Showing 2428 results

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Person

Young, Vershawn

  • Person

Vershawn "Vay" Young is an artist, actor, diversity consultant and Professor, Joint Appointed, in Communications Arts and English Language and Literature at the University of Waterloo where he has been the director of Waterloo's Black Studies program since its launch in 2022. His research in Black Studies focuses on masculinity, language and performance, and he is known for scholarship about "code-meshing" which was explored in his 2007 book Your Average Nigga Performing Race, Literacy, and Masculinity.

Young holds a JD law degree from Mitchell Hamline College of Law and a PhD from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Prior to his appointment at Waterloo, he was a faculty member at the University of Iowa and the University of Kentucky.

Since joining Waterloo, Young has been a founding member of Waterloo's Black Faculty Collective and, along with Kathy Hogarth and Christopher Taylor, was a member of the Black Studies implementation team whose work and phage 1 report led to the founding of a Black Studies program in 2022. Outside of academia, he has worked as a high school drama, English and speech teacher, an elementary school principle and a school board administrator. During Winter 2023 Young stared as Sir Robert Chiltern in a production of Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband at the Firehall Theatre in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

Young, Camilla

  • Person
  • 1946

Camilla Young was born in Atlantic City, New Jersey (United States of America) in 1946, and grew up in Woodbridge, New Jersey. Young was a professional writer, a fashion commentator, a consultant, and a model. She coordinated New Jersey's Miss Black America Pageant and judged other pageants.

Wyle, Florence

  • Person
  • 1881-1968

Florence Wyle was a Canadian sculptor. She was born in Trenton, Illinois, and studied medicine at the University of Illinois and then art at the Art Institute of Chicago, where she later taught classes. She then worked in New York where she shared a studio with Frances Loring. Loring and Wyle moved to Toronto in 1912, and in 1920 bought an old church and converted it into a studio. Loring and Wyle were both active in Canadian art movements and were founding members of the Sculptors Society of Canada in 1928. Their work can be seen at the National Gallery in Ottawa, Art Gallery of Toronto, and in the streets of Toronto on such buildings as the Toronto General Hospital and Timothy Eaton Memorial Church, and on memorials in small towns in Ontario, New Brunswick and Maine.

Wright, Douglas T.

  • Person
  • 1927-2020

Douglas Tyndall Wright was born October 4, 1927 in Toronto, Ontario to George Charles and Etta Frances (Tyndall) Wright. He received a B.A.Sc. from the University of Toronto in 1949, a Master of Science degree in 1952 from the University of Illinois, and a Ph.D. from Trinity College, Cambridge in 1954. In 1954, he joined the Department of Civil Engineering at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, becoming Associate Professor by 1958. In 1958, he became a Professor of Civil Engineering at the University of Waterloo. He was Chairman of the Department of Civil Engineering from 1958 to 1963 and was Dean of the Faculty of Engineering from 1959 to 1966. During his tenure Waterloo developed the largest School of Engineering in Canada.

From 1967 to 1972, Doug was the Chairman of the Committee on University Affairs for the Province of Ontario. From 1969 to 1972, he was the Chairman of the Commission on Post Secondary Education in Ontario. From 1972 to 1979, he was Deputy Provincial Secretary for Social Development and from 1979 to 1980, he was Deputy Minister of Culture and Recreation. From 1981 to 1993, he served as the President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Waterloo.

He has served as an advisor to the Government of Ontario and to the Government of Canada. In 1992 he was appointed Chairman of the Canadian Working Group of the Trilateral Task Force on North American Co operation in Higher Education and Research.

Wright died at his home May 21, 2020.

Wray, Fay

  • Person
  • 1907-2004

Fay Wray was born on September 15, 1907 in Cardston, Alberta. Wray was a Canadian-American actress who found much success in Hollywood. She is most known for her role as Ann Darrow in the movie "King Kong" (1933). She is also considered as the first scream queens in cinema. Wray was a well-rounded actress appearing in all genres of film ranging from dramas and comedies as well as Westerns and horror roles. She also performed her own stunts in films. She died on August 2, 2004.

