, literary critic, and author who collected songs and ballads in Nova Scotia in the early twentieth century. He was born in River John, Pictou County, Nova Scotia on February 14, 1883. He studied at Dalhousie University, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1902 and a Master of Arts in 1903. He went on to study with George Lyman Kittredge at Harvard University, where he earned a Master of Arts in 1905 and a PhD in English in 1910.

In 1918, Mackenzie joined the faculty of the Department of English at Washington University. He wrote two books on Nova Scotia ballads and was considered by many to be one of the greatest authorities on Shakespeare. He died in 1957.

MacKenzie-Bourne, Veronique

  • Person
Veronique MacKenzie-Bourne became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2001 because their video recording “In the Wings” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Mackie, Irwin Cameron

  • Person
  • 1880 - 1970
Irwin Cameron Mackie was a metallurgist and inventor. He was born in Bayview, Prince Edward Island, in 1880 and graduated from Dalhousie in 1901. In 1902 he moved to Sydney, Nova Scotia, to join the company that became DOSCO (Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation), where eventually he was appointed Director of Metallurgy and Research. In the late 1920s he developed the "Mackie Process," a method for preventing cracks from appearing in rails by slowing down the cooling process, which was adopted and employed by steel producers around the world by the early 1930s. In 1946 he received the Inco Medal and in 1962, one year after retiring from what was then the Dominion Steel Company, he was granted honorary membership in the Canadian Standards Association. He died in Sydney in 1970.
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