View allAll Photos Tagged Jackie Edwards

For the 5 kilometre race results and photos...here are the local (Ottawa & area) participants -- sorted by cities and first name -- in the September 19, 2010, Canada Army Run held in Ottawa, Ontario.

 

Click here and enter the bib numbers for the full individual race results. Race photos here. (6,760 runners in the 5 km race)

 

Thank-you to Sportstats.

 

Part A. Ottawa (Click here.)

Part B. Other Communities (Alexandria to Navan) (Click here.)

Part C. Other Communities (Nepean to Woodlawn) (see below)

 

Part C:

 

10733…Adele Pontone….. Nepean

11845…Al Ruppel….. Nepean

9843…Alana Henry-Fontelio….. Nepean

11513…Alex E. Smith….. Nepean

7265…Alexander Maxwell….. Nepean

14160…Alexandra Reimer….. Nepean

10495…Alison Gotceitas….. Nepean

7963…Alison Vrckovnik….. Nepean

8610…Amy Yee….. Nepean

10100…Andrea Cook….. Nepean

8784…Andrea Copperthwaite….. Nepean

12268…Andrew Ma….. Nepean

10002…Andrew Makus….. Nepean

12672…Anezka Zlamal….. Nepean

7881…Angie Rucchetto….. Nepean

8379…Anna Passmore….. Nepean

9255…Anne Senior….. Nepean

8431…Anya Rampal….. Nepean

14195…April Van Den Beek….. Nepean

11251…Athena Williams….. Nepean

11252…Aurora Williams….. Nepean

12931…Becky Bodnar….. Nepean

11429…Ben Cook….. Nepean

7260…Benjamin Cheng….. Nepean

12058…Bihac Mazigh….. Nepean

7023…Bob Cordukes….. Nepean

8474…Bonnie Badour….. Nepean

9476…Bonnie Gregoire….. Nepean

3991…Brent Eyre….. Nepean

12133…Brian Green….. Nepean

10848…Bronwynn Guymer….. Nepean

8660…Cathie Adeney….. Nepean

8666…Cathy Anderson….. Nepean

9909…Cecily Pantin….. Nepean

12293…Chris Brace….. Nepean

13076…Chris Cull….. Nepean

13081…Chris Daley….. Nepean

13148…Cindy Elmy….. Nepean

7972…Cindy Wendler….. Nepean

10685…Clare Beckton….. Nepean

7906…Claudio Sicoli….. Nepean

11092…Colby Wilson….. Nepean

8741…Colleen Burns….. Nepean

11446…Corinne Finlayson….. Nepean

12094…Craig Heath….. Nepean

10420…Cynthia Field -Rose….. Nepean

12722…Cynthia Sleigh-O'rourke….. Nepean

7756…D.R. Macgregor….. Nepean

11166…Daniel Cormier….. Nepean

12147…Danielle Miner….. Nepean

7262…Daphne Snelgrove….. Nepean

8042…Dave Regimbald….. Nepean

13053…David Contini….. Nepean

10170…David Daze….. Nepean

10656…Debbie Mclellan-Lepine….. Nepean

11133…Deborah Park….. Nepean

12588…Dorothy Gordon….. Nepean

10934…Drew Robertson….. Nepean

8481…Edward Drummond….. Nepean

12174…Eileen Melnick Mccarthy….. Nepean

10768…Elaine Yee….. Nepean

13368…Elana Lamesse….. Nepean

11689…Emily Devitt….. Nepean

7351…Emma Victoria Smith….. Nepean

14477…Eric Mullen….. Nepean

13827…Eric Traclet….. Nepean

9164…Erika Penno….. Nepean

9607…Erin Brennan….. Nepean

14157…Erin Purdy….. Nepean

9844…Ermin Fontelio….. Nepean

14223…Eugenio Rino….. Nepean

9486…Fannie Simard-Castonguay….. Nepean

8381…Franca Mirella….. Nepean

10328…Francine Lapointe….. Nepean

8685…Gallisedo Bae….. Nepean

7264…Gary Maxwell….. Nepean

10793…Gerry Blathwayt….. Nepean

1502…Glenn Kavanagh….. Nepean

10171…Gracie Daze….. Nepean

13529…Hana Moidu….. Nepean

9840…Heather Sutcliffe….. Nepean

9334…Heather Webb….. Nepean

12235…Hilary Allen….. Nepean

11787…Holly Karout….. Nepean

10028…Howard Godby….. Nepean

12126…Irene Yaraskavitch….. Nepean

9898…J.P. Trottier….. Nepean

9487…Jade Simard-Castonguay….. Nepean

13530…Jaleel Moidu….. Nepean

11450…James Boutin….. Nepean

12439…James Passmore….. Nepean

7170…James R. Edge….. Nepean

13061…Jan Coulis….. Nepean

11822…Janet Myers….. Nepean

10847…Jason Green….. Nepean

8032…Jean Marie Manson….. Nepean

8480…Jeff Drummond….. Nepean

12518…Jeff Harvey….. Nepean

13858…Jen Walsh….. Nepean

12391…Jennifer Bordeleau….. Nepean

8941…Jennifer Hopkinson….. Nepean

11405…Jennifer Maroun….. Nepean

9155…Jennifer Passmore….. Nepean

13883…Jennifer Williams….. Nepean

7630…Jessica Gage….. Nepean

14494…Jill Castiglione….. Nepean

11806…Jill Marchand….. Nepean

11018…Jo Ann Uline….. Nepean

8815…Joanne Denomme….. Nepean

14030…Joanne Doucet….. Nepean

8482…Jocelyn Drummond….. Nepean

11410…Joe Harvey….. Nepean

9404…Johanne Harris….. Nepean

14548…John Smith….. Nepean

12893…Jordan Beauvais….. Nepean

7519…Josh Brennan….. Nepean

11658…Judy Smith….. Nepean

7240…Julian Yang….. Nepean

12916…Julie Bennett….. Nepean

13080…Julie Dalbec….. Nepean

9081…Kaitlin Mclellan….. Nepean

1867…Karen Mullen….. Nepean

8141…Kathleen Cole….. Nepean

13051…Kathy Conlon….. Nepean

11226…Katie Squires….. Nepean

12519…Keirsten Harvey….. Nepean

7557…Keith Clark….. Nepean

7558…Kelsey Clark….. Nepean

11132…Ken Park….. Nepean

11774…Kenneth Hennessey….. Nepean

7755…Kenton Lynds….. Nepean

12626…Kevan Mackay….. Nepean

8786…Kim Corlett….. Nepean

12130…Kimberley Brigden….. Nepean

8012…Kirk Lynds….. Nepean

12040…Kirsten Miller….. Nepean

11560…Kristen Grewal….. Nepean

12754…Kristina Ellement….. Nepean

7296…Kyle Gordon….. Nepean

10767…Kyle Tennant….. Nepean

7559…Laura Clark….. Nepean

7819…Laura Nichols….. Nepean

12821…Laura Peckett….. Nepean

8374…Leisa Villeneuve….. Nepean

8802…Leslie Da Silva….. Nepean

9642…Lien Ha….. Nepean

10023…Linda Billyard….. Nepean

8986…Linda Koenders….. Nepean

11946…Linda Mckay….. Nepean

9283…Linda Swaffield….. Nepean

8162…Lisa Marie Bambrick….. Nepean

10295…Lisa Piers….. Nepean

9592…Louise Desjardins….. Nepean

13609…Lucas Perkins….. Nepean

7208…Luke Harvey….. Nepean

10106…Lydia Walker….. Nepean

9228…Lynda Rozon….. Nepean

12213…Lynn Hannah….. Nepean

13758…Lynn Smith….. Nepean

12236…Mackenzie Allen….. Nepean

8812…Mamta Deecker….. Nepean

8792…Marcy Craig….. Nepean

9854…Margaret O'brien….. Nepean

8972…Margaret-Ann Kellett….. Nepean

9803…Marianna Burch….. Nepean

14323…Marie Bulmer….. Nepean

12328…Marie Noreau….. Nepean

9350…Marie Yelle-Whitwam….. Nepean

11096…Marilyn Booth….. Nepean

14251…Marion Dare….. Nepean

8910…Mark Hache….. Nepean

10764…Martine Proulx….. Nepean

11687…Mary Devitt….. Nepean

14120…Mary-Kaye Mcgreevy….. Nepean

13819…Matthew Threader….. Nepean

7207…Megan Harvey….. Nepean

11549…Melanie Boudreau….. Nepean

14029…Melanie Dompierre….. Nepean

14261…Melanie Gibbons….. Nepean

8864…Melissa Fisher….. Nepean

7140…Michael Burch….. Nepean

7261…Michael Cheng….. Nepean

11896…Michael Teeple….. Nepean

7973…Michael Wendler….. Nepean

12958…Michelle Bray….. Nepean

11416…Mike Trottier….. Nepean

11911…Mimi Hadi-Kho….. Nepean

10062…Mina Rampal….. Nepean

8740…Miriam Burke….. Nepean

10935…Mishele Robertson….. Nepean

6509…Momodou Loum….. Nepean

7014…Monique Cordukes….. Nepean

13559…Natalie Sharp….. Nepean

12773…Natasha Yee….. Nepean

7947…Nathan Toft….. Nepean

7689…Ning Huang….. Nepean

8901…Paige Graham….. Nepean

11076…Parto Navidi….. Nepean

7356…Patrick Nicholas Smith….. Nepean

