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Cartwright, Mary

  • CA QUA01775
  • Pessoa singular
  • n.d.

Mary Cartwright was the daughter of Sir Richard Cartwright.

Darling (family)

  • CA QUA01777
  • Família
  • n.d.

Thomas Darling (1814-1883) was born in Berwick, Scotland and came to Canada in the 1830s. In 1845 he established a business as a merchant in Lansdowne, Ontario and supplying wood to steamers at Darlingside, on the St.Lawrence River. A second store was established in 1871, staffed by Darling's oldest son, John. In 1883 Thomas Darling died and was survived by three sons - John David William, Thomas John and George Henry - who carried on the family business with some diversification. Thomas and John continued in the store while George specialized in imported teas he sold through travelling agents. There are no records of the sale of wood after 1883. Beside their commerce, the family owned and managed considerable property in the St. Lawrence and in the early twentieth century purchased and mortgaged property in Alberta.

Queen's University

  • CA QUA01783
  • Pessoa coletiva
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Keeling, Nora Catherine

  • CA QUA01789
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1933-2008

Nora Catherine Keeling Hall was born in Owen Sound, Ontario in 1933. In September 1952, she entered the University of Western Ontario in the Honours Program in French Language and Literature. After two years she left to attend the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London where she earned a diploma. She then went to Paris for five years to paint and write. By 1961 she had returned to language studies at the University of Western Ontario and graduated with a B.A. in 1963 and an M.A. in 1964. She continued in graduate studies to 1971 and has taught French both at the University of Western Ontario and at Fanshawe College in London. While Nora Keeling (as a student) had written dramas and poetry published in U.W.O.'s Folio she began publishing her short stories in 1971. Since then she has published three volumes of collected stories with Oberon Press.
Nora Keeling died of lung cancer on 4 March 2008.

Brooks, Reva

  • CA QUA01791
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1913-2004

Leonard and Reva Brooks are noted Canadian artists who have lived and worked in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, since their arrival there in 1947.

Reva Brooks was born in Toronto 10 May 1913, and was educated at Dovercourt Public School, Central High School of Commerce, Central Technical School, Toronto, and took courses at the University of Toronto. She married Leonard Brooks on 18 October 1935. A noted photographer, Reva Brooks' works have been exhibited in Toronto, Montreal, London, and Vancouver Galleries; Santa Barbara Museum of Art; Anglo-Mexican Institute, Mexico; Witte Museum, San Antonio, Texas; Museum of Modern Art, N.Y.; Dartmouth College; Group Show Creative Photography, 1956; Salon International du Portrait Photographique, Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, 1961; Grands Photographes de Notre Temps, Versailles, 1962; Expo 67, Montreal; Palacio de Bellas Artes Mexico, 1970; Centro Cultural Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico; Casa de Cultra Aguascalientes, Mexico; Universidad de Guanajuato; Travelling Exhibition USA, 1971; Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, 1972. Her works are represented in the collections of the Bibliotheque Nationale Paris; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artas, Mexico; David Alfaro Siqueiros, Mexico; Rufino Tamayo, Mexico; Rico Lebrun, Los Angeles; John Huston, Ireland; MacKinley Helm Collection, Santa Barbara; Ansel Adams, Carmel, California; Ayala and Samuel J. Zacks, Toronto; Helen Hayes, New York; Kate Simon, New York; Henry Miller, California; Freeman Tovell, Ottawa. Reva Brooks died in San Miguel de Allende on 25 January 2004.

Dr. Isobel McConville

  • CA QUA01797
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1866-1947

Student (Meds. '89) at Queen's University and physician, Kingston, Ont.

Artistic Ladies Wear

  • CA QUA01801
  • Pessoa coletiva
  • 1953-

Artistic Ladies Wear was opened in 1953 by Herman Dardick at 94 Princess St. (South corner at Wellington St.) in Kingston, Ontario. It would later move to 398 Princess St. (between Clergy and Montreal Sts.)

Ontario Association of Social Workers. Kingston Branch

  • CA QUA01802
  • Pessoa coletiva
  • 1966-

Prior to 1966, the needs of, and on-going training for, professional social workers in the Kingston area had been addressed by such individuals having become members of the Kingston Branch of the Canadian Association of Social Workers (CASW). Over the preceding years, this local body had expanded to include social workers in the Counties of Lennox & Addington, Hastings, and Prince Edward and forthwith had become known as the Kingston-Quinte Branch. Then, by the mid 1960's, this Branch had extended itself yet again, to include social workers in Northumberland and Peterborough Counties. Consequently, the name was changed once more to the Kingston-Quinte-Kawartha Branch of the CASW.

At a June 1965 meeting, it was decided that as the distances to be traveled by members were becoming extremely problematic, the Branch would be split in two: a) the Quinte-Kawartha Branch, which would include social workers in the Counties of Peterborough, Northumberland, Hastings, Prince Edward, and Lennox & Addington; and b) the Kingston Branch. After some discussion, it was moved, and unanimously approved, that a request be forwarded to the Ontario Association of Professional Social Workers (OAPSW) -- now known as the Ontario Association of Social Workers (OASW) -- asking that the Kingston Branch be re-constituted as a Branch of the OAPSW to serve qualified social workers employed, or residing, in Frontenac County. A 'pro tem' slate of officers was elected and immediately formed itself into a Nominating Committee to present a slate of officers, once OAPSW approval for the re-constitution of the Kingston Branch had been received.

Thus the Ontario Association of (Professional) Social Workers - Kingston Branch came into existence in the Spring of 1966. Since that time, the Branch has strived to serve members in the Kingston region by providing leadership through the assertion of the role of social workers, by advancing their interests, and enhancing their contributions to social justice. It acts as a source of information and consultation on social work practice by publishing and disseminating relevant and pertinent information to its members and the public at large; and it encourages and assists members to develop the highest professional standards through on-going training sessions and workshops. The Kingston Branch also seeks to assist the region by undertaking studies of social problems and issues, and taking appropriate action in order to influence social policy and legislation, so that the well-being of area residents is protected.

Roberts, Margaret (Harrison)

  • CA QUA01804
  • Pessoa singular
  • 1911-1985

Margaret Harrison was born on May 28, 1911, in Mimico, Ontario and attended local public schools and trained at the Toronto General Hospital, becoming a registered nurse. In 1932-33 she went through the diploma programme in public health nursing at the University of Toronto, where she studied under noted nursing educator Edith Kathleen Russell. For two years (1934-1935), she did public health nursing at Penetanguishene and Christian island, Ontario. In 1936 she joined her fiance, Herbert Horace Roberts, who was working as an architect in London, England. They were married on February 15, 1936 in Caterham, Surrey, where they lived for four years. On account of the war, Mrs. Roberts and her daughter, Jill, returned to Canada in 1940 and lived at Westport, Ontario. She died on December 26, 1985, at Toronto.

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