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1893 deaths

Thomas Lewis Dodge

1816 births | 1893 deaths | nova scotia liberal mlas


Thomas Lewis Dodge (July 19 1816October 31 1893) was a merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia, Canada. He represented King's County in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1882 to 1886 as a Liberal member.

He was born in Horton, Nova Scotia, the son of David Dodge and Phebe Scott. In 1843, he married Sarah Harrington. Dodge married Harriet Amy Harrington in 1856. He was named to the province's Legislative Council in 1887. Dodge served as treasurer for King's County from 1870 until his death at home in Kentville at the age of 77.

Audley Archdall

1825 births | 1893 deaths | irish cricketers


Audley Archdall (June 6, 1826February 27, 1893) was an [[Ireland Irish cricketer. He was born in Ballacassidy and died in Newent.

Carl Fredrik Nyman

1820 births | 1893 deaths | people from stockholm | swedish botanists


Carl Fredrik Nyman (August 31, 1820 - April 26, 1893) was a Swedish botanist who was a native of Stockholm. The plant genus Nymania is named in his honor.

Nyman was curator at the Riksmuseum in Stockholm. With Heinrich Wilhelm Schott (1794-1865) and Theodor Kotschy (1813-1866), he was editor of Analecta Botanica (1854). Among his publications are the following:

  • Conspectus Florae Europaeae, (volume 1- September 1878, volume 2- October 1879, volume 3- July 1881, volume 4- October 1882, addendum- December 1885).
  • Sylloge Florae Europaeae, (1854–1855).
Nyman, Carl Fredrik

George Vicat Cole

1833 births | 1893 deaths | english artists | english painters | member of artists rifles | people from portsmouth | royal academicians


George Vicat Cole (April 17, 1833-April 6, 1893), English painter, born at Portsmouth was the son of the landscape painter, George Cole (1810-1883), and in his practice followed his fathers lead with marked success. He exhibited at the British Institution at the age of nineteen, and was first represented at the Royal Academy in 1853. His election as an associate of this institution took place in 1870, and he became an Academician ten years later. He died in London on the 6th of April 1893. The wide popularity of his work was due partly to the simple directness of his technical method, and partly to his habitual choice of attractive material.

Most of his subjects were found in the counties of Surrey and Sussex, and along the banks of the Thames. One of his largest pictures, The Pool of London, was bought by the Chantrey Fund Trustees in 1888, and is now in the Tate Gallery.

John Machar

1796 births | 1893 deaths | principals of queen's university


The Reverend John Machar (1796February 7 1893) was the second principal of Queen's University, then known as Queen's College at Kingston.

Machar was born in Tannandice, Scotland. He was ordained as a Presbyterian minister in 1819. In 1827, he emigrated to Kingston, Upper Canada in order to become the minister at St Andrew's Church.

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