Showing 4086 results

Authority Record

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.

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.

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.

Luckhardt and Belder

  • Corporate body
  • 1899-
Luckhardt and Belder are listed as publishers in New York starting in 1899.

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.

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.

Lovett, Jonathan Henry, 1779-1805

  • Person
Jonathan Henry Lovett was the son of Reverend Verney Lovett, chaplain to the Prince of Wales. Born in 1779, he travelled to Bombay at the age of seventeen and became a writer in the service of the East India Company. His facility for languages caused him to be selected by the Marquess Wellesley, India's Governor General, as the political and commercial resident of the court of Persia, at Boshire. Illness curtailed his appointment and he died at sea in 1805 at the age of twenty-seven on his return to England.

Lounder, Carolyn

  • Person
Carolyn Lounder has been associated with the Centre for Art Tapes when a tape she collaborated on “The Thirty Second Effect” from 1983 became a part of their tape collection. The tape was a summer project created at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design.

Longley, Willard V., 1887-1957

  • Person
  • 1887-1957
Willard V. Longley taught agricultural economics at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College. Born on 4 October 1887 in Paradise, Nova Scotia, he graduated from NSAC in 1909 and from the Ontario Agricultural College in 1911. In 1919 he emigrated to the United States and became a naturalized citizen, living and working as a county agent in Kittson, Minnesota. He earned a PhD from the University of Minnesota before returning to Canada to work for the Nova Scotia Department of Agriculture as well as the Nova Scotia Agricultural College, where he served as Director of Extension Services. He died on 9 August 1957; in 1976 he was inducted posthumously into the Atlantic Agricultural Hall of Fame in Nova Scotia.

Longley, Charles Frederick, 1870-1945

  • Person
  • 1870-1945
Charles F. Longley was born on 5 October 1870 to Thomas and Theresa Longley (nee Keating) in Belturbet, Ireland. He did military service in South Africa during the 1890s. Longley married Florence Augusta Kelly in 1905. From 1902 to 1910, Longley operated a shipping company, C.F. Longley and Co., in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Longley purchased Deadman’s Island from the British in 1907 and built an amusement park known as Melville Park. He died on 29 May 1945.

Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 1807-1882

  • Person

William Wadsworth Longfellow was a poet and educator born in 1807 to Stephen Longfellow and Zilpah (Wadsworth) Longfellow in Portland, Maine. He was educated in the private Portland Academy and at Bowdoin College, Maine. After travelling and studying in Europe he became a professor at Bowdoin and, later, at Harvard College. He retired from teaching in 1854 to focus on his writing and spent the remainder of his life in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His major works include Paul Revere's Ride, The Song of Hiawatha and Evangeline.

Longfellow's first wife, Mary Potter, died in 1835 after a miscarriage. His second wife, Frances Appleton, died in 1861 after sustaining burns from her dress catching fire. Longfellow passed away in 1882.

Long, Anne-Marie

  • Person
Anne-Marie Long became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1998 because their video recording “It’s About Choice: Alternative Menstrual Products” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

London, Daniel

  • Person
Daniel London was a music artist known to have made sound recordings at Solar Audio in the 1980's.

Logan, Robert A., 1892-1992

  • Person

Robert Archibald Logan was born on in Middle Musquodoboit, N.S. on August 17, 1892. Born to small land-owning farmers, he helped his mother on the farm whilst attending school. On his graduation, he attended the Technical University of Nova Scotia to become a Dominion Land Surveyor. When war broke out in 1914, he learned to fly an airplane at his own expense, and became the first Canadian civilian pilot to earn a commission in the British Royal Flying Corps. During the war he distinguished himself as a pilot and navigator, and was involved in training other pilots. On Apr. 8, 1917, he was shot down behind enemy lines by an aerial attack led by Baron von Richtoven. He and his observer survived the crash and spent the rest of World War I in 6 different German POW camps, including Schweidnitz. He began to study languages during his internment, which began an interest that continued for the rest of his life.

When the War ended, Logan participated in a Canadian government expedition by boat into the Arctic, and helped to establish the first air landing fields in the far north, including on Ellesmere Island. He also became involved in the new field of aerial surveying, which led him to south-central Africa for two years. Upon his return to the USA, he was employed by Pan-American Airways, where he investigated potential landing sites for the airline through travels that took him from Alaska to Argentina, and was Operations Manager for Pan-Am in Argentina and Brazil.