Wray

  • Person

Wood, Maude Matilda

  • Person
  • 1880-1973

Married Ernest Wood of Massachusetts on October 18, 1906 in Waterloo.

Wilson, Ross Alexander

  • Person
  • 1952-

Ross Alexander Wilson was born on August 14, 1952 to Margaret "Peg" Isabel Forbes and Colin Andrew "Joe" Wilson.

Wilson, Pamela Margaret

  • Person
  • 1950-2011

Pamela Margaret Wilson was born on February 16, 1950 to Margaret "Peg" Isabel Forbes and Colin Andrew "Joe" Wilson.

Pamela attended Bishop Strachan School in Toronto, Ontario.

Pamela passed away at age 62 on March 7, 2011 and was buried in Parkview Cemetery and Crematorium in Waterloo, Ontario.

Wilson, Bettie Bernice

  • Person
  • 1917-2000

Bettie Bernice Wilson was born in Hamilton (Ontario) in 1917 to David Thomas Wilson and Monica Elesta Robinson. Wilson enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force Women's Division on March 31, 1942, she completed her basic training at the No. 6 "M." Depot in Toronto (Ontario), her trade training at No. 1 Technical Training School in St. Thomas (Ontario), and was posted in 1942 at the No. 16 Service Flying Training School (SFTS) Hagersville (Ontario). She was discharged on September 8, 1945. Bettie Bernice Wilson died in Galt (now Cambridge, Ontario) in 2000 and was buried in Mountview Cemetery.

Willson, Mary Elizabeth

  • Person
  • 1860-1928

Mary Elizabeth Anthes was born in Wilmot township February 11, 1860 to parents Jacob Anthes and Magdalena Stricker. She was married September 30, 1886 to Ephraim William Willson and the couple had five children: Leslie A.; Ford Isaac; William Claremont; Norma Margaret; and Martha Bell (Marthabell). She died September 14, 1928 and is buried in Mount Hope Cemetery, Kitchener.

Willson, Ephraim William

  • Person
  • 1862-1950

Ephraim William Willson was born August 26, 1862 in Waterloo County, Ontario. He married Mary Elizabeth Anthes September 30, 1886 and the couple had five children: Leslie A.; Ford Isaac; William Claremont; Norma Margaret Hattin; and Martha Bell (Marthabell) Cook.. He died in September of 1950 and is buried with Mary in Mount Hope Cemetery, Kitchener.

Williams, Marita

  • Person
  • [1944?] -

Marita Williams is an Anglican priest and a graduate and former employee of the University of Waterloo. Born in Jamaica, she grew up on Negril beach where her parents provided lodging to researchers and tourists in the area. Her father was Protestant, and her mother was Anglican. As a child, Marita enjoyed attending church but was discriminated against for being a girl. She was not allowed to go up to the altar, and she could not be a server, acolyte, or a priest.

Marita left her childhood home and attended college in Kingston, Jamaica. In 1966, she then transferred to Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) in Toronto, Ontario to study business and marketing management. While in Toronto, Marita attended church but was asked to stop attending by the minister who feared he would lose membership because she was Black. He suggested Marita attend a Black church instead. Marita did not attend church for several years following this racist encounter.

Although Marita intended to return to Jamaica and take over her parent’s business, by then a restaurant, she changed plans when she met and married Henry Williams, a Ghanaian studying at the University of Toronto. Marita and Henry had two sons. Marita and her family attended St. Matthew’s Anglican Church in Cambridge and she served as a deacon.

Marita became the manager of space information and resource planning at the University of Waterloo and later worked as the scheduling coordinator in the Registrar’s Office. She also studied at Waterloo, receiving a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in psychology which she worked towards part-time over ten years. Marita received her degree during the convocation ceremony held on Saturday, October 25, 1997. Celebrating with her at the ceremony was her son, Prempeh Williams, who received a Bachelor of Science (BSc), Honours Health Studies, from the University of Waterloo in Spring 1997. Marita retired from Waterloo in 1999.

