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JAMESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-04-07 published
BRISTOW,
John
Robert "
Bob"
Peacefully on Monday, April 3, 2006 at Joseph Brant Hospital,
in Burlington, Ontario, in his 90th year. Beloved husband of
the late Emily Edith
JAMESON.
Loving father of Rev. Canon Philip
(Cheryl,)
Jim
(Debbie
MIDA) and Anita
COOK (the late Ron.) Dear
grandfather of Shannon
HADAYA
(Elias) and
Lydia,
Jamie (Sylvia)
and Gloria
TUCK
(Ken,)
Bradley, Terri-Lynn (Patrick)
McGUIRE
and Lianne (Phuong)
HUYNH and a growing number of great-grandchildren.
Will be sadly missed by his extended family and Friends. A special
thanks to the staff and residents of Hampton Terrace and all
his Friends at Tim Hortons. Memorial Service will be held at
St. Matthew-On-The Plains, 126 Plains Rd. East, Burlington on
Saturday,
April 8, 2006 at 1 p.m. Rev. Canon Carol
SKIDMORE officiating.
Interment at Mount Royal Cemetery in Montreal at a later date.
In lieu of flowers donations to St. Matthew's Anglican Church,
Burlington or World Vision would be appreciated by the family.
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JAMESON - All Categories in OGSPI
JAMIE o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-11-24 published
ALLISON,
Wayne
Raymond
Peacefully at his residence, on Wednesday, November 22nd, 2006,
Wayne Raymond
ALLISON of Kilworth at the age of 49. Beloved and
cherished husband of Susan
(LEGGE)
ALLISON.
Loving father of
Jake and Nolan
ALLISON. Dear son of Hilda and the late Raymond
ALLISON.
Grandson of Marie
KAUK. Son-in-law of Nora
ASENATH (Senny)
and the late William Ferguson "Fergie"
LEGGE.
Brother-in-law
of Margaret and Larry
RALPH and Fergie and Liz
LEGGE.
Uncle of
Zachary, Melina, Jeanna, and Paula
JAMIE. Visitation will be
held at the Westview Funeral Chapel, 709 Wonderland Road North,
on Sunday from 2: 00-4:00 and 7:00-9:00 p.m. The funeral service
will be conducted at Glad Tidings Assembly, 556 Wonderland Road
North, on Monday, November 27th, 2006 at 11: 00 a.m. with Pastor
Rick BOYES officiating. Interment Oakland Cemetery. Those wishing
to make a donation in memory of Wayne are asked to consider the
Dr. Venance Neuro-muscular Department at London Health Sciences
Foundation at University Hospital or to the Glad Tidings Assembly
Building Fund. Email condolences may be sent to westview@execulink.com
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JAMIE - All Categories in OGSPI
JAMIESON o@ca.on.grey_county.artemesia.flesherton.the_flesherton_advance 2006-11-15 published
JAMIESON,
Reg▼
In loving memory of Reg
JAMIESON, who passed away November 19,
It's sad to walk the road alone
Instead of side by side
You gave us years of happiness
Then came sorrow and tears
But you left us beautiful memories
To treasure through the years.
- Lovingly remembered and deeply missed, Marie and Family.
Page 3
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.grey_county.artemesia.flesherton.the_flesherton_advance 2006-11-15 published
JAMIESON,
Reg▲
In loving memory of our dear brother-in-law and uncle, Reg, who
passed away November 19, 2004.
As time unfolds another year
Passed memories keep you near
The many good times we shared together
Old memories that will last forever.
Sadly missed by Robert and Pat, Lloyd and Eva-may, Willy and
Janet, and families.
Page 3
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2006-10-16 published
WINCH,
James
Floyd
Charles "
Jim"
At the Orillia Soldiers' Memorial Hospital on Saturday October 14th,
2006 in his 59th year. Jim
WINCH of Orillia formerly of Brampton
and Meaford. Much loved husband of Bonnie Catherine
WINCH (nee
MILLER.) Dear father of Jim (Aimee) of Collingwood, Dana (Jason
HAWTON) of Thornbury. Stepfather of Terry
CLARKE (Jo
Anne) of
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Rick
CLARKE (Sara) of Victoria, British Columbia,
Wanda CLARKE of Port Coquitlam, British Columbia. Loving grandfather
of Theoren, Sienna, Zion, Quinn, Alyssa, Trenton and Jesse. Dear
brother of Susan
JAMIESON of Orillia, Ann (Bob
McINTRYE) of Pettawawa,
Mike WINCH of Meaford, Cathy (Marion
OPRISON) of Victoria B.C..
Debbie (Ken
WALDRON) of Victoria, British Columbia. Loved son
of the late Dorothy and Floyd
WINCH.
Visitation will be held
at the Simcoe Funeral Home - 38 James Street E. Orillia (705-327-0221)
on Wednesday October 18th, from 7 to 9 p.m. Funeral services
will be held in the chapel on Thursday October 19th, at 1 p.m.
Cremation to follow. Memorial donations to the Orillia Soldiers'
Memorial Foundation or the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated
by the family.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-05-07 published
Canoeist's body found
By Canadian Press, Sun., May 7, 2006
Paris -- The body of a man who went missing a week ago in southern
Ontario after his canoe went over a dam and capsized has been
recovered.
Ontario
Provincial
Police say the body of Ken
JAMIESON was spotted
by a relative on the Grand River in Paris.
JAMIESON, 41, was on an annual canoe trip in the area with eight
others April 29 when his canoe missed a portage, went over the
dam and flipped.
His fellow canoeist, Jason
ENAIR, was rescued by others.
The accident also killed 41-year-old Rob
DICKSON/DIXON of Dundas, who
tried to rescue
JAMIESON and
ENAIR.
Police say surging water levels halted initial recovery efforts.
In April 2001, a 35-year-old man was killed in a kayaking accident
at the dam.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-05-18 published
JAMIESON,
Jim
Peacefully at Clinton Public Hospital, on Tuesday, May 16, 2006,
Mr. Jim JAMIESON of R.R.#1 Londesborough in his 83rd year. Beloved
husband of Ramona
JAMIESON.
Loving father of Susan and David
HART of Goderich Township, Robert
JAMIESON of R.R.#1 Londesborough.
Cherished grandfather of Darren, Denise and Bradley. Dear brother
of Lois LESOUDER of Stratford. Predeceased by parents Robert
and Lillie
JAMIESON and sisters Isabel and Art
COLSON,
Hazel
and Jack DONALD.
Friends will be received at The Falconer Funeral
Homes, 153 High Street, Clinton, on Thursday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
where the funeral service will be held on Friday, May 19, 2006
at 2 p.m. Interment Clinton Cemetery. As expressions of sympathy
memorial donations to Londesborough United Church Memorial Fund
would be greatly appreciated.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-06-19 published
DINKEL,
Cheryl▼
Ann▼ (née
MONGEON)
Of R.R.#1, West Lorne died tragically on June 16, 2006 in her
48th year. Dearly missed and never forgotten by her husband Manfred
DINKEL; lovingly remembered by her children Samantha
WILSON,
Gerald DINKEL and Kelly
CHARRON,
Tina▼ and Eddie
CHAPMAN, Darren
and Stacey
DINKEL,
Diana▼ and Doug
JAMIESON, Nancy
TREMBLETT,
Loraine and Kelly
TAILOR/TAYLOR.
