McGill Library
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Goldwin Smith was born on August 13, 1823, in Reading, England.
He was a historian, writer, and journalist. Educated at Eton College and Magdalen College, Oxford (B.A., 1845; M.A., 1848), he was elected a Fellow of Oxford in 1847. A Fellow in Civil Law at University College London (1846), he was called to the bar in 1850 at Lincoln’s Inn, but he never pursued a legal career. As a member of the Royal Commission of 1850 to inquire into the reform of the university, he published a pamphlet, The Reorganization of the University of Oxford (1868). He was a tutor of King Edward, and in 1858, he was appointed Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford, retaining the position until 1866. He was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1865. Smith first visited America during the Civil War, and in 1866, he was appointed Professor of English and Constitutional History at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. In 1871, he moved to Toronto, Ontario, but retained an honorary professorship at Cornell and returned to campus frequently to lecture. He got married in 1875 to Harriet Elizabeth Dixon (1826–1909) and spent the rest of his life in her manor named the Grange. He edited the Canadian Monthly and founded the Week and the Bystander. In 1893, Smith was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society. He published articles in a weekly The Farmer's Sun and wrote My Memory of Gladstone (1904).
He died on June 7, 1910, in Toronto, Ontario.
Smith, Ford Cushing, 1883-1955
Ford Cushing Smith was born on October 2, 1883, in Hancock, Delaware County, New York.
He was a civil engineer who he graduated from Princeton University in 1904. Shortly after, he became an instructor of civil engineering at the same university. Throughout his professional career, he worked for the Foundation Company on various projects, including the East River Tunnels and Municipal Buildings in New York City, as well as a power plant for the Aluminum Company of America in Massena, New York. He also contributed to several parkway and irrigation projects in Oregon.
From 1917 to 1923, he served as the resident engineer for M.P. and J.D. Davie Co. on a dry dock project in Lauzon, Quebec. His final position was with the New Hampshire State Department of Highways in Concord, New Hampshire.
In 1929, he married Katherine Sayers Ford (1896-1988). He died of a heart attack on November 30, 1955, in Hopkinton, Merrimack County, New Hampshire.
Erminnie (Ermine) Adele Platt Smith was born on April 26, 1836, in Marcellus, Onondaga County, New York.
She was an American ethnologist and geologist. She graduated from Troy Female Seminary in New York in 1853. The mother of four sons, she spent their early years at home. When the family moved temporarily to Germany for the boys' schooling, she continued her studies in mineralogy and crystallography at the University of Strassburg and Heidelberg. She also attended the School of Mines in Freiburg. In 1866, the family moved from Chicago to Jersey City, where she founded the Aesthetic Society of Jersey City in 1876. From 1880 to 1885, she focused her studies on the Iroquois Nation reservations in New York and Canada and spent most of her time among the Tuscarora tribe, which bestowed upon her the name of "Beautiful Flower". She amassed their legends and obtained and compiled more than 15,000 words of the Iroquois dialect. Her research was done under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution's Bureau of American Ethnology. Smith was the first woman inducted into the American Academy of Sciences. She was a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the New York Historical Society. She was also the first woman to become a Fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences (1877) and the London Scientific Society. Her publications include numerous scientific papers and Myths of the Iroquois (1883).
In 1855, she married Simeon H. Smith (1834-1916), a lumber dealer and merchant. She died of heart disease on June 8, 1886, in Jersey City, New Jersey.