Monday, May 26, 2008

Tony Malone

**updated**
Friends and former colleagues will be saddened to learn of the death of Joseph Anthony (Tony) Malone on Sunday, May 18, 2008, at the age of 66.

Joseph Anthony Malone (BA, University of Ottawa, 1963; MA, University of Oxford, 1967) joined the Department of External Affairs in 1965 and served abroad in New York, Accra, Washington D.C., Rome, Port-au-Prince as Ambassador, Brussels (NATO) as Minister-Counsellor and Deputy Permanent Representative, Paris as Minister, and Wellington and Lusaka as Acting High Commissioner. At headquarters, he served as Departmental Assistant to the Minister of Foreign Affairs; Secretary, Robinson Task Force on Representation in the United States of America; Deputy Director, Economic Division; Director, Central America and Caribbean Division; Diplomat in residence at the Canadian Foreign Service Institute; and Director General, Policy Branch. Mr. Malone retired from the department in 2000.

Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family, friends and colleagues during this difficult time. Friends are invited to visit at the Central Chapel of Hulse, Playfair & McGarry, 315 McLeod St. on Friday, May 30, 2008 from 1:00 until 3:00 p.m.




Sunday, May 25, 2008

Ride for Dad


Terry Colfer and Art Perron participate in the "Ride for Dad" event, May 24, in Ottawa (pace the date on the photo - ed). Or, perhaps, they are checking out the movements of the Brinks truck seen in the background. Nice choppers. These guys don't fool around.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Monday, May 12, 2008

Author! Author! Bob Lee's Book

Amigos interested in early settlements in Upper Canada, specifically those of the Canada Company, might like to read colleague Bob Lee's book on the subject:

Lee, Robert C. (2004). The Canada Company And The Huron Tract, 1826-1853. Natural Heritage Books, Toronto. ISBN 1-896219-94-2.

See parts of it online here.

It has been very well received, as these excerpts from a review in
Scots Magazine attest:

Form a company, raise money from eager investors, buy underdeveloped land at a bargain, divide it up and sell it on at a profit - surely a property developer's dream! A simplified explanation perhaps, but this wasn't too far from the thinking of the group of businessmen who founded the Canada Company in London in 1824, with a view to settling over two million acres of untouched land in Upper Canada.

And, as with many foreign ventures at that time, there were a number of Scots at the heart of it. Indeed, John Galt, the Irvine-born novelist, adventurer, historian and businessman, who claimed the initiative was his own idea, became the company's first commissioner.

[It was] an enterprise that helped shape Ontario during modem Canada's formative years.

In 1966 a young Canadian student began writing his thesis for a Master of Arts degree. For his subject he chose a topic dear to his heart, "The Canada Company: A Study In Direction, 1826-1853". For the next 35 years Robert C. lee, diplomat and historian, toured the world as a Trade Commissioner in the Canadian Foreign Office before going home and turning his attention back to his first love, the Canada Company and Huron County, Ontario. With encouragement from a number of sources, he grasped the nettle and expanded the original thesis into a book.

The Canada Company And The Huron Tract, 1826-1853: Personalities, Politics And Profits concentrates on the development of the million acres on the shores of lake Huron known as the Huron Tract, the largest settlement scheme in Upper Canada.

This book is an impeccably researched work, which includes copious notes, a bibliography, and previously unpublished illustrations. It will appeal to anyone with a specific interest in the area and the times, or in the workings of a business.