Cheryl▼ was a loving grandmother of
Lacey, Virginia, Jimmy, Leanne, Lorne, Lillian, Alyssa, Cassie
and Megan. Oma's smile, her hugs and her love, will be sadly
missed by grandchildren Benjamin and Samuel. She also leaves
one great granddaughter, Alexis. Also sadly missed by her parents
Stan and Terry
MONGEON, sister Karen and brothers Mark, Ralph
and Mike. Friends may call at the West Lorne Chapel, 202 Main
Street, West Lorne on Monday June 19, 2006 between 2-4 and 7-9
pm., where the service will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. Cremation
to follow. Contributions may be made in lieu of flowers to Sari
Therapeutic Riding, an organization that Cheryl was passionate
about (www.sari.ca) Arrangements entrusted to the Padfield Funeral
Home, Rodney 519-785-0810
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-06-20 published
DINKEL,
Cheryl▲
Ann▲ (née
MONGEON)
Of R.R.#1, West Lorne died tragically on June 16, 2006 in her
48th year. Dearly missed and never forgotten by her husband Manfred
DINKEL; lovingly remembered by her children Samantha
WILSON,
Gerald DINKEL and Kelly
CHARRON,
Tina▲ and Eddie
CHAPMAN, Darren
and Stacey
DINKEL,
Diana▲ and Doug
JAMIESON, Nancy and Mike
TREMBLETT,
Laurene and Kelly
TAILOR/TAYLOR.
Cheryl▲ was a loving grandmother of
Lacey, Virginia, Jimmy, Leanne, Mikey, Lorne, Lillian, Alyssa,
Cassie and Megan. Oma's smile, her hugs and her love, will be
sadly missed by grandchildren Benjamin and Samuel. She also leaves
one great granddaughter, Alexis. Also sadly missed by her parents
Stan and Terry
MONGEON, sister Karen and brothers Mark, Ralph
and Mike. Friends may call at the West Lorne Chapel, 202 Main
Street, West Lorne on Monday June 19, 2006 between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.,
where the service will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. Cremation to
follow. Contributions may be made in lieu of flowers to Sari
Therapeutic Riding, an organization that Cheryl was passionate
about (www.sari.ca) Arrangements entrusted to the Padfield Funeral
Homes, Rodney 519-785-0810.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-06-28 published
DEEG,
Dorothy
Mae (née
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON)
Peacefully at the Tillsonburg District Memorial Hospital, on
Monday,
June 26, 2006, Dorothy Mae
(THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON)
DEEG of (Wyecombe,)
R.R.#1, Delhi, in her 88th year. Born in North Walsingham Township
on November 11, 1918, dear daughter of the late William
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON
and the late former Rachel
BROWNLEE.
Dorothy was a life long
resident of the North Walsingham area. She was owner-operator
of Deeg's General Store for 40 years, a member of Langton Baptist
Church and a life member of the Langton Women's Institute, just
recently receiving her 50 year pin. Dear mother of: Marilyn
HAMMOND,
Tillsonburg and her children Linda and Dave
DELEEUW;
Paul
HAMMOND
and Fran; Catherine and her husband Bob
CAIL, all of Langton.
Junior DEEG and Belva, R.R.#1 Walsingham and their children Kimberley
and Dave SOUTHWICK,
Tillsonburg;
Tom
DEEG and Cherie, Australia.
John DEEG and Delena, Evansville, Manitoulin Island; and their
children David
DEEG of Manitoulin Island; Brian
DEEG and his
wife Ashley of Manitoulin Island; Cheryl
DEEG and Shawn, Manitoulin
Island. Dan
DEEG, R.R.#3, Langton and his children Dorothy and
her husband Chuck
CSCERCICS,
Tillsonburg;
April and her husband
Nathan HARRISON, Petawawa, Ontario; Trevor
DEEG, Langton. Proud
great-grandmother of 15 great-granchildren and one great-great-granddaughter.
Survived by the father of her children Harvey
DEEG of Port Dover.
Dear sister-in-law of Clair
JAMIESON,
Langton and Dean
HUTCHINSON/HUTCHISON
of Midhurst. Also survived by several nieces, nephews and cousins.
Predeceased by her son-in-law John
HAMMOND (2000) and by sisters
Marie HUTCHINSON/HUTCHISON,
Frances
JAMIESON, Luella
SHAY/SHEA and her husband
Jim, Jean MOULTON and her husband Bill and by brothers Gordon
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON and his wife
Madeliene and John
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON.
Resting at
the Verhoeve Funeral Home, 40 Queen Street, Langton, Ontario
where funeral service will be held in the chapel on Friday, June 30,
2006 at 2: 30 p.m. by Rev. Keith
SUTHERLAND of the Langton Baptist
Church. Interment in the Langton Baptist Cemetery. Memorial donations
(by cheque only) to the Langton Baptist Church or the charity
of your choice. Visitation Thursday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-07-10 published
GEE,
G.
Russell
At the Woodstock General Hospital on Friday July 7, 2006, G.
Russell GEE of Norwich in his 75th year. Beloved husband of Phyllis
(COOPER) for 52 years. Loving father of Doug, Donna and husband
Ernie KIRK,
Kathy and husband Michael
SMITH, Cheryl
ROHRER, all
of Norwich, Sue and husband Joe DE
PAEPE of Langton. He will
be missed by his grandchildren Melissa and Jamie
TIRVA,
Andrew
ROHRER,
Adam and Jessica
SMITH, and great grandchildren Dorien and
Taylor RICHES and Lauren
HEMINGWAY.
Brother of Marion and husband
Bernard JAMIESON of London. Also missed by dear Friends Clarke
and Brenda
SMITH.
Predeceased by granddaughter Pamela
TIRVA,
brother Aubrey, sisters Margaret and husband Fred
WATSON,
Bernice
and husband Fred
LONSBARY.
Russ worked at the Co-op in Norwich
for 28 years. Friends will be received at the Arn-Lockie Funeral
Home, 45 Main Street West, Norwich on Monday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Service to celebrate Russ' life will be held at the funeral home
on Tuesday July 11th at 11: 00 a.m. with Vi
SACKRIDER officiating.
Interment Norwich Cemetery. As expressions of sympathy, donations
may be made to the Woodstock Hospital Foundation. On-line condolences
may be made at www.arn-lockiefuneralhome.com. Arn-Lockie (519) 863-3020.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-09-16 published
ANDERSON,
Dorothy (née
DENNIS)
Of Wallaceburg passed away suddenly on Thursday, September 14,
2006 in her 86th year. Dorothy is the daughter of the late Frederick
and Nettie
(SENECAL)
DENNIS.
Beloved wife of Harvey. Loving mother
of Denise and Allan
JAMIESON of Calgary and Mark and Mona
ANDERSON
of Wallaceburg. Dear grandmother of Fiona
JAMIESON,
Chris and
Melanie, Nicole and Jennifer
ANDERSON,
Melissa and David
SHERK,
Riley KENNY and Cheyenne
POIRIER.