Following her retirement, Marita made the decision to become a priest. To achieve her goal, she studied at Waterloo Lutheran Seminary at Wilfrid Laurier University, Conrad Grebel University College and Huron College in Western University for her Master’s degree in divinity. She also trained with Reverend Canon Christopher Pratt at the Anglican Church of St. John the Evangelist in Kitchener. In 2009, Marita was called to the priesthood. Marita was believed to be the only Black, female, Anglican priest in the Huron diocese at the time and may still be.

Marita has worked an itinerant priest leading services and presiding over funerals, weddings, and baptisms. She served as the Assistant Priest at St. George’s of Forest Hill in Kitchener for three years and has a regular assignment at Trinity Anglican Church in Cambridge. In 2023, Bishop Townshend appointed Reverend Marita Williams as the interim Priest-in-Charge of St. James, Cambridge.

White, Wilfrid Herbert

  • Person
  • 1899

Wilfrid Herbert White was born to Etta Lydia Mary White and Ward Malott White on February 20, 1899. Wilfrid died at four months of age on June 4, 1899.

White, Ward Malott

  • Person
  • 1870-1948

Ward was born to John White (1838-1910) and Susan Malott (1846-1872) on March 21, 1870 in Leamington, Ontario.

Ward was a member of the Salvation Army.

On September 1, 1897 Ward married his long-time friend Etta in her family’s home located at 43 Schneider Avenue, Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario. The couple moved to Leamington, Ontario and had their first child, Wilfrid Herbert White on February 20, 1899. Wilfrid died at four months of age on June 4, 1899.

In 1900 Ward moved out west to homestead in Alberta with Etta’s brothers Arthur and Austin and her father Tobias. Subsequently, Etta returned home to Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario to give birth to their second child, Dorothy Etta. Etta died from complications of childbirth shortly after.

Ward stayed in Alberta and proposed marriage to Etta’s sister Sophie. Sophie declined his proposal.

In 1908 Ward moved to Chilliwack, British Columbia and worked as a contractor. He helped build the extension of the Chilliwack hospital, nurses’ home, and Methodist church. Later, he worked as a caretaker of municipals schools until he retired.

Ward married Ella Feeg (nee Hunsperger) and helped her raise her three children from a previous relationship; Benjamin, Gilbert and Beatrice.

Ward died on May 1, 1948 in Chilliwack, British Columbia.

White, James Herbert

  • Person
  • 1875-1957

James Herbert White, author of Forest Trees of Ontario, was born September 21, 1875. In 1909, he became the first person to receive a degree in forestry at the University of Toronto, and taught there for 37 years. He is recognized as a pioneer in forestry conservation in Ontario. He died November 14, 1957.

White, Etta Lydia Mary

  • Person
  • 1866-1900

Etta was born to Tobias and Mary Schantz in Port Elgin, Ontario on October 9, 1866 and raised alongside her seven siblings; Orpheus Moyer Schantz, Sophie Emma Schantz, Austin Tobias Schantz, Franklin Abram Schantz, Arthur Benjamin Schantz, Florence Annie Catherine Schantz, and Herbert Cecil Palmer Schantz.

In 1870 the family moved to the village of Hawkesville in Waterloo County. In 1877 the family moved to Conestogo, Waterloo County and later to Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario in 1884.

In 1884, Etta started working at the Williams Greene Rome Company shirt factory.

Etta attended high school at the Berlin Collegiate & Technical Institute. In addition, she attended the Model School for teacher training at Central School. She taught briefly in West Montrose, Ontario before returning to the shirt factory in 1892.

Between 1892 and 1896 Etta lived in Chicago, Illinois with her brother Orpheus. She helped take care of his home and his infant daughter Ruth Schantz. Eventually, she found a position at the department store Carson Pirie Scott & Company where Orpheus worked. Around 1897, Etta moved back to Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario.

