Showing 2266 results

Authority Record
Person

Pollard, Matt

  • Person
Matt Pollard became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2009 because their video recording became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Pontchartrain, Louis Phélypeaux, comte de, 1643-1727

  • Person
  • 1643-1727
Louis Phélypeaux (1643-1727), Comte de Ponchartrain, was Chancellor of France and became Secretary of the Marine in 1690, on the death of De Seignelay. Cf. Nouveau Larousse Illustré.

Pope, Doug

  • Person
Doug Pope became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1984 because of their involvement in the video recording entitled “Indifferent city” which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Porter, Cathy

  • Person
Cathy Porter is a Halifax-based keyboardist and percussionist musician. Since performing professionally beginning in 1989, Porter has performed extensively nationally and internationally. Cathy Porter was awarded the Musician’s Achievement Award at the 2013 East coast Music Awards. Porter became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1991 through her involvement on a video tape recording entitled “Souls in the Rinse Cycle”.

Porter, Doug

  • Person
Doug Porter is a Halifax based artist and has been working with media and video mediums since the 1980s. Porter has exhibited artworks internationally. Porter is an instructor at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax.

Pothier, Hector

  • Person
  • 1891-1976
Hector Pothier was a physician and politician born in Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, in 1891. He received his early education at the local school in Eel Brook before studying at St. Anne's College in Digby County and graduating from Dalhousie Medical School in 1919. During World War One, Dr. Pothier served as a medical surgeon in the Army Medical Corps, then took post-graduate studies at St. Vincent Hospital in New York City, returning to Weymouth, Nova Scotia, in 1920 to set up a medical practice. He was affiliated with several community organizations and was elected MLA for the municipality of Clare in 1963. He served for four years, during which time he retired his medical practice and settled in Beaver River. He died in 1976.

Potter, Jacob, Captain, b. 1844

  • Person
Jacob Potter was born ca. 1844 and married Laura J. Cox in 1868. He was a master mariner who lived in Canning, Nova Scotia.

Potter, John Henry, fl. 1886

  • Person
John Henry Potter was born in Canning, Nova Scotia, in 1849. He received his certificate of competency as a master mariner in 1886. Along with his father and brothers, he commanded locally-built (Canning, Kingsport, Scotts Bay) ships such as the Boniform, Blomidon, Providence, and Habitant.

Poulin, Julien

  • Person
  • 1946-
Julien Poulin is a Canadian filmmaker from Quebec. He has performed numerous roles in various popular films and series in Quebec.

Power, Tom

  • Person
Tom Power became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2005 because their video recording “12 Steps” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Prado, Gilbertto

  • Person
Gilbertto Prado is a Brazilian multimedia artist. He is a professor in the Department of Plastic Arts at the University of São Paulo, School of Communications and Arts. Prado’s education includes Engineering and Visual Arts, including a PhD in Arts at the University of Paris, Pantheon Sorbonne. Prado became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1998 because their video recording “Narciso 25.10.88” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Pratt, Nelson

  • Person
  • 1867-1952
Nelson Pratt was a graduate of Dalhousie Medical School and a physician in Stewiacke, Nova Scotia. He was born in Selma, Hants County, where he received his early education. After teaching for several years he entered Dalhousie Medical School and received his MD in 1900. Ill health led him to live in Montana for some years before returning to his practice in Stewiacke, where he built a house and acquired a farm to raise horses. He died on 6 December 1952.

Precious, David S.

  • Person
  • 1944-2015
David Stanley Precious was a leader in the field of dental surgery and specialized in cleft palate/cleft lip surgeries. He was a professor in Dalhousie's Faculty of Dentistry, chair of the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Sciences from 1985-2004, and Dean of Dentistry from 2003-2008. Born in Ottawa on 23 April 1944, he earned a BSc (1961) and Doctorate in Dental Surgery (1969) at Dalhousie before doing his residency at McMaster University.program and finished in 1972. During his career he worked and taught in Vietnam, Brazil, Tunisia and India. He was the president of the Nova Scotia Dental Association, president of medical staff at the Victoria General Hospital, National Chief Examiner for the Royal College of Dentists of Canada, president of the Canadian Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. He received the Order of Canada in 2007, the Humanitarian award from the American College of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons, the Canadian Dental Association Medal of Honour, the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, and two honorary degrees from Laval and Dalhousie (2013). The Dalhousie University Medal in Dentistry was renamed in his honour in 2012. He died on 3 February 2015.

