Showing 4086 results

Authority Record

Schofield, Mélisandre

  • Person
Mélisandre Schofield is an interdisciplinary artist who experiments with narratives. Scholfield’s education includes a BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (2003). Scholfield became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 2000s because their audio recording “Demo for Magazine Dialogue” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Schott Music

  • Corporate body
  • 1770-
Schott Music is one of Germany's oldest music publishing firms, founded in Mainz in 1770 by Bernard Schott. The company was owned by the Schott family from 1770 until 1874, and by the Streckers from 1874 to present day.

Schulich, Sir Seymour

  • Person
  • January 6, 1940 -
Sir Seymour Schulich was born on January 6, 1940 and was raised in Montreal, Quebec. He earned his BSc McGill University in 1961, his MBA from the Desautels Faculty of Management in 1965, and his Chartered Financial Analyst designation from the University of Virginia in 1969. His first job was at Shell Oil Company, and he worked at Beutel, Goodman & Company Ltd., a pension fund management company, from 1968 to 1990, eventually becoming president and vice-chairman. Schulich published a book titled "Get Smarter: Life and Business Lessons" in 2007. He donated $20 million to Dalhousie's Faculty of Law in 2009 to fund 40 new annual scholarships. This was the largest gift of its kind ever made to a Canadian law school, and the school was renamed the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University.

Schulz, Stephan

  • Person
Stephan Schulz is a multi-disciplinary artist who uses electronic media and custom made software to create performative electronic installations. Schulz was born in East Berlin, Germany in 1978, and received a MFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University in 2007. Schulz became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2009 because their video recording on a compilation entitled “New Media Projects” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Science Atlantic

  • Corporate body
  • 1969-

Science Atlantic is a federally incorporated, non-profit organization representing 18 post-secondary and research institutes in Atlantic Canada. It was founded in 1962 as the Atlantic Provinces Inter-University Committee on the Sciences (APICS) to encourage collaboration across Maritime universities and the government sector.

With offices in Dalhousie University's Life Sciences Building, the organization continues to provide networking and conference opportunities for undergraduate science students and faculty. Its activities include annual academic conferences in ten disciplinary and interdisciplinary fields; lecture tours by notable scientists; awards recognizing research and science communication skills; travel assistance for students to attend conferences; and workshops for faculty and students.

Scipio, Ricardo

  • Person
Ricardo Scipio became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1980s because of their involvement in a video recordings which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Scott Paper Company.

  • Corporate body

The groundwood pulp mill was built in 1924 by the American Perforated Wrapping (A.P.W.) Company of Albany, New York. The mill was located at the mouth of the West River in Sheet Harbour, Nova Scotia, and its first pulp produced in March of 1925. The first shipment of pulp took place in June 1925, marking the first ocean-going ship to reach Albany, New York, and establishing it as an Atlantic seaport.

In 1933 the company’s name was changed to Halifax Power & Pulp Company, and controlled by Roger Babson interests. It was subsequently sold to Fox Brothers in 1944, and Hearst Enterprises of New York in 1946, but both times the company name was retained.

In 1963 the company was sold to the Fraser Companies, Limited of New Brunswick, and became known as Fraser Companies, Limited, Nova Scotia Division. Finally in 1964 it was sold to the Scott Paper Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and became known as the Scott Paper Company, Sheet Harbour Division. Throughout these changes the operation in Sheet Harbour was helmed by J.S. Donaldson, and after 1967 by C.B. McKenna.

In 1964 the mill had an average production of 100 tons of mechanical groundwood pulp per day, or 30,000 tons annually, consumed 27,000 cords of wood annual, and employed over 100 men in the mill and 100 – 200 more men in the woods on a seasonal basis; these men were unionized via the International Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite and Paper Mill Workers, Local 301 (in the mill), and Sheet Harbour Longshoremen’s Association Local No. 1449 (stevedores). Market for the product included the United States, Mexico, South America, England, Italy, Spain, Israel, Korea, and Formosa.

The company had private ownership of 115,000 acres of forested land from which approximately 50% of their wood requirements were cut, the rest purchased from small woodlot owners. Equipment used in the plant included: slasher and barking drums, conveyors, grinders, coarse screens, fine screens, Kamyr wet machines, flash drying equipment, high density press, and balers. Once finished and dried the pulp was formed in 800 pound bales and shipped to the United States where it was used in the manufacture of high quality tissues and towels.

In 1971 the pulp operation suffered significant flood damage; due to this damage and a difficult market in which it was considered fortunate merely to break even, the decision was made to not rehabilitate the plant, and thus pulp and paper operations at Sheet Harbour came to an end.

Scott, Duncan

  • Person
Alfred Ernest Whitehead was born in 1887 in England. He immigrated to Canada and became a choirmaster, an organist, a teacher and a composer. In his adult life he taught at Mount Allison University as well as McGill University. Whitehead was a community and church leader while he lived in Montreal. Ill health forced him to retire to become the head of Mount Allison University’s Music Department from 1947-1953. When he retired from the university he moved to Amherst, Nova Scotia, where he resumed his organist and choirmaster activities at Trinity United Church until 1971. Whitehead was a distinguished recitalist as well as a prolific composer. In addition, he was a painter, and just before his death in early 1974 he completed the third edition of his book “The Squared-Circle Cancellations of Canada”.

