Showing 2264 results

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MacLeod, Enid J.

  • Person
  • 1909-2001
Enid Johnson MacLeod was born in Jacksonville, New Brunswick. She graduated from the Dalhousie Medical School in 1937 and married Innis Gordon MacLeod in 1942. She worked as an anesthetist before joining the Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine.

Becke, Axel

  • Person
Axel Dieter Becke was born on June 10, 1953 in Esslingen, Germany. He immigrated to Canada, and later graduated with a Bachelor in Science from Queen’s University in 1975. He got his Masters in 1977 and PhD in 1981 (both from McMaster). From 1981-83 he worked as a Killam postdoctoral fellow at Dalhousie University, and then went to teach at Queen’s. He returned to Dalhousie in 2006 to teach, and was made the Killam Chair in Computational Science until 2015. His work focuses on Density Function Theory and computational chemistry. In 2000 he was awarded the Schroedinger Medal from the World Association of Oriented Chemists, and in 2006 was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in London. In 2014, he became the first Canadian to receive the premier award in the field of theoretical chemistry from the American Chemical Society. In 2015 Axel Becke was awarded the Gerhard Herzberg Medal for Science and Engineering – the highest honour in science in Canada, which comes with a $1M prize. He is one of the most widely cited scientists, with two of his papers in the top 25 cited science papers of all time. His work on Density Function Theory has been groundbreaking for chemistry and all aspects of science, and he continues to innovate and progress the field. Becke retired officially in 2015 but still works at Dalhousie in the Department of Chemistry.

Hamilton, Sylvia D.

  • Person
Sylvia D. Hamilton was born in Beechville, NS. She grew up in Nova Scotia and attended a segregated school as well as a non-segregated school. She was the first person from Beechville to graduate high school. She attended Acadia University and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1972. Later, she earned a Master’s degree at Dalhousie (2000). Sylvia is an accomplished filmmaker, including NFB films like “Black Mother Black Daughter” and “Speak It! From the Heart of Black Nova Scotia”. Her work focuses on the experience of African Nova Scotians/African Canadians and women. She has earned a Gemini award, the Portia White Prize, CBC Television Pioneer Award, and the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal. Sylvia Hamilton currently teaches in the School of Journalism at the University of King’s College (Dal) and is the current Rogers Chair in Communications. She holds three honourary degrees.

Banting, Angus

  • Person
  • 1908-1966
(Edward) Angus Banting was born in Alliston, Ontario on January 19, 1908. He earned a Bachelor of Science (Agriculture) from the Ontario Agricultural College (Guelph, Ontario) in 1933, and a Diploma in Education in 1934. He taught high school in Beamsville, Ontario from 1934-1937 before moving to Nova Scotia to be the head of Agricultural Engineering at the Nova Scotia Department of Agriculture. He was also the first professor of Agricultural Engineering at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College. He was a founding member of the Canadian Farm Building Plan Service in Truro. In 1952 he left NSAC to teach at MacDonald College (McGill) in Montreal. He was the Director of the diploma course from 1960-1963 at MacDonald College. He retired in 1963 and passed away March 9, 1966. He helped developed agricultural engineering in Nova Scotia, was a leader in land drainage and marshland reclamation. He also developed a chicken plucking machine that was patented on July 4, 1944 that made it easier for everyone to use items from home to build their own machines. It was very popular. Angus Banting was the nephew of Sir Frederick Banting, who invented insulin for diabetes. Angus also has a building named after him at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College.

Beaverbrook, Lady

  • Person
  • 1909-1994
Marcia Anastasia Christoforides was born on July 27, 1909 in Sutton, England. She worked as the personal secretary of Sir James Dunn, and they eventually got married in 1942. Upon his death in 1956 she became the beneficiary of his estate and the Sir James Dunn Foundation, which was to be used for charitable purposes. Lady Dunn gave $2.5 million for construction of Sir James Dunn Science Building at Dalhousie in 1957, in her late husband’s honour. She remarried in 1963, to the equally wealthy Max Aitken (Lord Beaverbrook), becoming known as Lady Beaverbrook. In 1967 she established the Sir James Dunn Law Library in the Weldon Building, as well as establishing seven Sir James Dunn law scholarships ($1500 a year, upped to $2500 in 1967, ended in 1978). In 1967 she was given an honorary degree from Dalhousie. She became Dal’s second Chancellor in 1968 (until 1990) after CD Howe. In 1968 she gave $500,000 for the Sir James Dunn Theatre in the Dalhousie Arts Centre. After a fire at the law school in 1985, she donated $2 million to restore the law school and its library holdings. Former chancellor CD Howe considered her the Guardian Angel of Dalhousie. She contributed over $300 million in her life from Dunn and Beaverbrook estates to charitable donations. The Sir James Dunn Foundation and Lady Dunn (Beaverbrook) gave around $22 million to charities in the Maritimes, and $5 million to Dalhousie from 1957-1994. Lady Dunn passed away in 1994.

