Showing 2266 results

Authority Record
Person

Ryan, Natasha

  • Person
Natasha Ryan became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2003 because their video recording "The Musical Man” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Rutten, Jospeh Gerard

  • Person
  • 1931-2006
Joseph Rutten was a Canadian actor who worked in theatre, radio, television and film. Born in the Netherlands on 5 May 1931, he moved to Canada in the 1950s and established what would be a 60-year career as a professional performer across North America. This included 12 seasons at Stratford Festival, three national tours with the Canadian Opera Company and over thirty performances with Neptune Theatre. He was also a veteran of more than 200 CBC radio dramas and numerous television and film performances, including Pope Calixtus in the film The Conclave. He was a life member of ACTRA and served as the branch councillor for ACTRA Maritimes. He died on 21 June 2006.

Rutherford, John

  • Person
  • 1823 -1913

John Rutherford was born in Shincliffe, England. He emigrated to Albion Mines in Pictou County and served as Inspector of Mines for Nova Scotia from 1865-1872, when he was appointed General Manager and Mining Engineer for the General Mining Association, later the Halifax Company. He had extensive dealings with Albion Mines, Blight Area, Caledonia Coal Mines, and the Style Mining Area. Beginning in the late 1890s, Rutherford sold Styles Mining Company options; his goal was to sell the entirety of the property to a worthy buyer.

Robert Rutherford was John’s only surviving son (George Rutherford died in 1903), and was left in charge of his father's estate in 1913. He continued his father's efforts to sell off the Cumberland Coal Areas until at least 1932.

Rusted, Nigel

  • Person
  • 1907-2012

Nigel Francis Scott Rusted was a 1933 graduate of Dalhousie Medical School. Born on 1 July 1907 in Salvage, Newfoundland, he was raised in Upper Island Cove and Carbonear and attended high school at St. Peters High School in St. John’s. He studied at Bishop Fields College and Memorial College, earning a Diploma in Arts and Sciences in 1927, one of Memorial's first graduating class. In 1927 he earned a BSc from Dalhousie University, then entered Dalhousie Medical School and graduated in 1933.

Dr. Rusted practised as a physician and reconstructive surgeon in Newfoundland, which included travelling to remote outports to provide services. He retired from general practice in 1987, at the age of 80. In 2007 he received the Order of Newfoundland, and in 2011 the Order of Canada, for his contributions in the field of medicine. He was married to Florence Anderson, with whom he had three children. Nigel Rusted died on 19 March 2012, aged 104.

Russell, Dawn

  • Person
Dawn Russell was the Purdy Crawford Chair in Business Law, acting Dean of Dalhousie's Faculty of Law from 1995–1996, and Dean from 1996–2005. After this, she became president of St. Thomas University in New Brunswick. Law firm Stewart McKelvey the Dawn Russell Community Commitment Award in her honour.

Russell, Anne

  • Person
Anne Russell became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1993 because their video recording “Liabilities” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Russell, Alexander, G., 1845-1911

  • Person
Alexander G. Russell was born in 1845 in Nova Scotia, Canada. He entered Dalhousie College in 1867 and won the University Prize for rhetoric, the Roy Prize for elocution, and a Certificate of General Merit – Class I. He received his BA in 1871. In 1876 he married Eliza Hoxie Norris, with whom he had three sons: Henry, Gordon and Alexander. He served as pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York, where he was known as an eloquent speaker and an energetic charitable worker. Russell died in 1911.

Rusinak, Tom

  • Person
Tom Rusinak is known to have recorded songs with Solar Audio & Recording Limited in the early 1990s.

Rushton, Mark

  • Person
Mark Rushton became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2000 because their video recording “Joven Club” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Ruggles, H.L.

  • Person
H.L. Ruggles was a wholesale grocer in Bridgetown, Nova Scotia.

Ruffman, Alan

  • Person
  • [194-?] -
Alan Ruffman is a marine geologist, Dalhousie University alumnus, honorary research associate and adjunct professor in the Department of Earth Sciences, and an adjunct professor in the School of Planning at Dalhousie University. He is the author of Titanic Remembered: The Unsinkable Ship and Halifax, and Ground Zero: A Reassessment of the 1917 Explosion in Halifax Harbour.

Ruderman, A. Peter

  • Person
  • November 19, 1923 - March 14, 2007
A. Peter Ruderman was born in Brooklyn, New York, November 19, 1923. He earned his BS from Harvard University in 1942, followed by an MBA at the University of Chicago and an MA and PhD in Economics at Harvard. Ruderman had a career in international public service, including 10 years in Geneva, Switzerland and 7 years in Washington, D.C. before moving to Canada. He was a professor of Health Administration at the University of Toronto for 8 years before coming to Dalhousie University, where he remained for 14 years as Dean of the Faculty of Administrative Studies and as a Professor of Health Administration. Ruderman died on March 14, 2007.