Preston, Lesley

  • Person
Lesley Preston is a Professor of Theatre and Chair of the Department of Theatre at Presbyterian College in Clinton, South Carolina. She received her Bachelor of Arts in Theatre from Dalhousie University and her Master of Fine Arts in Theatre Design from the University of Calgary. She previously worked as a free-lance set designer in Canada, including at Neptune Theatre in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She designed the set for the world premiere of Step Dance at Neptune.

Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone

  • Person
  • 1883-1981
Princess Alice was the granddaughter of Queen Victoria a member of the British royal family . She married Alexander Cambridge, first Earl of Athlone, in 1904, and they had two children, Lady May Helen Emma Abel Smith and Rupert Cambridge, Viscount Trematon.

Proudman, Dawna

  • Person
Dawna Proudman became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1982 because of their involvement in the video recording “Coming out strong”, which became a part of the centre’s tape collection. Dawna is an artist, writer, editor and a writing teacher. Dawna often holds workshops on writing and provides children’s programs and activities in the Durham, Ontario area.

Publicoffer, Jacob and Frederick

  • Person
  • fl. 1821
Jacob and Frederick Publicoffer [Publicover] are known to have owned land in New Dublin, Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia in the early 19th century. The Publicovers became a prominent shipping family around the Lahave River.

Pugh, Anthony

  • Person
  • [19--] - 2012
Anthony R. Pugh was born and raised in Liverpool, England. He attended Cambridge University where he received his BA (1953); MA (1954); and PhD (1959). He taught at the University of London, King's College, and Queen's University of Belfast before moving to Canada, where he taught in the French Department at the University of New Brunswick. As a scholar, he published studies of Honoré de Balzac, Blaise Pascal, and, perhaps most notably, Marcel Proust. He was well known in the Fredericton music community, serving on the UNB Creative Arts Committee and the Board of Directors for Debut Atlantic, and writing concert program notes for the Atlantic Symphony Orchestra and other groups. He died on 6 February 2012.

Pulbicover, Lemuel

  • Person
  • 1975 - [19--]
Lemuel Publicover was born on 25 May 1865 in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. He was the son of Jacob Solomon Publicover and Margaret Sarah Himmelman. Publicover was married three times: to Johanna Slauenwhite on 2 January 1889; Fanny Wagner on 19 October 1893; and Mary Veinot on 28 January 1899. The Publicovers were a prominent shipping family on the Lahave River, and Lemuel was master of the schooner Algoma.

Pullen, H.F. (Hugh Francis), 1905-1983

  • Person
  • 1905-1983

Hugh Francis Pullen was born 9 July 1905 at Oakville, Ont. and entered the Royal Naval College at Esquimalt, B.C. in 1920. He spent two years at sea with the Canadian Pacific Steamships and rejoined the Royal Canadian Navy in 1924. In 1944 he received the Order of the British Empire for his services while commanding a convoy escort group. He retired from the navy in 1960, his last appointment as flag officer Atlantic Coast, Maritime commander Atlantic, and commander Atlantic Sub-Area (NATO), 1957-1960. Rear-Admiral Pullen held executive positions in several voluntary organizations such as the United Appeal, The Royal Commonwealth Society, The Royal Life-Saving Society of Canada, the Canadian Mental Health Society, and the Anglican Church of Canada. In 1960 he was chairman for the World Refugee Campaign in Nova Scotia, and also served as a member of the National Council of the Duke of Edinburgh's Awards, 1963-1969. Pullen was awarded the Order of the British Empire (O.B.E.) and the Canadian Forces Decoration (C.D.) for his services.

Pullen was a co-founder of the Maritime Museum of Canada in 1948 (now Maritime Museum of the Atlantic), and was a member of the Advisory Council of the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic and the Halifax Grammar School. He was also first commodore of the Nova Scotia Schooner Association and a member of the Society for Nautical Research and the Navy Records Society. He was the author of several books and articles on Maritime history. Among his best known works are 'Atlantic Schooners' (1967), 'The Shannon and the Chesapeake' (1970), and 'The Pullen Expedition' (1979), for which he won the John Lyman Book Award in 1980 from the North American Society for Oceanic History. H.F. Pullen died 4 May 1983 in England. He was married to Helen (MacKean); they had seven children.