Gesner, Abraham

  • Person
  • 1797-1864
Dr. Abraham Gesner was born near Kentville, NS in 1797. He went to medical school in London, England and graduated in 1825 as a surgeon and physician. He found an interest in geology during university, and did extensive geological surveys in New Brunswick. He also did some geological work in PEI and Nova Scotia. His geological collection was turned into a museum, which eventually became the New Brunswick Museum, and is considered the oldest intact geological collection in Canada. Starting in 1846 he began to develop kerosene for oil lamps, and patented the invention in 1854. Kerosene became the standard lighting fuel in homes. The company he established in New York was bought by Standard Oil, which eventually became Imperial Oil. He returned to Nova Scotia in 1863 and became professor of Natural History at Dalhousie. He wrote many books on geology and the petroleum industry. He died in Halifax in 1864.

Horrocks, Norman

  • Person
  • 1927-2010

Norman Horrocks was a Dalhousie professor, school director, and faculty dean. Born in Manchester on 18 October 1927, he began his library career in England, where he worked from 1945-1953, interrupted by three years serving in the British Army Intelligence Corps from 1945-1948. He was elected a Fellow of the Library Association and later worked in Cyprus and Australia, where he obtained a BA in constitutional history, before moving to the United States and earning MLS and PhD degrees at the University of Pittsburgh.

In 1971 he accepted a position in the new library school at Dalhousie, where he was instrumental in convincing the American Library Association (ALA) to accredit the Master of Library Service program. Considered vital to the progress of library studies at Dalhousie, he eventually became Dean of the Faculty of Administrative Studies. In 1986 he left Dalhousie to work as the Editorial Director of Scarecrow Press in New Jersey, but returned to the university in 1995 and stayed until his retirement. Decorated with multiple awards, he was the first person to have been elected an honorary member of the Canadian, American and British national libraries and in 2006 was named an Officer of the Order of Canada. He died in 2010.

Sexton, Frederic Henry

  • Person
  • 1879-1955
Frederic Henry Sexton was born in New Boston, New Hampshire on June 9, 1879. He attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and graduated in 1901. He became an assistant in Metallurgy at MIT from 1901-1902 and then worked for General Electric Company as a research chemist and metallurgist. He met his wife May Best (Edna May Williston Best) who had also graduated from MIT (1902) and worked at GE. She became extremely well known for her prominence in women’s organizations, and for her work in Halifax during WWI running the Local Council of Women, who were recognized as a leader in the civilian war effort. (May Best is responsible for raising over $1 million for the WWI effort in Nova Scotia from 1914-1918.) In 1904 FH Sexton was hired by Dalhousie to teach mining engineering and metallurgy. In 1907, he became the founding principal and Director of Technical Education at the Nova Scotia Technical College (now TUNS). “Dr. Sexton simultaneously organized the nation's first system of technical education and laid the foundations for the future growth of the Nova Scotia Technical College". He received an honourary degree from Acadia and Dalhousie in 1919 for the NSTC’s help during WWI. In 1925, he became the president of NSTC, until he retired in 1947 after forty years. During the Second World War he organized a training program for technical personnel and carried out a rehabilitation program for discharged personnel, which represented the largest program of vocational education ever undertaken in Nova Scotia. He was made CBE in 1943, and got an honourary degree and a Plymouth car when he retired after 40 years in 1947. FH Sexton died in Wolfville, NS on January 12, 1955.

White, Portia

  • Person
  • 1911-1968
Portia May White was born in Truro, NS on June 24, 1911. She was raised in a large family. Her father was a minister and was the first black graduate with a Doctorate of Divinity from Acadia University. He was also the only Black Canadian chaplain during WWI. Portia grew up in Halifax and attended Dalhousie University in 1929, then found a teaching job. She worked as a schoolteacher in Africville and Lucasville, NS. She was a great singer and always performed in her father’s church. In 1941 she made her first national debut in Toronto. In 1944, she made her international debut, performing at Carnegie Hall in New York City. She then toured the world performing. She retired early after some health problems, and settled in Toronto in 1952 to teach singing. She was a singing coach for the first cast of the stage show of Anne of Green Gables. She performed in 1964 for Queen Elizabeth II in PEI. Portia died from cancer on February 13, 1968 at the age of 56. She has been named a person of national historic significance in Canada (1995) and had a commemorative postage stamp made in her honour for the millennium. The Portia White Prize in Nova Scotia also exists in her honour.

