In Memoriam

Remembering ĂŰĚŇ´ŤĂ˝ alumni.

Those Who Have Passed

Sharing memories of friends, faculty, and colleagues - In Memoriam helps you honour those who have recently passed.

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  • Dr. Henry B. Dinsdale (right) and Stephen L. Archer

    1950s

    Dr. Henry B. Dinsdale

    – MD’55

    Summer 2023

    Dr. Henry B. Dinsdale passed away on May 30, 2023. He is dearly missed by children, Janyce MacDonald (John Colden), Scott (Jennifer, Sandi), Henry (Diane Wherrett), and Martha Thomson (Anthony); grandchildren, Kate MacDonald (Brandon Law), Sarah MacDonald (Ben Curtis), Lizzie MacDonald (Jonathan Ludwig), Morgan Dinsdale, Taylor Dinsdale (Trevor Morgan), Maddy Dinsdale, Ben Dinsdale (Maddy Godin), Emily Thomson (Jesse Topley); and great-grandchildren, Cedric, Angus and Malcolm Law. He was predeceased by his parents, Harry and Doris Dinsdale of Peterborough, Ontario; and brothers, Jack and Sidney.

    Stephen L. Archer MD. FRCP(C), FRSC, FAHA, FACC
    Head Department of Medicine, ĂŰĚŇ´ŤĂ˝ Scientific Director, Queen’s Cardiopulmonary Unit (QCPU): 

    It is with great sadness that I acknowledge the passing of Dr. Henry B. Dinsdale, Professor Emeritus, Division of Neurology. Dr. Dinsdale was a leader in medicine both at Queen’s and on the national stage. He is fondly remembered as a world class neurologist, department head and colleague.

    Dr. Dinsdale graduated in medicine from Queen’s, which was followed by clinical and research training in neurology at the Maudsley Hospital and National Hospital, Queens Square, London and the Harvard Neurological Unit, Boston City Hospital. He returned to the Faculty of Medicine at Queen’s, where he was professor and head of the Department of Medicine, as well as the associate dean for research. After his “retirement” as head of the Department of Medicine, he worked as an outpatient general neurologist for 17 years and treated thousands of patients. Dr. Dinsdale’s major research interests and publications were in the area of stroke and the effects of hypertension on the blood-brain barrier.

    Dr. Dinsdale retired from clinical duties in 2014 after 53 years of service to Queen’s and neurological patients. As department head, I had the pleasure of establishing the Dr. Henry B. Dinsdale Visiting Lectureship to acknowledge his significant contributions to Queen’s Department of Medicine, and in June 2014, his service was recognized with the inaugural Dinsdale Medical Grand Rounds lecture, as well as a bench dedication ceremony.

    Dr. Dinsdale was past president of the Canadian Congress for Neurological Sciences and past member of the executive of the American Academy of Neurology. He was a member and vice-president of the Medical Research Council of Canada. He was a founding member and past president of the National Council on Ethics in Human Research. Dr. Dinsdale was past president of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. He was a member of the Order of Canada and an honorary fellow of the College of Physicians of London, the Australasian College of Physicians and the College of Physicians of South Africa. 

    When I think of Henry, I think of excellence, commitment to the profession, and a selfless commitment to advancing academic medicine in Canada. We were lucky to have him in our midst these many decades. He will be missed, but his values and goals continue on in the department. I know he was thrilled to see the growth of the Neurology Division and the expansion of the Department of Medicine.

    To the Dinsdale family, and especially his wife June, I extend my heartfelt sympathy. Thank you for sharing Henry with us throughout his long and illustrious career. We are with you in spirit as you mourn his passing, but also with you as you celebrate his rich life and vast legacy, both personal and professional. To my colleagues in the Department of Medicine, please join me in remembering a giant amongst physicians who advanced excellence in Queen’s Department of Medicine and who elevated patient care and medical education at Kingston General Hospital and Queen’s.

  • 1960s

    William “Bill” Newton-Smith

    – BA‘66

    Summer 2023

    William “Bill” Newton-Smith passed away on April 8, 2023. He is survived by his wife, Nancy Durham; his daughters, Apple (Malcolm Jolley) and Rain (Andrew Goodwin); his grandchildren, Alec, Will, and Hamish Jolley, Willow, Autumn, Sky, and Indigo Goodwin; his brothers, Richard and Robin Newton-Smith.