She will be missed by her great-grandchildren
Braxton, Leah and Dakota. Dorothy was a lifelong member of Trinity
United Church, Grace United in Sarnia, the Imperial Order of
the Daughters of the Empire, Ontario Registered Music Teachers'
Association and spent her lifetime teaching music to the Private,
Separate and Public School systems. She loved painting her landscapes.
Friends may call at the Haycock Cavanagh Funeral Home, 409 Nelson
Street, in Wallaceburg from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on Sunday. The funeral
service will be conducted by Diaconal Minister Cheryl
KIRK on
Monday, September 18 at 1 p.m. A time of fellowship and refreshment
at the Cavanagh Reception Centre will immediately follow. The
interment in Wyoming Cemetery will be held at 3: 40 Monday. If
desired, remembrances to the Heart and Stroke Foundation may be
left at the funeral home. 519-627-3231.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-09-22 published
MARKS,
Wellington
At Braemar Retirement Centre, Wingham on Thursday, September 21,
2006, Mr. Wellington
MARKS formerly of Belgrave age 93 years.
Beloved husband of the late Isabel
JAMIESON (2000.) Dear father
of Murray and Donna
MARKS of Belgrave, Judy and Bob
BELL of Vanastra
and Ken and Annette
MARKS of R.R.#1 Belgrave. Loving grandfather
of Brian, Craig, T.J., Tammy and Rob, Derek, Melissa, Christine,
Doug and Roxanne. Also survived by ten great-grandchildren and
brother Rowland
MARKS of Brussels. Predeceased by two infant
sons James and Randy, granddaughter Charlene, brothers, Russell,
Clifford and Stanley and by his sister Kathleen. Visitation at
McBurney Funeral Home, Wingham, Ontario on Friday, 2: 00-4:00 and
7: 00-9:00 p.m. Funeral service will be held at the funeral home
chapel on Saturday at 1: 30 p.m. Reverend Ethel Miner
CLARE officiating.
Interment in Brussels Cemetery, Morris Township. Memorial donations
to Alzheimers Society of Ontario would be appreciated as expressions
of sympathy. Online condolences at www.mcburneyfuneralhome.com
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-10-03 published
WILSON-
CUCKSEY,
Jeannette
Christine
Passed away on Friday, September 29, 2006 at London Health Sciences
Centre -- Westminster Campus in her 50th year. Beloved wife of
William CUCKSEY. Cherished mother of Rebacca (Jason)
McKEEN.
Loving foster mother of Amy
WILSON,
Theresa
WILSON, Christopher
JAMIESON,
Ian
BADGER, Tracy
GONNEAU and their families. Loved
daughter of Jessie
WILSON and the late Ernest
WILSON. Dear sister
of Shirley (Rick)
TERRY-
WILSON of Ladysmith Vancouver, Rose (Ted)
JOHNSON, Ernie
WILSON, Donna (Mike)
WILSON, Donna (Joe)
MacINTYRE
and the late May
WILSON and Susan
WILSON.
Loving daughter-in-law
of Donald and Lillian
CUCKSEY and their families. Jeannette will
also be missed by many nieces and nephews. Funeral Service will
be held at Forest Lawn Memorial Chapel, 1997 Dundas Street East
(at Wavell), London on Wednesday, October 4, 2006 at 3: 00 p.m.
Visitation one hour prior to service. Cremation to follow. In
remembrance, donations to the Dale Brain Injury Services, 815 Shelborne
Street, London, Ontario, N5Z 4Z4 would be gratefully appreciated.
Online condolences are available at www.memorialfuneral.ca
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-12-12 published
JAMIESON,
Anne
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Anne
JAMIESON, in her 65th year, at Chateau Gardens London, on Friday,
December▼ 8th, 2006. Beloved wife of the late William
JAMIESON.
Loving mother of Michelle
JAMIESON, Larry (Brenda)
JAMIESON,
Edward (Kim)
FITZGERALD and Margaret (Paul)
ARNOLD.
Adored
Nanny
of Justin JAMIESON,
Amanda and Stacey
LITTLE, Angel and Ricky
JAMIESON, Jeff
REIMER, Tammy
ARNOLD and David
ARNOLD. Great Nanny
to Dreyden
REIMER, Sabian
REIMER and Austin
SMITH. Lifetime Friends
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
SHULAR of Southhampton and Mr. and Mrs. Brian
FETTER of Chatham. Friends may call at the Needham Funeral Chapel,
520 Dundas Street, London (519-434-9141) on Wednesday, December 13th
from 1-3 p.m. Service from the chapel on Wednesday at 3 p.m.
It seems like just a short time, we were blessed with our amazing
mother. God must have misplaced an Angel, as we were the luckiest
children to receive such a gift. We will always look up with
chin high, as she would tell us to thank the Lord for being highly
blessed. So, in our sorrow, it is comforting to know that we
will see you again. We would like to thank the dedicated staff
at Chateau Gardens for their outstanding care and devoted love
given to our Mom over the past 5 years. We love you Mom. Tributes
may be left at www.mem.com
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-12-15 published
JAMIESON,
Donald
Harry "
Don"
At London Health Sciences Centre -- Victoria Hospital, on Tuesday,
December▲ 12th, 2006, Donald Harry "Don"
JAMIESON of London. Beloved
husband of Audrey
(KERR)
JAMIESON. Dear brother of Dorothy
HUNT
and her husband Lawrence of Deep River, Ontario, and Carrollynne
LECOURTOIS and her husband Paul of Orleans, Ontario. Also survived
by several nieces and nephews. Predeceased by his brother William
"Alex" JAMIESON.
Visitation will be held on Thursday from 2: 00-4:00 and
7: 00-9:00 p.m. at the Westview Funeral Chapel, 709 Wonderland
Road North, where the funeral service will be conducted on Friday,
December 15th, 2006 at 3: 00 p.m. Cremation to follow. Those wishing
to make a donation in memory of Don are asked to consider the
charity of your choice.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-04-01 published
TRUDEL,
Louise▼
M.,▼ R.N.
Louise passed away on March 23, 2006 at Toronto Grace Hospital
after a two year struggle with cancer. Born in St. Boniface,
Manitoba on August 23, 1936, Louise was predeceased by her parents
Margherita (Rita) Chevrier
TRUDEL and Doctor Jean-Joseph
TRUDEL,
her brothers Doctor André
TRUDEL
(Anne▼) and Hubert
TRUDEL (Annick,)
her nephew Scott
JAMIESON, and her niece Yvonne
PREFONTAINE.
She▼ is survived by her brother Robert
TRUDEL
(Louise,▼) sisters
Solange HESS,
Valerie▼
JAMIESON and Rose-Marie
TRUDEL, nieces
and nephews, nineteen great-nieces and nephews, and by many close
Friends, including her circle of O.R. nursing Friends and her
very close friend Lloyd
BODIE.
