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Authority Record

Nova Hereford Farms.

  • Corporate body

Nova Hereford Farms was located in Petite Riviere, NS, Canada. Ernest Himmelman purchased the land in 1940 for the purpose of breeding Holstein dairy cattle, however, decided to change his focus to breeding Hereford beef cattle.

Nova Hereford Farms was known to have one of the finest herds of Herefords, and was the first farm east of Ontario to have sold bulls to Alberta and British Columbia farmers. The cattle won national acclaim for the quality of Ernest's breeding operation. In 1960, the Hereford bull "Whittern National Velvet" was judged Canada's grand champion at the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto, Ontario.

Notman Studio

  • Corporate body
  • 1856-1935
WIlliam Notman founded his photography business in Montreal in 1856. By the 1880's, Notman had expanded his business to over 20 studios throughout Canada and the United States, including one in Halifax. In 1882, Sandham left the business and Notman's son, William McFarlane Notman, because his junior business partner. After Notman's death in 1891, William McFarlane and his brother Charles Frederick carried on business until it was sold to Associated Screen News in 1935.

Notman and Fraser

  • Corporate body
  • 1868-1880
William Notman opened a branch of his photographic studio in Toronto in 1868, under the name Notman & Fraser. John Arthur Fraser, the head of Notman's art department, was Notman's partner and manager of the studio.

Nordheimer Piano & Music Co.

  • Corporate body
  • 1842-1927
The Nordheimer Piano & Music Co., known as A. & S. Nordheimer Co. prior to 1898, were music dealers and publishers, and piano dealers and manufacturers. They were active in Kingston, Ontario (1842-1844) and Toronto, Ontario (1844-1927).

Norcross, Kevin

  • Person
Kevin Norcross became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1988 because of their involvement in audio recordings which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Nock, Bobby

  • Person
Bobby Nock became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1999 because their video recordings became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

No. 7 Stationary Hospital Benevolent Association

  • Corporate body
  • 1915 - 1975
The No. 7 Stationary Hospital Benevolent Association was created in 1915 in response to the establishment of the No. 7 Canadian Stationary Hospital (Dalhousie University), an overseas hospital unit from Halifax that served in England and France, posted for over a year close to the front in the northern French village of Arques. The Benevolent Association established a fund to support members of the unit and their surviving relatives. In August 1975 the fund was closed out and the remainder of the monies transferred to Dalhousie University.

Nixon, John Alexander

  • Person
  • 1874-1951
John Alexander Nixon was born in 1874 and educated at Cambridge University and St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London. He was House Physician and Ophthalmic House Surgeon at St. Bartholomew's Hospital (1900-1901), House Surgeon at Metropolitan Hospital in London (1901-1902), House Physician and Senior Resident Officer at Bristol Royal Infirmary (1902-1906), Consulting Physician in France (1918), and Consulting Physician at Bristol Royal Hospital. He was also Emeritus Professor of Medicine at the University of Bristol in England. He died in 1951.

Niepold, Frank

  • Person
Frank Niepold became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1987 because of their involvement in a video recording entitled “NSCAD club flamingo party tape- 4 student videos” which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Nicol, Nancy

  • Person

Nancy Nicol is a professor in the Visual Arts Department at York University, where she has taught since 1989. Between 1979 and 2009 she created over thirty films and has exhibited widely in national and international festivals, conferences and community based organizations. In the early 1980s, Nicol screen films at the Centre for Art Tapes in Halifax. Begun In 1999,"From Criminality to Equality" includes the films: Stand Together, the Queer Nineties, Politics of the Heart and The End of Second Class. Her work on lesbian and gay history also includes a number of shorts: Pride and Resistance, and Proud Lives. This body of work has received a number of honours including: the Elle Flanders Award for Best Documentary, Inside Out, Toronto, 2007 and 2006; Honourable Mention for Best Canadian Female Director in the shorts category, Inside Out, 2007; the Audience Choice Award for Best Documentary, Image + Nation, Montréal, 2006; the Audience Choice Award, Making Scenes, Ottawa, 2002 and the John Bailey Completion Award, Inside Out, 2002.

