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Authority record
Corporate body · 1981-1997

The New Maritimes Editorial Council Society was founded on 17 January 1981. It was incorporated first in 1981 under the Corporations' Registrations Act and again in 1982 under the Societies' Act as a non-profit organization. The society's objective was to establish an independent and self-sufficient regional publication with a critical point of view. The editorial policy of its magazine, New Maritimes, was to publish material that reflected the distinctiveness of life in in the Maritime provinces, with emphasis on the region's culture and history, primary resources, and environment. Due to financial problems, the society disbanded on 8 January 1997, and the magazine ceased publication.

Person

Thomas Neville was born ca. 1794 in Lichfield, Warwickshire, England, the son of Thomas and Sarah (Harding) Neville. He married Frances Amelia Bridgen (ca. 1798-1894) in July 1816. The couple arrived in Pictou, N.S. on the brig "Thomas Battersby" on 4 August 1828. Thomas worked at Albion Mines as an engineer fitter until 1841. The Nevilles later moved to Denmark, Colchester County, N.S. and were buried in the Anglican Cemetery in Middleton, Colchester County. Thomas Neville died in 1883.

Neiley, Clifford, 1883-1955
Person · 1883-1955

Clifford Roscoe Neiley was born on 23 November 1883 in North Kingston, Kings County, Nova Scotia, the son of William Wallace and Oddessa P. (Margeson) Neiley. About 1904 he travelled to Saskatchewan where he established Rosemount Stock Farm, breeders of shorthorn cattle and Plymouth Rock fowl in Saltcoats, Saskatchewan. Apparently as a result of the stock market crash in October of 1929 he was forced to sell his farm and move back to Nova Scotia. He died on 28 August 1955 in North Kingston, Nova Scotia.

Family · 1720-

Reverend Nehemiah Porter, son of weaver Nehemiah Porter and Hannah (Smith) was born 22 or 27 March 1720 at Ipswich, Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard College in 1745 and was ordained in 1750. On 14 February 1749 he married Rebecca Chipman at Beverly, Massachusetts; they had the following children: Rebekah, Hannah, Nehemiah (b. 1753), John C., Sarah, Samuel, Ebenezer, Joseph, and Elisabeth. Dismissed from his first church in Ipswich in 1766 and his wife having died a few years earlier, Rev. Porter moved to Cape Forchu, Nova Scotia where he served as minister of the Congregational Church, 1767-1771. He returned to Massachusetts in 1771, leaving his eldest son Nehemiah Porter Jr. to keep his farm at Yarmouth. Rev. Porter settled at Ashfield, Massachusetts in 1774 and was chaplain in 1777 during the American Revolutionary War. He married Elizabeth Raymond in 1778 and continued to preach until his death at Ashfield on 29 February 1820, a few days short of his 100th birthday. Nehemiah Porter Jr. bought his father's farm in Yarmouth ca. 1784. He and his wife Mary (Tardy), married 18 July 1776, had fourteen children: Rebecca (b. 1777), Mary (b. 1778), Hannah (b. 1780), Ruth (b. 1782), Sarah (b. 1784), Nehemiah (b. 1786), John Tardy (b. 1788), Ebenezer (b. 1791), Elizabeth (b. 1793), Joseph (b. 1795), Samuel Chipman (b. 1797), Jonathan (b. 1801), George Rowland (b. 1804), and Eunice (b. 1806).

Corporate body · 1975-

The Native Council of Nova Scotia was established in February 1975, in Yarmouth, as an advocacy group for all Mi'kmaw / Aboriginal People residing off-reserve in Nova Scotia (who number about 15,000, according to 1990 statistics). The Council was formed in reaction to the perceived inadequacy of Federal and provincial government policy in dealing with such "non-status Indians". The Council contends that all Aboriginal people are equal, regardless of where they choose to reside. The primary objective of the Council is to help Mi'kmaw / Aboriginal People residing off-reserve to find a voice and to organize to ensure "a better future" for all Aboriginal people. Since its inception the Council has been extremely active, establishing and/ or participating in a host of cultural, political, and economic organizations, including: The Native Council of Nova Scotia Employment Outreach Services; The Native Council of Nova Scotia Education Fund; The Native Council of Nova Scotia Native Social Counselling Agency; The Native Council of Nova Scotia Mi'kmaq Language Program; The Mi'kmaq Society; and the Mi'kmaq Development Corporation. The Council has worked in cooperation with all levels of government, public and private agencies, private industry, and other Mi'kmaw / Aboriginal groups. Membership in the Native Council of Nova Scotia is open to both "status" Indians (those on band lists) and "non-status" Indians, and to people with Aboriginal ancestry. The Council has established twelve operational zones in the province. Within each zone, there is an executive usually consisting of an elected President, Vice-President, Treasurer and Secretary. The Council maintains a central administrative office in Truro, and regional offices in Halifax, Sydney, and Bridgewater.

