Showing 4770 results

Authority record

Hazell, Brita Schneider

  • Person
  • 1931-?

Brita Hazell was born on March 21, 1931. The third child of Norman and Ethel Schneider, she was raised in Kitchener, Ontario alongside brothers Herbert and Howard. Her first marriage was to Robert White, which took place on October 10, 1953. Her second marriage to Roy Graham Hazell (1930-2000) took place March 29, 1969 in San Francisco, California.

Hayes, Elliott

  • Person
  • 1956-1994

Elliott Hayes was born on June 22, 1956 in Stratford, Ontario. Hayes was a playwright from a heavily theatre influenced family with his grandfather and father both being actors. His family played a large role in preserving the old city hall in Stratford as well as the gallery in the city. Hayes worked for many years in Hollywood before returning to Stratford in 1981 where he was the Stratford Festival's literary manager, assistant director, and lyricist. In his short career, Hayes created several short stories, poems, and plays such as "Homeward Bound". He died February 22, 1994.

Hawkings, Jean Schneider

  • Person
  • 1923-2011

Jean May Schneider was born on March 18, 1923 to Frederick Henry and Ella Daniels Schneider. She studied at McMaster University, graduating in 1943, and served as a photographer for the Royal Canadian Air Force during the remainder of the Second World War. She married Robert Hawkings on June 16, 1945, with whom she had three sons: Rob, Bruce and Jim. The family lived for a time in Deep River. She was an active member of the Church of the Good Shepherd (Kitchener) and the Deep River Community Church. Later in life she was involved with the Waterloo chapter of the Canadian Federation of University Women. Hawkings died July 30, 2011 in Waterloo, Ontario.

Hartley, Sir Percival Horton-Smith

  • Person
  • 1867-1952

Sir Percival Hartley was born December 2, 1867. He was educated at Marlborough College and St. John's College in Cambridge, England. Hartley later studied medicine at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London, as well as other hospitals in Paris and Vienna. He was a physician at the London General Hospital and St. Bartholomew’s Hospital. Hartley also worked at the Hospital for Consumption and Diseases of the Chest in Brompton, London, and Daneswood Sanatorium in Bedfordshire, England. He wrote a number of medical books and articles for journals. In 1900, he was given the honour of Goulsonian Lecturer at the Royal College of Physician. Throughout his career as a physician, Hartley specialized in diseases of the chest, particularly tuberculosis. He died on June 30, 1952.

Hartley

  • Corporate body
  • 1875-[1894?]

"Edward Hartley was born 1849 in Wadsworth, OH. The date he left Ohio is undetermined but, according to one obituary, had a photograph studio in Jacksonville, IL, before moving to Chicago in 1875.

It is safe to say that he was active as a photographer in Chicago from 1875 to 1887 and any cabinet cards imprinted with the 309 W Madison address would probably be from that era. However, under the management of his brother Charles Hartley, the photograph studio carried on some years after Edward's death and it would certainly be possible that some photographs from the studio continued with the same imprint."

In 1893, Charles Hartley purchased Brand Studios at 210 & 212 Wabash Street, which he renamed Hartley. He subsequently deeded his share in the business to his wife, Belle Hartley, before "eloping" to Utah in 1894. It is unknown whether the business continued after this point.

Hart, Thomas C.

  • Person

Admiral Thomas C. Hart was Commander in Chief, U.S. Asiatic Fleet, the Philippines, during World War II.

Harris, Michael Deane

  • Person
  • 1945-

Michael Deane Harris (born January 23, 1945) is a retired Canadian politician who served as the 22nd premier of Ontario from 1995 to 2002 and leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario (PC Party) from 1990 to 2002. During his time as party leader, he guided the Ontario PC Party toward Blue Toryism, advocating for the "Common Sense Revolution", his government's program of deficit reduction in combination with lower taxes and budget cuts.

Hardy, E.L.