Eaton, Rosemary C. (Gilliat)

  • Person
  • 1919-2004
Rosemary Gilliat was born in Hove in the United Kingdom in 1919. She grew up in British Ceylon and went to boarding school in Switzerland. She developed a love of travel and an interest in photography at a young age. In the United Kingdom, she worked in photographic studios as well as taking photographs for her own interest. Gilliat immigrated to Canada in 1952, where she found employment as a photographer. She had an interest in the north and in indigenous peoples which led her to travel throughout the country. Gilliat married Michael Eaton in 1963 and moved to Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia. There she became an environmental and cultural activist until her death in 2004.

Parks, Ron Doug

  • Person
  • 1945-
Ron Doug Parks is a music producer who has been active in the Nova Scotia music industry since the 1980s.

Murphy, Bruce

  • Person
Bruce Murphy is a recording artist who is known to have recorded songs at Solar Audio & Recording Limited in the middle to late 1980s.

Howe, Clarence Decatur

  • Person
  • 1886-1960
The Right Honorable C.D. Howe was the first Chancellor of Dalhousie University, from 1957 to 1960. His association with Dalhousie dates to 1908, when he was appointed Professor of Engineering, leaving in 1912 to work for the government, followed by success as a businessman and later politician. He was a powerful Canadian Cabinet minister of the Liberal Party, serving in the governments of Prime Ministers William Lyon Mackenzie King and Louis St. Laurent continuously from 1935 to 1957.

Wheaton, Jeff

  • Person
Jeff Wheaton is a freelance cinematographer and director.

Guy, Barry

  • Person
  • 1947-

Barry Guy (b. 1947) is a British composer and double bass player. From 1997 to 2006, he lived in Ireland, before moving to Switzerland with his wife, Maya Homburger, a Baroque violinist.

Guy worked for Caroe and Partners Architects in London for three years while studying the double bass and taking composition classes at Goldsmith’s College in London, England. He gave up a potential career in architecture in the late 1960s to study double bass full-time with James Edward Merritt at the Guildhall School of Music in London.

Since graduating, he has performed internationally as a solo, chamber, and orchestral musician, performing a range of improvised, baroque, and contemporary music. Guy has collaborated with a number of other musicians and ensembles, including the City of London Sinfonia, Academy of Ancient Music, London Classical Players, Maya Homburger, Paul Lytton, and Evan Parker, to name a few, and is the founder and artistic director of the London Jazz Composers Orchestra (formed in the early-1970s) and the Barry Guy New Orchestra (formed in 2000).

Many of his compositions arise from commissions from ensembles and orchestras with whom he also has a performing relationship. His compositions often feature improvisational elements and/or extended techniques, and he has experimented with graphic notation in a number of his works, including "Nasca Lines," a graphic score commissioned by the Upstream Ensemble in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Although Guy began to discuss a commission with Jeff Reilly (artistic director of the Upstream Music Association, or UMA) circa 1996, his first appearance in Halifax was not until 1999, when he performed one of his works, "Octavia," with the Upstream Ensemble at the Open Waters Festival of New and Improvised Music. Since then, Guy has collaborated regularly with the ensemble, through performances (sometimes with Maya Homburger), workshops, and compositions. Most recently, the Upstream Ensemble performed his "Witch Gong Game" at the 2012 Open Waters Festival. The "Witch Gong Game," like "Nasca Lines," is a graphic score partially inspired by the work of Scottish artist Alan Davie.

Guy and Homburger also have a CD label, MAYA Recordings, for the production of new, improvised, and early music. He has more than 200 recordings as a solo, chamber, and orchestral musician, 26 of which are under the MAYA label.

MacLennan, Electa A.E.

  • Person
  • 1907-1987

Electa MacLennan was the first director of Dalhousie School of Nursing, serving from 1949-1972. She was born in Brookfield, Nova Scotia, on March 31, 1907. Despite being kept home from school in the tenth grade to learn the art of homemaking, she skipped a grade on her return. She earned a BA from Dalhousie, where she was active in the choral, biology and dramatics clubs. After training at the Royal Victoria Hospital School of Nursing in Montreal, she earned a diploma in Teaching in Schools of Nursing from the School for Graduate Nurses at McGill University, followed by an MA in Public Health Supervision at Columbia University.