On September 1, 1897 Etta married her long-time friend Ward White in her family’s home located at 43 Schneider Avenue, Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario. The couple moved to Leamington, Ontario and had their first child, Wilfrid Herbert White on February 20, 1899. Wilfrid died at four months of age on June 4, 1899.

In 1900, Ward moved out west to homestead in Alberta with Etta’s brothers Arthur and Austin and her father Tobias. Subsequently, Etta returned home to Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario to give birth to their second child.

Etta gave birth to a daughter, Dorothy Etta White, on April 26, 1900. Etta died from complications of the childbirth on May 5, 1900.

White, Catherine Schneider

  • Person
  • 1860-1938

Catharine Schneider was born on July 21, 1860 to Johann Christoph and Anna Schneider. She married John White (1853-?), who had migrated from Scotland on July 12, 1882, and the couple lived in Toronto. They had four children: John Alexander (1883-1989), married Clarabel E.L. Bowman; Elizabeth (1884-1974); Arthur (1888-1910), married Carrie Emma McDonald; and Harold Eugene (1899-1982). Catharine died at home on March 2, 1938 and is buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto.

Whalen, Dwight

  • Person
  • active 1992-2018

Dwight Whalen is a freelance researcher and writer from the Niagara Falls, Ontario area.

Welsh, Moira

  • Person

Moira Welsh worked at The Record for two years, until moving on to work for the Toronto Star. She is now an Investigative reporter and has won two Canadian Association of Journalists Awards and three National Newspaper Awards with the Toronto Star. Her reporting focuses on the topics of elderly, environmental regulation and social justice.

Weil, Bernard

  • Person

Bernard Weil graduated from Sheridan College in 1981 in the program of Photography. He worked as a volunteer for The Mississauga News covering the local elections. He later took on full-time work as a darkroom technician with the publication after his graduation. He moved to the Kitchener-Waterloo Record (The Record), where he was working for a daily newspaper. In 1986, he won the photographer of the year award from the Ontario News Photographer's Association and went on to join The Toronto Star as a staff photographer.

Weicker, Florence

  • Person
  • 1907-1977

Florence Weicker was a nurse and the first Lutheran Deaconess in Canada. She was born in Edmonton, Alberta on October 2, 1907 and moved to Kitchener with her family at the age of 13, where she became a member of St. Matthew's Church. She studied nursing at the Stratford General Hospital, graduating in 1932, after which time she worked as a nurse at the Freeport Sanitorium for a year and a half and as an industrial nurse Merchants Rubber for eight years. She studied at Waterloo College for a year, before going to Philadelphia where she worked with children at the Lutheran Settlement House, followed by two years of training at the Lutheran Deaconess House and School in Baltimore, graduating in May of 1947. The same year she returned to St. Matthew's Church in Kitchener, where she worked with refugees, youth groups and made regular hospital and nursing home visits. In addition to her work with the Lutheran Church, Weicker was a member of the K-W Quota Club, a board member of St. Monica's House, and a charter member of both the Sunnyside Auxiliary and the St. Leonard's Society.

Weicker died of cancer on June 16, 1977 and was buried at Saint Peter's Lutheran Cemetery in Kitchener.

Webster, Marion

  • Person
  • November 6, 1863-May 31, 1952

Marion Webster nee Murchie (1863-1952) was born to Charles and Marian Murchie (nee Hamilton) in Walton, Grey County, Ontario in 1863. By 1880 she was living in Grafton, North Dakota and working as a servant. She married Ardell Webster (September 21, 1858-June 1889). The two traveled to Angola in 1887 as missionaries with The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions and settled in Bailundo. Ardell died in June of 1889, and Marion stayed on in Angola until her retirement in May 1933. She later worked at the Dondi mission in Catchiungo, and the Webster Memorial school there was named for her. In 1933 she returned to the United States and settled in Los Angeles with her sister Margaret. She died in Los Angeles on May 31, 1952.

