Showing 15020 results

Authority record

Files, Harold Gershorn, 1895-1982

  • Person
  • 1895-1982

A Bostonian, Harold Files received his B.A. (1915), M.A. (1916) and Ph.D. (1923) from Harvard. In 1923 he joined the English Department at McGill, where he taught until his retirement in 1964. In the late 1940s he established a programme whereby candidates for the M.A. might submit a novel in place of a thesis. Files also served as head of the Humanities Group from 1946 to 1956, and chairman of the English Department from 1947 to 1952.

Filip, Raymond, 1950-

  • Person
  • 1950-

Raymond Filip (born Filipavicius) was born in 1950 in a displaced person camp in Lübeck, Germany, after World War II.

He is a Lithuanian-Canadian poet, writer, musician, and educator. He is the author of six collections of poetry and one collection of prose. His poetry centres on themes of domestic abuse, war trauma, and immigration. His work has been included in major anthologies: “Canadian Poets of the 80s” edited by Ken Norris (1983), “The New Canadian Poets 1970-1985” edited by Dennis Lee (1985), and “The Penguin Treasury of Canadian Popular Songs and Poems” edited by John Robert Colombo (2002). His work has been translated into French, Spanish, Italian, and Lithuanian. In 2012, Filip released a DVD entitled "Rivers Applaud Forever," containing footage of his spoken word/broken music performances. He teaches in the English department at John Abbott College in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec.

Findlay, Francis Robert, 1888-1977

  • Person
  • 1888-1977

Francis R. Findlay was born in Montreal in 1888. After studying at the University of Pennsylvania, he became his father's partner in 1913. He practised architecture with his father, interrupted by service in the First World War, until the partnership was dissolved in 1941 upon the retirement of Robert Findlay. Francis Findlay then continued a limited independent practice until his retirement in 1959. Concurrently, Francis Findlay worked with the architect Earl Lockhart at Defense Industries Ltd from 1941 to 1953. From 1953 to 1959 he worked for Pringle, a Westmount consulting engineer firm.

Findlay, Robert, 1859-1951

  • nr 97043580
  • Person
  • 1859-1951

Scottish-Canadian architect Robert Findlay was born in Inverness, Scotland. He began training for his profession at age 17 in his hometown (with John Rhind ’s firm), followed by work in Glasgow (as an assistant to John Burnet). He immigrated to Montreal in 1885 and started working with Alexander Dunlop; he assisted with designs for the St. James Methodist Church at 463 St. Catherine Street West. In 1887 he both married Jane Ameilia Fleming and won a competition for a design for the expansion of the first Sun Life building (predecessor of the building on Dorchester Square). Apparently impressed by the young architect’s talents, Robert Macaulay, president of Sun Life, hired him to design a home for himself. Findlay’s career took off, first in a partnership and then with his own firm; he began getting important commissions for mansions and large homes in Montreal’s Golden Square Mile sector and in nearby Westmount. Eventually he produced designs for about 30 homes in Westmount alone, including residences for the influential Molson and Bronfman families and for his own growing family (at 419/421 Lansdowne Avenue –they lived in the southern half of the semi-detached house). In 1898 he designed the Westmount Public Library, the first of a number of Westmount municipal buildings he created; it was the first municipal library building in the province and was built to celebrate Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee. There followed a commission in 1899 for Westmount’s original Victoria Hall, a public gathering place which would burn down in 1924. He created the children’s addition to the Westmount library with a separate entrance in 1910. His son Frank joined his firm in 1913 and helped him with the work for Westmount City Hall in 1922, followed by another library extension in 1924. Like the library, many of his designs featured “Queen Anne” style towers, arches and large windows. The Quebec Association of Architects awarded him their first Medal of Merit in 1938. He retired in 1941 and spent the rest of his life in the home on Lansdowne Avenue.

Results 4841 to 4850 of 15020