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Howland S. Chandler
Personne

Howland Shaw Chandler was a Boston architect active between 1902 and 1918.

Quinn, R.
Personne
Laura Catterall Ferguson
Personne · 1914-2010

Laura (Catterall) Ferguson (1914-2010) was the youngest daughter of Harry and Ada Catterall. Her siblings were Thomas and Helen, who both lived with their parents at Hatley Park during construction between 1908 and 1910. Laura was born in 1914 at the family home on Linden Avenue. Laura, also known as ‘Lollie’, attended Girls’ Central and St. Margaret’s School and Sprott Shaw College. She married Robert ‘Bob’ Ferguson in 1941 in Toronto, ON, and they had two children, Allan and Dola Dube. Laura’s father and paternal grandfather were general contractors in Victoria, and were involved in many building projects, including the castle and wall at Hatley Park. Her maternal grandfather, Charles Gladding, was a gardener working for the Dunsmuir family for many years and was initially in charge of creating the gardens at Hatley Park. (Biographical information from Laura Ferguson’s obituary, published in the Times Colonist, July 3, 2010.)

Johnson & Stockdill
1938-1941

John Graham Johnson and C. Dexter Stockdill were Victoria architects.

City of Colwood
Collectivité · 1985-present

The Royal Roads site is located within the municipality of Colwood.

Dunsmuir, James
Personne · 1851-1920

James Dunsmuir, industrialist, politician, premier of British Columbia 1900-02 (b at Ft Vancouver, Wash 8 July 1851; d at Cowichan, BC 6 June 1920), son of Robert Dunsmuir. Main heir to his family's coal fortune and spokesman for capital over labour, Dunsmuir dominated BC's economy until 1900. From 1876 to 1910 he managed the family coal operations on Vancouver Island, increasing annual output tenfold by opening new fields and improving mining methods. He invested widely in transport, agriculture, manufacturing and other resource industries.

Dunsmuir withstood all attempts at unionizing his operations, becoming labour's chief target in western Canada. In 1905 he sold the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway to the CPR and in 1910 he sold his collieries to William Mackenzie and Donald Mannfor $10 million.
Dunsmuir was elected MPP for Yale in 1898; he was premier of BC from 1900 to 1902, leading a Conservative administration concerned chiefly with Asian immigration, railway construction and BC's position within Confederation. A less prestigious figure would have had problems redistributing the legislature to reflect the now dominant mainland, and a more partisan politician would have remained longer in office. Dunsmuir disliked politics and served more from a sense of public duty than a desire for power. He reluctantly agreed in 1906 to be the province's lieutenant-governor, but resigned in 1909, relieved to be free to enjoy his lands and yacht.

Among Dunsmuir's real estate possessions was Hatley Castle, which was built for him by Samuel MacLure and which today houses the administration offices of Royal Roads University.
(From The Canadian Encyclopedia)

James Dunsmuir died on June 6, 1920, at his hunting lodge along Cowichan River.

Bruner, Gavin
Personne

bandmaster at Royal Roads Military College from 1979 - 1985

Anonymous 1
Personne

attended Royal Canadian Naval College from 1943 to 1945