Royer, Benjamin Franklin

  • Person
  • 1870-1961
Benjamin Royer was a physician and researcher in public health, and taught in Dalhousie's Faculty of Medicine from 1919-1923. He born near Middleburg, Pennsylvania, on 13 December 1870 and graduated from Jefferson Medical College in 1899, with a residency at the Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia from 1899-1900. He worked at Jefferson Hospital (1902-1903), the Contagious Disease Hospital (1903-1908), the [Pennsylvania] State Department of Health (1908-1919, 1947-1948), and the Halifax Health Commission in Massachusetts (1919-1923), which is when he made his connection with Dalhousie. From 1919-1921 he lectured in medical jurisprudence at Dalhousie, and from 1920-1923 he was the director of the Public Health Course for Nurses. He returned to the United States in 1924 to take up a position at the American Child Health Association, then the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness (1926-1932), the State Emergency Child Health Committee (1933-1938), and the State Sanatorium at Cresson (1943-1947). Dr. Royer died on 16 February 1961 in Greencastle, Pennsylvania.

Roué, William

  • Person
  • 1879-1970

William Roué was a naval architect and the designer of Nova Scotia's famous Bluenose schooner. Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, on 27 April 1879 to James and Grace (Penaligan) Roué, he married Winnifred Conrod in 1908, with whom he had four children: James, Harry, William and Frances. Roué developed a passion for boating at early age, built toy boats as a child and designed his first mathematically calculated yacht for his mentor Frank H. Bell in 1907. He studied mechanical drafting at the Victoria School of Art and Design and in 1920 he was contracted to design a fishing schooner to compete for the International Fisherman’s Trophy. His design, the Bluenose, was launched in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, on 26 March 1921, and went on to win many other awards.

Roué also worked for his father’s firm, Roué Carbonated Waters. After the sale of the firm in 1929, Roué became a full-time naval architect. In 1934 he moved to City Island, New York, to join the naval architecture firm Ford and Payne, which became Ford, Payne, and W.J. Roué. He returned to Nova Scotia in 1936 and in 1942 he invented the sectional barge. Roué worked as a naval architect until his death on 27 February 1970.

Rothman, Bernard

  • Person
Little is known about Bernard Rothman. He gave and signed a copy of his composition, "Sun Shower," to the Canadian pianist Ellen Ballon.

Ross, Theodore

  • Person
  • 1876-1959

The Reverend Theodore Ross was born in North Bedeque, Prince Edward Island, on 6 May 1876, to farmers Murdoch and Margaret Ross. He received his education at Prince of Wales College in Charlottetown, Dalhousie University (BA, 1899), and the Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph. He taught at Prince of Wales College and worked ca. 1919-1921 at Pine Hill, Halifax Presbyterian Theological College, which also served as a residence for Dalhousie students. During this time he worked as the provincial organizer for Dalhousie's Million Dollar Campaign committee.

Ross served as Secretary of Agriculture with the PEI government ca. 1913-, during which time he wrote numerous reports and papers on agricultural matters. He was ordained to the ministry in 1921 and served the United Church in Nova Scotia until his retirement in 1952. Ross died in Summerside, PEI, in 1959. He was married to Florence Annear of Lower Montaque, PEI, with whom he had one son and two daughters.

Ross, John R.

  • Person
  • fl. 1857 - 1880
John R. Ross was a general merchant from North East Margaree, Nova Scotia.

Ross, James

  • Person
  • 1811-1886
James Ross (1811-1886) was a Presbyterian minister, editor, and educator from West River, Pictou County, Nova Scotia. He was the son of son of the Reverend Duncan Ross and Isabella Creelman. Ross studied under Thomas McCulloch at the Pictou Academy. Ross is best known for serving as the second Principal of Dalhousie College. The College closed in 1843 after its first president, Dr. Thomas McCulloch died. The College re-opened in 1863 and Rev. James Ross served as Principal from 1863 to 1885. Under Ross' presidency, women were admitted to the university.

Ross, Harriet

  • Person
Harriet Ross associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2001 because the video recording they produced “Jack in the Box” was featured on a compilation tape that became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Ross, Alexander

  • Person
Alexander Ross was born in 1843 in Scotsburn, Pictou County, to Hugh Ross and Barbara McLeod. He was an early graduate of Dalhousie College (BA, 1867), and went on to teach in schools around Nova Scotia, as well as serving as principal of Dalhousie High School in New Brunswick. He died in Halifax in 1942.

Roper, John

  • Person
  • 1888- 1946

John Shenstone Roper was born in St. John's, Newfoundland, but was largely educated in Halifax, attending first Halifax County Academy and then Dalhousie University, where he earned a BA in 1910, an MA in 1911 (by examination in Shakespeare), and an LLB in 1913. He was editor of The Dalhousie Gazette and, while at law school, served as a lieutenant with the Dalhousie branch of the Canadian Officers' Training Corp (COTC). Roper practised law in Halifax for several years before receiving a commission in the 85th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. After various assignments at home, he was made an acting captain in 1917 and sent overseas in early 1918, where he fought in France and was awarded the Military Cross. He continued his military involvement after returning to Halifax, practicing law alongside serving as a brigade major and later the commanding officer of his former COTC.

