Print preview Close

Showing 17 results

Archival Description
Stanley, Carleton Wellesley File English
Print preview View:

3 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Stanley, Carleton W. - Addresses

The President's Address to the Freshman Class, Session 1931-32 (September 24, 1931); The Inauguration of Carleton W. Stanley as President of Dalhousie University (October 9, 1931); various President's addresses opening of sessions (1933-34, 1937-38, &c.) and Convocation ceremonies.

Records regarding Carleton Stanley's inauguration and retirement

File contains records regarding Carleton Stanley's inauguration ceremony and dinner, including correspondence, lists, seating arrangements, invitations, programs and tickets; copies of several addresses given by Stanley in the 1930s; correspondence with W.D. Woodhead at McGill University; and correspondence regarding Stanley's annuities and pension, including that paid to his widow.

Personal papers of George Frederick Pearson

  • MS-2-291, SF Box 31, Folder 22
  • File
  • 1920,1932
File comprises letters from Marshall Saunders, enclosing a sermon, "The Value of Higher Education from a Woman's Point of View," and his own "Report of a committee headed by G. Fred Pearson regarding dissatisfaction with Carleton Stanley, made to the Board of Governors of Dalhousie University, May 21, 1932."

Pearson, George Frederick

Newspaper clippings regarding Carleton Stanley's addresses

File contains clippings of newspaper announcements and reports of Carleton Stanley's public addresses. There are also copies of his opening address at Dalhousie in 1933; an offprint of a 1932 article on Cretan art based on Stanley's lecture to the Montreal Art Association; and a copy of the University of Maine's 1935 commencement ceremonies at which Stanley spoke.

Museums - Labrador duck

File contains correspondence and contracts related to the loaning of Labrador duck specimens from the Thomas McCulloch Museum to the National Museum of Canada.

Correspondence collected by Alfred Whitehead

  • MS-5-3, SF Box 17, Folder 17
  • File
  • 1937
File contains a letter written by Carleton Stanley to Archibishop Arthur Carlisle and a letter from Duncan Scott to Alfred Whitehead.

Whitehead, Alfred

Composite Photograph of the Faculty of Medicine - Class of 1935

File is a composite photograph the Dalhousie Faculty of Medicine Class of 1935. Photograph includes 35 individual portraits with three photographs of Dalhousie Buildings. Composite photograph includes portraits: Samuel Johnson Fairstein, John Howard Buntain, Gordon Louis Silver, Douglas Kerr Murray, Harrie Handler, Gerald Pope Tanton, Harold Jack Davidson, Frederick Lawson Whitehead, Leonard Gilbert Holland, Gabriel Boudreau, David Paul Wollowick, Hugh Allan Collins, Eric MacLean Found, Peter Darling Crynock, Dr. Robert Evatt Mathers, Fred Henry Wigmore, Dr. R. P. Smith, Dr. Cecil Edwin Kinley, Dr. Harold Benge Atlee, Dr. Kenneth Alexander MacKenzie, Dr. J.G. MacDougall, Dr. H.K. MacDonald, Dr. E.K. MacLellan, Wilfred Howard Drover, Dr. W. Alan Curry, Dr. G.H. Murphy, Dr. Carleton Wellesley Stanley, Dr. Harry Goudge Grant, Dr. N.B. Dreyer, Dr. J. Cameron, George William Anderson Keddy, Kenneth William MacKenzie, Charles Harold Lamont Baker, Theodore Clare Chalmers Sodero, and Theodore Markovits.

Carleton Stanley's correspondence and offprints

File contains Carleton Stanley's general correspondence dated between 1931 and 1945, including copies of his outgoing letters, as well as newspaper clippings and offprints of his articles. There are also letters and newspaper clippings from 1959 related to the official portrait of Stanley painted by Arthur Hodgkins.

Carleton Stanley's correspondence

File contains Carleton Stanley's correspondence with colleagues and editors, and included some manuscript drafts and offprints of articles or addresses by Stanley or others.

Addresses by President Carleton Stanley

File contains manuscript copies of Stanley's 1938 addresses at the closing exercises at New Glasgow High School and annual banquet of the Alumni Association of the Conservatory of Music; book suggestions for teenage boys; New Year 1938 musings; and a letter to a newspaper editor regarding the decline and fall of Classics in higher education.