Corporate body · 1899-2003

National Sea Products Limited originated in Lunenburg in 1899 as W.C. Smith & Co., a ships' chandlery and salt fish operation. In 1926 the latter company merged with Lunenburg Sea Products, a cold storage and fresh fish plant, while retaining its company name. Soon the new company began to modernize its offshore fishing ships by installing diesel engines in existing vessels and constructing new types of dory trawlers and diesel powered otter trawlers. In addition, it was one of the first fishing companies to install radio-telephone communications between fishing vessels and port, and to introduce other electronic and navigational equipment. Further expansion led to the construction of new plants at Louisbourg, North Sydney, Lockeport and Digby, as well as Shippegan and Loggieville, N.B., and sales offices were opened in Montreal, Toronto, New York and Boston. In 1938 both Lunenburg Sea Products and W.C. Smith & Co. were acquired by a holding company, Smith Fisheries Ltd. During World War II the company built two modern otter diesel trawlers, Cape North and Cape LaHave, that revolutionized the Atlantic fishing industry by replacing offshore line fishing by draggers towing trawls along the ocean floor. The company also improved its processing methods and equipment, and developed a variety of new frozen seafood products. In 1945 Lunenburg Sea Products, its associated companies, and Maritime National Fish Company of Halifax were acquired by outside interests and amalgamated into National Sea Products Ltd. In the 1960s Nat Sea built a new plant at Battery Point on Lunenburg Harbour that was considered one of the most modern and largest fish plants in the world. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, as with the fishing industry in general, Nat Sea was plagued by over-inventory and a weak market. But in 1983 the establishment of federal government quota and allocation systems helped stabilize the industry and improve the company's financial outlook. In 1998 Nat Sea became a division of High Liner Foods Incorporated, one of North America's largest marketers of fresh and frozen seafood and frozen pasta products. In 2003 the sale of National Sea Products' High Liner Foods fleet to Clearwater Seafoods, Halifax, was announced.

Nancy Jabbra
Person · 1943-

Nancy (Walstrom) Jabbra, retired anthropology professor, was born in 1943 in Cleveland, Ohio, United States to Octavia Seawell Walstrom and Douglas Peter Walstrom. She married Joseph G. Jabbra in August 1974 and is the mother of two children: Michael and Mary. She earned her Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Anthropology in 1964 from the University of California, Santa Barbara, US; her Master of Arts (MA) in 1970 from Indiana University, Bloomington, US; and her Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in 1975 from the Catholic University of America, Washington, DC, US. Dr. Jabbra worked as professor of Social Anthropology at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia 1975 to 1990, then moved to Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California, where she served as founding Chair of the Women’s Studies Department from 2004 until retirement in 2012. She has co-authored 18 books and book chapters and 33 articles in scholarly journals and she was a member of 20 professional societies, served as President of the Canadian Ethnic Studies Association from 1987-1989.

Murray, Paul, 1927-2007
Person · 1927-2007

Paul Burns Murray was born in Saint John, New Brunswick, on 21 March 1927, the son of Isaac and S. Audrey G. (Mullin) Murray. He was educated at Mount Allison University and the Royal College of Music in London, England. Mr Murray was a graduate of the University of Toronto with a Bachelor of Music degree and successfully completed the requirements for Associate of the Royal College of Music (1953) and Fellowship of the Royal College of Organists (1952). He was director of school music in Saint John, 1955-1961, and then moved to Toronto as supervisor of music for Scarborough schools and organist and choirmaster of Metropolitan United Church. He was also chairman of school music for the North York Board of Education, 1963-1967. He moved to Halifax in 1967 and became music consultant for the Nova Scotia Department of Education and organist and choir director of Saint Matthew's United Church, Halifax. Mr. Murray founded the Halifax Chamber Choir in 1970. He was a past President of the Canadian Music Educators Association from 1976 to 1979. He was married to Helen and had two children. He died on 9 July 2007 in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Murray, Jon, 1948-1993
Person · 1948-1993