  • Person

E. L. Hardy was a photographer at York Studio in Toronto.

Hanna, Henry

  • Person
  • 1872-[19--]

Henry Hanna was born in 1872 in the Waterloo County area, Ontario.

hann

Haney, Haney, Kendall & Melville

  • Corporate body
  • 1860-

The firm of Haney, Haney, Kendall & Melville was established in 1860 and has conducted business since then under a number of names. The first firm name recorded in the papers is MacGachen and Colquhoun on a document dated 1865. Of F. Stewart MacGachen nothing has been discovered except that he was appointed solicitor for the Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance Company, formed in 1863. The partnership of MacGachen and Colquhoun lasted approximately fifteen years, as by 1875 Colquhoun's name alone appears on documents. In 1876 Colquhoun then entered into partnership with Ward Hamilton Bowlby and Edwin Perry Clement, under the name Bowlby, Clement and Colquhoun, but remained for only a short period. After conducting business alone for several years, in 1889 he entered into partnership with Arthur B. McBride under the name Colquhoun & McBride. This partnership lasted until 1897 when Colquhoun accepted the postion of Collector of Customs. McBride practised alone for several years before taking another partner, E.P. Flintoft, and the firm name became McBride and Flintoft, ca. 1906. Flintoft left to become solicitor for the Canadian Pacific Railway, leaving McBride once again alone for several years until taking E.W. MacKenzie as partner with the firm name McBride and MacKenzie, ca. 1916. Still later, McBride took another partner and the firm name changed to McBride & McGibbon.

The earliest document in the collection is an abstract of a will which names James Colquhoun as a beneficiary. James Colquhoun was a Barrister of the Middle Temple, a brilliant lawyer who emigrated to Canada in 1842 with his wife, Mary Bryce Colquhoun. After initially establishing a law practise in Galt and speculating in land near Ayr James Colquhoun moved to Berlin ca. 1852, where he first lived on Frederick St. and then built the home now known as "Woodside", the boyhood home of William Lyon MacKenzie King. John King was a family friend and rented Woodside from Frederick Colquhoun from 1886 to 1893. Shortly after moving to Berlin he was appointed Clerk of the county court, a position he held until his death, as was also made deputy clerk of the crown. A keen interest in education led him to serve at various times as trustee or chairman on both the public and high school boards. He died in 1877.

Frederick Colquhoun, son of James Colquhoun, was born August 31, 1839 in Sterling, Scotland. He was educated in Berlin and studied law. From 1860 until 1897 he had a successful law practise; in 1897 he was appointed Collector of Customs at the port of Berlin, a post which he held until his death in 1906. As well, Colquhoun served as Village Clerk for Waterloo from 1868 to 1876, and for the Town of Waterloo from 1876 to 1897. He was secretary of the North Waterloo Reform Association and Children's Aid Society for a number of years, and an original member of the Board of Directors of the Dominion Life Assurance Co., 1900. At the time of his death he was President of the Berlin and Waterloo Hospital Trust. In approximately 1889 he built a house on a lot on the corner of King and Union Streets, Waterloo, currently 251 Mary St.and known as the "backwards house." The house originally faced King St. but subdivision of the original lot has left the back of the house fronting on Mary St.

Arthur B. McBride was born November 21, 1861, was educated in Toronto, called to the bar in 1884 and practised in Toronto until 1889. In 1889 he moved to Waterloo and went into partnership with Frederick Colquhoun. In 1887 he married Agnes Kumpf, daughter of Christian Kumpf. In Waterloo McBride served as director of the Globe Furniture Company, as well as being active in both the Odd Fellows and Masons.

Handa, Virender Kumar (Vir)

  • Person
  • 1931-2005

Virender Kumar (Vir) Handa was a faculty member in civil engineering at the University of Waterloo from 1964 to 1995 with a focus on construction safety and management. Born in Lahore, India, his father was a lawyer and his mother a social activist. Handa obtained a BSc in physics, chemistry and maths at the University of Calcutta in 1949 and a second BSc in engineering at the University of London in 1954. Coming to Canada on a scholarship, he completed an MSc in civil engineering at Queen's University in 1958 and an MSc in applied mathematics at the University of Waterloo in 1962, followed by a PhD in in civil engineering in 1964.