After▼ graduating from St. Boniface
School of Nursing in 1958, Louise worked at various hospitals
in Manitoba and Ontario before pursuing Post Graduate studies
at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Maryland. She moved to Toronto in
1966, beginning a 30 year career at Toronto Western Hospital
where she excelled as an Operating Room nurse and supervisor,
also playing a significant mentoring role to many nurses who
remained close to her throughout the years and who provided heartfelt
support during her illness. Louise will be remembered for her
beautiful smile, kindness, warm and friendly manner, sense of
humour, and gift for Friendship. Highly competent and keenly
intelligent, Louise was also modest and low-key. She was a pillar
of strength for all those in her life, and faced her own illness
with her customary strength of character, spirit, and positive
attitude. While the cancer overcame Louise's body, she was certainly
not defeated by it - rather she was victorious in handling it
with courage, grace and style, and her last months and days were
happy and peaceful ones. Louise continues to serve as an inspiration
to her Friends and family, and she played a special role in the
lives of her nieces and grand-nieces as a model of independent
living who was also feminine and caring - a career woman who
went on exciting adventures around the world, yet never forgot
her family and Friends back home and took the time to correspond
and keep in touch. Louise was a cultured person in the larger
sense, firmly grounded by an understanding of the past and her
French-Canadian roots, but open-minded and interested in new
ideas and approaches as well. She was an avid and discriminating
reader, as well as an independent thinker. She enjoyed music,
literature, art and design. Louise had excellent taste and believed
in quality, and was a connoisseur of fine crystal and china.
Louise was a lover of nature and the great outdoors too, and
believed in fitness of mind and body. As a young woman, Louise
distinguished herself as a leading speedskater, winning many
awards across Canada and the United States. Night after night
Louise would brave the cold Winnipeg winter weather, working
that outdoor oval at the Norwood - St. Boniface Speedskating
Club, pushing herself to be her best, becoming National Junior
Speedskating Champion and also earning a place in Manitoba's
Sports Hall of Fame. Speedskating gave way to downhill skiing,
with Louise taking yearly trips to Vail and other top destinations,
also going on many hiking and birding expeditions and remaining
active throughout her retirement and illness. Family was all-important
to Louise. She was a loving daughter, sister, and aunt, and was
the Toronto anchor for the Chevrier-Trudel family, especially
for the many nieces and nephews who lived and traveled there
over the years, opening her home on countless occasions and hosting
birthday celebrations marked by her love and individual flair.
She had a gift for knowing how to make people feel special, not
only acknowledging hallmark events in their lives but also in
supporting their individual talents and endeavours and following
their careers with interest. Her family history was a source
of great pride to Louise - a rich and colourful history, so much
a part of Canada's history - replete with coureurs de bois, fur
trade merchants, city fathers and Members of Legislative Assembly
and senators, with Suffragettes and community leaders, with clergy
and teachers and public servants, with writers and artists and
actors - all their contributions equally celebrated by Louise.
This passion was nurtured by her mother, and shared with her
brother Hubert. He was the historian and archivist, Louise the
keeper of the stories and protector of family artifacts and heirlooms.
Yet she also did her share of gathering pieces of the story,
mostly in the form of (all those!) newspaper clippings. Part
of Louise's legacy rests in the way she transmitted this rich
heritage to the next generation. The family would like to thank
everyone who provided caring support and expressions of love
and kindness, with a special mention to Louise's 'wonderful team
of specialists at Princess Margaret Hospital and to her Friends
Lenore, Shirley, and Joan. Louise found immense solace in being
at home in her final months, and greatly appreciated the devotion
and care provided by her dear sister Val and her friend Lloyd
who made that possible. In accordance with Louise's wishes, no
formal service will be held. An interment will take place later
this spring at St. Boniface Basilica Cemetery, where she will
rest next to her parents. Condolences may be for warded to Trull
Funeral Home. Donations may be made to Toronto Grace Hospital,
which provided exceptional care to Louise and family in her final
hours. Thank you Louise, for all the interest, encouragement,
and kindness you've shown us. We love you and cherish the love
you've given. Watch over us. 'Et certes il existe, l'irréparable,
mais il n'y a rien là qui soit triste ou gai, c'est l'essence
même de CofE qui fut.' 'Traveler, there is no path. The path is
made by walking.'
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-04-01 published
TRUDEL,
Louise▲▼
M.,▲▼ R.N.
Louise passed away on March 23, 2006 at Toronto Grace Hospital
after a two year struggle with cancer. Born in St. Boniface,
Manitoba on August 23, 1936, Louise was predeceased by her parents
Margherita (Rita) Chevrier
TRUDEL and Doctor Jean-Joseph
TRUDEL,
her brothers Doctor André
TRUDEL
(Anne▲▼) and Hubert
TRUDEL (Annick,)
her nephew Scott
JAMIESON, and her niece Yvonne
PREFONTAINE.
She▲▼ is survived by her brother Robert
TRUDEL
(Louise,▲▼) sisters
Solange HESS,
Valerie▲▼
JAMIESON and Rose-Marie
TRUDEL, nieces
and nephews, nineteen great-nieces and nephews, and by many close
Friends, including her circle of O.R. nursing Friends and her
very close friend Lloyd
BODIE.
After▲▼ graduating from St. Boniface
School of Nursing in 1958, Louise worked at various hospitals
in Manitoba and Ontario before pursuing Post Graduate studies
at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Maryland. She moved to Toronto in
1966, beginning a 30 year career at Toronto Western Hospital
where she excelled as an Operating Room nurse and supervisor,
also playing a significant mentoring role to many nurses who
remained close to her throughout the years and who provided heartfelt
support during her illness. Louise will be remembered for her
beautiful smile, kindness, warm and friendly manner, sense of
humour, and gift for Friendship. Highly competent and keenly
intelligent, Louise was also modest and low-key. She was a pillar
of strength for all those in her life, and faced her own illness
with her customary strength of character, spirit, and positive
attitude. While the cancer overcame Louise's body, she was certainly
not defeated by it - rather she was victorious in handling it
with courage, grace and style, and her last months and days were
happy and peaceful ones. Louise continues to serve as an inspiration
to her Friends and family, and she played a special role in the
lives of her nieces and grand-nieces as a model of independent
living who was also feminine and caring - a career woman who
went on exciting adventures around the world, yet never forgot
her family and Friends back home and took the time to correspond
and keep in touch. Louise was a cultured person in the larger
sense, firmly grounded by an understanding of the past and her
French-Canadian roots, but open-minded and interested in new
ideas and approaches as well. She was an avid and discriminating
reader, as well as an independent thinker. She enjoyed music,
literature, art and design. Louise had excellent taste and believed
in quality, and was a connoisseur of fine crystal and china.
Louise was a lover of nature and the great outdoors too, and
believed in fitness of mind and body. As a young woman, Louise
distinguished herself as a leading speedskater, winning many
awards across Canada and the United States. Night after night
Louise would brave the cold Winnipeg winter weather, working
that outdoor oval at the Norwood - St. Boniface Speedskating
Club, pushing herself to be her best, becoming National Junior
Speedskating Champion and also earning a place in Manitoba's
Sports Hall of Fame. Speedskating gave way to downhill skiing,
with Louise taking yearly trips to Vail and other top destinations,
also going on many hiking and birding expeditions and remaining
active throughout her retirement and illness. Family was all-important
to Louise. She was a loving daughter, sister, and aunt, and was
the Toronto anchor for the Chevrier-Trudel family, especially
for the many nieces and nephews who lived and traveled there
over the years, opening her home on countless occasions and hosting
birthday celebrations marked by her love and individual flair.