Weber, Donald

  • Person
  • 1919-1990

Mayor of Kitchener from 1954 to 1955.

Weaver, Henry B.

  • Person
  • 1830-1923

Henry B. Weaver was born August 4, 1830 in Lancaster County, PA. He married twice and had 14 children by his first wife Hetty Rohrer Mosser (1833-1889). His second wife was Anna Martin Witmer (1826-1921). He died August 30, 1923.

Weaver, Henrietta Josephine

  • Person
  • 1854-1931

Henrietta Josephine Cook was born on May 7, 1854 near Preston, Ontario to James Cook and Elizabeth Williams Cook. She married Jacob B. Weaver (1852-1932), lived in Kitchener, Ontario and died January 22, 1931.

Watson, Mary Margaret

  • Person
  • 1907 - 1982

Mary Margaret Watson was born in Exeter, Devonshire, in England. Homer Ransford Watson and Roxanna "Roxa" Betchtel adopted her in December of 1907. She was their only living child. Mary Watson died on July 14, 1982, in Cambridge, Ontario.

Watson, Homer Ransford

  • Person
  • 1855-1936

Homer Watson was born at Doon, Ontario in 1855 where he lived for 81 years. Early in his teens he was exhibiting his drawings at the annual fall fairs, held in surrounding communities. One of his earliest efforts, "The Pioneer Mill", appeared at the first exhibition of the Royal Canadian Academy and was purchased by the Marquis of Lorne for Queen Victoria. He took a prize in Montreal for his painting; was awarded a gold medal at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in 1904; was elected as associate of the Royal Canadian Academy on the organization of that body in 1880; became full academician in 1882; elected president of the Canadian Art Club in 1907 and 1911; was president of the Royal Canadian Academy in 1918. He died in May 1936.

Watfor

  • Person
  • 1966-1968?

Watfor is a character and cartoon strip created for The Chevron by Don Kerr in 1966. The character appeared in The Chevron until approximately April 1968.

Watfor was inspired by the Fortran computer program called WATFOR which was developed by a group of University of Waterloo undergraduates in 1965. Watfor lived in the campus pond in front of the Health Services Building. It is unclear exactly what type of character Watfor is. The character refers to itself as a tad, fish, troll, and pond denizen. It may be part computer, part fish. In the comic strips, Watfor commented on campus happenings. The character was also printed on some ephemeral items such as ribbons distributed to the Orientation Committee on campus in the late 1960s.

Don Kerr was a graduate student at the University of Waterloo in the department of design when he created Watfor. He had recently graduated from the University of Manitoba as an architect and came to Waterloo to further his studies, specifically around experimental colours and architectural illumination.

Cartooning was a hobby for Don Kerr. He created the FDU cartoon strip which ran in the University of Manitoba's newspaper, the Manitoban, as well as the Winnipeg Tribune. He also created Lapinette, a cartoon ad for the Bank of Montreal that ran in the majority of campus newspapers across Canada.

Don Kerr married Mary Robinson, a fellow graduate student in design, in the Conrad Grebel chapel on May 20, 1967. The wedding was featured in an article in The Chevron titled, "This doesn't very often happen: Watfor sees his father married." The article includes a photograph of Don Kerr and Mary Robinson at the wedding ceremony.

Washburn, Margaret

  • Person
  • 1867-1963

Margaret Cameron Washburn (nee Gillespie) was born ca. 1867. She married Clark Grant Washburn on October 27, 1890 and resided afterwards in Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario. She died in 1963.

Warnock, Adam

  • Person
  • 1828-1902

Adam Warnock was married to Stephanie Hespeler, who was the aunt of Stephanie Urbs. He was a merchant in Galt. He was born in Scotland on July 20, 1828. He died on August 29, 1902.

Wanless, Alice

  • Person
  • 1861-[1955?]

Alice Wanless was born Alice Philp in 1861. She married George A. Wanless on January 5, 1887 and resided in Kitchener, Ontario for a short time. She died November 27, 1955 in Edmonton, Alberta.