In addition to substantial contributions to the development of the study of construction management, Handa worked with Waterloo colleagues to created several Expo 67 pavilions including Man the Explorer, Planet ad Space, and Man the Producer. He served as Chairman of the Board of the Canadian National Museums of Science and Technology, consulted for the Cree Housing Authority for more than 20 years, and held the position of Riding Association President for the Liberal Party of Canada. Handa was also active in the recruitment of students to Kitchener-Waterloo serving with involvement and chair roles in groups including the Canadian South Asian Chamber and the India Canada Association.

Handa died May 3, 2005 following complications from an accident two years prior, leaving behind wife Silvana and their two children, Dev and Aruna. A celebration of life was held on May 25, 2005 at Waterloo's University Club.

Hancock, Irene

  • Person
  • February 10, 1900-May 15, 1989

Kathleen Irene Hancock was born February 10, 1900 to Claude Hancock (1872-1955) and Henrietta Maria Wingfield-Digby (1867-1967) of the Wingfield-Digby's of Sherborne Castle. Irene was educated at Headington School for Girls, Oxford (where she was Head Girl) and Portsmouth School for Girls before attending Mrs. Hoster's Typewriting, Shorthand and Translation Office where she took a six month course in secretarial training. She became a member of the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship (NUSEC) and served as the General Secretary until 1928. The same year she also helped to organize and taught at the NUSEC summer school, held at St. Hilda's College, Oxford. The summer school offered classes to women in topics on politics and enacting on your enfranchisement. After this point she traveled to Vienna, Austria where she studied abroad and watched over the education of Ray Strachey's daughter Barbara. Correspondence from this time indicates that she intended to return to England sit the bar, however census records show that in 1932 she was working as a personal assistant to the Hon. S. Baldwin. Irene died in 1989 in Liss, Hampshire.

Hamilton-Gordon, Ishbel Maria Marjoribanks

  • Person
  • 1857-1939

Ishbel Maria Marjoribanks Hamilton-Gordon, Marchioness of Aberdeen and Temair and known as Lady Aberdeen, was born in 1857, the daughter of the first Baron Tweedmouth. She married the first Marquis of Aberdeen in 1877, who became Lord Aberdeen, Governor-General of Canada, in 1893 and remained in that office for the next five years.

Lady Aberdeen was active in philanthropic and educational work along many paths for nearly sixty years. She was president of the International Council of Women for nearly forty years, from 1893-1899, and then again from 1904-1936. She was also president of the Irish Industries Association, the Women's National Health Association of Ireland, and the Onward and Upward Association, and for a number of years she was the chairperson of the Scottish Council for Women's Trades. In Canada, Lady Aberdeen founded the Victorian Order of Nurses and took a leading role in the formation of the National Council of Women of which she was the first president. She died in Scotland in 1939.

Hamilton, Ruth Johnson

  • Person
  • 1876-1954

Ruth Johnson was born in 1876 in Warrington, England and immigrated to the United States with her family in the early 1890s. She married Charles C. Hamilton on April 19, 1898 in Chicago, Illinois. Together they had several children, including Ruth Alice. Hamilton was a charter member of the North Shore Church, a one time president of the Wisconsin Synodical Society of the Presbyterian Church, and served as executive secretary of the Wisconsin League of Women Voters and the Women's Suffrage Association. She died April 4, 1954 in Shorewood, Wisconsin.

Hamilton, Ross

  • Person
  • 1897-1952

Ross Hamilton was born August 4, 1879 in Frontenac, Ontario to David Hamilton and Margaret Clyde. On February 23, 1916 he enlisted in the First World War, lying about his age and stating his birthdate as being in 1893. In 1938, he married Elizabeth "Bess" Heist (1910-1975) in Waterloo, Ontario. Hamilton worked for Waterloo Trust & Savings Co. where he met Homer Watson. Watson had been forced to sell his mortgage to the trust and saving company due to financial issues, and Hamilton became Watson's estate agent. After Watson's death in 1936, Hamilton and his wife Bess started the Doon School for the Arts in June 1948. Hamilton died June 10, 1952 and his wife took over the operations of the school until her death in 1975.

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