10151…Patrick Walsh….. Nepean

13197…Paul Gauthier….. Nepean

7292…Paul Romano….. Nepean

7038…Paula Noyes….. Nepean

9655…Peggy Bradford….. Nepean

13790…Pierre St-Pierre….. Nepean

10448…Ralph Mahar….. Nepean

10154…Ram Bickram….. Nepean

10496…Ray Gotceitas….. Nepean

14317…Raymond Tsang….. Nepean

10183…Reid Zandbelt….. Nepean

12078…Rena Itan….. Nepean

12892…Rhonda Beauregard….. Nepean

13085…Richard Dare….. Nepean

7578…Richard Dault….. Nepean

13198…Rob Gauthier….. Nepean

9402…Rob Harris….. Nepean

7729…Robert Langlois….. Nepean

14516…Robert Lee….. Nepean

294…Roberto Palmero….. Nepean

9122…Rod Myers….. Nepean

7908…Roger Skidmore….. Nepean

7928…Rowan Stringer….. Nepean

12381…Roy Thomas….. Nepean

12842…Sabeena Abdulmajeed….. Nepean

10105…Sadie Walker….. Nepean

13809…Sajan Thankachan….. Nepean

10099…Sam Cook….. Nepean

11541…Samara Peters….. Nepean

7022…Samer Forzley….. Nepean

8708…Sandra Binkley….. Nepean

11393…Sandy Andrews….. Nepean

10755…Sarah Gardam….. Nepean

7206…Sarah Harvey….. Nepean

9077…Sarah Mcisaac….. Nepean

9856…Scott Kennedy….. Nepean

10104…Scott Walker….. Nepean

9604…Shane Brennan….. Nepean

13369…Shane Lamesse….. Nepean

12438…Shannon Passmore….. Nepean

10598…Sharon Leonard….. Nepean

8974…Shawna Kelly….. Nepean

13810…Sheryl Theal….. Nepean

7414…Simon Kou….. Nepean

13901…Simon Xie….. Nepean

14324…Siobhan Bulmer….. Nepean

11358…Sokoeun Sreng….. Nepean

11333…Sonya Driscoll….. Nepean

11835…Sophia Ramirez-Hennessey….. Nepean

11374…Stefanie Burch….. Nepean

14567…Stephanie Dunne….. Nepean

13760…Stephen Smith….. Nepean

12526…Steve Camilucci….. Nepean

8281…Steven Leonard….. Nepean

7306…Susan Bickram….. Nepean

11723…Susan Carter….. Nepean

8139…Susan White….. Nepean

12300…Suzanne Judd….. Nepean

12565…Taemin Ha….. Nepean

12006…Tammy Delaney….. Nepean

9606…Tammy Harris….. Nepean

9358…Tanya Churchill….. Nepean

7912…Tanya Snook….. Nepean

12287…Teresa Scrivens….. Nepean

9839…Theo Tsang….. Nepean

8386…Thomas Lepine….. Nepean

10595…Thomas Williams….. Nepean

8886…Tina Garbas-Tyrrell….. Nepean

9232…Tina Ryan….. Nepean

13835…Tom Trueman….. Nepean

11430…Tony Cook….. Nepean

11091…Tracey Wilson….. Nepean

7964…Trevor Vrckovnik….. Nepean

14136…Trish Munro….. Nepean

9137…Trishia Ogilvie….. Nepean

9449…Tyler Young….. Nepean

11799…Vivianne Leguerrier….. Nepean

12772…Wayne Yee….. Nepean

9156…Wendy Patenaude….. Nepean

13820…Wendy Threader….. Nepean

9930…Yanika Gauthier….. Nepean

13767…Yupin Spatling….. Nepean

11164…Yvonne Dumont….. Nepean

13370…Zac Lamesse….. Nepean

9261…Zoe Sjolund….. Nepean

7922…Angie Stevenson….. North Gower

8503…Ashley Robinson….. North Gower

10715…Georgia Robinson….. North Gower

12567…Janet Johnston-Vineyard….. North Gower

11683…Julie Poirier….. North Gower

7291…Kim Paley….. North Gower

10827…Marie Dowden….. North Gower

7169…Mark Parry….. North Gower

12566…Mitch Vineyard….. North Gower

10878…Nicole Komendat….. North Gower

8924…Pam Harrison….. North Gower

11684…Rick Poirier….. North Gower

10932…Ronnie Richardson….. North Gower

8909…Susan Gutwin….. North Gower

13785…Tim Stevenson….. North Gower

12092…Vicki Brown….. North Gower

14326…Aaron Derouin….. Orleans

14596…Adam Menzies….. Orleans

11001…Adina Turner….. Orleans

8214…Adrian Fyfe….. Orleans

10279…Aguilar Julio….. Orleans

11131…Ainsley Howard….. Orleans

11387…Alain Beaulieu….. Orleans

11129…Alan Howard….. Orleans

9262…Alan Smith….. Orleans

10930…Alex Renwick….. Orleans

14578…Alexander Overton….. Orleans

9139…Alexis O'bryan….. Orleans

14276…Algis Danaitis….. Orleans

12913…Alison Bennett….. Orleans

11625…Allison Gordon….. Orleans

9771…Alvin Szeto….. Orleans

12743…Amanda Bower….. Orleans

12571…Amanda Daluz….. Orleans

8103…Amanda Hope….. Orleans

13763…Amanda Soule….. Orleans

7623…Amelie Flanagan….. Orleans

8537…Amy Cameron….. Orleans

7091…Andrew Cormack….. Orleans

9249…Andrew Scarlett….. Orleans

13863…Andrew Warden….. Orleans

8544…Angela Maxwell….. Orleans

9292…Anick Taverna….. Orleans

12655…Anik Corbeil….. Orleans

9293…Anita Taylor….. Orleans

13133…Annabelle Dube….. Orleans

10887…Anne Lemay….. Orleans

8534…Anneliese Myers….. Orleans

11811…Annemarie Mccormick….. Orleans

9684…Anne-Marie Ranger….. Orleans

9223…Annik Rouse….. Orleans

13624…Anthony Pickett….. Orleans

11187…Anthony Williamson….. Orleans

11639…Arthur Mckenzie….. Orleans

11637…Arthur Mckenzie….. Orleans

13964…Ashley Arbour….. Orleans

12223…Ashley Beaton….. Orleans

11709…Barbara Bourke….. Orleans

7825…Barbara Oattes….. Orleans

7285…Ben Richard….. Orleans

8632…Bennett Dave….. Orleans

7035…Benoit Cadieux….. Orleans

10854…Bernie Hasselman….. Orleans

8926…Beverley Hatt….. Orleans

7680…Beverley Holden….. Orleans

7786…Bill Meek….. Orleans

13965…Blake Arbour….. Orleans

7767…Bonita Martin….. Orleans

8148…Brenda Cavanagh….. Orleans

7644…Brenda Gosselin….. Orleans

11800…Brenda Leury….. Orleans

13569…Brian Newlove….. Orleans

9857…Brigitte Benay….. Orleans

8718…Brigitte Bourre….. Orleans

10459…Bruce Brunelle….. Orleans

14281…Camelia Touzany….. Orleans

12544…Carl Kletke….. Orleans

11742…Carla De Koning….. Orleans

11765…Carly Gordon….. Orleans

10855…Carly Hasselman….. Orleans

9247…Carmela Savoia….. Orleans

11504…Carmen Foglietta….. Orleans

8048…Carol Daigle….. Orleans

12383…Carol Huot….. Orleans

9665…Carol Moule….. Orleans

11188…Carol Williamson….. Orleans

7634…Carole Gaudes….. Orleans

9756…Caroline Tessier….. Orleans

11983…Chelsea Hughes….. Orleans

13864…Chelsea Warden….. Orleans

12719…Chris Michael….. Orleans

13570…Chris Newlove….. Orleans

11097…Christa Faehndrich….. Orleans

9554…Christina Jahraus….. Orleans

10720…Christina Walker….. Orleans

8751…Christine Casey….. Orleans

9250…Christine Scarlett….. Orleans

9196…Cindy Reid….. Orleans

13040…Clairette Clement….. Orleans

11934…Corey Bursey….. Orleans

14471…Dakota Chamberlain….. Orleans

7184…Danie Michaud….. Orleans

9926…Daniel Bradley….. Orleans

9577…Daniel Quimper….. Orleans

12560…Danielle Richardson….. Orleans

7971…Darlene Welch….. Orleans

9879…Dave Byrne….. Orleans

11894…Dave King….. Orleans

9471…David Ball….. Orleans

9680…David Gee….. Orleans

13386…David Lawrence….. Orleans

13764…David Soule….. Orleans

7982…David Young….. Orleans

8626…Deanna Masur….. Orleans

10835…Deanne Farley….. Orleans

14230…Deanne Mclintock….. Orleans

14252…Debbie Landry….. Orleans

10929…Denis Raymond….. Orleans

10317…Dennis Lloyd….. Orleans

9021…Diane Levesque….. Orleans

7573…Dominique Cusson….. Orleans

11382…Donald Darrell….. Orleans

8975…Donald Kennedy….. Orleans

12226…Doreen Murray….. Orleans

13305…Earl Jared….. Orleans

8763…Edith Chartrand….. Orleans

9509…Edith Gibeault….. Orleans

8550…Elan Graves….. Orleans

10786…Elizabeth Bachand….. Orleans