In 2008, Nicol completed One Summer in New Paltz, A Cautionary Tale, (54 minutes) which investigates the civil disobedience same-sex marriage movement in the U.S.A during 2004. It was short-listed for the Derek Oyston CHE Film Prize, at the 23rd London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival, London, UK, in 2008, an honour that celebrates films which contribute to the struggle for lesbian and gay rights. Nicol's recent scholarly publications include: "Politics of the Heart: recognition of homoparental families", in Who's Your Daddy? and other writings on queer parenting, ed. Rachel Epstein, Sumac Press, March, 2009; "Legal Struggles and Political Resistance: Same-Sex Marriage in Canada and the U.S". co-written with Miriam Smith, Sexualities, Sage Publications, December 2008, Vol 11, Issue 6, 667-687; and "Politics of the Heart: recognition of homoparental families", Florida Philosophical Review: Journal of the Florida Philosophical Association, University of Central Florida Department of Philosophy, Vol 8, issue 1, summer 2008.

Nicholson, Rt. Rev. Clarence McK.

  • Person
Dr. C. M. Nicholson was Principal of Pine Hill Divinity Hall from 1946 to 1971. The Pine Hill Alumni Assocition established a memorial fund in Nicholson's honour and the fund now supports the Nicholson Lectures at the Atlantic School of Theology.

Nichols, Edward Wilber

  • Person
  • 1881-1939

Edward Wilber Nichols was a classicist with a long and close association with Dalhousie University. The son of a farmer, he was born in 1881 in Lansdowne, Digby County, where he received his early education. He earned both his BA (1906) and MA (1910) from Dalhousie before receiving a PhD in 1913 from Yale University, where he taught classics until 1918. In 1919 he returned to Dalhousie as an assistant professor in the Department of Classics, eventually becoming department head in 1930, a position he held until his death in 1939 at the age of fifty-seven. His widow, Dr. Roberta Bond, a graduate of Dalhousie Medical School, raised their four children while running a wartime medical practice and teaching in the Department of Anatomy, and eventually developed and headed the Department of Anaesthesia at the Children's Hospital.

In the obituary that appeared in Volume LXXII of the Dalhousie Gazette, Charles Lindsay Bennet remembers his colleague as a "complete Dalhousian," whose dominant principle was loyalty to the College.
https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/handle/10222/50802

Nicholls, George

  • Person

George Van Vliet Nicholls, QC was born on October 25th, 1908 in Montreal, Quebec to Dr. Albert George and Lucia Pomeroy (Van Vliet) Nicholls. The family moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1915 where Nicholls graduated from the Halifax County Academy with the highest standing in his class. He went on to Dalhousie University, and then transferred to McGill University his junior year, later graduating with honours in English literature in 1929 and a civil law degree from McGill in 1932. Nicholls was admitted to the Quebec Bar that same year and practiced law for a few years in Montreal. The Nicholls family had returned to Montreal in 1927.

Nicholls went on to work in the legal and industrial relations departments at the Toronto head office of the Canadian Manufacturers’ Association in 1937. He was commissioned by the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1941, and was the first sectary and chairman of the K.R. (Air) Revision Committee. In 1943, he joined the staff of the Judge Advocate General’s Brach in London and transferred to the Reserve in December, 1945.

After the service, Nicholls was appointed Manager of the Research Department at the Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Montreal. Nicholls was appointed to Queen’s Council in 1953 in Quebec. He also became the editor of the Canadian Bar Review until 1957 when he joined the Faculty of Law at Dalhousie.

While at Dalhousie, he taught administrative law and labour law. He also originated and taught the courses, the Introduction to the Private Law of Quebec and Legal Research and Writing which is still part of the curriculum and became a model for legal research and writing courses at other law schools across Canada. Nicholls also assisted in the creation of the Dalhousie Law Journal, which was first published in September, 1973 and served as one of the original editors and was on the editorial board. He’s been published in multiple legal journals and reviews writing on topics covering administrative and common law, labour law and Quebec law and was the author of The Responsibility for Offences and Quasi-offences under the Law of Quebec.

Nicholls was a member of the Senate Committee, and chairman of the Art Gallery Committee and Dalhousie University’s General Committee on Cultural Activities. He was also one of the people responsible for the concept and planning of the Dalhousie Arts Centre. Nicholls also served as chairman for the public relations of the Waegwoltic Club.

George V.V. Nicholls was married to Patricia “Pat” Ross and had one daughter, Anne. Nicholls died on August 9, 1986 in Halifax.

Nichol, Dave

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