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Authority record- CA QUA01272
- Corporate body
- 1964-
The programme was first broadcast on 2 May 1964 with The World of Buckminster Fuller which explored the theories and structures of inventor Richard Buckminster Fuller and included the Horizon mission statement: "The aim of Horizon is to provide a platform from which some of the world's greatest scientists and philosophers can communicate their curiosity, observations and reflections, and infuse into our common knowledge their changing views of the universe". Horizon continues to be broadcast on BBC Two, and in 2009 added a series of films based on the rich Horizon archive called Horizon Guides on BBC Four.
- CA QUA02200
- Person
- 1919-2015
Ruth Lenore Hood Horlick, a retired nurse, was born in Toronto on September 25, 1919 and was raised in Gananoque. She received her B.A. from Queen's University in 1941. She worked as a correspondent for the War Savings Committee in Ottawa in 1942, and later trained and graduated as a nurse from the Montreal General Hospital School of Nursing in 1947. In 1954, she was hired as a lecturer in Psychiatric Nursing with the School for Graduate Nurses at McGill University.She passed away on February 15 2015 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
In 1952, she married Dr. Louis Horlick, with whom she had three children.
- CA QUA11767
- Person
- fl. 1958
R.B. Horn was a student in the School of Mining at Queen's University.
- CA QUA00276
- Person
- 21 September 1880-16 April 1927
John (Jack) Hornby was an English explorer best known for his expeditions in the Arctic region, notably in the Northwest Territory of Canada. Hornby was born to a wealthy family in England and migrated to Canada in 1904.
Hornby's first trip to the Arctic was to the Great Bear Lake region in 1908 and he developed a strong fascination with the Canadian Arctic wilderness. Apart from occasional trips to Edmonton and service in World War I, Hornby spent the rest of his life in the Arctic region of northern Canada.
He became known as the "hermit of the north" for his efforts to live off the land with limited supplies. In 1923, Hornby teamed up with an Englishman James Critchell Bullock (1898-1953) in efforts to spend an entire year in the Arctic near Hudson Bay living off the land without supplies except for weapons. The pair barely survived and Critchell Bullock's diaries formed the basis of Malcolm Waldron's book Snow Man: John Hornby in the Barren Lands first published in 1931.
In 1926, Hornby tried to spend a year in a spot by the Thelon River with his 18 year old cousin Edgar Christian and another young man Harold Adlard. Unfortunately, the trio missed the caribou migration southward and therefore lacked sufficient food to survive the winter. Hornby died of starvation along with his companions in 1927. The graves of the three men can be found by the Thelon River.
Hornby recommended in a report following his expedition with Critchell-Bullock that the areas near the Thelon and Hanbury Rivers be created as a wildlife sanctuary. The Thelon Game Sanctuary was established in 1927, renamed Thelon Wildlife Sanctuary in 1956, and this area remains the heart of the largest area of wilderness in North America. The publication of Waldron's book proved successful and sparked further interest in the Northern wilderness.