In 1933, he participated in the "Jelling" North Atlantic voyage with the Lindberghs, which investigated fueling and landing sites for Pan-Am’s cross-Atlantic routes. He also began and managed a gold mining operation in Nova Scotia during this time. He was then hired by the Irish national airline Aer Lingus Teoranta, and was its general manager until World War II necessitated the shutdown of its operations.

During WWII, Logan worked for the RCAF as a Command Navigation Officer in Nova Scotia, and Lt. Colonel and Director of Intelligence in Ottawa until the USA entered the War. In 1941, he participated in a secret Arctic expedition to Greenland and Iceland with the US military for the establishment of northern military airbases. After that, he continued work with the American military, and was sent on an another special mission to the South Pacific in 1943 with Rear Admiral Richard Byrd (who he knew from their mutual association with the Explorer’s Club in New York), again to research potential airfield and fuelling sites for the US military. Due to a leg injury during this expedition, he was given a medical retirement discharge, and retired as a Colonel.

After Logan retired from the military, he devoted most of his time to writing. His research and writing spanned a great deal of topics, such as genealogy, history, astrology, philosophy, mineralogy, writing systems, and fiction. He also compiled and published a two-volume Cree-English dictionary, and had it distributed to many academic libraries across N. America at his own expense.

Logan remained active in these pursuits well into the later years of his life, and his achievements have been noted by organizations like the International Biographical Associations of the UK and the USA, and the Explorer’s Club. He died shortly after his 100th birthday in 1992, in Duluth, Minnesota.

Logan, John Daniel

  • Person
  • 1869 - 1929

John Daniel Logan was a writer and professor of poetry, literary and music criticism, and literary history. Born in Antigonish, Nova Scotia on May 2, 1869 to Charles and Elizabeth (Rankin) Logan, he moved with his mother and siblings to Pictou, Nova Scotia in 1876 after the death of his father. He attended Pictou Academy where he developed an affinity for the Gaelic language and started a life-long love of Celtic culture in Canada. He then went to Dalhousie College, where he received a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy (1893) and a Master of Arts (1894), and Harvard University, where he received his PhD (1896). He remained in academia until 1902, holding several teaching positions in the United States. After 1902, he continued to publish papers and give lectures, predominantly on philosophy.

In 1902, he left his position at the State University of South Dakota to work as an advertising specialist with Siegel, Cooper and Company of Chicago, where he stayed until 1906, when he returned to Canada to take a position with Woods-Norris, Limited of Toronto. Two years later, Logan left advertising to become the first literary and music critic for the Toronto newspaper Sunday World (1908-1910), and then the News (1910-1914). In this role, he supported cultural and artistic endeavours in Canada. At the same time, he began to write for the Canadian Magazine, which he continued to do for the rest of his life. His work as a music and literary critic, however, did not result in much popularity or success, and in 1914, he left Toronto for Montreal in search of work. At this point, he also separated from his wife, Minerva Shepard Bromer of New York (married in 1897).

Logan stayed in Montreal for eighteen months before moving to Halifax in 1915 for a government position. During this time, he also worked part-time as a journalist for the Halifax Morning Chronicle. In 1916, he enlisted in the Army. He was discharged in April 1918 due to an injury and returned to Halifax, where he resumed his work in literary and music journalism. In 1918, he donated his library of Canadian literature to Acadia University (where he had given a series of lectures in 1915) and on May 28, 1918, his positions as "Special Lecturer in Canadian Literature" was formalized by the Board of Governors at Acadia. In Halifax, as in Toronto, he frequently clashed with the literary-intellectual community, and is known for arguing with Archibald MacMechan of Dalhousie University about the teaching of Canadian literature there, and with H.L. Stewart, head of the Philosophy Department at Dalhousie, about his teaching methods.

In 1924, he founded the Colonel William Ernest Thompson Library of Musical Literature in 1924 in memory of his classmate and to support a Faculty or Department of Music at Dalhousie University. In 1925, he was appointed Associate Dominion Archivist for the Maritime Provinces, after persistently campaigning for the position from Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. He was not happy in Halifax, however, and resigned his position as Archivist to move to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he was elected Head of the English Department at Marquette University in 1927. He died there on January 24, 1929 and is buried at the Holy Cross Cemetery in Halifax.