Purcell, Charlie, Jr.

  • Person
Charlie Purcell is a recording artist known to have created sound recordings at Solar Audio.

Purdy, Richard

  • Person
Richard Purdy is an interdisciplinary artist from Ottawa and has presented over a hundred solo art exhibitions since 1975. Purdy’s education includes a BFA (1975) from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, a MFA (1977) from the Villa Schifanoia Badia Fiesolana (Rosary College), in Florence, Italy and a PhD (2001) in Visual Art Practice and Study from the Université du Québec à Montréal.

Putnam, Eugen

  • Person
Very little is known about Eugen Putnam. At least two of his compositions are based on folk songs: "Quill Dance" (op. 24) and "Humoresque, after a Banjo Folk-Song" (op. 22).

Quashie, Harley

  • Person
Harley Quashie became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1995 because their video recording “Pan” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Quinn, Bob

  • Person
Bob Quinn is a musician and radio engineer. Quinn was a partner in the Halifax-based Solar Audio & Recording Limited, along with Russell Brannon and, later, Hayward Parrott.

Quinn, Cathy

  • Person
Cathy Quinn is a media artist who was active in Halifax during the 1980s. She exhibited some of her work through the Centre for Art Tapes.

Raddall, Thomas H., 1903-1994

  • Person

Born at Hythe, Kent, on November 13, 1903, Thomas Head Raddall was the son of British Army Officer Thomas Head Raddall and Ellen (née Gifford) Raddall. At the time, the family lived in the married quarters of the School of Musketry where THR's father taught. In 1909 THR's parents enrolled him in St. Leonard's Primary School for boys in Hythe. He continued there until May 1913, when his family moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia, in order for his father to assume a training position in the Canadian Militia. Sixteen months after the family's move, THR's father joined the war effort. Acting Lieutenant-Colonel Raddall, D. S. O., of the Winnipeg Rifles, was killed in action in August 1918 at Amiens.

In Halifax, THR attended Chebucto School. His final year there (Grade 9) was interrupted in December 1917, when the school was turned into a temporary morgue following the devastating Halifax Explosion. The Raddall family survived the explosion, an event which Raddall writes about in his memoirs, In My Time, and also in his history Halifax, Warden of the North.

At the age of fifteen, Raddall trained at the Canadian School of Telegraphy in Halifax and shortly thereafter (having given his age as eighteen) obtained work as a marine telegraph operator for the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company. In 1919 he was assigned to Partridge Island, New Brunswick; between then and 1922 he worked at various locations in Nova Scotia (Pictou, Sable Island, and Camperdown) as well as on ships—including the War Karma, the Prince George, the Watuka, and the Mackay-Bennett—in the North Atlantic. This period also saw the publication of his first short story, " The Singing Frenchman" ( Sunday Leader, December 1921).

From September 1922 to the spring of 1923, THR undertook accountancy training at the Maritime Business College in Halifax and by April had been hired as a bookkeeper by Macleod Pulp and Paper Company in Milton, Queen's County, Nova Scotia. It was there that he met Edith Margaret Freeman, a music teacher, in 1924; they became engaged in the spring of 1926 and were married on June 9, 1927, in Milton's Baptist Church. A slump in the pulp and paper industry, the subsequent reduction in his salary, as well as a new mortgage prompted THR to look for employment elsewhere. He worked briefly as a clerk in the construction industry before being hired (February 1929) by the Mersey Paper Company in Liverpool, where he resided until his death in 1994.

Still looking for extra income, THR sent Maclean's a short story, " The Three Wise Men," for which he received $60. From this point on, THR made a serious commitment to writing. His new boss at the Mersey Paper Mill encouraged his writing, and over the next few years, THR published Saga of the Rover (1931) and The Markland Sagas (1934). By 1938 THR was earning enough from his writing to support his growing family—his son Tom was born in 1934 and daughter Frances in 1936—that he quit his job at the Mersey Paper Company and took to writing full-time.