Jon Earl Murray was born at Middleton, N.S., the son of Lloyd and Kathleen (MacNeil) Murray. He attended the Nova Scotia Technical College where he graduated with a B. Arch. in 1972. He commenced his professional practice in architecture in 1975 and registered with the Nova Scotia Association of Architects and the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada. From 1972 to 1985 he was associated with the firm Architectural Resources Consultants Company Limited. He also taught briefly at the School of Architecture, Technical University of Nova Scotia, 1981. As a freelance architect, Murray specialized in restoration of private homes and commercial buildings, small-scale rehabilitation, and design of modern homes for which he received several awards including the Nova Scotia Lieutenant Governor's Award for Architecture in 1991 and Lieutenant Governor's Award for Architecture Medal of Excellence in 1993. He worked primarily in metropolitan Halifax-Dartmouth and surrounding counties, as well as Cape Breton and New Brunswick. His projects included renovations for W.R. MacAskill house at St. Peter's and Baddeck Library, and the design and construction of Chocolate Gourmet Treats Limited ("Treats") stores and Silversides Subdivision, Waverly. Formerly a resident of Centreville, N.S., he died 28 December 1993 at London, England.

Murray, Dudley, 1900-1955
Person · 1900-1955

Norman Dudley Murray was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia on 29 March 1900, the son of Norman Grant and Gertrude L. (Pickering) Murray. He saw active service in the First World War, enlisting in the Canadian Expeditionary Force on 1 April 1916 and serving until he was discharged on 15 October 1919. Thereafter, he returned to Halifax and attended Dalhousie Law School, graduating in 1922. In 1923 he married Nellie Jean Archibald in Truro, Nova Scotia. He was eventually made Dartmouth Town Magistrate. He was keenly interested in early film photography. He was active in the pre-Second World War militia (87th and 88th Field Artillery Batteries), which met in the armories in the old wooden Park School in Dartmouth. He re-enlisted for active service in 1942, but due to his wife's health he was placed in charge of civil defense for Dartmouth, where he was involved in responding to both the V-E Day riots and the Magazine Explosion in 1945. He was appointed a K.C. on 30 December 1950. He died on 30 November 1955.

Murdoch, Beamish, 1800-1876
Person · 1800-1876

Beamish Murdoch, barrister, writer, and historian, was born at Halifax, N.S. on 1 August 1800, the son of Andrew and Elizabeth (Beamish) Murdoch. In 1822 he was admitted to the bar of Nova Scotia and began a legal practice. He also began to contribute articles to the Acadian Recorder and Acadian Magazine. He served as MLA for Halifax Township, 1826-1830, after which he published his first book, Epitome of the Laws of Nova Scotia (1832-33). In 1841 he became clerk of the Central Board of Education followed by recorder for the city of Halifax, 1852-1860. He retired in 1860 and began to write A History of Nova Scotia, or Acadie, published between 1865 and 1867. Murdoch was active in several civic and charitable organizations, including the Charitable Irish Society (vice president, 1824-1825); Poor Man's Friend Society, 1825; Nova Scotia Philanthropic Society in the 1830s; and the Halifax Temperance Society (president, 1842). He died on 9 February 1876 at Lunenburg.

