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Frank Tindall
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1968 (Creation)
- Creator
- Berry, Wallace R.
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Physical description
1 photograph : b&w ; 35.4 x 30.4 cm(including mat)
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Biographical history
Wallace R. Berry (1917-1999) was born and raised in Brantford Ontario. In 1937 he entered Queen's University graduating in 1942. While at Queen's he was coach and instructor for swimming and water polo and it was also during these years that he developed an interest in photography. After his graduation from Queen's, in 1942, Wally Berry entered the Royal Canadian Navy. Following the war Wally worked with a motion picture company in Montreal, Associated Screen News. Later he returned to Kingston and established Cinema Television Productions as an outlet for his ideas, as well as opening a photographic studio. Around 1971, he opened The Village Studio in Photography located in Portsmouth Village at 670 King St West. In addition to portraiture he did some freelance news and aerial photography. In 1951 he was appointed official photographer to the Queen's yearbook. In 1954, in addition to still photography, he began filming and latterly video taping Queen's football games. In fact he pioneered this work and it brought him membership in Queen's Football Hall of Fame, builder category. he was also awarded what is now known as the Padre Laverty Award from the Kingston Branch of the Queen's Alumni Association. He closed up his studios in 1996.
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Scope and content
Frank Tindall & Don Bayne standing behind three trophies with plaque engraved "Presented to the Winner/of the 1968/Western College Bowl/played between/University of Manitoba Bisons/and/Queens University Golden Gaels/at/University Stadium/Winnipeg Nov.16th..."
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Transferred from the Department of Athletics and Physical Education, Queens University at Kingston, Ontario., 8 February 1999.
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Open
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General note
Frank Tindall (1909-5 October 1993) was a native of Solvay, New York and was one of the few great Canadian University coaches of the twentieth century. A former football and basketball star at Syracuse University, he was a football All-Eastern guard, All-America honourable and team MVP at Syracuse in 1932. Frank was recruited by the Toronto Argonaughts and named a Canadian Football League (CFL) 1933 All-Star in his rookie season and he was a member of their 1934 Grey Cup Championship team. Lager, the Argos selected him to the All-Gime All-Star Squad (1921-1941) and he was inducted into the CFL Hall of Fame in 1985. Frank came to Queen's in 1939 to coach football, but WWII interruped interuniversity sports. Frank returned to Queen's in 1948 to coach both football and basketball and established what became known as the "Tindall Era". As a signal of his status in the Canadian Interuniversity Athletic Union, the football coach-of-the-year trophy has borne his name since 1969, six years before he retired in 1975.
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Conservation code: 1
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Final
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Full
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Description created on 8/29/2002. Last updated 25/04/2013.