MacLennan became a staff nurse with the Victorian Order of Nurses (VON) in Montreal, taught in the School of Nursing at the Vancouver General Hospital, and then returned to the VON in Montreal as a supervisor and later as National Office Supervisor for the Maritimes. She was the assistant secretary of the Canadian Nurses’ Association in 1942, and assistant director of the Faculty of the McGill School for Graduate Nurses in 1944. Hired at Dalhousie in 1949, she was responsible for launching the university's first nursing program. During her tenure, she created annual Nursing Institutes sponsored by Dalhousie and organized in-service education programs in Nova Scotia hospitals. She was appointed an associate professor in 1950 and full professor at Dalhousie in 1970.

A founding member of the Canadian Nurses Foundation, MacLennan was instrumental in ensuring that more nurses could finance their education and pursue research. She fought to increase the numbers of nursing teachers and qualified nurses in hospitals across Canada. MacLennan was president of the Canadian Conference of University Schools of Nursing from 1954 -1956; a board member of the International Congress of Nurses from 1962-1969; a Fellow of the American Public Health Association; and a member of the Royal Society of Health. In 1976 she was recognized with the Canadian Public Health Association’s Honorary Life Membership. MacLennan was also named as an Elder of the Church in Brookfield.

Electa MacLennan retired from Dalhousie in 1972 and died in 1987. The Electa MacLennan Memorial Scholarship is awarded annually to students in Dalhousie graduate nusring programs.

Forrest, John

  • Person
  • 1842-1920
John Forrest was born in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, in 1842. He was educated at the Free Church College in Halifax, the Presbyterian Seminary in Truro, and at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. He was the minister of St John's Presbyterian Church in Halifax and represented the Presbyterians on Dalhousie University's Board of Governors beginning in 1879. In 1881 he was appointed George Munro Professor of History and Political Economy and served as Dalhousie's third president from 1885-1911. He died in Halifax in 1920 at age 77, known by many of his former students as "Lord John." In 1919 the "new" Dalhousie College building was renamed the Forrest Building in his honour.

Macneill, Murray

  • Person
  • 1877-1951
Murray Macneill was born in Maitland, New Brunswick and brought up in St. John’s, Newfoundland and St. John, New Brunswick. He attended Pictou Academy before coming to Dalhousie University in 1892 at the age of fifteen. Macneill graduated in 1896 (the same year as James Robinson Johnston, Dalhousie's first Black graduate) and won the Sir William Young medal in mathematics. Macneill went on to do graduate work at Cornell, Harvard, and Paris. In 1907, Macneill returned to Dalhousie after being hired as a mathematics professor. In 1908, he was appointed Arts and Science registrar and in 1920 he was appointed university registrar. After a long feud with President Stanley over admission standards, Macneill was dismissed as registrar in 1936 but he continued as a professor until 1942. Macneill was an avid curler and was a member of the Halifax Curling Club and president of the Canadian Curling Association. He was the first Brier champion in 1927 and also competed in 1930, 1932, and 1936. He died in 1951 of pancreatic cancer.

Menuhin, Yehudi, 1916-1999

  • Person
  • 1916-1999
Yehudi Menuhin was an American-born violinist and composer who spent most of his career in the United Kingdom. Menuhin is regarded as one of the greatest violinists of the twentieth century.

Cram, Paul

  • Person
  • 1952-2018
Paul Cram was a musician and composer known for his new music compositions and his collaborative approach to music performance. He was born 11 August 1952 in Victoria, British Columbia, and completed his Bachelor of Music at the University of British Columbia in 1978. He formed the Paul Cram Trio in 1982, followed by several other ensembles including the New Orchestra Workshop, System Saxophone Quartet, the Kings of Sming, the Paul Cram Quintet, and the Paul Cram Orchestra. In 1987 he co-founded Hemispheres, a new jazz/new music ensemble in Toronto, Ontario. He moved to Halifax in 1990, where he became a founding member and later artistic director of Upstream Music Ensemble (1990-2015). He died 20 March 2018.