She had a gift for knowing how to make people feel special, not
only acknowledging hallmark events in their lives but also in
supporting their individual talents and endeavours and following
their careers with interest. Her family history was a source
of great pride to Louise - a rich and colourful history, so much
a part of Canada's history - replete with coureurs de bois, fur
trade merchants, city fathers and Members of Legislative Assembly
and senators, with Suffragettes and community leaders, with clergy
and teachers and public servants, with writers and artists and
actors - all their contributions equally celebrated by Louise.
This passion was nurtured by her mother, and shared with her
brother Hubert. He was the historian and archivist, Louise the
keeper of the stories and protector of family artifacts and heirlooms.
Yet she also did her share of gathering pieces of the story,
mostly in the form of (all those!) newspaper clippings. Part
of Louise's legacy rests in the way she transmitted this rich
heritage to the next generation. The family would like to thank
everyone who provided caring support and expressions of love
and kindness, with a special mention to Louise's 'wonderful team
of specialists at Princess Margaret Hospital and to her Friends
Lenore, Shirley, and Joan. Louise found immense solace in being
at home in her final months, and greatly appreciated the devotion
and care provided by her dear sister Val and her friend Lloyd
who made that possible. In accordance with Louise's wishes, no
formal service will be held. An interment will take place later
this spring at St. Boniface Basilica Cemetery, where she will
rest next to her parents. Condolences may be for warded to Trull
Funeral Home. Donations may be made to Toronto Grace Hospital,
which provided exceptional care to Louise and family in her final
hours. Thank you Louise, for all the interest, encouragement,
and kindness you've shown us. We love you and cherish the love
you've given. Watch over us. 'Et certes il existe, l'irréparable,
mais il n'y a rien là qui soit triste ou gai, c'est l'essence
même de CofE qui fut.' 'Traveler, there is no path. The path is
made by walking.'
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-05-16 published
Brooke FORBES,
Radio
Producer (1940-2006)
Born a 'red diaper baby,' she entered broadcasting armed with
socialist sensibilities and remained true to her principles throughout
a long Canadian Broadcasting Corporation career with the shows
As It Happens and Sunday Morning
By Douglas
McARTHUR,
Special to The Globe and Mail, Page S9
Toronto -- Brooke
FORBES believed passionately in public radio
and in its responsibility to seek out and broadcast the stories
of minorities and the underprivileged.
"She made sure we told stories about people on the wrong side
of the power equation," says George
JAMIESON, a television news
assignment editor who once worked with her as a producer on the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation flagship public affairs show
As It Happens. "If they needed a voice, she'd make sure they
got it."
During a quarter century with Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
Radio, Ms.
FORBES was a producer at As It Happens, Sunday Morning
and The Sunday Edition. She was also instrumental in setting
up and running a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation summer camp
aimed at teaching the basics of radio to students from minority
groups.
Co-workers say she strove to produce radio features that would
both entertain and educate listeners, and that her encyclopedic
knowledge of music helped provide the perfect accompaniment for
any report. They remember her as a person who stopped smiling
only to laugh and who loved listening to and telling stories.
She was intensely proud of her mixed ethnic heritage and often
talked about how a particular issue was seen by her Jamaican,
Scottish and Jewish families.
In late 2004, she was diagnosed with esophageal cancer and had
to quit work to undergo painful treatments. It was a bitter blow
for someone in the communications industry who also loved socialize.
But she lived much longer than the doctors predicted, says close
friend and fellow radio producer Karen Levine. "She was very
stubborn about staying alive."
Brooke FORBES' championship of equal rights and her love of music
were rooted in her Toronto childhood. Born early in the Second
World War, she was a "red diaper baby" - the child of two committed
and activist socialists. She also mingled at an early age with
her parents' Friends in the arts and entertainment industries.
Her
Scottish-born father, William B.
FORBES, was a union organizer
and journalist. He edited The Clarion and the Canadian Tribune,
both left-wing newspapers, and later became publisher of Canadian
Printer and Publisher for Maclean Hunter. Her mother, Hazel
FORBES
(née MOYSTON,) was director of publicity at Toronto's O'Keefe
Centre theatre and once took a year off to work in London and
Paris for the New China News Agency.
Her maternal grandmother, Daisy
MOYSTON, born in Jamaica with
a Jewish father, ran a rooming house on Toronto's Bernard Ave.
that was frequented by actors and writers. Visiting there as
a child, Ms.
FORBES sat on the knee of Paul Robeson, the black
singer and actor who eventually had his U.S. passport revoked
because of his left-wing activities. Years later, she produced
a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation radio documentary on Mr. Robeson's
life.
She attended Harbord Collegiate in Toronto, but took her final
year of high school at Neuchatel, Switzerland. On her return
to Canada she spent a year at the University of Toronto and played
guitar and sang at popular Toronto folk clubs including the Purple
Onion, the Bohemian Embassy and the Village Corner.
In 1962, while working in the coat check at the O'Keefe, she
met violist Leslie
MALOWANY, who was playing in the theatre's
orchestra.
They were married in London and lived there three years, then
moved to Montreal, and, in 1975, to Vancouver. While her husband
played in the symphony orchestras of all three cities, she was
busy looking after a family that grew to four children.
Ms. FORBES had neither experience nor training in radio when
she started her career in her late 30s. "She taught herself to
edit, tape, write scripts and chase stories," says her daughter
Megan FORBES.
She worked first with
CFRO, the volunteer station of Vancouver
Co-operative Radio, where she hosted a morning show. Moving to
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Vancouver, she served as associate
producer of Variety Tonight, which was carried nationally, and
of Daybreak, a local morning show.
Hal
Wake, who worked with Ms.
FORBES in co-op radio, says she
made the studio her home and on one occasion, a Christmas broadcast,
turned her living room into a studio, hosting her show over the
background crackle of a roaring fireplace.
"Brooke was the proverbial 'breath of fresh air' in current affairs,
because she didn't fit the earnest journalist profile, at all,"
says Linda Negrave, a co-worker at Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
Vancouver. "She was much too colourful [in both her dress --
she loved bright purples and pinks -- and her take on the world],
well-rounded and well-read, with an extensive knowledge of the
arts, and just a hoot, who loved to laugh and refused to take
anything too seriously."
In the mid-1980s, after going through a divorce, Ms.
FORBES moved
to Toronto where she held key public affairs positions with Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation Radio. While there, she lobbied for
increased diversity and convinced the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
in 1990 to start a one-week summer radio camp for high-school
students from four designated groups: women, aboriginals, people
of colour and the disabled. She organized and taught at it for
six years until the network pulled the funding.
Aisha WICKHAM, who attended one of the camps, is now Canadian
talent development manager with
FLOW 93.5 radio in Toronto. "It
had a strong impact on my decision to pursue a career in radio,"
she says. More recently Ms.
FORBES taught radio skills to a group
of First Nations teenagers as part of a Vancouver program called
Rookie Radio.
On the job, Ms.
FORBES was both professional and popular. "She
was the kind of person you wanted to tell things to, knowing
she could share a tear or a laugh without embarrassment or judgment,"
says Michael Enright, host of Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's
Sunday Edition.
One of her particular interests was black history in the United
States and Canada, says Mary Lou Finlay, former host of As It
Happens. "She wanted the rest of us to know a lot of stories
about African-Canadians we didn't know, and some she didn't know
until she'd discover them."