13765…Emma Soule….. Orleans

7157…Eric Bourbonnais….. Orleans

8360…Eric Christensen….. Orleans

10266…Eric Drouin….. Orleans

12091…Eric Gay….. Orleans

9567…Erica Dixon….. Orleans

7853…Erik Poapst….. Orleans

11443…Ethel Best….. Orleans

11834…Farhana Rahman….. Orleans

9049…Faye Magne….. Orleans

11000…Feyah Turner….. Orleans

12633…France Gagnon….. Orleans

13880…Frederick Whichelo….. Orleans

8213…Fyfe Will….. Orleans

12704…Gabriel Rousseau….. Orleans

14012…Gail Cote….. Orleans

10528…Garrett Fiander….. Orleans

9797…Genevieve Beliveau….. Orleans

12175…George Cormack….. Orleans

12325…Georges Rousseau….. Orleans

14000…Gerry Champagne….. Orleans

9663…Gilles Berger….. Orleans

13647…Gilles Pouliot….. Orleans

10916…Gisele Montgomery….. Orleans

13687…Gisele Rivest….. Orleans

9571…Gorden Cavanagh….. Orleans

9798…Greg Beliveau….. Orleans

13360…Greg Lacroix….. Orleans

8568…Gregory Burt….. Orleans

12061…Gregory Villeneuve….. Orleans

12869…Guy Armstrong….. Orleans

10246…Harold O'connell….. Orleans

7483…Heather Barr….. Orleans

12415…Heather Lloyd….. Orleans

9535…Heather Mcintosh….. Orleans

13766…Heather Soule….. Orleans

14470…Helene Boyer….. Orleans

11796…Henri Lanctot….. Orleans

7981…Ian Yokota….. Orleans

8049…Irvin Daigle….. Orleans

8357…Isabelle Lapierre….. Orleans

9397…Jacinthe Laliberte….. Orleans

8671…Jackie Anton….. Orleans

11807…Jacob Matthews….. Orleans

10084…Jacques Gagne….. Orleans

11594…James Gan….. Orleans

8768…Janice Christensen….. Orleans

11120…Janice Mcintyre….. Orleans

12194…Jannine Moreau….. Orleans

7191…Jason Sinkus….. Orleans

11891…Jean-Pierre Dufour….. Orleans

12332…Jennifer Brisson….. Orleans

8448…Jennifer Buffam….. Orleans

7667…Jennifer Hausman….. Orleans

8981…Jennifer King….. Orleans

7924…Jennifer Stewart….. Orleans

14001…Jessica Champagne….. Orleans

10694…Jessica Danforth….. Orleans

9193…Joan Rajotte….. Orleans

14351…Joanna Streppa….. Orleans

12103…Jo-Anne Matheson….. Orleans

9116…Joanne Mulligan….. Orleans

13911…Joel Bergeron….. Orleans

9516…Johanne Stuart….. Orleans

12422…John Kernick….. Orleans

14089…John Learned….. Orleans

13491…John Mcgregor….. Orleans

14597…John Menzies….. Orleans

9140…John O'bryan….. Orleans

9251…John Scarlett….. Orleans

7939…John Tennant….. Orleans

7959…John Vice….. Orleans

7299…Jonathan Favre….. Orleans

14283…Jonathan Montreuil….. Orleans

9517…Jordi Stuart….. Orleans

11638…Josee Cote….. Orleans

11476…Josee Deleseleuc….. Orleans

11152…Josee Sarazin….. Orleans

12871…Josie Armstrong….. Orleans

12368…Julie Arsenault….. Orleans

11137…Julie Johnson….. Orleans

9248…Julie Savoie….. Orleans

9141…Justin O'bryan….. Orleans

11167…Karianne Lefebvre….. Orleans

8982…Karyl King….. Orleans

8127…Katharina Menduni….. Orleans

10469…Katherine Kurtossy….. Orleans

12716…Kathleen Michael….. Orleans

8692…Kathryn Barr….. Orleans

12308…Katie Williams….. Orleans

7744…Kayla Licari….. Orleans

11772…Kelly Haynes….. Orleans

12718…Kelly Michael….. Orleans

9519…Kelsey Teague….. Orleans

10814…Kenneth Crane….. Orleans

11066…Kenneth Gray….. Orleans

12756…Kevin O'keefe….. Orleans

12564…Kevin Riendeau….. Orleans

10758…Kim Carrier….. Orleans

9075…Kim Mcgowan….. Orleans

14010…Krista Cooper….. Orleans

7317…Kristen Ward….. Orleans

14238…Kyle Thebault….. Orleans

9618…Kylie Rozon….. Orleans

8449…Laura Buffam….. Orleans

8167…Laura St-Pierre….. Orleans

9351…Laura Yokota-Savoia….. Orleans

7051…Lauren Devereux….. Orleans

10556…Laurie Mack….. Orleans

12090…Lesley Gay….. Orleans

8952…Leslie Hurry….. Orleans

14074…Leslie Katz….. Orleans

8747…Lili Caron….. Orleans

14370…Linda Brunet….. Orleans

12072…Linda Dupuis….. Orleans

9300…Lindsay Toll….. Orleans

13860…Lindsay Walthert….. Orleans

13999…Lisa Carozza….. Orleans

9083…Lisa Meek….. Orleans

12198…Lisa St-Amour….. Orleans

12102…Lise Dixon….. Orleans

9213…Lloyd Rockburn….. Orleans

7018…Lorne Schmidt….. Orleans

9214…Louise Rockburn….. Orleans

13761…Louise Soloski….. Orleans

8215…Luc Nadon….. Orleans

9163…Luc Pedneault….. Orleans

10761…Lucie Houle….. Orleans

7222…Lucien Bedard….. Orleans

7804…Lynda Muirhead….. Orleans

13196…M Gauthier….. Orleans

11121…Malcolm Mcintyre….. Orleans

7960…Manon Virag….. Orleans

8523…Marc Desforges….. Orleans

7501…Marc-Andre Blanke….. Orleans

11695…Marg Zens….. Orleans

7686…Maria Hotston….. Orleans

13468…Maria Perron….. Orleans

9620…Mark Deschamps….. Orleans

12717…Mark Michael….. Orleans

11400…Mark Price….. Orleans

7653…Marquis Hainse….. Orleans

9527…Martine Gagnon….. Orleans

8105…Mary Anne Gillespie….. Orleans

12568…Mary Jane Daluz….. Orleans

8823…Mathieu Dion….. Orleans

14048…Mathieu Gill….. Orleans

14278…Matt Boivin….. Orleans

8211…Matt Fyfe….. Orleans

12872…Matthew Armstrong….. Orleans

11014…Matthew Mckay….. Orleans

14579…Matthew Overton….. Orleans

9252…Matthew Scarlett….. Orleans

9635…Matthew Walthert….. Orleans

12326…Maureen Brennan-Rousseau….. Orleans

8478…Maureen Lamothe….. Orleans

8907…Max Guenette….. Orleans

7474…Megan Apostoleris….. Orleans

9294…Megan Taylor….. Orleans

7524…Michael Brown….. Orleans

13306…Michael Jared….. Orleans

9636…Michael Kampman….. Orleans

13705…Michael Roome….. Orleans

8824…Michel Dion….. Orleans

10957…Michel St Denis….. Orleans

10702…Michelle Best….. Orleans

12206…Michelle Maheux….. Orleans

11136…Mike Johnson….. Orleans

10742…Ming Tung….. Orleans

9088…Mireille Mikhael….. Orleans

10859…Monica Henderson….. Orleans

9772…Monique Goyette….. Orleans

7687…Morgan Hotston….. Orleans

7666…Murray Hatt….. Orleans

8816…Natalie Deschamps….. Orleans

13361…Natascha Lacroix….. Orleans

7736…Natasshia Lee….. Orleans

11065…Nathalie Laroche….. Orleans

9212…Nathalie Rochon….. Orleans

9415…Nerehis Tzivanopolous….. Orleans

9957…Nicolas Ducharme….. Orleans

8674…Nicole Arbic….. Orleans

11214…Nicole Lalonde….. Orleans

10757…Norman May….. Orleans

11672…Olivier Lavictoire….. Orleans

9723…Pamela Lavallee….. Orleans

11673…Patrice Lavictoire….. Orleans

11294…Patrick Grenier….. Orleans

9019…Patrick Levasseur….. Orleans

11572…Patrick Mcvarnock….. Orleans

12765…Patrick Sarda….. Orleans

14591…Paul Mcdonough….. Orleans

10760…Paul Walker….. Orleans

12508…Pauline Giese….. Orleans

13913…Peter Blier….. Orleans

10433…Peter Devlin….. Orleans

14130…Philippe Milot….. Orleans

8761…Pierre Charron….. Orleans

12738…Pierre Huet….. Orleans

11293…Pierrette Grenier….. Orleans

8450…Rachel Buffam….. Orleans

9722…Rachel Lessard….. Orleans

10893…Rachel Mac Duff….. Orleans

8583…Rafael Huet….. Orleans

12528…Randy Buffam….. Orleans

11151…Randy Lahaise….. Orleans

8348…Raymond Mcinnis….. Orleans

12623…Raymond Ouimet….. Orleans

10143…Rebeca Shaw….. Orleans

9518…Rebecca Teague….. Orleans

