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McGill Library
McLennan Library Building3459 rue McTavish
Montreal, Quebec
H3A 0C9
Johnstone, James Johnstone, chevalier de, 1719-1800?
Johnstone, Sarah M. (Sarah Mortimer), 1825-1910
Sarah Mortimer Smith was the daughter of George Smith, a merchant and MLA for Pictou County from 1836-1840. She married George Moir Johnston, a surgeon and founding member of the Medical Society of Nova Scotia.
Johnston-Lavis, H. J. (Henry James), 1856-1914
Henry James Johnston-Lavis was born on July 19, 1856, in London, England, the son of Frances Lavis (1827–1880), an artist.
He was a vulcanologist and physician. His interest in geology was sparked at the grammar school, Iver, Buckinghamshire. For the benefit of his mother's health, the family moved to Marseilles, France, where he began medical training. In 1873, he transferred to University College, London. Here he was inspired by the teaching of the influential geologist John Morris, and at the age of nineteen, he was elected a Fellow of the Geological Society. His first paper on the Triassic strata at Sidmouth was published in 1876. Some bones he had discovered were found to be a new species of amphibian and were named Labyrinthodon lavisi in his honour. He qualified as MRCS, LRCP, and LSA in 1878. He entered medical practice in Stalbridge, Dorset, and then moved to Plaistow, before gaining the degree of B.Sc. in Paris. In 1879, he moved to Naples, Italy, where he started a medical practice for English-speaking communities, acquiring the degree of M.D. in Naples in 1884. In Italy, he was able to pursue his geological interests. He published a monograph (1885) on the earthquakes that occurred at Ischia in 1881 and 1883. He devoted much of his spare time to the study of Monte Somma and Vesuvius, presenting a paper on the subject to the Geological Society in 1884. In 1891, he published a scientifically accurate geological map of Vesuvius, representing the first detailed geological map of the area. In 1892, he was appointed Professor of Vulcanology at the Royal University of Naples. In 1894, he moved to the south of France, qualifying in medicine again at the University of Lyons in 1895. He held the position of English consulting physician to the Établissement de la Société Générale des Eaux Minérals de Vittel. He acquired a magnificent collection of books, lithographs, gouaches, engravings, photographs, and geological specimens, which he offered to the geology museum at University College, London, in 1913.
In 1879, he married Antonia Francoise Bourdariet de St. Aupre (–1917). He died on September 10, 1914, in a car accident near Bourges, Cher, France.
Joint Center for Urban Studies
Jolicoeur, Ph. J. (Philippe Jacques), 1829-1898
Philippe-Jacques Jolicoeur was born on April 30, 1829, in Quebec City, Quebec.
He was a lawyer, admitted to the bar in 1854. He was associated with Narcisse-Fortunat Belleau from 1858 to 1863. In 1867, he was appointed Queen's Counsel and became the first Under-Secretary of the Province of Quebec, the position he held until 1890. He served as President of the Institut canadien de Québec in 1858 and 1859. He contributed numerous articles to several journals.
In 1858, he married Honorine Matte (1836–1913). He died on October 5, 1898, in Quebec City, Quebec.