- CA QUA02184
- Person
- fl. 1900s
Isabelle Palmer of Bath, Ontario was married to Tommy Riedel.
Isabelle Palmer of Bath, Ontario was married to Tommy Riedel.
Queen's University. Faculty of Health Sciences
The Faculty of Health Sciences was established in 1854, after more than a decade of effort by Queen's officials to add a medical school to the young University. It began in a small limestone house at 75 Princess Street, soon thereafter moving to Summerhill, where the rest of the University was located. In 1858, it moved into the first permanent building that Queen's built for itself: the Old Medical Building. In 1866, however, the Faculty split from the University after medical professors less theologically-minded than their colleagues protested against having to make a public declaration of the Presbyterian faith. The Faculty became the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, Kingston (RCPSK), which retained a loose affiliation with the University. The RCPSK eventually reunited with Queen's in 1892, in order to share resources and expertise.
The Faculty grew enormously in the 20th century, evolving into one of Canada's premier centres for medical research, as well as teaching. In recent decades, the most important development in medical education was the establishment in the 1960s of the Kingston Health Sciences Centre, which brought the Faculty of Medicine and the School of Nursing together with local hospitals to provide cooperative facilities for exemplary patient care, research, and training. Planning for a nursing program at Queen's began in 1941 The first students were admitted in the Fall of 1942 and the first Director of the School of Nursing was appointed in 1946. In 1979, the School of Rehabilitation Therapy, originally a stand alone unit, became part of the Faculty.
In 1998, the School of Medicine and School of Rehabilitation Therapy were joined by the School of Nursing to become the current Faculty of Health Sciences. Today the Faculty has about 330 full-time faculty members but many more part-time, since every doctor with attending privileges at Kingston General Hospital, Hotel Dieu Hospital, and Providence Continuing Care Centre's St. Mary's of the Lake Hospital site normally holds a faculty appointment in the School of Medicine as well. The Faculty of Health Sciences forms the academic core of the Academic Health Sciences Centre, and is also part of the Health Care Network of Southeastern Ontario. Academic programs are based on campus but are distributed throughout southeastern Ontario's health care facilities, including affiliations with Quinte Healthcare Corporation, Lakeridge Hospital, Peterborough, Perth, Brockville, Weeneebayko (Moose Factory) being amongst many other sites. The innovative Alternative Funding Plan (AFP), a contractual agreement of SEAMO and the Ministry of Health & Long-Term Care and the Ministry of Community & Social Services, provides stable funding for the delivery of research, education and extensive tertiary, secondary and some primary care in a region of over one million people.
The Faculty offers programs in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education; undergraduate education in Physical and Occupational Therapy, and graduate education in Rehabilitation Science; undergraduate and postgraduate education in Nursing, including the Nurse Practitioner Program; graduate education in the Life Sciences; and collaborative programs in Respiratory Therapy and in X-Ray Technology. Main offices of the Faculty are located in Botterell Hall.
Degrees conferred by the Faculty include: Doctor of Medicine (MD), Bachelor of Nursing Sciences (BNSc), Master of Science, Nursing (MSc), Bachelor of Science Physical Therapy (B.Sc. P.T.), Bachelor of Science, Occupational Therapy (B.Sc.O.T.), Master of Science, Rehabilitation Science (M.Sc.), Doctor of Philosophy, Rehabilitation Science (Ph.D.), Master of Science, Life Sciences (M.Sc.), Doctor of Philosophy, Life Sciences (Ph.D.) .Schools under the auspisces of the Faculty of Health Sciences include: Medicine, Nursing, Rehabilitation TherapyDepartments: Anatomy & Cell Biology, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Community Health & Epidemiology, Diagnostic Radiology, Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine, Medicine, Microbiology & Immunology, Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Oncology, Opthalmology, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmcology & Toxicology, Physiology, Psychiatry, Rehabilition Medicine, Surgery and Urology.
The Faculty of Health Sciences established the Tony Travill Debate in memory of Professor A.A.Travill (1925-1996), MBBS(London), MRCS(Eng), LRCP(London), MSc(Med)(Queen's), former head of the Anatomy Department at Queen's University (1969-1978). Dr Travill was an excellent teacher, physician, philosopher and historian, who was a devotee of logical argument and witty debate. This annual event allows medical researchers to debate a controversial topic in medicine from two different perspectives, both supported by research.
George William Henry Comer was born the third son of John F.R. Comer and Elizabeth Barbara Comer on October 21, 1840 in Niagara, Upper Canada. The Comer family moved to a number of different places in Upper Canada including Port Robinson, Chippewa and Kingston. While in Kingston, George Comer attended grammar school from 1850 to 1854.
After leaving school Comer studied the business of printing, working at the Commercial Advertiser office in Kingston. George Comer continued to work in printing over the next ten years though not exclusively in Kingston. He worked for The Constitutional in St. Catherines, The Times in Hamilton, The Herald in Cleveland, Ohio and The Lorain County News in Oberlin, Ohio.