Logan, Charles Tupper, 1867-1961

  • Person
Charles Tupper Logan was born in 1867 in Amherst Point, Nova Scotia, the eldest son of Isaac and Margaret Logan. He served as a member of the Amherst Point School Board for over forty years and served also on the Marshland Reclamation Board. In addition to farming at Amherst Point, Mr Logan sold hay and fertilizer until he was over eighty years old. He passed away in 1961.

Lockheart, Amy

  • Person
Amy Lockheart is a filmmaker, animator and artist. Lockheart is known for her animation artwork, which she has exhibited nationally and internationally. Lockheart became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1999 because their video recording “The Devil Lives in Hollywood” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Locke Family

  • Family
The Locke Family are decedents from one of two original families that founded Lockeport, Nova Scotia. Churchill Locke owned and operated C. Locke & Company, a business that sold fish, salt, and other goods.

Lochhead, Douglas

  • Person
  • 1922-2011
Douglas Lochhead was a poet, academic librarian, bibliographer and university professor who published more than 30 collections of poetry over five decades. Born on 25 March 1922 in Guelph, Ontario, he was raised in Ottawa and received his BA from McGill University in 1943. After serving overseas as an infantryman in the Canadian Armed Forces, he earned his MA at the University of Toronto in 1947 and a further degree in Library Science at McGill In 1951. He was hired by the University of Victoria as their first librarian before taking employment at York University, then Dalhousie, then Toronto's Masse College Library. In 1975 he moved to Mount Allison University, New Brunswick, where in 1987 he became Davidson Professor of Canadian Studies and Writer in Residence. He was vice-chairman of the League of Canadian Poets from 1967-1971, and in 2002 was named Poet Laureate of Sackville, New Brunswick. He died on 15 March 2011.

Llewellyn, John

  • Person
John Llewyn is a folk musician living in Kingston, Nova Scotia. John Llewellyn is known to have made sound recordings at Solar Audio.

Livingston, Walter Ross

  • Person
  • 1893 - 1978
Walter Ross Livingston was the author of Responsible Government in Nova Scotia: A Study of the Constitutional Beginnings of the British Commonwealth (University of Iowa Press, 1930). Born 14 October 1893 in Miller County, Missouri, he started teaching in rural schools in the Ozark Mountains four years before he graduated from high school. Following military service, in 1919 Livingston graduated from Knox College with an AB, earning a graduate degree from the University of Missouri in 1920. In 1923, following three years of teaching at Pomona College, he took up a doctoral fellowship at the University of Wisconsin. He spent summers at the Canadian Archives in Ottawa researching responsible government in the Canadian provinces, with a focus on Nova Scotia.
Livingston was hired to teach Canadian history and American foreign relations at the University of Iowa, where he also built a collection of government documents, with a focus on those pertaining to the British Commonwealth. He was eventually appointed "Curator of British Documents." Inspired by his PhD dissertation, Livingston wrote Responsible Government in Nova Scotia; in 1931, he published Responsible Government in Prince Edward Island: A Triumph of Self-Government Under the Crown.
Livingston died 30 December 1978 in Coralville, Iowa.

Livingston, Neil

  • Person
Neil Livingston became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1996 because their video recording “Diligent-diletanté” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Live Bait Theatre

  • Corporate body
  • 1988-
Live Bait Theatre was founded in 1988 by Mount Allison University graduates Randy White, Ann Rowley, Ross Murray, Karen Valanne and Charlie Rhindress. It is a professional theatre company and is located in Sackville, New Brunswick.

Littlefield, Connie

  • Person
Connie Littlefield is a Halifax, Nova Scotia based filmmaker. Littlefield is associated with “Conceptafilm”, a film production company in Halifax. Littlefield’s most popular films have been documentaries and are: “Hofmann’s Potion” (2002), “All the Right Stuff” (1997), and “Feed Your Head”. Littlefield became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1998 because her film “Waiting for Squeaky” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Liszt, Franz

  • Person
  • 1811-1886
Franz Liszt was a prominent composer and virtuoso pianist in the nineteenth century.
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