Scott, Heather

  • Person
Heather Scott became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1990s because their audio recording “CKDU Long Songs” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Scott, John

  • Person
John Scott became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1993 because their video recording compilation became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Scott, Nigel

  • Person
Nigel Scott is a lighting, costume, and set designer who has worked with various theatre companies including Neptune Theatre, Theatre Calgary, Western Canada Theatre, and Essential Collective Theatre.

Scriver, Walter de Mouilpied

  • Person
  • 1894-1967
Walter de Mouilpied Scriver was born in 1894 in Hemmingford, Quebec, and received his B.A. from McGill University in 1915. He served overseas from 1915-1918, returning to Montreal to earn his medical degree from McGill in 1921. He was Professor Medicine at McGill’s Faculty of Medicine from 1952-1957 and physician-in-chief at the Royal Victoria Hospital. He specialized in the field of pharmacology and had a research interest in diabetes and kidney diseases. He was instrumental in founding the Quebec Division of the Canadian medical association and served as a member of its Executive Committee from 1947-1957. Scriver died in 1967.

Seafood Producers Association.

  • Corporate body

The Seafood Producers Association of Nova Scotia, formerly known as the Nova Scotia Fish Packers Association, was formed in 1942 as a non-profit industry association to provide a voice for their members by representing them in dealings with the government, media, and the general public. All members have an equal say in the Association's activities. Members range from small to large seafood processors and are provided with information on topics relating to the fishing industry, including government actions and proposals. The Seafood Producers Association is affiliated with the Fisheries Council of Canada. It has no government affiliations, although they often act as industry advisors on various government committees including bilateral fisheries negotiations, government policies and regulations, over-the-side sales, and dockside grading. Along with being a liaison between members and government officials and the Fisheries Council of Canada, and providing information to their members, the Association has also prepared submissions and briefs, assisted in promotion of fish products in the United States and Canada, and provided financial support to research of the nutritional benefits of seafood.

In 1944, their name changed from Nova Scotia Fish Packers to the Fish Packers Association of the Maritimes when many processors from New Brunswick joined the Association. Their named changed back to Nova Scotia Fish Packers Association when fish packer associations were formed in New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. At the annual meeting in 1980, the Nova Scotia Fish Packers Association became the Seafood Producers Association of Nova Scotia.

Out of their office on Hollis Street, and later their office on Alderney Drive in Dartmouth, they operated their sister organizations the Canadian Atlantic Salt Fish Exporters Association, Atlantic Fishing Vessel Association, Atlantic Queen Crab Association, and Atlantic Fisheries By-Products Association. The Seafood Producers Association's secretarial staff performed the same duties for these associations.

The first meeting was held on February 17, 1942, with H.G. Connor as the president. Over the years, presidents were elected from processing companies that were members. Some presidents included A. Kerr, J.B. Morrow, D.F. Corney, William Murdoch and D.R. Bollivar. The current president is Roger C. Stirling.

Past secretary-treasurers, executive directors, secretary-managers, assistant managers, and managers included H.P. Connor, Robert (Bob) Johnson, Roger C. Stirling, Bruce Chapman, Deborah S. Lawrence, Eric Roe, and John T. Salsbury. Some of the members of the Seafood Producers Association of Nova Scotia were Acadia Fisheries Ltd., Booth Fisheries Canadian Company Ltd., British Columbia Packers Ltd., Connors Brothers Ltd., Comeau's Seafoods Ltd., Karl Karlsen and Co. Ltd., Mersey Seafoods Ltd., National Sea Products, H.B. Nickerson and Sons, Snow Brothers Ltd., Swim Brothers Ltd., and United Maritime Fishermen Ltd.

The Seafood Producers Association of Nova Scotia is currently still active, but with fewer staff due to the decline in the fishing industry in Atlantic Canada.

Seahorse Investments Limited.

  • Corporate body

Seahorse Investments Limited was an investment company set up after the Oland Family sold the brewing assets of Oland and Son Limited to John Labatt Limited. Bruce Oland acted as President and Ruth Oland acted as Secretary-Treasurer. The company was a partially owned subsidiary of Culverwell Holdings Limited. It owned shares of other companies owned by the Oland family and made investments in businesses such as Ben's Holdings Limited and General Dynamics, John Labatt Limited, Royal Bank of Canada, and Sobeys Stores Limited. The company also owned and maintained a yacht "Seahorse III."

In 1993, the original Oland Investments Limited company became inactive. When this happened, Seahorse Investments Limited changed its name to Oland Investments Limited. The company is still active today. See the Oland Investments Series for more information.

Seaman, J.H.

  • Person
J.H. and J.W. Seaman were merchants in Barronsfield, Nova Scotia.