11272…Remika Gautam….. Orleans

10810…Renelle Cloutier….. Orleans

11653…Richard Purves….. Orleans

12113…Richard Tremblay….. Orleans

10924…Rita Paul….. Orleans

9320…Rob Vice….. Orleans

10815…Robbie Crane….. Orleans

9782…Robert Blasutti….. Orleans

9647…Robert Downey….. Orleans

11168…Robert Jr Lefebvre….. Orleans

11820…Robert Morin….. Orleans

11982…Robert Patchett….. Orleans

7907…Robert Simard….. Orleans

11881…Robin Whitford….. Orleans

7054…Robyn Macdonald….. Orleans

13998…Roger Butt….. Orleans

13586…Ron Orien….. Orleans

9454…Roy Maclellan….. Orleans

14449…Sandy Clark….. Orleans

12414…Sandy Jones….. Orleans

9352…Sara Yokota-Savoia….. Orleans

7712…Scott King….. Orleans

9439…Sean Patchett….. Orleans

14158…Sesha Rabideau….. Orleans

10999…Shaily Turner….. Orleans

12947…Shanna Boutilier….. Orleans

10364…Shannon Snider….. Orleans

7287…Shawn Hohenkirk….. Orleans

8533…Shawn Myers….. Orleans

14469…Shayne Chamberlain….. Orleans

9218…Shirley Rogers….. Orleans

8730…Stacey Brisebois….. Orleans

10766…Stacy Taylor….. Orleans

7182…Stephan Lemaire….. Orleans

11228…Stephanie Ettinger….. Orleans

12141…Stephen James….. Orleans

11900…Steve Greenwood….. Orleans

7336…Steve Pelletier….. Orleans

10875…Susan Kes….. Orleans

12437…Susan Lepine….. Orleans

8117…Susan Villeneuve….. Orleans

9579…Suzanne Giguere….. Orleans

9089…Suzanne Mikkelsen….. Orleans

11130…Sydney Howard….. Orleans

14616…Sylvain Levesque….. Orleans

9972…Sylvie Daoust….. Orleans

12431…Sylvie Godbout….. Orleans

9596…Sylvie Morin….. Orleans

8536…Talia Cameron….. Orleans

13387…Talia Lawrence….. Orleans

8047…Tamiko Von Eicken….. Orleans

12024…Tammy Edwards….. Orleans

7236…Tammy Gardner….. Orleans

5841…Tanja Scharf….. Orleans

7621…Tanya Finlay….. Orleans

9166…Taylor Perron….. Orleans

9970…Tom Kannemann….. Orleans

7962…Tommy Vranas….. Orleans

10149…Tonie Lavictoire….. Orleans

10340…Tori Maclean….. Orleans

8286…Tracey Fitzpatrick….. Orleans

11349…Tracey Gibbons….. Orleans

7654…Traci Hainse….. Orleans

8619…Tracy Rizok….. Orleans

10527…Travis Fiander….. Orleans

13808…Tristan Tessier….. Orleans

8672…Val Anton….. Orleans

9639…Valerie Beauchesne….. Orleans

13362…Valerie Ladouceur….. Orleans

9661…Valerie Marcil….. Orleans

12682…Valerie O'connell….. Orleans

12320…Vanessa Sanger….. Orleans

11877…Venise Volodarsky….. Orleans

13400…Veronik Leblanc….. Orleans

7583…Veronique Daviault….. Orleans

10568…Vicki Aubin….. Orleans

10132…Vince Daluz….. Orleans

11778…Wendy Hickson….. Orleans

11847…Wendy Ruthven….. Orleans

8873…Wyn Fournier….. Orleans

9237…Xavier Saindon….. Orleans

13595…Yvonne Parsons….. Orleans

12155…Zachary St-Pierre….. Orleans

14285…Zack Hazledine….. Orleans

11808…Zoe Matthews….. Orleans

7779…Didi Mclean….. Oxford Mills

8868…Jana Ford….. Oxford Mills

12796…Julie Shephard….. Oxford Mills

8933…Kim Hennessy….. Oxford Mills

12783…Leia Richards….. Oxford Mills

13324…Marvin Kealey….. Oxford Mills

10641…Nadia Diakun-Thibault….. Oxford Mills

10347…Robert Lachance….. Oxford Mills

14619…Aida Izquierdo….. Pembroke

9041…Alanna Macgregor….. Pembroke

14622…Amanda Sykes….. Pembroke

10393…Amelia Gallant….. Pembroke

10499…Bernadette Demong….. Pembroke

13176…Brian Fraser….. Pembroke

10389…Chantal Gallant….. Pembroke

10778…Cheryl Gallant….. Pembroke

12346…Chichi Mgbemena….. Pembroke

8435…Chuck Mathe….. Pembroke

10884…Deanna Lang….. Pembroke

13263…Derek Hebner….. Pembroke

10342…Donald Sheppard….. Pembroke

10000…Elisabelle St-Hilaire….. Pembroke

10392…Ellyse Gallant….. Pembroke

10500…Erik Fleurant….. Pembroke

10794…Ginger Boucher….. Pembroke

12592…Hilary Reiche….. Pembroke

10390…James Gallant….. Pembroke

12724…Jessica Bucci….. Pembroke

14624…John Blair….. Pembroke

14623…Jordan Blair….. Pembroke

8436…Kerry Nolan….. Pembroke

10391…Lauren Gallant….. Pembroke

10343…Lorie Sheppard….. Pembroke

12539…Lynn Carre….. Pembroke

9999…Marie-Philippe St-Hilaire….. Pembroke

12154…Melissa Jarvis….. Pembroke

10606…Michael Murphy….. Pembroke

14368…Michelle Rousselle….. Pembroke

12889…Mike Baxter….. Pembroke

13862…P Ward….. Pembroke

10209…Peter Harrington….. Pembroke

11042…Renee Fleurant….. Pembroke

10001…Ryan Bergin….. Pembroke

12775…Sherri Forward….. Pembroke

12214…Stanley Gauthier….. Pembroke

9996…Andrea Kennedy….. Perth

7433…Angela Gilbertson….. Perth

8227…Anne Marie Gallant….. Perth

12019…Ashley Murphy….. Perth

11265…Bobbi-Jo Jarvis….. Perth

11002…Charles Kirkwood….. Perth

12397…Connor Stewart….. Perth

8983…Dawn Kirkham….. Perth

12984…Derick Buffam….. Perth

11566…Georgine Elderkin….. Perth

12985…Jacob Buffam….. Perth

12398…Jim Stewart….. Perth

14219…Kayla Millar….. Perth

8617…Kelly Ireton….. Perth

8243…Kim Hazen….. Perth

9243…Lexi Saunders….. Perth

9244…Lisa Saunders….. Perth

8508…Lise Harris….. Perth

9245…Logan Saunders….. Perth

1048…Lynn Marsh….. Perth

9246…Nolan Saunders….. Perth

12866…Quattrocchi Annette….. Perth

9345…Rhonda Wright….. Perth

12939…Sharon Bothwell….. Perth

8230…Steve Gallant….. Perth

9109…Tammy Morrison….. Perth

13634…Tracy Plourde….. Perth

10478…Adele Burry….. Petawawa

12488…Amanda Prud'homme….. Petawawa

8382…Amy Christensen….. Petawawa

12832…Andrew Chan….. Petawawa

11299…Andrew Wilson….. Petawawa

13224…Angela Grandy….. Petawawa

8562…Annette Baisley….. Petawawa

10615…Bethany Hackworth….. Petawawa

11686…Bonnie Farrel….. Petawawa

10979…Brenda Willsie….. Petawawa

11069…Brian Mckay….. Petawawa

10505…Bryanna Novack….. Petawawa

7898…Caroline Seessle….. Petawawa

9372…Chico Traclet….. Petawawa

13195…Chris Gauthier….. Petawawa

12545…Chris Stewart….. Petawawa

12799…Claire Luesink….. Petawawa

12654…Clinton Vardy….. Petawawa

8228…Colleen Williams….. Petawawa

8082…Connor Chalmers-Wein….. Petawawa

13670…Cora Rennie….. Petawawa

10564…Corey Rice….. Petawawa

10014…Daniel Brissette….. Petawawa

13499…Daniel Mclaren….. Petawawa

10907…Daniel Milburn….. Petawawa

7961…Dave Vooght….. Petawawa

13219…David Gottfried….. Petawawa

13227…David Grebstad….. Petawawa

13442…Donna Macera….. Petawawa

10498…Doug Bowers….. Petawawa

8095…Emma Bowers….. Petawawa

12184…Eric Brisebois….. Petawawa

9656…Eric Jutras….. Petawawa

9770…Eric Pilon….. Petawawa

3822…Eric Roy….. Petawawa

10408…Eve Boyce….. Petawawa

9413…Fedora Lombardo….. Petawawa

13002…Gillian Campbell….. Petawawa

12991…Glen Butcher….. Petawawa

13444…Grant Macintosh….. Petawawa

13253…Greg Hatcher….. Petawawa

7043…Haley Moreau….. Petawawa

11688…Harrison Lane….. Petawawa

10094…Heather Skaling….. Petawawa

10617…Heidi Tingley….. Petawawa

10993…Heike Traclet….. Petawawa

9326…Ian Walcott….. Petawawa

10620…James Conway….. Petawawa

13225…Janessa Grandy….. Petawawa

13205…Jennifer German….. Petawawa

9453…Jeris Chalmers-Wein….. Petawawa

