Showing 12519 results
Authority record- CA QUA01090
- Person
- b. 1881
Brigadier General James Sutherland-Brown was born in 1881 at Simcoe, Ontario. He had a distinguished military career beginning as a member of the 39th Regiment Norfolk Rifles in 1896. He attended the Staff College at Camberley, England, in 1914 and served overseas in the First World War. He was awarded a D.S.O. in 1916 and a C.M.G. in 1918. He continued in the army after the war attending Imperial Staff College in 1928 and being commanding officer of Military District No. II, British Columbia.
- CA QUA02319
- Person
- ca. 1830-1878
Robert Sutherland was the first student of colour at Queen's University at Kingston, and one of its most important early benefactors. He was born in Jamaica to unknown parents, though there is some evidence that his father was Scottish. He entered Queen's in 1849, just eight years after the university was founded. He may have been the first student of colour in Canada, as well as at Queen's; the subject has not been fully researched, but none of the handful of other universities that existed then have uncovered records of an earlier entrant. Sutherland led an extraordinarily successful academic career at Queen's, winning 14 academic prizes, including one for general merit in Latin that was awarded after a vote by fellow students. He graduated in 1852 with honours in classics and mathematics and went on to study law at Toronto's Osgoode Hall. He was called to the bar in 1855 and moved to the growing town of Walkerton, south of Owen Sound, where he practised law for more than 20 years. He died unmarried in 1878 after contracting pneumonia. He had drawn up his will just three weeks before his death and left his entire $12,000 estate to Queen's. It is unclear why he did so, but friends recalled that he often said Queen's was one place where "he had always been treated as a gentleman." His donation was the largest that any one person had yet given to the university and came at a time when Queen's was still battling its way out of poverty. Principal George Grant ordered that a large granite tombstone be placed on his grave in Toronto's Mt Pleasant Cemetery where it still stands to mark his connection with Queen's. The City of Kingston dedicated a plaque in Grant Hall to his memory in 1973. In 1997, the Robert Sutherland Memorial Room was unveiled, located on the third floor of the John Deustch University Centre. In 2009, the Policy Studies building was renamed "Robert Sutherland Hall".
- CA QUA10871
- Person
- fl. 1930s
No information is available about this creator.
- CA QUA02817
- Person
- 21 Feb. 1919-1 Sep. 1956
John Sutherland (21 February 1919 1 September 1956) was a Canadian poet, literary critic, and magazine editor based in Montreal, Quebec. Although he published numerous poems of his own, he was perhaps better known as the founder and editor of two important Canadian literary magazines, First Statement and Northern Review.
Before his death from cancer, Sutherland also published the anthology Other Canadians: An Anthology of New Poetry in Canada, 194046, a collection of Canadian modernist poetry, and one of the first critical studies of the poetry of E.J. Pratt. Sutherland was also instrumental in exposing the poetry of Irving Layton to a wider audience, thanks to the Sutherland-owned First Statement Press, the small press that issued Layton's first book, Here and Now.