- CA QUA09389
- Persona
- n.d.
Barbara Lemoine (née Simpson) was a nurse at Kingston General Hospital. She graduated from Queen's University in the 1940s.
Barbara Lemoine (née Simpson) was a nurse at Kingston General Hospital. She graduated from Queen's University in the 1940s.
Kingston Heights Community Council
The Kingston Heights Community Council was formed out of the tenants association of the Wartime Housing Ltd. from the Kingston Heights area which is bounded by Concession, Kirkpatrick, Victoria and Division streets. The Council's purpose was to further the interests of the citizens of Kingston Heights in all matters pertaining to public welfare, group projects, social activities and to promote better conditions for the area as a whole.
Wartime Housing Ltd. Tenants' Association
The Kingston Heights Community Council was formed out of the tenants association of the Wartime Housing Ltd. from the Kingston Heights area which is bounded by Concession, Kirkpatrick, Victoria and Division streets. The Council's purpose was to further the interests of the citizens of Kingston Heights in all matters pertaining to public welfare, group projects, social activities and to promote better conditions for the area as a whole.
Liam Birch is an author and photographer associated with CanoeKayak Canada.
Marie McPhedran was an author who won the Governor General's Literary Award for juvenile fiction in 1952. She lived in Toronto and was close friends with Katherine Hale.
The Drummond family is the line of Capt. Peter Drummond of Jessup's Loyal Rangers.
Loyal Orange Lodge No. 577 (Kingston)
No information available on this creator.
John Bianchi, an illustrator, was born in Rochester, NY and came to Canada about 1968 after a stint in the U.S. navy aboard the aircraft carrier USS Intrepid. Disillusioned with American politics and the Vietnam War, Mr. Bianchi left the navy and moved to Ottawa. Unable to find work at first, he survived as a sidewalk artist selling his paintings to tourists outside the National Arts Centre.
Bianchi eventually found work at Crawley Films as an animation background artist and later as an illustrator with CJOH TV. He met his wife, Margaret Cameron, an Ottawa native, at that time and they eventually moved to the country to start a family. He got his start as an illustrator with Harrowsmith magazine in the late 1970s.
In 1993, John and his family (daughters Jessica and Sasha) moved to the outskirts of Tucson, Arizona. Mr. Bianchi travelled extensively across Canada and the United States, encouraging thousands of students a year to get active reading, writing and drawing. He was also a popular guest at regional and national literacy conferences. He wrote and illustrated more than 20 learn-to-read books for The American Reading Company.