She served as a volunteer director of the Urban Alliance on Race
Relations in the 1980s, helping organize a media-monitoring program.
"We were doing very serious work," says Carol Tator, who worked
with her on the project. "But she made it fun."
After and between her cancer treatments, Ms.
FORBES lived at
home seeing only family members and close Friends. But she kept
in touch with a wide network of admirers through The Brooke Blog,
a website created by her son Matthew Malowany. And she made it
clear she wanted more than good wishes from those who kept in
touch.
"I ask for gossip and you rush out and look under every rock
you can find," she wrote on her son's website last December.
"Matthew says on the blog, I prefer mail, suddenly the mailman
is loaded down. When I say, no e-mail is fine, the box is almost
full every day."
Brooke FORBES was born in Toronto on September 29, 1940. She
died at her Toronto home on April 22, 2006, 16 months after being
diagnosed with esophageal cancer. She was 65. She is survived
by a daughter, Megan; three sons. Caedmon, Matthew and Paul
and a sister Wendy
FORBES.
Friends in Vancouver have set up the
Brooke Forbes Legacy Fund (604-877-7241) to carry on her work
teaching radio skills to minority youth.
J... Names JA... Names JAM... Names Welcome Home
JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-05-27 published
CROZIER,
Hulda "
Huddie"
Vivian (née
JAMIESON)
Passed away peacefully on Sunday, May 21st, 2006, at Pine Grove
Nursing Home where she had been a resident since November 2003.
Born in Campbellton, New Brunswick on May 28, 1923 she was the
daughter of Sydney and Jennie
(WARD)
JAMIESON.
She graduated
from Campbellton High School in 1941 receiving the Lieutenant
Governor's Medal. Prior to her marriage she worked for a period
of time with Canadian National Railways. She is survived by her
devoted husband of 52 years, Glendon "Spud"; two loving daughters,
Jane CROZIER-
ELLIS
(Hugh) of Bathurst and Diane
CROZIER of Moncton
one special granddaughter Lauren
ELLIS. As the youngest child
in a close and loving family of seven brothers and sisters, she
is survived by her sister, Mrs. Florence
LYON of Etobicoke, Ontario
brother Doctor James
JAMIESON of North Bay, Ontario and many nieces
and nephews. She was predeceased by brothers Lloyd "Lanky", Harold
and Laine JAMIESON and sister Bernice
HUTCHINSON/HUTCHISON.
During her
lifetime Huddie maintained a strong commitment to family and
an optimistic outlook at all times. She displayed an attitude
of caring and a devotion to helping others, especially the elderly.
She was a longtime member of the United Church, the United Church
Women and the Canadian Parkinson Society. She valued and cultivated
the many personal Friendships she made over the course of her
lifetime. She derived her greatest joy from family gatherings,
good food, a great bridge hand a colorful joke. She loved music,
reading and reciting poems and was well known for her quick wit
and embellishment of any story worth telling and what story wasn't!
Funeral service was held May 24th, 2006 at 1: 00 p.m. from Saint Paul's
United
Church with Rev. Dr. William
RANDALL and Rev. Paul
ROSS
officiating. Memorial tributes may be made to the Canadian Parkinson
Society or to a charity of the donor's choice. Arrangements have
been entrusted to McAdam's Select Community Funeral Home. www.mcadamsfh.com
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-06-21 published
KNAPP,
Emily
Chapin "
Jamie" (née
JAMIESON)
Hilton Head, S.C. -- Emily Chapin "Jamie" Jamieson
KNAPP, 89,
died Friday, June 16, after a long illness. She was born March 20,
1917 in Warren, Pennsylvania, the daughter of the late Lewis C.
JAMIESON and Julia Bliss Chapin
JAMIESON.
She received her B.A.
from Bennington College in 1938, married David
KNAPP on May 31,
1941, and worked as a fashion illustrator for Lord and Taylor in
New York City before starting a family. The family moved to Oakville
where they lived for 23 years before retiring to South Carolina.
She painted throughout her life. She is survived by five children,
their spouses and grandchildren: Julia, Arthur, Allison and Ashley
Roslund of Lyndonville, Vermont; Marcia, Lon, Megan and Meredith
PETERS of Portland, Oregon; David, Kathy and David T.
KNAPP of
Oakton, Virginia; Cynthia
KNAPP and Pete
HOLDNAK of Atlanta,
Georgia.; and Jamie
KNAPP and Rick
PALKOVIC of Davis, California.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Hospice Care of
the Lowcountry, P.O. Box 24158, Hilton head Island, S.C. 29925.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-12-06 published
JAMIESON,
Hugh
Crawford
Suddenly on Monday, December 4, 2006, Hugh, loving husband of
Margaret and brother to Jim. Dear son-in-law to Margaret
MURRAY
and loved brother-in-law of Sheila and Bill
WHITELEY.
Predeceased
by his parents the Rev. A.C. and Mrs. Nellie
JAMIESON.
Retired
from Ontario Hydro. Long time and faithful member of Knox Presbyterian
Church, Agincourt. The family will receive Friends at the Ogden
Funeral Home, 4164 Sheppard Ave. East, Agincourt on Thursday,
December 7th from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral Service at Knox Presbyterian
Church, 4156 Sheppard Ave. East, Agincourt on Friday, December 8th
at 11 a.m. Cremation to follow. In lieu of flowers, memorial
donations to the Knox Heritage Fund or the Heart and Stroke Foundation
of Ontario would be appreciated.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-01-10 published
KELLY,
Dr.
Norman
Henry, M.D.
(September 17, 1921-January 8, 2006)
"Love between two children of God outlives the union, outlives
failing bodies, outlives the earth itself. Love, in whatever
celestial form it takes in heaven, lives on after the earthly
shell has passed into dust. For the one who believes, death changes
"goodbye" into other more hopeful words. I will see you soon
my love. I cannot bring you back to me, but I can come to you.
And I will." And he has. Norman
KELLY died peacefully at home
to join his beloved wife, Helen, of 60 years in the fourth mansion
on the right just inside the Pearly Gates. Norm served both his
country in the Royal Canadian Air Force during World War 2, and
his community as a family doctor. He will be sadly missed by
his loving son Robert, beloved granddaughters Sheila Anne
KELLY
(mother Mary Ellen
JAMIESON) and Katrina Kato
KELLY (mother Dr.
Christine KATO,) daughter-in-law Barbara
DATLEN-
KELLY and her
son James DATLEN
(David
CLEGHORN,) sisters and brothers-in-law
Marie PRITCHARD,
Kay and Charlie
PEEVER, Joan and Bernie
O'DONNELL,
Grace MASON,
Leo
McCARTHY, Tom
ROBERTS and many nieces and nephews.
Norm was predeceased by his cherished wife Helen, his beloved
son Norman Henry, grand_son Norman Francis, sister Anne
McGEE,
brother Tom
KELLY, sisters-in-law Eleanor
ROBERTS,
Marcella
SULLIVAN,
Mary McCARTHY, Berta
KELLY, brothers-in-law Bill
MASON, Joe
McCARTHY
and Gord McGEE.