He was a solicitor for the Nova Scotia Highways Board for three years before being appointed to the Nova Scotia Public Utilities Board from 1928-1938. He sat on the Board of Governors for Dalhousie University, served as secretary-treasurer of The Dalhousie Review, and was a longtime member of the Dalhousie Alumni Society. He also was president of the Studley Quoits Club for some time in the 1930s.

John Roper was married to Gladys Una Smith in 1915, whom he met when they were both students at Dalhousie. Their marriage ended in divorce with no children. He died at Camp Hill Military Hospital in 1946.

Roome, Richard Edward Graham, Brigadier, 1892-1985

  • Person

Brigadier Richard Edward Graham Roome was born on 1 May 1892 to George and Florence Roome in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. His early education took place in local public schools and he attended Halifax County Academy for secondary school. In 1913 he began a Bachelor of Arts program at Dalhousie University, but left in 1915 before completing his degree, to join the 2nd Heavy Battery, Royal Canadian Artillery. In England he was commissioned with the Royal Field Artillery of the British Army in September 1915. During World War I Roome saw action first in France, where he was wounded, and later in India and Mesopotamia.

After the war Roome returned to Canada and co-founded Harris and Roome Ltd., a wholesale distribution company specializing in electrical items, hardware, and batteries. He served as vice president but remained active in the local militia, most notably helping to form the 87th Field Battery in Dartmouth in 1921.

With the onset of World War II Roome returned to active duty, training troops and visiting training camps across Canada. He organized the CANLOAN program, which enabled surplus Canadian officers to serve in the British Army, which by 1943 was suffering from a serious shortage of younger infantry officers. From 1940-41 Roome was posted overseas as the Commanding Officer of the 5th Field Regiment of the Royal Canadian Artillery. In 1942 he returned to Canada, was promoted to brigadier, and placed in command of the Artillery of the 7th Divisions based in Eastern Canada. Roome’s stay in Eastern Canada was short; in 1943 he became Deputy Adjutant General for Officers and posted to National Defense Headquarters in Ottawa, where he also became chairman of the Officer’s Selection, Promotion, Reclassification and Disposal Board. In 1945 he was awarded the Commander of the British Empire medal for his service. Roome remained in Ottawa until the end of the war when he retired from active service.

In 1946 Roome returned to the Halifax area where he resumed work at Harris and Roome Ltd. and began commanding local militia units. He retired in earnest in 1951, but maintained his interest in military history, researching and writing a series of articles on the American Civil War for the Canadian Gunner.

Roome died in August of 1985 at age 93. He is known to have had one daughter, Lorna, with wife Helen (Jones).

Roome, Graham

  • Person
  • 1896 - [19--]
Graham Roome was born on 30 January 1896 in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, to George N. Roome and Florence A. Graham. He was working as a commercial traveller in 1916 when he joined the Halifax No. 10 Siege Battery and went overseas. In 1918 he was discharged and commissioned as a flight cadet in the RAF. The war ended shortly after and he returned to Halifax, where he worked as an engineer and married Annie Belle Hollett.

Roome (née Hollett), Annie Belle

  • Person
  • 1896 - [19--]
Annie Belle Roome (née Hollett) was born in Burin, Newfoundland, in 1895 to Benjamin and Sadie Hollett. In 1920 she married Graham Roome, with whom she built a house in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia.

Roland, Albert E.

  • Person
  • 1911-1991

Albert E. Roland was Provincial Botanist for the Nova Scotia Department of Agriculture and Professor Emeritus of Biology at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College. Born in Aylesford, Kings County, in 1911, he graduated from Acadia University with a BA in 1931 before attending University of Toronto to study plant pathology, earning an MA in 1936, and then the University of Wisconsin, where he was granted a PhD in 1944.

In 1944 he joined the Nova Scotia Department of Agriculture and started teaching at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College. He was an active researcher and writer and published prolifically, including the seminal Flora of Nova Scotia (1944), which was revised in 1988 as Roland's Flora of Nova Scotia (ed. Marian Zink); Geological Background and Physiogeography of Nova Scotia (1982); and, with Randal Olson, Spring Wildflowers (1993). The herbarium collection at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College is named in recognition of his lifelong contribution to the understanding of Nova Scotia's natural history.

Albert Roland was a member of the Nova Scotia Institute of Science, the Agricultural Institute of Canada, the Nova Scotia Institute of Agrologists, and the Canadian Botanical Association. He served as president of the Nova Scotia Institute of Agrologists (1958-1959) and became a fellow of the Agricultural Institute of Canada in 1971. Named as one of thirty outstanding graduates of Acadia University between 1910-1960, he was granted an honorary DSc from Acadia (1972), the centennial medal (1967) and an LLD from Dalhousie University (1980). He died in September 1991 in Truro, Nova Scotia.

Rogers, Gerry

  • Person
Gerry Rogers is a documentary filmmaker based in St. John’s. Rogers runs her own production company, Augusta Productions. Rogers was elected to the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly in the 2001 provincial election, representing the district of St. John’s Centre. Rogers became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2004 because their video recording “Pleasant Street” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Rogers, Byron

  • Person
  • 1947 -
Byron Rogers is a sociologist in Ottawa, Ontario.
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