Showing 12520 results
Authority recordCongregational Missionary Society of British North America
- CA QUA00714
- Corporate body
- n.d.
No information available on this creator.
- CA QUA00717
- Person
- 1906-1998
Dr. Walter Ford Connell, best known as Ford Connell, was a graduate of Queen's Medical School earning his M.D.C.M in 1929, along with the gold medal in both medicine and surgery. After some time spent overseas, he returned to Queen's in 1935, joining his father Dr. W.T Connell in the Department of Medicine. At this time, he also bought the Kingston General Hospital its first portable electrocardiograph and established its division of cardiology. Connell became the head of the Department of Medicine in 1942, and was a leader in the decision to allow women back into Queen's Medical School in 1943. By the early 1950s, Connell had built up the department of medicine to provide for teaching, research and patient care in many subspecialties. Connell retired in 1968 as an emeritus professor and Queen's awarded him an honorary degree in 1973. Ford Connell passed away in October 1998 in Kingston.
- CA QUA02296
- Person
- 1873-1964
Queen's Medical graduate, 1894. Professor, head of Medical department, pathology pioneer, Queen's University.
- CA QUA01730
- Person
- 1926-
Andrew J. Connidis was born in London, England in 1926. In 1942, at the age of sixteen, he received a scholarship to study at Regent Street Polytechnic School of Achitecture in London. His studies were interrupted in 1946 for military service. He returned to his studies in 1948, receiving his Diploma in Architecture in 1950. In 1952, Connidis emigrated to Canada where he worked with several firms before founding his own practice in Kingston, Ontario, in 1960. In 1967, while maintaining his private practice, he collaborated with Wasteneys and Stern, Architects of Toronto to found the firm of Connidis, Stern, Wasteneys with offices in both Toronto and Kingston. Connidis remained active in both firms until 1974 when he left Kingston to join the Department of National Defence as Project and Production Officer. In 1975, he joined Public Works Canada where he was actively involved in promoting the application of thermography to building design and construction. In 1979, he joined the Technical Services Branch of Correctional Service Canada and, in 1982, briefly returned to Public Works Canada before joining the Bank of Canada in 1983 as Building Consultant. He retired in 1990. Connidis is a member of the Ontario Association of Architects, the Royal Achitectural Institute of Canada, and an associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects. He was married in London, England, in 1949, to Dr. Ingegjerd Lilla Arnet. They have seven children.
Conservative Party of Canada Conventions
- CA QUA00715
- Corporate body
- n.d.
The Progressive Conservative Party, a political party, began as a coalition of Liberals and moderate Conservatives in 1854. Brought together under the leadership of Sir Alan MacNab and the active direction of John A. Macdonald and George-Etienne Cartier, this Liberal-Conservative coalition was regarded at first as just another of the shifting alliances of the period. The party was broadened at Confederation by the addition of the Conservative parties of the Maritime Provinces. The Party retained the name "Liberal-Conservative" from its inception in 1854 until its national convention in 1938. At that convention the name was changed to "The National Conservative Party". At the convention of 1942 in Winnipeg the name was changed to "Progressive Conservative Party". At no time from 1854 to the present has the single name "Conservative" ever been used as the official designation of the Party.