Corporate body · 1975-

Formed on 15 June 1975 through the intiative of the Department of Recreation, the Multicultural Association of Nova Scotia is an umbrella organization which represents and serves regional multicultural councils in the province and their affiliated groups. Its objectives are to promote, encourage and assist cultural groups to develop and preseve their cultural identities, to act as a co-ordinating centre for local associations and councils, and to act as a liaison between the various cultural groups and departments of government. The association was incorporated under the Societies Act on 22 July 1975 and its first board meeting took place in Halifax on 8 August 1975. The programs developed by the association serve the multicultural community in the areas of education, performing and visual arts, immigration and anti-racism concerns, library service, radio broadcasts, and publications, including several books and a quarterly newsletter, Share (first issue published October 1975). MANS has also sponsored, co-sponsored and produced numerous festivals including Community Ethno Cultural Arts Festival, the Canadian Heritage Festival, and Celebration, which began in 1985 and is currently known as the annual Nova Scotia Multicultural Festival

Corporate body · 1965-

The Undergraduate Curriculum Committee is a sub-committee of the Committee on Academic Policy and Planning and reports to Senate through that standing committee. Referred to at various times as the Curriculum Committee (established in 1965) and the Curriculum Sub-Committee, the Committee's purpose is to serve as consultant and advisor to Senate on matters dealing with undergraduate curriculum. The membership of the Committee consists of the Dean of Professional Studies and the Dean of Arts and Science as alternating Chairpersons, the Registrar, two full-time members of faculty from each division, and one faculty member at large, as well as, one third or fourth-year student representative named by the Student Union.

Corporate body · 1966-

The Undergraduate Admissions and Scholarship Committee is a standing committee of Senate. The first meeting of the newly-formed Committee on Admissions and Awards (originally there was a separate Committee on Scholarships and a separate Committee on Admissions) was held December 1966, and at various times this Committee has been known as the Committee on Admissions, Scholarships and Bursaries. This title was later changed to the Committee on Admissions and Scholarships.

Corporate body

The Committee on Appointment, Promotion and Tenure or Permanence is a standing committee of Senate, and was known in the past as the Committee on Appointments, Rank and Tenure. This Committee is responsible for matters dealing with the awarding of academic rank, tenure and permanence to administrators with academic rank, who are not members of the bargaining unit represented by the Mount Saint Vincent Faculty Association. The Vice-President Academic acts as Chair. This Committee communicates the decision reached in each case of appointment, promotion and tenure or permanence to the Chair of Senate, to the President and/or to the Board of Governors, as appropriate. The Committee considers individuals recommended for emeritus status, and makes recommendations to Senate concerning the granting of emeritus status. Members of the committee include four elected members of faculty serving as members of the University Review Committee/University Review Committee for Librarians.

Mosher, Marial, 1917-2008
Person · 1917-2008

Marial Mosher was born on 29 January 1917 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She was the adopted daughter of Malcolm and Florence B. (Larder) Mosher. She became interested in dance at an early age. When she was eighteen, she went to New York and studied dance under Albertina Rasch and others. In 1939 Marial Mosher returned to Halifax, just before the outbreak of the Second World War. She continued dancing at Madame Hylda's School of Dance in Halifax, and gave performances for servicmen with Uncle Mel's Show. In 1941, Marial Mosher gave up her career as a dancer to join the Canadian Women's Army Corps. Following her return from the services in 1945, she studied sociology at Acadia University, graduating in 1951, and subsequently taught anthropology at Mount Saint Vincent University for many years. She also served as a staff officer at Eastern Command Headquarters for ten years. In 1953, Marial Mosher was one of a small group of Canadian service women selected to attend the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, in recognition of her distinguished military service. She died in Halifax on 4 October 2008.

Mosher, Malcolm, 1883-1951
Person · 1883-1951

Malcolm Mosher was born on 4 December 1883 at Avondale, Hants County, Nova Scotia, the son of Daniel and Merinda (Martin) Mosher. He graduated from the Maritime Business School in Halifax in 1902, and began working as a clerk the same year. On 2 November 1908 he married Florence B. Larder of Halifax. The couple adopted one daughter, Marial. In 1914 Mosher went into business on his own as an importer and grocery broker, establishing Mosher Brokerage Company in Halifax. The business prospered and Mosher became a well known and respected member of the Maritime business community. Mosher was very active in Halifax community life, particularly in the affairs of the Brunswick Street United Church, where he was a treasurer, a chorister, and a board member. He was also a member of the Halifax Curling Club, Gorsebrook Golf Club, the North British Society, St. John's Lodge, the Scottish Rite, and the Rotary Club. Malcolm Mosher died suddenly of a heart attack on 16 May 1951 in Windsor, Nova Scotia.