    Bill Newton-Smith was born in Orillia, Ontario, in 1943. He was the son and grandson of Anglican ministers. He studied philosophy and mathematics at Queen’s and was the St. Andrews’ Scholar in 1965. In philosophy class, he met Dorris Heffron, (Arts’67, MA’69). They married in Oxford, 1968, after Bill did his masters at Cornell University, then became a Commonwealth Scholar at Balliol College, Oxford. Shortly after completing his DPhil, which is titled The Structure of Time, Bill was made a fellow in philosophy at Balliol College.

    They had two daughters, Apple and Rain Newton-Smith. Bill was an unforgettably good teacher. Dorris published her first three novels, while also teaching part time for Oxford’s external studies. In January of 1980, while on sabbatical in Holland, Bill had a life-changing adventure while attending a clandestine meeting of philosophers in Czechoslovakia: police invaded the meeting; Bill was arrested and taken across the border for questioning, but the car broke down in a snow fall. “In Canada, we make snowballs,” Bill explained as he surreptitiously put pieces of paper with addresses into the snowballs he threw into the woods. Over the border he was released.

    Philanthropist George Soros learned of this incident, met with Bill, and soon hired him to help combat authoritarian regimes by founding and setting up courses in universities, ultimately in 33 countries, beginning with being the leading force in founding the Central Eastern European University. Bill also continued teaching at Balliol and writing books on logic and the philosophy of science, which continue to influence philosophy studies to this day.

    Bill and Dorris divorced in late 1980 and Dorris returned to Canada with their daughters, though joint custody was maintained and Bill was a dedicated, influential father throughout. Apple Newton-Smith graduated from McGill and then Queen’s Law School in 1997. She is now a Criminal Court Judge in the Ontario Justice System. Rain Newton-Smith graduated from Oxford then was the Bank of England Scholar at The London School of Economics. She is now Director General of The Confederation of British Industries.

    In 1990, Bill married Nancy Durham, a Canadian reporter for the CBC with international assignments. In retirement Bill and Nancy developed a lavender oil skin products business from their lavender farm in Wales. Bill’s last project was to help found an Arts College in Wales, which will open September 2023. 

  • Harold (Hal) Pringle, taken at 96 years of age.

    1940s

    Harold (Hal) Pringle

    – BComH’48

    Summer 2023

    Harold (Hal) Pringle passed away on Feb. 5, 2023 at age 97 in Ancaster, Ont. Hal is survived by his children, Jane (Bob), Andrew (Sandi), Jake (Bill); and his grandchildren, Victoria and Rob. He was predeceased by his first wife, Joyce, and second wife, June.

    Harold’s parents, Frank Pringle (BSc’17) and Nettie Pringle (nee Johnson), met at Queen’s. His mother came from a long-time Kingston family and, evidently, Johnson Street was named after her family. Harold’s parents settled in Hamilton, where he was born on Nov. 19, 1925. 

    He graduated from Queen’s with his Commerce degree in 1948 and said many times over the years that the saddest day of his life was the day he graduated. He became a chartered accountant and spent several years at what was then Coopers & Lybrand, including about 10 years as the managing partner of the Hamilton office. He saw two of his three kids go to Queen’s — Jake (Artsci’88) and Andrew (Com'85).

  • Linda Lee Hoffman (Baker)

    1980s

    Linda Lee Hoffman (Baker)

    – BNSc'87

    Summer 2023

    Linda Lee Hoffman (Baker), 59, went home to be with Jesus on Friday, May 12, 2023. She leaves her father, Larry; her husband, Dave; and two precious daughters, Monica and Anna-Lee.

    Born in Hamilton and raised in Chatham and Toronto, Linda went to Queen’s, where she met Dave. After graduating in 1987 as a nurse, Linda and Dave were married.

    Besides her family, Linda’s two greatest joys were homeschooling her children and serving Jesus. She excelled at both, graduating both daughters from high school. She also served the homeschooling community by helping with the annual conference and speaking at conferences. Linda had a passion for serving missionaries, worshiping the Lord, and praying. Later “Mrs. H” also taught Sunday school, bringing the authority of God’s word to life.

    Linda’s legacy is a life well lived for God and of love for her family and people.