Comer returned to Kingston, Canada in 1861where he continued working at a variety of printing and accounting jobs. In 1868 George Comer was granted a Purser's position with the Canadian Navigation Company. His first appointment was on the Steamer Corinthian, and throughout the next twenty seasons worked on that ship as well as the Algerian and Spartan. During the winters Comer worked as a bookkeeper for a variety of companies and businesses in the area.
On April 1, 1891 George Comer was personally appointed to the Customs Department as a Preventative Officer by Sir John A. Macdonald. He worked for the Department for over 25 years and in 1919 received the Long Service Medal from King George IV.
George W. H. Comer died on January 5th, 1929. He had been predeceased by his wife Ellen Elizabeth Charles, of Garden Island and was survived by three of his seven children, Jessie Comer, Bessie Comer and Elizabeth Cassa White.
George William Henry Comer was born the third son of John F.R. Comer and Elizabeth Barbara Comer on October 21, 1840 in Niagara, Upper Canada. The Comer family moved to a number of different places in Upper Canada including Port Robinson, Chippewa and Kingston. While in Kingston, George Comer attended grammar school from 1850 to 1854.
After leaving school Comer studied the business of printing, working at the Commercial Advertiser office in Kingston. George Comer continued to work in printing over the next ten years though not exclusively in Kingston. He worked for The Constitutional in St. Catherines, The Times in Hamilton, The Herald in Cleveland, Ohio and The Lorain County News in Oberlin, Ohio.
Comer returned to Kingston, Canada in 1861where he continued working at a variety of printing and accounting jobs. In 1868 George Comer was granted a Purser's position with the Canadian Navigation Company. His first appointment was on the Steamer Corinthian, and throughout the next twenty seasons worked on that ship as well as the Algerian and Spartan. During the winters Comer worked as a bookkeeper for a variety of companies and businesses in the area.
On April 1, 1891 George Comer was personally appointed to the Customs Department as a Preventative Officer by Sir John A. Macdonald. He worked for the Department for over 25 years and in 1919 received the Long Service Medal from King George IV.
George W. H. Comer died on January 5th, 1929. He had been predeceased by his wife Ellen Elizabeth Charles, of Garden Island and was survived by three of his seven children, Jessie Comer, Bessie Comer and Elizabeth Cassa White.
PUNSHON, WILLIAM MORLEY, Methodist minister and author; b. 29 May 1824 at Doncaster, England, the only child of John Punshon and Elizabeth Morley; m. first 22 Aug. 1849 Maria Vickers (d. 1858), and they had at least four children; m. secondly 15 Aug. 1868 Fanny Vickers (d. 1870); m. thirdly 17 June 1873 Mary Foster; d. 14 April 1881 at Tranby Lodge, Brixton, Devon, England.
William Morley Punshon was one of the most highly regarded English religious leaders to serve in Canada during the Victorian period. His public lectures and sermons during his long career achieved widespread popularity throughout the empire while his administrative ability, especially in support of conciliation, church expansion, and missions, served the British Wesleyan connection well for almost 40 years. Punshon also composed poetry of a meditative and devotional nature. All his writing tended to be parabolical in form and moral in intention; unfortunately, it has not aged well. He is now remembered in Canada primarily for his important contributions to the progress of Wesleyanism in the years immediately following confederation.
Knights of Labor, Local Assembly No. 553
Knights of Labor, the major labour reform organization of the late 19th century, organized December 1869 by Philadelphia garment cutters. Growing slowly in the 1870s, the secret organization emphasized co-operation and education. The Knights believed in organizing all workers, without regard to skill, sex or race. Their major organizational breakthrough was the mixed assembly of various types of workers, which allowed the order to expand into small towns and villages. Entering Ontario, perhaps in 1875, and certainly in 1881 in Hamilton, the order organized some 450 local assemblies across Canada. Strongest in Ontario, Québec and BC, the Knights also enjoyed success in Nova Scotia and Manitoba and established locals in New Brunswick and present-day Alberta.
In Ontario and Québec, leading Knights played key roles in organizing the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, and were prominent in independent labour political campaigns in the 1880s and 1890s and in considerable parliamentary lobbying. The Knights peaked in Ontario and the West in 1886, but were most successful in Ottawa and Québec in the 1890s. Their expulsion for dual unionism from the TLC in 1902 at Berlin [Kitchener] abetted the development of distinctive Québec unions.
Key Knights' strongholds were Toronto, Hamilton, Montréal, Québec, Ottawa, St Catharines, St Thomas, London, Kingston, Winnipeg and Victoria. Canadian Knights such as A.W. Wright, Thomas Phillips Thompson and D.J. O'Donoghue made important contributions in the US as well. The Knights' major contributions to the Canadian working class lay in the notion of the organization of all workers and in their efforts to formulate social alternatives to the growth of monopolistic capitalist society.