Morton, Rachel, 1909-2009
Person · 1909-2009

Rachel Perot Wainwright was born in Vancouver, British Columbia on 25 November 1909, the daughter of Lumley Gregor (1863-1910) and Mary Haliburton (King) Wainwright (1866-1950). She was educated at the Halifax Ladies Academy and at St. Leonard's School in St. Andrew's, Scotland. Thereafter, she studied at King's College and the Halifax Conservatory of Music. She married Harry Stafford Morton on 15 July 1937. She was an active volunteer and was a founding member of the first Montreal Meals on Wheels service, a former president of the Montreal Volunteer Bureau, and she served with the National Council of Women. She died on 6 March 2009 in Halifax, Nova Scotia and was buried in Brookside Cemetery in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia.

Morton, Harry, 1905-2001
Person · 1905-2001

Harry Stafford Morton was born in Port Greville, Nova Scotia on 18 August 1905, the son of Charles Stewart (1876-1955) and Maie Howard (Stafford) Morton (1879-1931). He studied at St. Andrew's College in Toronto, Ontario, 1918-1921, Dalhousie University where he received his BA (1925) and M.Sc. (1927). He received his medical training at the University of London, graduating with an MB, BS in 1930. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine, England, in 1935 and was added to the Medical Register of the College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in 1937. In 1938 he joined the Canadian Navy, serving as a surgeon commander with the Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve. He retired as a surgeon captain in 1945. Thereafter, he taught at McGill University Medical School and served as Chairman of the Surgical Fellow Training Program, 1946-1964; and as Examiner for the Medical Council of Canada and McGill University, 1946-1964. He was Chairman of the Cancer Committee of the Quebec Medical Society and was founder of the Quebec Tumor Registry. He was made a patron of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1999. He served as a director of the Equitable Life Insurance Company of Canada, 1962-1988, and the Board of Regents of Mount Allison University, 1964-1983. He authored 37 scientific publications and in 2000 published Canadian Medical Officers in the Royal Navy, World War II. He died on 8 December 2001 in Halifax, Nova Scotia and was buried in the Morton family plot in Brookside Cemetery, Bridgewater, Nova Scotia.

Person · 1876-1937

Nathaniel Niles Morse was born on 15 February 1876 in Newton, Massachusetts, the son of Charles C. and Francis S.N.K. Morse. He graduated from Harvard Medical School in 1904. He thereafter served as an anesthetist. Morse is believed to have been part of a Harvard University medical team that came to Halifax to offer medical relief after the Explosion of 1917. He married Helen Louise Stewart, a native of Stanstead, Quebec, at Providence, Rhode Island, in 1904. They had two daughters, Nancy and Mary. He died on 24 February 1937 in Goffstown, New Hampshire.

Morrow, Blair
Person · 1937-2016

C. Blair Morrow of Lower Sackville, Nova Scotia, was born 18 July 1937 to Bill and Florence Morrow in Prince Edward Island and grew up in Fairview subdivision of Halifax, NS. He married Lorraine Morrow and had 2 sons Kale and Robbie. He was employed in the road construction industry all his life, worked at various times with Warnock Hersey, SNC Lavalin, Jacques Whitford and Stantech, mostly on concrete supports for bridges. He enjoyed coaching hockey and baseball, researching genealogy and taking photographs of the iron bridges he worked on. He died 3 September 2016 in Lower Sackville, NS.

Person · 1919-1981

James Loran Morrison was born on 3 February 1919 in Economy, Nova Scotia, the son of James Levi and Myrtle Mary (Marsh) Morrison. He was hired in 1938 by the Truro Police Force as a constable. He joined the Navy Shore Patrol in 1944 and served until 1947. After demobilization he moved to Toronto where he was hired as a constable. In 1953 he returned to Economy, Nova Scotia, where he managed a family-owned service station and general store. He operated the business until 1980, when he retired. He died in January 1981.

Morris, Charles, 1759-1831
Person · 1759-1831

Born in Hopkinton, Mass. in 1759, Charles Morris arrived in Halifax, N.S. with his parents, Hon. Charles and Elizabeth Morris, in 1761. He succeeded his father as surveyor general of lands for Nova Scotia from 1802 to 1831. Charles married Charlotte Pernette (1771-1844) ca. 1786 and became a member of the Council on 2 June 1808. He died on 17 December 1831.