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Authority record

Burkhardt, Rick

  • https://lccn.loc.gov/no2002011953
  • Person
  • 1969-

Burland, G. B. (George Bull Boothsby), 1829-1907

  • Person
  • 1829-1907

George Bull Boothsby Burland was born on May 24, 1828, or 1829, in Loggan, Wexford County, Ireland.

He was a Montreal businessman and philanthropist. He was educated in England by private teachers. In the 1840s, he moved to Canada with his family. In 1844, he joined the Hamilton Gazette, a property owned by his uncle, who also worked there as a publisher. He moved to Montreal around 1848 and worked with engraver and printer George H. Matthews. In 1864, he joined forces with George Lafricain, Nathaniel Barber and George Bishop to buy Matthews' company and they found the Burland-Lafricain & Company, specializing in lithography. A few years later, the company merged with its main rival, William Cumming Smillie's company. It became the British American Bank Note Company, whose business consisted of printing postage stamps, bank bills, tax stamps, bonds, and stock certificates. Burland served as Vice-President of the company from 1866, before becoming President and General Manager from 1881 until his death. In the 1870s and the 1880s, he also ran a printing company that printed books and periodicals such as the Canadian Illustrated News. In addition to his commercial activities, he was interested in public health. In 1902, he became President of the Protestant Hospital for the Insane in Verdun and one of the founding members of the Anti-Tuberculosis League of Montreal.

In 1858, he married Clarissa Healy Cochrane (1829–1890). In 1894, he married Amelia Elizabeth Haines (1845–1905) and in 1906, he married Hildegarde Florence Beard (1870–1928). He died on May 22, 1907, in Los Angeles, California and is buried in Montreal, Quebec.

Burman, W. A. (William Alfred), 1857-1909

  • no 90012007
  • Person
  • 1857-1909

Born at Yorkshire, England in 1857, William A. Burman was persuaded to immigrate to Canada at the age of 18. After his arrival in Manitoba, he attended St. John’s College where he studied natural sciences and theology. In 1879 he was ordained deacon and was sent to the Sioux Reserve near Griswold (now the Sioux Valley Dakota Nation) to establish a mission. He worked there for ten years, became fluent in the Sioux language and very knowledgeable in the Indian work of the Church.
In 1886 he was appointed the first rural dean of Brandon, Manitoba. He organized and was the first head of the Rupert’s Land Industrial School at Middlechurch. He also helped build St. Peter’s mission in Winnipeg. Failing health forced him to give up parish work, and in 1903 he was appointed steward and bursar at St. John’s College, where he had been lecturing in botany and Biblical literature.
As an avid nature lover, he had a wide reputation as a botanist and became an examiner in botany for the University of Manitoba. He was also the founder of the Forestry and Horticultural Association of Manitoba which still promotes horticulture on the prairies. He served as the Manitoba Historical Society president from 1899 to 1901.
Burman died in Winnipeg on January 30, 1909.

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