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MacDermot, Terence William Leighton, 1896-1966

  • Person
  • 1896-1966

Terence MacDermot was born in Jamaica in 1896 and grew up in Montreal. He attended McGill University from 1913 to 1916, where he became editor of the McGill Daily. He was granted a B.A. in 1917, while serving overseas in the 7th Canadian Siege Battery. A Rhodes scholar, he obtained his M.A. from Oxford University in 1922. In 1923, after working for a year at Hotchkiss School, Connecticut, MacDermot returned to Montreal and taught at both, Lower Canada College and at McGill’s History Department. Between 1925 and 1930 he was editor of the McGill News. McGill promoted him to the level of Assistant Professor in 1929, and he remained there until 1934, when he left to serve as national secretary of the League of Nations Society in Canada. The following year Upper Canada College appointed him as its Principal. During the Second World War, he worked first for the War Service Department and then as a Chief Army Examiner for the Toronto district. In 1944, he joined the Department of External Affairs, receiving appointments as High Commissioner to South Africa in 1950-1954, Ambassador to Greece and Israel in 1954-1957, and High Commissioner to Australia in 1957-1961. He then became Professor of Political Science at Bishop’s University. MacDermot received an honorary LL.D. degree from McGill in 1957. He had a life-long interest in the life and works of British writer D.H. Lawrence. He died in 1966.

MacDermot, H. E. (Hugh Ernest), 1888-1983

  • n 85800926
  • Person
  • 1888-1983

Hugh Ernest MacDermot was born in Jamaica in 1888 and received his medical training at McGill, graduating in 1913. He served in the Canadian Army Medical Corps during World War I. He was Lecturer in Anatomy at McGill, 1921-1924, and Demonstrator in Medicine, 1925-1949, and was on the staff of the Montreal General Hospital. He also served as instructor in Clinical Medicine at McGill. MacDermot was a historian and among his published works are biographies of Maude Abbott and Sir Thomas Roddick and histories of the Montreal General Hospital, the Canadian Medical Association, the Royal Edward Institute and the Christ Church Cathedral in Montreal. In 1942, he became editor of the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

MacCullagh, J. C. (John Christian), 1832-1917

  • Person
  • 1832-1917

Rev. John Christian MacCullagh was born on June 6, 1832, in Palmerstown, County Dublin, Ireland.

He was an Anglican priest. Educated at Clontarf Crescent and Trinity College, Dublin, he entered the Islington Mission College. In 1863, he travelled to Sydney, Australia, and entered Moore Theological College. He was ordained deacon at St. James's Pro-Cathedral, Melbourne in 1864. In 1866, he was ordained priest and was inducted as incumbent of St. Paul's Anglican Cathedral, Sandhurst, where the parish and the entire community flourished during his forty-six years of service. In 1907, he became vicar-general of the new diocese of Bendigo and acted as archdeacon from 1909 to 1914. MacCullagh had contributed scientific and religious articles to the Argus and the Bendigo Church News. He also published Sunday school lesson material and notes for theological students. He won repute throughout the whole district for his liberality and concern for those who suffered.

In 1865, he married Elizabeth Ince (1843–1870). He died on September 24, 1917, in Melbourne, Australia, almost penniless; for years giving his income to those who needed it.

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