Walter, John

  • Person
  • 1892-1978

John Walter, Jr. was a Canadian politician and businessman. The eldest of four children, he was born April 10, 1892 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to John and Caroline (nee Drier). He attended elementary school in Milwaukee and Detroit, Michigan before attending high school at the Crane Technical High School in Chicago, Illinois. He immigrated to Canada with his family in 1912 and worked alongside his father and brother as a manufacturer with the family company, John Walter & Sons. He married Olga Klehn, of Kitchener, on August 9, 1922. They lived for a time at 32 Fairview Avenue in Kitchener, Ontario.

In the 1930s Walter served first as Vice-President and later President of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (C.C.F) party's Kitchener branch. He ran against and lost in the 1935 federal election to William Daum Euler. In addition to his affiliation with the C.C.F., Walter served as a Kitchener public school board trustee for nine years during the 1920s and 30s.

Walter died on April 17, 1978.

Wallace, Claire

  • Person
  • 1900-1968

Claire Wallace was a Canadian radio broadcaster and journalist, and one of the first women to broadcast nationally over the CBC. Born in Orangeville, Ont., she attended Branksome Hall and initially worked for The Toronto Star writing a column titled "Over the Teacups" which parlayed into, as radio show on station CFRB Toronto in 1935, called "Teatime topics." She joined CBC in 1936 and by 1942 she was hosting the thrice weekly show "They Tell Me." She married James C. Stutt in the same year. In 1946 she won the Beaver Award from Broadcaster Magazine as Canada's top woman commentator. Beginning in the 1940's she also became an advocate for women's rights, and could lay to claim to many "first woman to..." titles. In 1952 Claire returned to broadcasting on CFRB where should would continue for many years while writing books such as "Mind Your Manners", an etiquette guide, which was published in 1953. For several years, beginning in 1955, she ran the Claire Wallace Travel Bureau in Toronto taking tourists to such locations as China and Russia. Claire was also a member of many organizations including the Canadian Women's Press Club and the Heliconian Club for artists and worked actively to raise money for several charities. Claire died in 1968 in Toronto.

Walker, Philip

  • Person
  • 1957-2017

Philip Walker spent 32 years at The Record, documenting the region of Waterloo. He was a photojournalist who created great photos of the region, capturing moments readers will remember. He took his last photos for the Record in 2014, when the physical demands of the job became too much.

Walker, James

  • Person
  • 1940

James (Jim) William Saint George Walker was born on August 5, 1940, in Toronto, and grew up in Agincourt, Ontario. Walker received his Bachelor's degree in History from Trinity College at the University of Toronto (1962), his Master’s degree in History from the University of Waterloo (1967), and his Ph.D. in History from Dalhousie University (1973). In 1976, Walker published his Ph.D. dissertation under the title The Black Loyalists: the search for a promised land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone, 1783-1870 with Longman International Education, which he later republished with the University of Toronto Press in 1992 and 2017.

During his time as a student in the 1960s, Walker worked in a Gandhian ashram in India under the auspices of Canadian University Service Overseas (CUSO) and he participated in the local support group for the US civil rights movement (“Friends of SNCC”) in Toronto. During Canada’s Centennial, he was Youth and Education Director for the Centennial International Development Programme. While at Dalhousie, Walker co-founded and taught the "Transition Year Program" designed to prepare African-Canadian and First Nations students for university entrance.

James Walker joined the University of Waterloo as a History professor in 1971. At the University of Waterloo, he created the first university-level course in African-Canadian History offered in Canada and Canada's first Public History graduate program; served as Chair of the Department of History (1981-1986); and taught courses in general History and Race relations, courses focused on Black Canadian and African History, and courses on Social History and Public History. During his research, teaching, and public speaker career his talks, publications, and courses focused on the history of African-Canadians, Canadian and international human rights, Racism in Canada, Race relations in Canada, Immigration, the Holocaust, and civil society and public history.

