Browse "People"
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Howard Burlingham Dunington-Grubb
In 1911 Howard Grubb married Lorrie Alfreda Dunington (see Lorrie DUNINGTON-GRUBB), an English landscape architect, adopting the surname Dunington-Grubb. They emigrated to Canada and opened an office in Toronto as H.B. & L.A. Dunington-Grubb, Landscape Architects.
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Howard Cable
Howard (Reid) Cable, conductor, arranger, composer (born 15 December 1920 in Toronto, ON; died 30 March 2016 in Toronto).
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Howard Cable
Howard (Reid) Cable, conductor, arranger, music director, composer, scriptwriter, radio and television producer (born 15 December 1920 in Toronto, ON; died 30 March 2016 in Toronto).
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Howard Charles Clark
Howard Charles Clark, FRSC, chemist, university administrator (born 4 September 1929 in at Auckland, New Zealand; died 14 August 2024 in Guelph, ON). Clark came to Canada in 1957 and rapidly established a reputation for original work in organo-metallic, co-ordination and fluorine chemistry (see Chemistry; Chemistry Subdisciplines).
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Howard Charles Green
Howard Charles Green, lawyer, politician (b at Kaslo, BC 5 Nov 1895; d at Vancouver 26 July 1989). Appointed minister of public works in the first DIEFENBAKER government, Green assumed the Dept of External Affairs portfolio in 1959 after Sidney SMITH's sudden death.
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Howard Dyck
In 1972 Dyck became conductor and artistic director of the Kitchener-Waterloo Philharmonic Choir (later renamed the Grand Philharmonic Choir) and in 1988 also of its Chamber Singers.
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Howard Engel
Howard Engel, novelist, cartoonist (under the pen name “Foo”), story writer, poet (born 2 April 1931 in Toronto, ON; died 16 July 2019 in Toronto). Howard Engel was raised in St. Catharines, Ontario, and educated at McMaster University and the Ontario College of Education. During his career as a producer of literary and cultural programs at the CBC, Engel published a few stories and poems, but he did not begin to write seriously until he became interested in detective fiction.
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Howard Ferguson
George Howard Ferguson, lawyer, Conservative politician, premier of Ontario 1923-30 (b at Kemptville, Ont 18 June 1870; d at Toronto 21 Feb 1946). He personified Ontario in the 1920s: a mix of 19th-century values and 20th-century ambitions.
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Howard Fogg
Howard (Frank) Fogg. Violinist, conductor, composer, b Lewiston, Me, 27 Apr 1892, d Montreal 17 May 1953. After studying music in Lewiston, notably with Gustav Haanka, Fogg moved to Montreal in 1913. He served as a lieutenant during World War I with the Canadian Expeditionary Force.
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Howard Fredeen
Howard Fredeen, agricultural research scientist (b at Macrorie, Sask 10 Dec 1921).
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Howard Graham
Howard Douglas Graham, lawyer, army officer (b at Buffalo, NY 15 July 1898; d at Oakville, Ont 28 Sept 1986). A WWI veteran, having enlisted at age 17, Graham rose to become chief of the general staff 1955-58. He practised law in Trenton, Ont, 1922-39, and was mayor in 1933.
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Howard Leyton-Brown
Leyton-Brown, Howard. Violinist, conductor, administrator, teacher, b Melbourne, Australia, 19 Dec 1918, naturalized Canadian 1963; Associate in music (Australia) 1931, diploma (Melbourne) 1937, LGSM 1952, FGSM 1955, DMA (Michigan) 1972.
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Howard Mawson
Howard (Allan) Mawson. Baritone, actor, b Toronto 23 May 1920, d 28 Mar 2004. Howard Mawson studied with Ruth Cross-Vanderpott, 1943-51 at the Hambourg Conservatory and 1951-8 privately, and with Irene Jessner at the Royal Conservatory of Music in 1959.
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Howard O'Hagan
Howard O'Hagan, writer (b at Lethbridge, Alta 17 Feb 1902; d 18 Sept 1982). O'Hagan was one of the first native-born westerners to make a mark on Canadian literature and is best known for his novel of the Rocky Mountains, Tay John (1939). His life is almost as noteworthy as his writing.
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Howard Pawley
Pawley led his party to victory in the Nov 1981 and March 1986 elections. The most controversial action by the Pawley government during its first term was the introduction of a resolution entrenching French language rights.
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