10684…Joann Tyrie….. Petawawa

11298…Jody Weymouth….. Petawawa

11372…Johanne Guimond….. Petawawa

8495…John Stevenson….. Petawawa

10565…Johnny Rice….. Petawawa

8592…Joseph Firlotte….. Petawawa

10670…Julianne Godard….. Petawawa

8496…Julie Stevenson….. Petawawa

12388…Kelly Brissette….. Petawawa

11081…Kelly Dove….. Petawawa

8034…Kelsey Macintosh….. Petawawa

14366…Kenneth Highsted….. Petawawa

10371…Kevin Cameron….. Petawawa

11082…Kirstyn Dove….. Petawawa

11632…Kristin De Jong….. Petawawa

12127…Lana Gillard….. Petawawa

12038…Laura Moreau….. Petawawa

10464…Leona Vance….. Petawawa

11662…Lisa Bourque….. Petawawa

12110…Lisa Fedak….. Petawawa

11049…Lucinda Vienneau….. Petawawa

10326…Marc Parent….. Petawawa

11068…Margaret Mckay….. Petawawa

8561…Mark Baisley….. Petawawa

8116…Marla Lesage….. Petawawa

8341…Marsha Robertson….. Petawawa

8600…Matthew Devine….. Petawawa

8953…Melissa Huston….. Petawawa

10410…Michael Companion….. Petawawa

12182…Michelle Brisebois….. Petawawa

8601…Molly Mcinnes Learning….. Petawawa

8229…Nick Williams….. Petawawa

12723…Nicole Laidlaw….. Petawawa

9479…Nina Di Sabatino….. Petawawa

12075…Pascale Paradis….. Petawawa

12037…Paul Moreau….. Petawawa

14605…Rich Gallant….. Petawawa

10063…Robert Mallory….. Petawawa

9090…Rodney Milburn….. Petawawa

7809…Ron Needham….. Petawawa

10497…Sam Bowers….. Petawawa

12685…Samantha Dacey….. Petawawa

9051…Sandra Majczyna….. Petawawa

13277…Scott Horodecky….. Petawawa

10683…Scott Tyrie….. Petawawa

9456…Selina Hatcher….. Petawawa

12766…Shane Learning….. Petawawa

10566…Sheldon Rice….. Petawawa

7401…Steve Buckett….. Petawawa

11984…Susan Chalmers….. Petawawa

12684…Suzanne Dacey….. Petawawa

11327…Tania Thompson….. Petawawa

13716…Tanner Rutz….. Petawawa

10332…Tiffeny Holdom….. Petawawa

13052…Todd Constantine….. Petawawa

10623…Valerie Plant….. Petawawa

12995…Vanessa Butler….. Petawawa

12524…Virginia Rich….. Petawawa

7355…Wayne Eyre….. Petawawa

13226…William Grandy….. Petawawa

12819…William Hawley….. Petawawa

10406…Angela Gauthier-Demers….. Plantagenet

8509…Annie Gauthier….. Plantagenet

8174…Carole Lapointe….. Plantagenet

13145…Debbie Elie….. Plantagenet

13101…Leo Demers….. Plantagenet

9229…Malika Rozon Sibera….. Plantagenet

13632…Christian Plante….. Pontiac

9285…Glen Swan….. Pontiac

9286…Heather Swan….. Pontiac

9287…Jane Swan….. Pontiac

9288…Janice Swan….. Pontiac

9289…Martin Swan….. Pontiac

7645…Renee Gosselin….. Pontiac

13633…Samuel Plante….. Pontiac

9290…Seamus Swan….. Pontiac

14139…Andrew Noonan….. Prescott

9845…Angela Powell….. Prescott

14140…Betty Noonan….. Prescott

12896…Chris Bedor….. Prescott

13193…Colleen Gander….. Prescott

11510…Darlene Daub….. Prescott

12897…Kim Bedor….. Prescott

11995…Leanne Crain….. Prescott

9128…Sandy Noonan….. Prescott

14141…Wayne Noonan….. Prescott

13846…Amanda Vance….. Renfrew

12915…Connor Bennett….. Renfrew

10021…Daryl Fiebig….. Renfrew

10020…Debbie Fiebig….. Renfrew

8035…Kelley Whitman….. Renfrew

14125…Lindsay Mcnulty….. Renfrew

10844…Lisa Gauthier….. Renfrew

7624…Rachel Folkema….. Renfrew

8136…Sonya Lepine….. Renfrew

14198…Adrianna Van Zeeland….. Richmond

10889…Al Lewis….. Richmond

10948…Andre Seiffert….. Richmond

8670…Barbara Annas….. Richmond

8620…Brent Macintyre….. Richmond

10318…Carl Turenne….. Richmond

12135…Carla Zylstra….. Richmond

10796…Charlene Burnside….. Richmond

14149…Christine Pepin….. Richmond

12829…Connie Bresee….. Richmond

8188…Dawn Jordon….. Richmond

10825…Deena Desson….. Richmond

11809…Diane Mayer….. Richmond

13281…Dominique Huet….. Richmond

7066…Heather Hunter….. Richmond

8306…Jamie Jordon….. Richmond

10737…Janet Moul….. Richmond

11810…Jerry Mayer….. Richmond

8256…Joe Barthelette….. Richmond

10944…Kristin Ryan….. Richmond

13240…Laura Habgood….. Richmond

12895…Lionel Bedard….. Richmond

13241…Michael Habgood….. Richmond

7598…Pierre Doiron….. Richmond

7242…Roger Crispin….. Richmond

9907…Scott Cooper….. Richmond

10890…Sean Lewis….. Richmond

7814…Sherry Newman….. Richmond

12989…Stephen Burwash….. Richmond

10891…Suzanne Lewis….. Richmond

10919…Theresa Murray….. Richmond

13550…Tom Moul….. Richmond

10381…Tony Steele….. Richmond

9175…Tracey Pick….. Richmond

10380…Wendy Steele….. Richmond

9162…Whitney Peasley….. Richmond

7358…Amanda Hebert….. Rockland

11875…Andre Vezina….. Rockland

12217…Belanna Mclean….. Rockland

10378…Braeden Roy….. Rockland

13165…Brenda Flood….. Rockland

8452…Carrie Mccoombs….. Rockland

10516…Catherine Watson….. Rockland

8314…Colene O'brien….. Rockland

8614…Connie Hadley….. Rockland

11773…Darlene Hebert….. Rockland

14418…Debbie Simms….. Rockland

14272…Emilie Deschamps….. Rockland

12993…Erika Butler….. Rockland

13854…Fran Vollhoffer….. Rockland

12379…Ghislain Veilleux….. Rockland

11755…Gisele Forest….. Rockland

10273…Guylain Ouellette….. Rockland

8313…Irene Lemaire….. Rockland

9836…Isabelle Tremblay….. Rockland

14263…Jolene Marinier….. Rockland

7980…Josanne Yelle….. Rockland

8451…Josef Mccoombs….. Rockland

12994…Karl Butler….. Rockland

11635…Michael Crabbe….. Rockland

7570…Michael Croteau….. Rockland

14419…Mitchell Simms….. Rockland

11551…Nancy Crabbe….. Rockland

14461…Nelson Lizotte….. Rockland

9386…Patricia Wright….. Rockland

12195…Pierre Archambault….. Rockland

10621…Robin Zito….. Rockland

12728…Roylana Larochelle….. Rockland

12219…Sam Mclean….. Rockland

8207…Serina K. Archambault….. ROckland

11162…Sharlene L. Archambault….. Rockland

13262…Simon Hebert….. Rockland

14421…Stephanie Simms….. Rockland

11161…Sylvie Archambault….. Rockland

12458…Tom Whelan….. Rockland

12071…Vickie Sheppard….. Rockland

12035…Donna Courchesne….. Shawville

7571…Debi Cunningham….. Smiths Falls

11452…Fabian Boone….. Smiths Falls

13512…Garry Mellan….. Smiths Falls

11717…Grace Buffam….. Smiths Falls

8690…Heather Bannon….. Smiths Falls

7532…Jen Cahill….. Smiths Falls

13517…Kat Merrells….. Smiths Falls

8707…Kim Berry….. Smiths Falls

13626…Matthew Pilon….. Smiths Falls

13317…Norma Jones-Myers….. Smiths Falls

8950…Pat Hunter Muldoon….. Smiths Falls

13067…Russell Cowan….. Smiths Falls

10638…Sheena Shilton….. Smiths Falls

8178…Stephen Wintle….. Smiths Falls

9793…Tammy Mulrooney….. Smiths Falls

13627…Tammy Pilon….. Smiths Falls

13358…Tanya Labelle….. Smiths Falls

8928…Theresa Heaslip….. Smiths Falls

8205…Alan Burgess….. South Mountain

8204…Carolyn Burgess….. South Mountain

14352…Julie Streska….. Spencerville

7220…Brian Roos….. St. Albert

12101…Kevin Rocchi….. St. Albert

8191…Lisa Bambrick….. St. Albert

13734…Patricia Sauve….. St. Albert

9354…|Jo Young….. Stittsville

8930…Aidan Heffernan….. Stittsville

11103…Alain Brazeau….. Stittsville

8352…Alyssa Endicott….. Stittsville