Sears, Fred Coleman

  • Person
  • 1866-1949
Fred Coleman Sears taught horticulture at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College from 1905-1907. Born in 1866 in Lexington, Massachusetts, he was raised in Kansas and graduated from Kansas State College in 1892. He taught horticulture in Kansas and Utah before moving to Nova Scotia to teach at the Horticultural School in Wolfville, which operated from 1894-1904. After its closure he taught at NSAC for one year before, in 1907, accepting a position as Professor of Pomology at the Massachusetts Agricultural College. In 1914 he published a textbook called Productive Orcharding. He died in October 1949.

Sears, Pamela

  • Person
Pamela Sears became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2002 because their video recording "Footsteps” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Seaside Inn.

  • Corporate body
The Seaside Inn was located in Lockeport, Nova Scotia, and managed by Mrs. W.H. Anderson. It advertised itself as a "home of travellers and tourists," with "fine bathing and good boating."

Security Investments Limited.

  • Corporate body
Security Investment Limited was incorporated in Nova Scotia on March 30, 1935. The company was an investment trust company that was set up to share the liability and risks associated with purchasing stocks and other assets. Sidney Culverwell Oland was President, J. MacGregor Stewart was Vice- President, D.R. Turnbull and C.J. Burchell were Officers, and Victor DeBedia Oland was Secretary.

Seigneur

  • Corporate body

Seigneurie de Berthier.

  • Corporate body
The seigneurial system was a semi-feudal method land distribution used in the North American colonies of New France. Seigneuries were parcels of land assigned to censitaires who were responsible for maintaining the land and paying various fees to seigneurs. Berthier County, Quebec was colonized through the signeurial system, which was formally abolished in 1854. This petition was created by residents of the area.

Semple, Jeff

  • Person
Jeff Semple was a musician who was associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in Halifax in the late 1980s. For a video recording “Georgia”, Eric Delisle provided graphics and Semple provided music.

Sewell, Jonathan, Justice, c. 1766-1839

  • Person

Jonathan Sewell was a lawyer, musician, office holder, politician, author, and judge. He was born ca. 1766 in Cambridge, Massachusetts into a prominent Loyalist family but spent his later childhood in London and Bristol. After briefly attending Brasenose College, Oxford, he moved to New Brunswick in 1785 to study law with Solicitor General Ward Chipman.

In 1789 Sewell moved to Quebec, where he rose quickly in the legal and political ranks. In 1790 he was appointed temporary Attorney General of the province of Quebec and in 1795 he received the permanent appointments of Attorney General and Advocate General. He was named judge of the Vice-Admiralty Court in June 1796, and in 1808 was appointed Chief Justice of Lower Canada, becoming the most powerful official in the colony after the governor.

Sewell married Henrietta (Harriet) Smith in 1797, with whom he had sixteen children. He and his family were at the centre of social life at Quebec: he was a member of the Barons’ Club, an active shareholder in the Union Company of Quebec, and sat on the board of the Royal Institution. Sewell was also the patron of a literary society, promoted the theatre, and founded and played in a quartet.

Sewell passed away in 1839, one year after resigning as Chief Justice.

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.

Shand, A.P.

  • Person
A.P. Shand was a businessman from Windsor, Nova Scotia. He invested in sailing vessels and other Nova Scotia businesses. In 1871, he founded the Windsor Furniture Company with Mark Curry.

Sharp, Eo

  • Person
Eo Sharp is a set and costume designer based in Quebec. She graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) from the University of Toronto before moving to Montreal to study at the National Theatre School of Canada. Since then, she has worked with various Canadian Theatre companies, including SIN 4 (in Montreal), Neptune Theatre (Halifax), the National Arts Centre (Ottawa), Stratford Festival, Segal Centre for Performing Arts, Imago Theatre, and Teatro Comenici/Festival Théâtre des Amériques. She won the Mecca Award for best design in "Looking for Romeo" (Sin 4 Productions) and "Human Collision/Atomic Reaction" (The Other Theatre/Festival Théâtre des Amériques).

Sharpe, Deborah

  • Person
Deborah Sharpe became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1996 because their audio recording became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Sharples, S.

  • Person
S. Sharples became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2004 because their video recording “Share” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Sharpless, S.

  • Person
S. Sharpless became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2009 because their video recording “Snare” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Shatford, A.W.

  • Person
  • [1860?]-[1955?]
A.W. Shatford (possibly Arthur Wellesley Shatford) was a proprietor from Hubbards, Nova Scotia who owned The Gainsborough Hotel in the same town. He is thought to have been born in August 24, 1860, and to have died in 1955.

Shaw Group, The.

  • Corporate body
L.E. Shaw Limited was a brick and concrete company based in Lantz, Nova Scotia. The company was incorporated in 1921, but its roots can be traced to 1861 when Robert Shaw opened the first brick plant in Hantsport, Nova Scotia, called Robert Shaw Brickworks. The company expanded through the Maritime provinces and was renamed The Shaw Group, Limited in 1993.
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