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Leake, Chauncey Depew, 1896-1978
Leake, Chauncey Depew, 1896-1978
Edward Lear (12 or 13 May 1812 in Holloway, Middlesex, England-29 January 1888 in Sanremo, Liguria, Italy) was an English artist, illustrator, musician, author and poet, and is known now mostly for his literary nonsense in poetry and prose and especially his limericks. He also composed and published twelve musical settings of Tennyson's poetry.
Learmont, Joseph B. (Joseph Bowles), 1839-1914
Joseph Bowles Learmont was born on May 15, 1839, in Montreal, Quebec.
He was a businessman, the head of the firm of Caverhill, Learmont & Co, wholesale hardware merchants, Montreal (est. 1854). As a very cultured man, he frequently lectured on literary and historical subjects. He was a collector of rare books and manuscripts, etchings, engravings, autograph letters, etc. He was an early member of the Numismatic and Antiques Society. He served on the Committee of Management of Montreal General Hospital and the Montreal Board of Trade. He was a governor of the Victorian Order of Nurses (Montreal Branch), director of Charity Organization Society, member of Executive committee of Lord’s Day Alliance, treasurer of Montreal Art Association, councillor, and treasurer of the Archaeological Institute of America. Learmont was the author of a paper on “Folk-lore” including Canadian folklore, and “The Canadian Indian.”
In 1873, he married Amelia Jane Holton (1849–1875) and in 1882, he remarried Charlotte Smithers (1847–1934). He died on March 12, 1914, in Montreal, Quebec.
Learmont, W. J. (William John), 1849-1907
Canadian architect and theatre designer born in Warsaw, Poland, 1917. He studied at the Regent Street Polytechnic (1939) in London and immigrated to Canada in 1949, where he became an associate professor of architecture at McGill until 1955. A talented theatre designer, he developed designs for many theatres, in addition to restoration projects in Old Montreal and residential designs. He was fellow of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada and an academician of the Royal Canadian Academy. He died in Kingston, Ontario, on 30 July 1985.