Over the next forty years THR published twenty-five books, dozens of articles on a wide variety of subjects, more than seventy short stories, and an autobiography; made radio and television appearances; became increasingly called upon as a guest speaker by various historical and literary societies; and was asked to become Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia (1968), an offer he declined. His first national recognition came in 1944 when The Pied Piper of Dipper Creek and Other Stories received the Governor General's Award for Fiction. He subsequently won the Governor General's Literary Award for Non-fiction in 1948 for Halifax, Warden of the North (1948) and again in 1957 for The Path of Destiny (1957). Some of his best-known works include His Majesty's Yankees (1942), Roger Sudden (1944), The Nymph and the Lamp (1950), The Wings of Night (1956) and The Governor's Lady (1960).

THR was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1953 and two years later received the Society's Lorne Pierce Medal "for distinguished service to Canadian literature." Also for his commitment and contribution to Canadian literature, THR was made an Officer of the Order of Canada (1971). He received honorary doctorates from Dalhousie (1949), Saint Mary's (1969), University of King's College (Halifax; 1972), and Saint Francis Xavier (1973).

After his death on April 1, 1994, his son donated money to the Queen's County Museum for the purposes of creating a Thomas Raddall Research Centre, and the furnishings of THR's study were moved to the museum to create a replica of his work area. Dalhousie University's Archives and Special Collections are the official repositories of his papers and his library, respectively.

Radul, Judy

  • Person
Judy Radul is an interdisciplinary artist from Vancouver, who has exhibited artwork internationally. Radul is also a writer, whose creative essays have been published in a variety of publications. She received a MFA in visual and media arts from Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson in 2000. Radul is currently the Chair of the graduate program at the School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University.

Rafuse, Ernie

  • Person
Ernie Rafuse is a recording artist known to have made sound recordings at Solar Audio in the 1980's.

Randle, Charles, 1755-1813

  • Person
  • 1755-1813
Captain Charles Randle (1755-1813) was a Royal Navy officer in command of the ship Peggy sailing between Halifax and Quebec in the late 1700s. He also served with British forces on Lake Champlain in 1776. Randle executed a number of ink and watercolour sketches of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New England, St. Lawrence River, and Lake Champlain.

Rankin, Helen

  • Person
  • 1908-1989
Helen G. Rankin (nee Williams) was a graduate of Dalhousie University (class of 1931). She was elected life Secretary of the class after graduation. Rankin is buried with her husband Murray M. Rankin (1907-1996) in Camp Hill Cemetery in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Rankin, Jimmy

  • Person
Jimmy Rankin is a country and folk musician from Mabou, Cape Breton. Jimmy and his siblings, John Morris, Raylene, Cookie and Heather started the Celtic music band, The Rankin Family, in 1989. The Rankin Family had international success in the 1990s and won several Juno awards. Jimmy Rankin has been a solo country and folk musician since 2001, and has released several albums. As a solo artist, Rankin has won multiple awards such as the East Coast Music Awards, Canadian Country Music Awards, and Canadian Radio Music Awards. Rankin received a BFA in 1989 from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, where he focused in painting and drawing.

Rankin, John Morris

  • Person
John Morris Rankin, born April 28, 1959 in Mabou, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, was a fiddler and pianist who, as leader of the Rankins, a musical group made up of members of his family, helped revive interest in North American Celtic music and culture. Rankin was a child prodigy who was featured in the 1973 documentary film 'The Vanishing Cape Breton Fiddler', and went on to achieve stardom with the tradition-oriented Rankins, who sold two million albums and won five Juno Awards. Sadly, Rankin died on January 16, 2000 near Inverness, Cape Breton Island when his truck skidded off a coastal highway into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. He was 40 years old.

Rankin, W.D.

  • Person
  • 1866-1928
W.D. Rankin was a surgeon in Woodstock, New Brunswick. He was born in Woodstock in 1866 and received his BSc in 1888 from the University of New Brunswick before attending medical school at the University of Edinburgh, graduating in 1890. He did post-graduate work at Guys Hospital and Saint Bartholomew's in London, as well as further studies at Edinburgh and in New York. He died in 1928.
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