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Authority record

Teaching and Research Assistants Certification Campaign

  • CA QUA01989
  • Corporate body
  • 1997-1998

Formed in response to growing concerns about the perceived erosion of research and teaching assistants, and undergraduate markers' rights, the Teaching Research Assistants Certification Campaign mounted a drive to unionize Queen's University graduate employees under the auspices of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE). Following a lengthy campaign begun in September 1997, this initiative was defeated in a certified vote in April 1998.

Tchslouronor, Millor

  • CA QUA10878
  • Person
  • fl. 1930s

No information is available about this creator.

Taylor, William Jock

  • CA QUA02190
  • Person
  • n.d.

William "Jock" Taylor served as Superintendent of the Baffin Island RCMP post from 1935 to 1975. He accompanied John Buchan on an exploration of the Arctic.

Taylor, Robert Bruce

  • CA QUA01097
  • Person
  • 1869-1954

Born in 1869 in Dumbartonshire, Scotland, Rev. Robert Bruce Taylor was Queen's 9th principal (1917-1930) and the last clergyman to hold the position. He was born in Dumbartonshire, Scotland and educated at the Universities of Aberdeen and Glasgow in Scotland and the Universities of Marburg and Gottingen in Germany. Taylor served as a minister in various parishes in Scotland and England from 1896 until 1911, when he came to Canada to take charge of St Paul's Church in Montreal, where he quickly gained a reputation as one of the country's foremost preachers and public speakers. Taylor had been granted an honorary degree from Queen's a year before his appointment. It was largely on the strength of this reputation that he was appointed Principal of Queen's in 1917. On top of being an effective fundraiser, Taylor also had good relations with faculty and students for most of his term. But he did not enjoy the administrative aspects of the job and left that work to others wherever possible.

The main achievements of his term were the building of Douglas Library in 1924, the founding of the Alumni Association, and the expansion of professional and scientific education at the university, including the first commerce courses in Canada. George Richardson Memorial Stadium, Jock Harty Arena, the Students' Memorial Union (see John Deutsch University Centre), and Ban Righ Hall were all also built in the 1920s.

Taylor's great difficulty while at Queen's was dealing with student government. He made criticisms of the Alma Mater Society's court system which, though valid, were presented with an attitude that was disagreeable to the students, who came into conflict with him a number of times.

His term ended on a low note after students went on a brief strike in March 1928 to protest the suspension of three students who had organized an unsanctioned dance in downtown Kingston.

The students were adamant that the University had no business regulating their behavior off campus. Queen's Trustees were displeased with how Taylor handled the situation and when he
learned of this, he chose to resign.

After his retirement, Taylor was minister for a time at the Church of Scotland in Rome. He later bought a house in Cannes, France, where he lived a quiet life and published a four volume work entitled Ancient Hebrew Literature. Taylor and his wife left France in 1940 and stayed in British Colombia until after WWII. They then returned to France, where Taylor died in 1955. He's buried in Cataraqui Cemetery in Kingston.

Taylor, Robert

  • CA QUA02000
  • Person
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Taylor, P.H.

  • CA QUA11965
  • Person
  • fl. 1933

P.H. Taylor was a student in the School of Mining at Queen's University.

Taylor, Mary

  • CA QUA10877
  • Person
  • fl. 1930s

No information is available about this creator.

Taylor, Kenneth Wiffin

  • CA QUA01926
  • Person
  • 1899-1975

Kenneth Wiffin Taylor (1899-1975) was born at Takutang Ki, China, receiving his early education at the China Inland Mission Schools at Chefoo, China. From 1917 to 1919 he served with the Canadian Field Artillery. In 1921 he received his Bachelor of Arts degree from McMaster University and in 1922 he graduated from the University of Chicago with a Master of Arts degree. From 1925 to 1939 he was Professor of Political Economy at McMaster Unversity, during the last five years of which he was Associate Dean of Arts. Throughout the next few years Taylor held various posts in government departments and related work. From 1929 to 1951 he held various positions with the wartime Prices and Trade Board including Secretary, Administrator, Deputy Minister and Chairman. In 1947 he was appointed Assistant Deputy Minister of the federal department of Finance and in 1953 became the Deputy Minister. Upon his retirement as Deputy Minister of Finance in 1963 he was Special Adviser to the Privy Council. Taylor died in 1975.

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