  • Arthur Charles Gordon Jarvis

    1940s

    Arthur Charles Gordon Jarvis

    – BSc’43

    Summer 2023

    Gord Jarvis passed away peacefully in Ottawa on August 7, 2022, at the age of 100 years. Gord was the son of the late Arthur and Yvonne Jarvis; the beloved husband of Mary Reeve (deceased) and, later, the husband of Ursula Tudor-Parker. He is survived by his two remaining sons, Greg (Jennifer) and Ian (Sabine); nine grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by his late son, David (Alison) and his late sister, Marie Wardrope. 

    He was an honours graduate from Ridley College (1939); a Queen’s graduate (1943); and Western University graduate (1949). Gord served as a Lieutenant during the Second World War (1943-1945). Gord enjoyed a long management career at Canadian General Electric (1952-1984). His pastimes included skiing, golf and curling. 

  • John Gunn for Obits

    1950s

    John Alexander Wilson Gunn

    – BA’59

    Summer 2023

    John Alexander Wilson Gunn, a world-renowned scholar in 17th and 18th-century political thought, died March 7, 2023, in Kingston.

    Known professionally as J.A.W. Gunn, he was called “Jock” by family and friends. Jock is survived by his partner, Mary Jane; children, James and Andrea (Manuel); and brother, Ted (Louise).

    Jock was born in Quebec City in 1937. He earned an honours B.A. in politics and history from ĂŰĚŇ´ŤĂ˝ in 1959; an M.A. in political economy from the University of Toronto in 1961; and a DPhil from Nuffield College, University of Oxford, in 1966.

    Jock joined the Queen’s Political and Economic Science department in 1960 as a lecturer, while still completing his graduate studies. His professors at Queen’s, John Meisel and Alec Corry, had recognized their former student’s spark of brilliance, and wanted to bring him back to Kingston. After Jock completed his doctoral studies, he returned to Queen’s to support the nascent Department of Political Studies under the direction of Meisel, who later wrote in his memoirs: “In Jock Gunn, we recruited a peerless scholar whose extensive command of the literature and commitment to a lofty ideal of a university added a significant dimension to what we had to offer.”

    Jock’s doctoral thesis (directed by John Plamenatz) was later published as Politics and the Public Interest in the Seventeenth Century (1969). In 1971, he published Factions No More: Attitudes to Party in Government and Opposition in Eighteenth-Century England.

    While still a student, Jock worked with Frontier College, supporting that organization’s goal to bring literacy and the love of reading to adult learners. As a professor, Jock challenged his students to read deeply, think critically, and write clearly and sensibly. In his classroom, Jock never relied on notes: in his lectures, he spoke both spontaneously and eloquently on political ideas and ideals. His classes were designed to spark intellectual curiosity and to help his students utilize existing – or develop new – skills in comprehension, inquiry, and analysis. In addition to his undergraduate teaching, Jock supervised 14 doctoral students. Many of his students, both undergraduate and graduate, kept in touch with him decades after they graduated. Some of his best students went on to become writers, journalists, diplomats, lawyers, policymakers, and teachers; Jock followed each of their career paths with interest.

    Between 1975 and 1983, Jock served as head of the Department of Political Studies at Queen’s. There, he was one of three editors of the first two volumes of the letters of Benjamin Disraeli (1982). Jock’s next book, Beyond Liberty and Property: The Process of Self-Recognition in Eighteenth-Century Political Thought, was published in 1983. This work, drawing upon a variety of primary sources, from newspapers and political pamphlets to parliamentary debates, sermons, and private correspondence, offered a bold new approach to the understanding of the public mind and political ideas in Britain. That year, Jock was elected to the Royal Society of Canada in recognition of his remarkable contributions to the social sciences.

    Later turning to the study of French political ideas, Jock published Queen of the World: Opinion in the Public Life of France from the Renaissance to the Revolution in 1995. The same year, succeeding his colleague John Meisel, he was appointed by the Queen’s Board of Trustees the Sir Edward Peacock Professor of Political Studies, a position that honours outstanding contribution to the field of political studies. His citation noted that Jock was “one of the department’s most distinguished academics over the past three decades. His international reputation in political thought has brought credit both to the department and the university.” Jock allocated a portion of the funds associated with the Peacock Chair to purchase items for the British Political Pamphlets Collection at the Queen’s University Library. He also contributed his expertise in recommending notable and rare acquisitions for the library.

    Jock retired officially from Queen’s in 2002 but, for several years and due to popular demand, came back to teach undergraduate courses. His last book, When the French Tried to Be British: Party, Opposition, and the Quest for Civil Disagreement 1814 - 1848, was published in 2009.