13896…Amanda Woodward….. Stittsville

13450…Amy Macleod….. Stittsville

8996…Annick Lafleche….. Stittsville

8289…Anthea Odai-Abaloo….. Stittsville

7884…April Sabourin….. Stittsville

10216…Bethany Roy….. Stittsville

8639…Blake Van Den Heuvel….. Stittsville

8931…Brendan Heffernan….. Stittsville

8831…Briana Downey….. Stittsville

7101…Brigitte Garvock….. Stittsville

8832…Brittney Downey….. Stittsville

13124…Bruce Donnelly….. Stittsville

9235…Caitlin Sabourin….. Stittsville

9748…Cameron Ellis….. Stittsville

12156…Carrie Brown….. Stittsville

9747…Carrie Gudgeon….. Stittsville

7510…Catherine Boucher….. Stittsville

10803…Cathy Chalmers….. Stittsville

11905…Cathy Chorniawy….. Stittsville

7834…Cathy O'neil….. Stittsville

10936…Cathy Robinson….. Stittsville

13155…Charles Falardeau….. Stittsville

14437…Chris Kurlicki….. Stittsville

13402…Chris Leger….. Stittsville

4481…Chris Stacey….. Stittsville

11275…Christiane Mendes….. Stittsville

10707…Christine Lusk….. Stittsville

11729…Claire Collis….. Stittsville

11866…Clarice Tattersall….. Stittsville

7885…Dakota Sabourin….. Stittsville

9337…Daphne Whiting….. Stittsville

9423…David Butler….. Stittsville

13488…Deb Mcgeachy….. Stittsville

12018…Denise Morrison….. Stittsville

7595…Dennis Desjardins….. Stittsville

13704…Don Rooke….. Stittsville

7886…Doug Sabourin….. Stittsville

8264…E. Roselyn Murphy….. Stittsville

9013…Elise Lavigne….. Stittsville

10708…Elizabeth Goddard….. Stittsville

14068…Eric Irons….. Stittsville

8332…Eric Kahler….. Stittsville

9482…Eric Morrison….. Stittsville

13910…Felix Belzile….. Stittsville

7548…Gerald Chamberlain….. Stittsville

12140…Grace Lachance….. Stittsville

10091…Greg Vanclief….. Stittsville

7759…Guy Macleod….. Stittsville

11274…Harold Mendes….. Stittsville

8749…Heather Carty….. Stittsville

7976…Hope Wilson….. Stittsville

14279…J.R. (Bob) Auchterlonie….. Stittsville

7061…Jason O'donnell….. Stittsville

11867…Jenna Tattersall….. Stittsville

7465…Jennifer Ailey….. Stittsville

11186…Jennifer Reid-Hudson….. Stittsville

12503…Jennifer Tschanz….. Stittsville

11109…Jerry Shelest….. Stittsville

7231…Jessica Pomeroy….. Stittsville

9555…Jody Fraser….. Stittsville

8966…Joel Kam….. Stittsville

14132…Joelle Morin….. Stittsville

8458…John Green….. Stittsville

11868…John Tattersall….. Stittsville

13884…John Williams….. Stittsville

14457…Jon Andrews….. Stittsville

9236…Judy Sabourin….. Stittsville

8044…Julia Gervais….. Stittsville

13477…Kaitlyn Mccaughan….. Stittsville

11104…Karen Dokken….. Stittsville

7366…Karen Kurlicki….. Stittsville

12262…Karin Wiens….. Stittsville

12591…Katherine Williton….. Stittsville

10101…Kelby Hamilton….. Stittsville

8833…Kevin Downey….. Stittsville

8173…Kristen Cameron….. Stittsville

4441…Kyle Mackay….. Stittsville

8560…Laura Coxworth….. Stittsville

9462…Laura Miller….. Stittsville

5825…Laurel Rosene….. Stittsville

7252…Laurie Laird….. Stittsville

13257…Liisa Hayman….. Stittsville

7258…Lisa Steele….. Stittsville

4442…Louise Mackay….. Stittsville

11185…Lucas Hudson….. Stittsville

10561…Lucas Hudson….. Stittsville

4067…Lynn Messager….. Stittsville

7877…Marc Roy….. Stittsville

13717…Marc Rydzik….. Stittsville

9045…Martha Macleod….. Stittsville

8935…Mary Herbert….. Stittsville

10682…Maryam Tangaki….. Stittsville

7479…Matt Bafia….. Stittsville

13989…Megan Ashlee Bowes….. Stittsville

8750…Meghan Carty….. Stittsville

8897…Melanie Goodfellow….. Stittsville

12261…Melissa Bouchard….. Stittsville

14270…Michaela Carella….. Stittsville

12260…Michel Bouchard….. Stittsville

9105…Michel Morin….. Stittsville

7511…Michelle Boucher….. Stittsville

11340…Michelle Endicott….. Stittsville

7668…Michelle Hay….. Stittsville

452…Moira Mcdonald….. Stittsville

7419…Nathalie Daigle….. Stittsville

7466…Nicholas Alexander….. Stittsville

10164…Peter Ennis….. Stittsville

11819…Pierre Monette….. Stittsville

10163…Rachel Ennis….. Stittsville

12108…Randal Walsh….. Stittsville

7609…Randy Dudding….. Stittsville

13166…Rene Flores….. Stittsville

10562…Renee Mcfarlane….. Stittsville

7669…Robert Hay….. Stittsville

12768…Robert Kinsman….. Stittsville

12139…Robert Lachance….. Stittsville

9510…Ruth Ann Sullivan….. Stittsville

10663…Sally Rideout….. Stittsville

13083…Sarah D'angelo….. Stittsville

8354…Savanna Endicott….. Stittsville

7790…Scott Miller….. Stittsville

13955…Shannelle Adam….. Stittsville

11395…Sheila Smith….. Stittsville

7902…Stephen Shaw….. Stittsville

13478…Steve Mccaughan….. Stittsville

9082…Steve Mcstravick….. Stittsville

4443…Stuart Mackay….. Stittsville

10607…Tania Lelievre….. Stittsville

13159…Taylor Ferris….. Stittsville

8967…Tenely Kam….. Stittsville

7480…Tim Bafia….. Stittsville

11184…Wayne Hudson….. Stittsville

12088…Wendy Fraser….. Stittsville

12899…Angelo Belanger….. Val-Des-Monts

12609…Anne Morin….. Val-Des-Monts

9924…Audrey Soucy….. Val-Des-Monts

12608…Dominik Roberge….. Val-Des-Monts

9444…Dominique Emond….. Val-Des-Monts

13539…Marc Moo Sang….. Val-Des-Monts

10305…Stefanie Moo Sang….. Val-Des-Monts

9443…Stephane Gravel….. Val-Des-Monts

7069…Yvan Dolan….. Val-Des-Monts

13380…Alison Laturnus….. Vanier

12319…Marthe Belanger….. Vanier

10418…Nicolas Fortin….. Vanier

12706…Thomas Bastien….. Vanier

10772…Michel Surprenant….. Vars

12628…Mike Kennedy….. Vars

13062…Sharon Courneyea….. Vars

12885…Sonia Barrette….. Vars

13276…Ali Hopper….. Wakefield

12699…Joanne Khouryati….. Wakefield

10310…Kerry Antonello….. White Lake

8729…Michelle Brennan….. White Lake

13252…Andrea Harrison….. Williamstown

13013…Bill Chambre….. Williamstown

13014…Cody Chambre….. Williamstown

13015…Sam Chambre….. Williamstown

8142…Christina Enright….. Winchester

10159…James Shelaga….. Winchester

9233…Marnie Rylaarsdam….. Winchester

11981…Nicole Robinson….. Winchester

9586…Ronald Harrison….. Winchester

12100…Carolyn Sandor-Weston….. Woodlawn

13458…Helen Malacrida….. Woodlawn

9853…Joanne Kumpf….. Woodlawn

12708…Michele Davey….. Woodlawn

7060…Mick Weston….. Woodlawn

 

© David K. Edwards. "Know your bitch wanna kick it, Jackie Chan ...." (Preme et al)

For the half-marathon (21.1 km) results and photos...here are the local (Ottawa & area) participants -- sorted by cities and first name -- in the September 19, 2010, Canada Army Run held in Ottawa, Ontario. There were 5,452 runners in the 21.1 km race. Thank-you to Sportstats.

 

Click here and enter the bib numbers for the full individual race results.

Enter the bib numbers for race photos here.

 

Lists of local half-marathon race participants:

 

Part A. Ottawa (Click here.)

Part B. Other Communities (Alexandria to Navan) (see below)

Part C. Other Communities (Nepean to Woodlawn) (Click here.)

 

Part B:

 

