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Authority record

Melissa W. Nash

  • Person

Melissa W. Nash was the daughter of Emily Moore. Emily Moore was the daughter of J. Warren Moore and Elizabeth De Wolfe. Henry Hazelwood Moore was also the son of John Warren Moore and Elizabeth De Wolfe. He died on April 12, 1883.

Nehemiah

  • 1870-1890

: Nehemiah was a blacksmith who married first Blanch Brannen [1870-1890]. She was the daughter of Matthew Brannen. Her siblings were Katherine Wolhaupter, Florence Etta, and Mary Scribner [-1896]. Nehemiah married second in 1894 Annie Amelia Gray [1869-1945]. She was the daughter of William Gray and Mary Jane Corrow. Her siblings were Murray Clowes and Martha Hood [1878-]. Nehemiah and Annie had Murray Grey [1899-1964] and Myrtle Louise Wightman.

The Nature Trust of New Brunswick Inc.

  • Corporate body
  • 1987-2021

The Nature Trust of New Brunswick Inc. describe themselves as a charitable corporation dedicated to protecting natural areas in New Brunswick with special scientific, educational, or aesthetic value. This group was founded in 1987 by Harold R. Hinds, the curator of the Connell Memorial Herbarium at the University of New Brunswick, and many other NB citizens. The group's first major collaborative activity was researching and publishing a paper titled "Critical Natural Areas of New Brunswick". Over the course of researching for this endeavor, it became clear that these natural sites the group mentions in their paper were in need of protection. In September 1987 the group was officially incorporated as the Nature Trust of New Brunswick Inc.
Their first success was the acquisition and conservation of the Shea Lake property, now the Shea Lake Nature Preserve, in 1988. Other conservation projects undertaken by this nature trust in subsequent years include the Long Island Conservation Project, the Caughey-Taylor Nature Preserve, and the Appalachian Hardwood Forest Project, to name just a few. The nature trust's publication "Refuge" was first published in January 1991 with support from the Themadel Foundation of St. Andrews. This publication provides updates on the projects and successes of the nature trust.

Chase Allen Family

  • Family

The tintype was found in the Charles Allen home, Hartland, Carleton County, New Brunswick. He was a barber in Hartland in the second half of the nineteenth century.

Connie Parlee

  • Person

Connie Parlee is the wife of the late Lloyd Totten. They married on Feb. 12, 1944. Lloyd’s parents were Thomas Totten and Gladys Stinson who married on July 10, 1918.Thomas Totten’s parents were George H. Totten (1869-1950) and Hannah M. Burchill. Gladys’ parents were William Stinson and Sarah Taylor. George Totten’s parents were Joseph Totten, born in Ireland, and Sarah Tait (Tate) also born in Ireland. They married on Dec. 7, 1848, in Saint John. Connie Parlee’s parents were Gordon Parlee (b. 1892) and Agnes Ingraham. They married May 31, 1916. Gordon Parlee’s parents were Arthur Samuel Parlee (1868-1952) and Maude Abbie Benson (1868-1943) who lived at 149 Princess Street Saint John. Agnes Ingraham’s parents were Hugh Patrick Ingraham (d. 1929) and Amanda Smith (d. 1938 at age 73 years). Amanda Smith’s parents were Capt. J. F. Smith and Eleanor Wayman. Arthur Samuel Parlee’s parents were George Parlee and Eunice Foster. Maude Abbie benson’s parents were James Benson and Abigail Griffon.

Dudley Currie's family

  • Family

According to notes that appeared with the artifact collection, these photographs may have been purchased at the Elbridge Currie Estate auction and these may be family members of Dudley Currie. Elbridge Currie was born in 1910 to Clovis Currie [1878-1954] and Katherine Estey Currie [1881-1944]. He married Alma Mae Timmins in 1929 [1910-?]. Clovis Currie [1878] was the son of Richard Dudley Currie [1852-1925] and Frances Estey [1851-1933], he had one brother Harley. The family lived in the Keswick Ridge-Mactaquac area

Ben Obermann

  • Person
  • 1944-2011

Ben Obermann is possibly Ben Obermann of Franklin Maine [1944-2011].

St. Andrews Arts Council

  • Corporate body
  • 1986-

The St. Andrews Arts Council was established in 1986 in partnership with the New Brunswick Community College of St. Andrews. It was founded by Lewis Dalvit, a maestro with a great deal of experience conducting all over the world, and several members of the art, business, and scientific community of St. Andrews. The initial goal of this organisation was to provide local, national, and international students with opportunities to learn and practice the performing arts. To this end they established a summer school for the performing arts in St. Andrews, which provides courses in opera, voice, choir, drama, dance, and instrumental music. They also established a summer Festival for the Performing Arts in St. Andrews. This festival presents performances by summer students, as well as ballet, opera, and theatre performed by professional and amateur groups from New Brunswick and Maine. In later years the St. Andrews Arts Council would undertake new ventures such as the proposed establishment of a Center for the Performing Arts in St. Andrews, collaborations with Ministers Island, and the St. Andrews International Piano and Aria Competitions.

Charles H. Harrison

  • Person
  • 1791-1879

Charles H. Harrison, MPP, (1791-1879), married a woman named Charlotte. One of their children, Harry (1866-1949), married Annie Davidson Stranger (1871-1923) in 1895. They had three children: C.T. Harrison (1899-1925), Beatrice (b. 1901, married Walter Baker), and Dorothy (b. 1897). Annie was the daughter of Thomas Stranger (1834-1899), a merchant tailor, and Agnes (1838-1916), his seamstress. They also had Agnes (b. 1868) who married W.J. Johnston (b. 1868) in 1908. Annie and Agnes also had one brother named George.

The Daily Gleaner

  • Corporate body
  • 1889-

The Daily Gleaner is the first daily newspaper published in Fredericton, New Brunswick. This paper is a continuation of The Gleaner, a Fredericton newspaper which began publication in May 1884. From 1889 to 1930 it was published by James H. Crocket and the Gleaner Pub. Co. Starting in May 1968 it was purchased by K. C. Irving, and is currently published by Irving's Brunswick News publishing company, which was founded in 1998.

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