Friends and family will gather for the Funeral
Mass on Thursday, January 12, 2006 at 10: 00 a.m. at St. Aidan
Church (3501 Finch Avenue East). Visitation will take place at
Jerrett Funeral Home (6191 Yonge Street) on Tuesday, January
10 and Wednesday, January 11 between 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. In
lieu of flowers, donations to the Save A Family Plan would be
appreciated.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-01-19 published
TONGE,
Hazel
(INNES)
Passed away at Dufferin Oaks Home for the Aged, Shelburne, Ontario
on Tuesday, January 17, 2006, in her 83rd year. Beloved wife
of the late Bill
TONGE.
Loved mother of Bill
TONGE Jr.
(Frances)
and Jackie
COLE
(John.)
Loving gram of Jennifer, Lori and Brian,
Julie and Chris. Loved great-gram of Sam, Ben, Max and Wil. Predeceased
by her sister Anetta
JAMIESON.
Resting at the W. John Thomas
Funeral Home, 244 Victoria Street E., Alliston from 11: 00 a.m.
on Friday, January 20, 2006 until time of Funeral Service in
the Chapel at 1: 00 p.m. followed by cremation. If so desired,
memorial donations to the Alzheimer Society would be appreciated.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-02-04 published
HOFFMAN,
Katherine
Elizabeth "
Liz" (née
NUTTER)
Liz passed away peacefully at her home with great courage and
dignity from malignant melanoma on January 27, 2006. To deeply
mourn her passing, so thankful for her life, are her loving family,
her beloved daughter Andrea
HOFFMAN
(Matt
TORMEY,) her mother
Audrey NUTTER, brother John
NUTTER, sister Patricia (Bob)
JAMIESON,
Auntie Bobbie and Uncle Dave
GRANT and family, Barry
HOFFMAN
and the HOFFMAN and Potter families. She was predeceased by her
father Philip
NUTTER. To all of Liz's Friends who loved her,
you are her family as well and we know that you will miss her
as deeply. Liz achieved a tremendous amount during her life.
She is remembered for her determination to stand up for the rights
of those without a voice, for her passion for books and making
them accessible to everyone, for the pleasure she took in travel
and her admiration of different cultures, and most fondly for
her deep love and appreciation of family and Friends. Liz gave
wholeheartedly to her Friends and always held them dear. She
was so grateful for all of the love and support that she received
over the past months - every call, every card, every flower and
every prayer was deeply cherished and gave her added strength.
Liz was born in Winnipeg in 1951, later moving to the Ottawa
area with her family. She graduated with an Honours Degree in
Public Administration from Carleton University in Ottawa and
pursued further study on scholarship at the Syracuse University
School of Public Administration, New York. Liz raised her family
and spent most of her career in Toronto. She returned to Winnipeg
in 2000. Liz's deeply rooted sense of fairness and social justice
led to a career as ombudsperson with distinguished service at
Carleton University, the University of Toronto, Ryerson Polytechnic
University and the Ontario College of Art and Design. For the
past five years she worked in Winnipeg as a Senior Investigator
with the Office of the National Defence and Canadian Forces Ombudsman.
She was a founding member and a past president of the Association
of Canadian College and University Ombudspersons. She was also
a founding member of The Forum of Canadian Ombudsman and remained
actively involved as a member of the Board. The opportunity to
volunteer with diverse groups and individuals in the community
gave her great pleasure. For over twenty years Liz was committed
to keeping the public library systems strong and maintaining
public access to information while preserving individual privacy.
She was past president of the Ontario Public Library Association
and on behalf of this Association and the Ontario Ministry of
Culture and Communications chaired the development of the Ontario
Public Library Strategic Plan. She contributed as a committee
chair to the development of Winnipeg's Millennium Library. She
was a member of the Executive Committee of the Canadian Commission
for United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
a member of the Board of Directors of the Canadian Network for
the Advancement of Research, Industry and Education; a member
of the Federal Government's National Community Access Programme
Advisory Board; a member of the Federal Government's Information
Highway Advisory Council; and founding chair of Canada's Coalition
for Public Information. A special joy was in representing Canada
as keynote speaker (National Information Policies: Canadian Approach)
at the 49th International Federation for Information and Documentation
Conference and Congress held in Jaipur and New Delhi, India.
Liz's leadership, service and commitment toward the betterment
of her local, provincial, national and global communities have
been highly recognized. She was honoured with many awards from
the organizations with which she worked. Commendations were received
from both the Prime Minister and the Governor General of Canada.
Liz believed in living each day to the fullest. She travelled
extensively with her family throughout North and South America,
Mexico, the Caribbean, Europe and Asia. She enjoyed diverse activities
including book clubs, cultural festivals, cinema, theatre, live
music and billiards. Most recently Liz's quiet time was spent
at her dream retreat Skye Cottage, Victoria Beach. Our lives
are richer for having known Liz. She touched and contributed
to the lives of many. The family invites Friends to share in
a remembrance and celebration of Liz's life at the Renaissance
Hotels Northern Lights Ballroom in the Rogers Centre, Toronto
on Saturday, February 11th at 1: 30 p.m. This is the site where
Liz hosted the initial visionary meeting of the future Ontario
Digital Library. A similar gathering is being held at the Inn
at the Forks, Winnipeg, on Saturday, February 4th. Flowers gratefully
declined.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-02-17 published
ROME,
George
Lenard
Peacefully on Thursday, February 16, 2006 at the Peterborough
Regional Health Centre, Palliative Care Unit at 76 years of age.
Loving husband of Jean
(QUINN) for 56 years. Beloved father of
Steve and his wife Kelly of Sault Ste. Marie, David and his wife
Debra of Ottawa, Debbie
LUCAS and her husband Robert of Minneapolis,
and Brad and his wife Laurie of Sudbury. Cherished grandfather
to Chris, Matt, Michael, Sarah, Lauren, Katie, Joshua, and Mandie.
Dear brother of Muriel
MONAHAN and her husband Bud, Evelyn
BROCKLEY
and her husband the late Arthur, Barbara
McILMOYLE and her husband
the late Ivan, Margaret
PULCINE and her husband the late Harry,
Millie HUGGINS and her husband Gord both predeceased, Shirley
JAMIESON and her husband Buck both predeceased. Dear brother-in-law
of Joan KIRKUS and her husband the late Ernie, Ed
WILLIAMS and
his wife the late Muriel. Remembered by numerous nieces and nephews.
Memorial service to held at St. Matthew's United Church Peterborough,
on Saturday, February 18, 2006 at 2 p.m. If desired memorial
donations to the Peterborough Regional Health Centre Palliative
Care Unit or the charity of your choice would be appreciated.
Arrangements entrusted to the Nisbett Funeral Home and Chapel
600 Monaghan Rd. S., Peterborough 705-745-3211.
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-04-01 published
TRUDEL,
Louise▲
M.,▲ R.N.
Louise passed away on March 23, 2006 at Toronto Grace Hospital
after a two year struggle with cancer. Born in St. Boniface,
Manitoba on August 23, 1936, Louise was predeceased by her parents
Margherita (Rita) Chevrier
TRUDEL and Doctor Jean-Joseph
TRUDEL,
her brothers Doctor André
TRUDEL
(Anne▲) and Hubert
TRUDEL (Annick,)
her nephew Scott
JAMIESON, and her niece Yvonne
PREFONTAINE.