2262…Cathy Maclean…..Alexandria

6383…John Zawada…..Alexandria

5960…Sue Duval…..Alexandria

1898…Marc Pominville…..Alfred

1330…Adam Hamilton…..Almonte

4284…Al Jones…..Almonte

6326…Alyssa Flaherty-Spence…..Almonte

4331…Bob Mosher…..Almonte

4272…Bob Thomson…..Almonte

5135…Brenda Swrjeski…..Almonte

3318…Christina Kealey…..Almonte

4509…Daphne Lainson…..Almonte

4201…Elaine Azulay…..Almonte

1145…Jenny Sheffield…..Almonte

4483…Judi Sutherland…..Almonte

918…Kathleen Everett…..Almonte

3826…Linda Melbrew…..Almonte

1423…Mark Blaskie…..Almonte

5011…Sherry Burke…..Almonte

5956…Tanya Yuill…..Almonte

3173…Bette-Anne Dodge…..Arnprior

2116…Cody Wise…..Arnprior

1093…Constance Palubiskie…..Arnprior

339…Emily Sheffield…..Arnprior

2067…Jaclyn Patry…..Arnprior

1317…Jane Dowd…..Arnprior

3849…Keri-Lyn Young…..Arnprior

2229…Kevin Smallshaw…..Arnprior

4945…Laura Stellato…..Arnprior

5325…Lynda Jamieson…..Arnprior

4990…Stephen West…..Arnprior

3809…Tara Beselaere…..Arnprior

447…Tracey Harrod…..Arnprior

2255…Mark Peterkins…..Ashton

5359…Paul Burke…..Ashton

3637…Shelley Rossetti…..Ashton

5603…Angela Hartley…..Athens

1188…Christina Ward…..Athens

2703…Desirae Heine…..Athens

981…Heather Johnston…..Athens

3268…Kevin Hartley…..Athens

2379…Annie Delisle…..Aylmer

4017…Chelsea Honeyman…..Aylmer

212…David Michaud…..Aylmer

4216…Francois Camire…..Aylmer

3773…Gerald Lewis…..Aylmer

3871…Julie Reska…..Aylmer

4218…Philippe Camire…..Aylmer

2419…Steve Faulkner…..Aylmer

2740…Alison Seely…..Beachburg

6424…Jacquelyn Macgregor…..Beachburg

1320…Lara Mylly…..Beachburg

364…Michelle Ward…..Beachburg

4416…Natalie Frodsham…..Beachburg

1695…Scott Blain…..Beachburg

2292…Wanda Gagnon…..Beachburg

1004…Luc Lalonde…..Bourget

2875…Pierre Lacasse…..Bourget

5307…Stephen Barry Plotz…..Brockviile

4940…Brenda Young…..Brockville

5346…Brian Kendel…..Brockville

4240…David Cavanagh…..Brockville

4939…Katelyn Cormier…..Brockville

4970…Monica Griffin…..Brockville

5186…Ruth McFarlane…..Brockville

5137…Sheila Appleton…..Brockville

6195…Tina Melbourne…..Brockville

3723…Lynda Cavanagh…..Brockvillle

3087…Clayton Cameron…..Brooklin

5146…Benoit Gosselin…..Cantley

6294…Camille Flipot…..Cantley

4937…Charles Francoeur…..Cantley

6335…Daryl Hargitt…..Cantley

4371…Helene Legault - Cote…..Cantley

6295…Jacky Lepeintre…..Cantley

663…Luc Rodier…..Cantley

1769…Mark Avon…..Cantley

4221…Patricia Robertson…..Cantley

2277…Rene Morin…..Cantley

5401…Richard Bisson…..Cantley

6237…Sylvie Rioux…..Cantley

5212…Danny Gagne…..Cardinal

2575…Stephen Bygott…..Cardinal

1656…Bill Bowers…..Carleton Place

449…Boyd Lemna…..Carleton Place

2520…Cheryl Smith…..Carleton Place

450…Christine Lemna…..Carleton Place

6103…Eric Gervais…..Carleton Place

156…Ivan Straznicky…..Carleton Place

2525…Jennifer Andress…..Carleton Place

5403…Jennifer Blackburn…..Carleton Place

280…Jennifer Derksen…..Carleton Place

541…Jodi Beyer…..Carleton Place

3246…John Graham…..Carleton Place

1722…Kerry Powell…..Carleton Place

991…Leanna Knox…..Carleton Place

148…Lee Warywoda…..Carleton Place

1448…Lois Ann Graham…..Carleton Place

5322…M Smith…..Carleton Place

1449…Mac Graham…..Carleton Place

440…Mary Anne Melvin…..Carleton Place

2595…Murray Dawes…..Carleton Place

3325…Roger Kinsman…..Carleton Place

5822…Ron Romain…..Carleton Place

73…Steve Pentz…..Carleton Place

2287…Timothy Day…..Carleton Place

2868…Tom Kemp…..Carleton Place

4931…Tracy Pentz…..Carleton Place

1655…Trent Bowers…..Carleton Place

4922…Kathleen Mongeon…..Carlsbad Springs

5133…Alain Drainville…..Carp

5067…Alison Green…..Carp

4047…Anna Li…..Carp

1235…Carol O'malley…..Carp

4619…Dayle Mulligan…..Carp

6303…Elizabeth Anvari…..Carp

3201…Elysa Esposito…..Carp

1536…Eric Janveaux…..Carp

3483…Gerard Rumleskie…..Carp

5427…Hans Buser…..Carp

2969…Ileana Tierney…..Carp

682…Jed Byrtus…..Carp

81…Marc Brisebois…..Carp

4544…Olivia Nixon…..Carp

4014…Raina Ho…..Carp

1429…Raymond Moffatt…..Carp

4803…Stephanie Cowan…..Carp

1510…Tracy Shouldice…..Carp

5216…Paul Jarmul…..Cary

1165…Bob Sweetlove…..Casselman

2720…Caroline Ranger…..Casselman

2152…Gillian Castonguay…..Casselman

5880…Mary Sweetlove…..Casselman

2374…Maurice Bonneville…..Casselman

4754…Michelle Phillips…..Casselman

2226…Richard Kosnaskie…..Casselman

2766…Andy Best…..Chalk River

2725…Brian Jozefowicz…..Chalk River

471…Janine Forcier…..Chalk River

6201…Jayson Murray…..Chalk River

1584…Michelle Cameron…..Chalk River

6252…Willard Smith…..Chalk River

2787…Ariane Brunet…..Chelsea

1974…Barbara Falardeau…..Chelsea

2230…Brad Smith…..Chelsea

1583…Catherine Verreault…..Chelsea

360…Christine Tardiff…..Chelsea

108…Daniel Olson…..Chelsea

2553…David Hearnden…..Chelsea

1930…David Hetherington…..Chelsea

529…Dodie Payne…..Chelsea

3294…Ian Hunter…..Chelsea

6099…James Galipeau…..Chelsea

