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Authority record

Bell, Basil, 1809-1889

  • Person

Basil Hall Bell was born in Oldhamstocks, East Lothian, Scotland, in 1809. He arrived in Pictou, Nova Scotia in 1847, where he was a merchant. He was the father of Adam Carr Bell, who was a Canadian politician, and the first mayor of New Glasgow, Nova Scotia.

Bell, George Mercer, 1834-1900

  • Person
  • 1834-1900

George Mercer Bell was born in Saint Cuthberts, Edinburgh, Scotland on March 16, 1934, to Peter Bell and Jane Mercer. He moved to Hamilton, Ontario where he worked as a locksmith and where he died on January 27, 1900.

Bell, James Mackintosh, 1877-1934

  • n 00078161
  • Person
  • 1877-1934

Born in St. Andrew’s East, Quebec, he was the son of Andrew Bell, a well-known mining engineer and Marianne Rosamond, a member of the Rosamond woollen mill family in Almonte, Ontario. He was also the nephew of Sir Robert Bell, Director of the Canadian Geological Survey. In 1886 his family moved to Almonte where he attended Almonte and District High School before venturing on to focus on geology and mining at Queens University in Kingston. James Bell received his PhD from Harvard University in 1904. His field work included exploration in Arctic Canada for the Geological Survey of Canada with his uncle. In 1905, at the age of 27, Bell became the youngest director of the Geological Survey of New Zealand. Four years later, he married Vera Beauchamp, the daughter of one of New Zealand’s most influential businessmen and the sister of writer Katherine Mansfield. They had two sons, Andrew and John. After leaving the Geological Survey in 1911, James again worked as a mining geologist in London with his colleague Colin Fraser.

During World War One he served as a captain with the 73rd Battalion Royal Highlanders of Canada, based in Montreal and put together a platoon from the Almonte area, which set sail in 1916, when he was promoted to major. The platoon was disbanded after losses in March and April of 1917 at Vimy Ridge, but Bell continued his duties, being seconded to the war office. Due to his knowledge of the Russian language and previous visits to Siberia he was attached to the Siberian expedition in 1918 to 1919, doing secret work for the war office in order to undermine the Russian Revolution. His outstanding record with the Canadian forces in France and the British military mission in Russia led to his appointment as an OBE.

After the war, James had a successful career as a mining consultant, was the author of many articles and books and the director of several Canadian mining companies. He received an honorary L.L.D. from Queen’s University in 1924 and died in Almonte ten years later.

Bell, James, 1832-

  • Person
  • 1832-

James Bell was the son of Peter Bell and Jane Mercer Bell, and the nephew of Margaret Mercer Dawson.

Bell, James, 1852-1911

  • Person
  • 1852-1911

Born in Ontario, James Bell graduated from the Medical Faculty of McGill in 1877, and immediately joined the staff of the Montreal General Hospital as house surgeon. As surgeon to the 6th Battalion of Fusiliers, Bell saw active service during the Northwest Rebellion of 1885, and was present at the battle of Batoche. He joined the Medical Faculty at McGill as Professor of surgery in 1893, and in 1895 became surgeon-in-chief of the Royal Victoria Hospital.

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