She▲ is survived by her brother Robert
TRUDEL
(Louise,▲) sisters
Solange HESS,
Valerie▲
JAMIESON and Rose-Marie
TRUDEL, nieces
and nephews, nineteen great-nieces and nephews, and by many close
Friends, including her circle of O.R. nursing Friends and her
very close friend Lloyd
BODIE.
After▲ graduating from St. Boniface
School of Nursing in 1958, Louise worked at various hospitals
in Manitoba and Ontario before pursuing Post-Graduate studies
at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Maryland. She moved to Toronto in
1966, beginning a 30 year career at Toronto Western Hospital
where she excelled as an Operating Room nurse and supervisor,
also playing a significant mentoring role to many nurses who
remained close to her throughout the years and who provided heartfelt
support during her illness. Louise will be remembered for her
beautiful smile, kindness, warm and friendly manner, sense of
humour, and gift for Friendship. Highly competent and keenly
intelligent, Louise was also modest and low-key. She was a pillar
of strength for all those in her life, and faced her own illness
with her customary strength of character, spirit, and positive
attitude. While the cancer overcame Louise's body, she was certainly
not defeated by it, rather she was victorious in handling it
with courage, grace and style, and her last months and days were
happy and peaceful ones. Louise continues to serve as an inspiration
to her Friends and family, and she played a special role in the
lives of her nieces and grand-nieces as a model of independent
living who was also feminine and caring - a career woman who
went on exciting adventures around the world, yet never forgot
her family and Friends back home and took the time to correspond
and keep in touch. Louise was a cultured person in the larger
sense, firmly grounded by an understanding of the past and her
French-Canadian roots, but open-minded and interested in new
ideas and approaches as well. She was an avid and discriminating
reader, as well as an independent thinker. She enjoyed music,
literature, art and design. Louise had excellent taste and believed
in quality, and was a connoisseur of fine crystal and china.
Louise was a lover of nature and the great outdoors too, and
believed in fitness of mind and body. As a young woman, Louise
distinguished herself as a leading speedskater, winning many
awards across Canada and the United States. Night after night
Louise would brave the cold Winnipeg winter weather, working
that outdoor oval at the Norwood - St. Boniface Speedskating
Club, pushing herself to be her best, becoming National Junior
Speedskating Champion and also earning a place in Manitoba's
Sports Hall of Fame. Speedskating gave way to downhill skiing,
with Louise taking yearly trips to Vail and other top destinations,
also going on many hiking and birding expeditions and remaining
active throughout her retirement and illness. Family was all-important
to Louise. She was a loving daughter, sister, and aunt, and was
the Toronto anchor for the Chevrier-Trudel family, especially
for the many nieces and nephews who lived and traveled there
over the years, opening her home on countless occasions and hosting
birthday celebrations marked by her love and individual flair.
She had a gift for knowing how to make people feel special, not
only acknowledging hallmark events in their lives but also in
supporting their individual talents and endeavours and following
their careers with interest. Her family history was a source
of great pride to Louise - a rich and colourful history, so much
a part of Canada's history replete with coureurs de bois, fur
trade merchants, city fathers and Members of Legislative Assembly
and senators, with Suffragettes and community leaders, with clergy
and teachers and public servants, with writers and artists and
actors - all their contributions equally celebrated by Louise.
This passion was nurtured by her mother, and shared with her
brother Hubert. He was the historian and archivist, Louise the
keeper of the stories and protector of family artifacts and heirlooms.
Yet she also did her share of gathering pieces of the story,
mostly in the form of (all those!) newspaper clippings. Part
of Louise's legacy rests in the way she transmitted this rich
heritage to the next generation. The family would like to thank
everyone who provided caring support and expressions of love
and kindness, with a special mention to Louise's 'wonderful team'
of specialists at Princess Margaret Hospital and to her Friends
Lenore, Shirley, and Joan. Louise found immense solace in being
at home in her final months, and greatly appreciated the devotion
and care provided by her dear sister Val and her friend Lloyd
who made that possible. In accordance with Louise's wishes, no
formal service will be held. An interment will take place later
this spring at St. Boniface Basilica Cemetery, where she will
rest next to her parents. Condolences may be forwarded to Trull
Funeral Home. Donations may be made to Toronto Grace Hospital,
which provided exceptional care to Louise and family in her final
hours. Thank you Louise, for all the interest, encouragement,
and kindness you've shown us. We love you and cherish the love
you've given. Watch over us. "Et certes il existe, l'irréparable,
mais il n'y a rien là qui soit triste ou gai, c'est l'essence
même de CofE qui fut ". "Traveler, there is no path. The path is
made by walking".
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JAMIESON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-04-26 published
DRENTH,
Ellen "
Aaltje"
Peacefully at the Leisureworld Nursing Home on April 25th, 2006,
in her 92nd year. Beloved wife of the late George
DRENTH.
Loving
mother of Ted
DRENTH and his wife
Judy and Ellen
JAMIESON and
her husband Bill. Dear grandmother of Nicole and Dave
VEITCH,
Kevin DRENTH,
William
JAMIESON and Jon
JAMIESON. A private family
service has taken place.
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JAMISON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-11-13 published
VITOLS,
Val▼
Passed away on November 10, 2006 at home in Oak Vay Village,
British Columbia after a brief struggle with cancer. Born on
April 3, 1921 in Zaube, Latvia he is survived by his daughter,
Jill, son, Kristjan, son-in-law Mark
JAMISON, daughter-in-law
Jennifer MacKAY and grandchildren Malcolm and Molly
JAMISON and
Ella and Everett
VITOLS. No flowers, but donations may be made
to the Sierra Legal Defense Fund, Suite 214-131 Water Street, Vancouver,
British Columbia V8B 4M3.
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JAMISON o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-11-18 published
VITOLS,
Val▲
Passed away on November 10, 2006 at home in Victoria, British
Columbia after a brief struggle with cancer. Born on April 3,
1921 in Zaube, Latvia, he was predeceased by his wife Barbara
in 1997. He is survived by his daughter, Jill; son, Kristjan
son-in-law Mark
JAMISON; daughter-in-law Jennifer
MacKAY; and
grandchildren Malcolm and Molly
JAMISON and Ella and Everett
VITOLS. No flowers, but donations may be made to the Sierra Legal
Defense Fund, Suite 214-131 Water Street, Vancouver, British Columbia
V8B 4M3.
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JAMISON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-01-17 published
JAMISON,
Jonathan
Sampson
At Headwaters Health Care Centre, Orangeville, on Sunday, January
15, 2006 in his 56th year; beloved husband of Frances Sarah
MURPHY
loved father of Paul
JAMISON and his wife
Danielle of Woodbridge,
Joanna JAMISON of Toronto, Robert
JAMISON of Hockley Valley
dear brother of Alec, Joyce and Janet; also sadly missed by his
other relatives and many Friends and co-workers at Siemens Canada
Ltd. Friends may call at the Dods and McNair Funeral Home and Chapel,
21 First Street, Orangeville on Thursday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral
Service will be held in the chapel on Friday, January 20, 2006
at 11: 00 a.m. As expressions of sympathy, donations can be made
to the Canadian Cancer Society - Pancreatic Research. (Condolences
may be offered to the family at www.dodsandmcnair.com)
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