Ellis, Lisle

  • Person
  • 1951-
Lisle Ellis is a Canadian jazz bassist and composer, known for his improvisational style and use of electronics. Born in Campbell River, British Columbia, he played electric bass as a teenager before entering the Vancouver Academy of Music and the Creative Music Studio in New York City (1975-1979). He lived in Toronto, Ontario from 1982 to 1983, and Montreal, Quebec from 1983 to 1992. He formed the performance and composition collective Vancouver's New Orchestra Workshop. In 1992, he moved to the Uited States where he spent time in San Francisco, San Diego, and New York City. He has performed and recorded with a number of artists.

Reilly, Jeff

  • Person
Jeff Reilly is a bass clarinetist, composer, conductor, and radio music producer for CBC. He has performed with numerous choirs, orchestras, and chamber groups around the world, and was a co-artistic director of the Upstream Music Association from 1990 to 2000. He also performs regularly with Peter Togni (organ) and Christoph Both (cello) in their trio, Sanctuary; with the jazz drummer Jerry Granelli; and with the Halifax-based ensemble, subText.

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.

Dalton, Sydney C.

  • Person
Sydney Dalton was an American composer, teacher, and music critic. He introduced the Canadian pianist Ellen Ballon to Rafael Joseffy, who became Ballon's teacher in New York.

Medtner, Nikolay

  • Person
  • 1880-1951
Nikolay Medtner was born on January 5, 1880 in Moscow. He studied piano with his mother until the age of 10 when he entered the Moscow Conservatory. After graduating from the conservatory in 1900, he quickly turned to composition and many of his pieces were performed by his friend and fellow pianist/ composer, Sergei Rachmaninoff. He moved to London, England in 1936, where he remained until his death in 1951.

Hovhaness, Alan

  • Person
  • 1911-2000
Alan Hovhaness was an American twentieth-century composer. He was highly regarded and performed during his lifetime, with over 500 compositions to his name.

Botrel, Théodore

  • Person
  • 1868-1925
Botrel was a French singer-songwriter from Brittany, most widely known for his song "La Paimpolaise."

Somerset Maugham, William

  • Person
  • 1874-1965
William Somerset Maugham was raised by his uncle after he was orphaned at the age of 10. He qualified as a medical doctor in 1897 from St. Thomas' medical school in London, England, but soon left medicine to pursue his writing. He wrote novels, plays, and short stories. He died in Nice on December 16, 1965.

Lehmann, Charlotte

  • Person
  • 1888-1976
Lotte Lehmann was an acclaimed German soprano known for her operatic roles, performances of lieder, and over 500 recordings.

Ferber, Edna

  • Person
  • 1885-1968
Edna Ferber was an American writer of novels and plays. In 1924, she won a Pulitzer Prize for her novel "So Big." She is perhaps best known for her book "Show Boat" (1926), which was made into a musical by Oscar Hammerstein II and Jerome Kern. She died on April 16, 1968.

Duke-Elder, William Stewart, Sir

  • Person
  • 1898-1978
Sir William Stewart Duke-Elder was a Scottish ophthalmologist and author of several books on the subject.

Backhaus, Wilhelm

  • Person
  • 1884-1969
Wilhelm Backhaus was a German pianist and teacher, particularly known for his performances of music by Ludwig van Beethoven and German Romantic composers. Born in Leipzig, he began piano lessons with his mother at age 4. From 1891 to 1899, he studied at the Leipzig Conservatory, before studying with Eugen d'Albert in Frankfurt. In 1905, he won the Anton Rubinstein Competition. Throughout his life, he toured Europe and the United States regularly and held various teaching positions, including at the Curtis Institute of Music. He moved to Lugano, Switzerland in 1930 and died shortly before a concert in Villach, Austria.

Remick Warren, Elinor

  • Person
  • 1900-1991
Elinor Remick Warren was a twentieth-century American neo-Romanticist composer. Born on February 23, 1900 to a Los Angeles businessman and amateur pianist, she studied music from an early age. She studied harmony with Gertrude Ross and piano with Kathryn Cocke, and published her first composition, "A Song of June," with G. Schirmer while still in high school. After graduation, she moved to New York where she studied with Frank LaForge and Dr. Clarence Dickinson, and quickly became known as a composer, piano accompanist, and piano soloist. She performed until the 1940s, when she retired to concentrate on composition. Her works range from piano solos to orchestral compositions and choral works. She spent most of her working life in Los Angeles.