While in Waterloo, Walker co-founded and was a long-time board member of the Global Community Centre of Kitchener-Waterloo and has served on the boards of several NGOs with an international focus (including CUSO, the WUSC local committee, and the board of the Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute). Between 2003 and 2004, the Social Science and Humanities Research Council appointed Walker the Bora Laskin National Fellow in Human Rights Research. In 2013, Walker was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. And in 2016, he was invested as a Member of the Order of Canada.

In 2020, Walker retired from his professor role and remained as Distinguished Professor Emeritus of the University of Waterloo.

During his professional years, James Walker published numerous articles, book chapters, and books, including, among others:

  • The Black Loyalists : The Search for a Promised Land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone, Longman and Dalhousie University Press, 1976 (1992, 2017).
  • Racial discrimination in Canada: the Black experience, Canadian Historical Association, 1985.
  • "Race," Rights and the Law in the Supreme Court of Canada: Historical Case Studies, The Osgoode Society and Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1997.
  • Critical Mass: The Emergence of Global Civil Society, Centre for International Governance Innovation and Wilfrid Laurier University Press, co-authored with Andrew Thompson, 2008.
  • “A Black Day in Court: ‘Race’ and Judging in R v RDS” in The African-Canadian Legal Odyssey, edited by Barrington Walker, Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History and University of Toronto Press, 2012.
  • Burnley "Rocky" Jones : revolutionary : an autobiography, Fernwood Publishing, 2016.

Wagner, Louis Henry

  • Person
  • 1857-1945

Rev. Louis Henry Wagner was born April 11, 1857 in New York to Jacob Wagner and Margaret Hailer. After his father's death his mother re-married Daniel Biehn (Bean) and he was educated in primary school. At the age of 13 he was invited to move to Kitchener by his grandfather Jacob Hailer and his uncle Louis Breithaupt. Here he attended Berlin Central School, high school, and then apprenticed as a tanner under his uncle Louis. He later attended Northwestern College in Naperville, Illinois. In 1878 he returned to Kitchener and worked again for his uncle as a bookkeeper and salesman. In 1882 he began working as an itinerant preacher for the Evangelical Association. He married Mary Staebler (1859-1887) on May 20, 1884 and she died two weeks after giving birth to their only child, Louis. He re-married in 1889 to Sarah Lodema Moyer (1861-1941). Louis Henry would continue to preach in Ontario, Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan until his death. He died in Kitchener on January 8, 1945 at the age of 87 and was buried in Mount Hope Cemetery.

Wagner, Jacob

  • Person
  • 1824-1858

Born in Siefersheim, German, Jacob emigrated to Lyons, New York, with his parents in 1840. He originally worked as a farmer and a cooper before beginning to preach at age 18 under the tutelage of Rev. Joseph Harlacher. Jacob married Margaret Hailer (1831-1918) and they had two living children, Rev. Louis Henry (1857-1945) and Catherine (b.1852).

Wagner, Henry

  • Person
  • 1793-1867

Born in German, Henry Wagner emigrated to Lyons, New York with his wife Anna Maria Eckhard (1796-1850) and son Jacob Wagner in 1840 where he established a farm.

Wagner, Gordon

  • Person

Gordon Wagner is the great grandson of Jacob Hailer and grandson of Louis Henry Wagner, who was a first cousin of Louis Jacob Breithaupt.

von Harpe, Susanne

  • Person
  • October 27, 1914-July 29, 2008

Susanne von Harpe (nee Baroness von Stackelberg) was born in what is now Tartu, Estonia in 1914. After school she worked in farming and housekeeping and In 1935 she married Ulrich von Harpe. In 1940 the family fled to Germany after Russian troops had occupied Estonia, settling in Schroda. On January 20, 1945 Susanne, Ulrich and their children fled West ultimately to Dotzum. On December 7, 1951 the family sailed to Canada arriving on December 23, and taking the train to their farm in Linwood, Ontario. Susanne spent many years traveling with her husband who was a sailor, and enjoyed painting and writing. Susanne died July 29th, 2008.

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