Bell, Hugh Philip

  • Person
  • 1889-1957
Hugh Philip Bell was a noted botanist and former head of Dalhousie University biology department. He was born on 22 February 1889 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Charles Bell and Isabella Jane Ray. He was educated in Halifax schools and attended Dalhousie University, where he studied botany and played an active part in college activities. After graduation he taught at Morris Street School in Halifax and at the Lunenburg Academy. During World War One Bell served as a captain with the RCRs in France, where he was wounded severely. On returning from the war he received his PhD degree from the University of Toronto before being appointed at Dalhousie, where he remained until his retirement in 1954. Bell was an associate of the Nova Scotia Research Foundation and published over fifty scientific papers on the development of Nova Scotia plants. At the time of his death on 25 October 1957, he was working as a botanist for the Research Council of Nova Scotia.

Betts, Donald

  • Person
  • 1929-2012
Donald Drysdale Betts was born in Montreal in 1929 to Wallace and Mary (Drysdale), and later moved to Halifax. He studied at the University of King's College, earning his Baccalaureate-first class honours and receiving the Dalhousie-King's University Medal in Physics in 1950, and his M.Sc. in 1952 from Dalhousie University. After this, he attended McGill University to complete his Ph.D.in theoretical mathematics (1955). Betts moved to Edmonton and served a year as a Post Doctoral Fellow before being appointed as a faculty member in the physics department at the University of Alberta, where he became a full professor over the following 24 years (1955-1980). During this time, he was appointed Director of the Theoretical Physics Institute at the University of Alberta (1972-78), as well as several executive roles within the Canadian Association of Physics (CAP), including president (1969-70). In 1980, Betts returned to Dalhousie as Dean of Arts and Science (1980-88), Dean of Science (1988-1990) and Provost of the College of Arts and Science (1988-89). He continued as a Professor of Physics until his retirement in 1994, when he was was awarded the honourary position of Professor Emeritus in physics. Betts also served as chair and later as a member of the Selection Committee for the Rutherford Medal in Physics for the Royal Society of Canada (1986-87, 1998-2002); as the editor of the Canadian Journal of Physics from March 1992 to March 1997; and on the executive of the Nova Scotia Institute of Science (NSIS) (1996-2002), including a term as President (1999-2001). Donald Betts died in Halifax on October 23, 2012.

Philipp, Isidor

  • Person
  • 1863-1958
Isidor Philipp was a French pianist, composer, and teacher.

de Burger, Ronald

  • Person
Ron de Burger was a highly respected leader in environmental public health in Canada, and Dean of the Faculty of Health from 1988-1992. He died on August 5, 2016.

Maclean, Guy

  • Person
  • 1939-
Guy MacLean was born in Sydney, Nova Scotia in 1929. He attended Dalhousie University, where he received a BA in 1951 and a MA in history in 1953. He was chosen as a Rhodes Scholar for Oxford in 1953, earning an honours BA and a MA, and received a PhD from Duke University in 1958. MacLean taught history at Dalhousie University beginning in 1957, and was Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies from 1966–1969, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Science from 1969–1975, and Vice-President Academic and Research from 1974-1980. He later became Mount Allison University’s 9th president from July 1980-1986, and was Ombudsman for Nova Scotia from 1989-1994.

Gounod, Charles-Francois

  • Person
  • 1818-1893
Charles-Francois Gounod was a French composer predominantly known for his operas (e.g., "Faust"). He spent most of his working life in Paris, although he also lived for some time in London and Italy.

Mendelssohn, Felix

  • Person
  • 1809-1847
Felix Mendelssohn was a Romantic-era German composer, pianist, and conductor. In addition to his own compositions, he is known for his revival of Johann Sebastian Bach's St. Matthew's Passion in 1829.

Moscheles, Ignaz

  • Person
  • 1794-1870
Ignaz Moscheles was a Bohemian composer and piano virtuoso. He spent most of his career in London, England and Leipzig, Germany where he taught and worked with Felix Mendelssohn at the Leipzig Conservatory.

Cochrane, Andrew G.

  • Person
  • [195-]-
Andrew G. Cochrane joined Henson College as acting dean in 2000 and went on to become the inaugural dean of the Dalhousie University College of Continuing Education. He was born and raised in Windsor, Nova Scotia, received a BA in Physical Education from Acadia University in 1977 and an MBA from Saint Mary's University in 1984. He retired from Dalhousie in 2019.

Doyle‑Bedwell, Patricia

  • Person
Patricia Doyle‑Bedwell was the director of the Transition Year Program and the first Mi'kmaq woman to earn tenure at Dalhousie. She is currently an associate professor at the University and an advocate for and professor of Indigenous and human rights.
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