2758…Jeff Bardsley…..Chelsea

2584…John Fahey…..Chelsea

1581…Lisa Kinloch…..Chelsea

1430…Lise Marshall…..Chelsea

256…Marie Ethier-Roy…..Chelsea

5316…Michelle Caesar Findlater…..Chelsea

5411…Murielle Brazeau…..Chelsea

6468…Phil Wright…..Chelsea

3070…Raymond Brunet…..Chelsea

8…Richard Gilker…..Chelsea

6467…Sarah Hebert…..Chelsea

5143…Serge Couture…..Chelsea

5420…Sophie Brunet…..Chelsea

189…Yvan Dion…..Chelsea

1622…Matthew Campbell…..Chesterville

1672…Sarah Derks…..Chesterville

1778…James Thibault…..Clarence Rockland

1458…Donelda Pleau…..Constance Bay

2441…Lee Saunders…..Constance Bay

3215…Abigail Fontaine…..Cornwall

2634…Andre Brunet…..Cornwall

6479…Carolyn McIntosh…..Cornwall

4097…Cathy Richer…..Cornwall

4276…Christine Marceau…..Cornwall

5328…Elizabeth Wattie…..Cornwall

4228…Gilles Gagnier…..Cornwall

4965…Jennifer Deschamps…..Cornwall

6079…Jessica Eamer…..Cornwall

2455…Jill Grant…..Cornwall

4412…Joanne Filliol…..Cornwall

2953…John St. Marseille…..Cornwall

4011…Kathleen Hay…..Cornwall

4930…Lise Irwin…..Cornwall

834…Marc Besner…..Cornwall

2683…Marc Poirier…..Cornwall

266…Marilyn Rand…..Cornwall

3795…Mike Cowden…..Cornwall

3118…Patrick Clarke…..Cornwall

2506…Sandra Contant…..Cornwall

200…Scott Heath…..Cornwall

6435…Sharron Miller…..Cornwall

756…Shawn Crockett…..Cornwall

5662…Stacie King…..Cornwall

5318…Tanya Deeks…..Cornwall

3454…Terry Quenneville…..Cornwall

1335…Thomas Leroux…..Cornwall

4929…Yvonne Commodore…..Cornwall

5952…Melissa Wren…..Cumberland

2138…Rich Boughen…..Cumberland

517…Shelley Slocombe…..Cumberland

159…Ted Lowther…..Cumberland

1961…Greg Mark…..Deep River

5863…John Speirs…..Deep River

1311…Murray Wright…..Deep River

810…Norman Spinks…..Deep River

5371…Christine Andrus…..Dunrobin

4232…Debra Gassewitz…..Dunrobin

5458…Gordon Colquhoun…..Dunrobin

5484…James Dalziel…..Dunrobin

3088…Janet Campbell…..Dunrobin

1511…Jennifer Damiano…..Dunrobin

811…Joanne Montgomery…..Dunrobin

4838…Laurie Spratt…..Dunrobin

5009…Linda Dillon…..Dunrobin

692…Lois Jacobs…..Dunrobin

2078…Marnie Armstrong…..Dunrobin

1625…Matt Gassewitz…..Dunrobin

2515…Neil Wright…..Dunrobin

5459…Pamela Colquhoun…..Dunrobin

2355…Paul Lefebvre…..Dunrobin

2079…Robert Armstrong…..Dunrobin

1802…Wayne Carroll…..Dunrobin

3786…Ben Prince…..Edwards

381…Erin Searson Clouthier…..Eganville

1565…Mike Searson…..Eganville

6073…Garrett Doreleyers…..Elgin

4372…Marianne Lowry…..Elgin

4363…Shannon Clair…..Elgin

2612…Andy Dalcourt…..Embrun

1214…Bertran Labonte…..Embrun

1742…Camilien Lamadeleine…..Embrun

5155…Caroline Poulin…..Embrun

453…Cheryl Desroches…..Embrun

1471…David Ryan…..Embrun

188…Eric Deschamps…..Embrun

639…Guy Gingras…..Embrun

742…Helene Desormeau…..Embrun

2735…Helose Sirois-Leclerc…..Embrun

4510…James Thompson-Slaven…..Embrun

672…Katherine Krenn…..Embrun

1455…Marc Courneyea…..Embrun

4367…Martine Quinn…..Embrun

65…Pierre Boulay…..Embrun

3900…Rachelle Quinn…..Embrun

4290…Richard Quinn…..Embrun

1286…Robert Butler…..Embrun

5692…Robert Lindsay…..Embrun

1976…Roxane Belanger…..Embrun

4204…Stephane Gregoire…..Embrun

5388…Sylvie Beauchamp…..Embrun

775…Yolande Dalcourt…..Embrun

5422…Jay Buhr…..Finch

569…Jean-Luc Leonard…..Finch

4082…Glenda O'rourke…..Fitzroy Harbour

5828…Denise Roy…..Fournier

433…Gregory Long…..Gananoque

5147…Jason Lapierre…..Gananoque

434…Kiera Long…..Gananoque

671…Laura Cunningham…..Gananoque

3985…Pierre Doucette…..Gananoque

985…Steacy Kavaner…..Gananoque

1732…Walter Gamblin…..Gananoque

2400…Adeline Germain…..Gatineau

4806…Agathe Binette…..Gatineau

5302…Alain Bergeron…..Gatineau

2530…Alain Gilbert…..Gatineau

2109…Alex Gagne…..Gatineau

5156…Alex Wright…..Gatineau

3867…Alexander Schwab…..Gatineau

6434…Alexandra Miglietta…..Gatineau

2774…Alexandre Boudreault…..Gatineau

2443…Alexandre Larocque…..Gatineau

3581…Alexandria Wilson…..Gatineau

5947…Allan Wilson…..Gatineau

3907…Andree Laflamme…..Gatineau

1859…Andree Soucy…..Gatineau

550…Andrew Roach…..Gatineau

1993…Anelise Alarcon-Moreno…..Gatineau

4600…Anik Lalonde…..Gatineau

4700…Ankica Djurcic-Jovan…..Gatineau

3764…Anne Pilote…..Gatineau

2800…Anne-Marie Chapman…..Gatineau

5982…Anne-Michele Alain-Noel…..Gatineau

1808…Annie Cloutier…..Gatineau

4773…Annie Guillette…..Gatineau

1763…Annie Lambert…..Gatineau

113…Anthony Chartier…..Gatineau

803…Antoine Langlois…..Gatineau

4631…Antoine Parker…..Gatineau

367…Audrey Vezina Manzo…..Gatineau

5562…Augusto Gamero…..Gatineau

555…Barnabe Ndarishikanye…..Gatineau

4592…Barry Wood…..Gatineau

2150…Benoit Carbonneau…..Gatineau

2842…Benoit Gagnon…..Gatineau

5570…Benoit Genest…..Gatineau

1576…Benoit Guerette…..Gatineau

3018…Bernard Audy…..Gatineau

4844…Bernard Labine…..Gatineau

2708…Blair Mehan…..Gatineau

3977…Brenda Cox…..Gatineau

5327…Brian Piche…..Gatineau

3636…Brigitte Hubert…..Gatineau

1639…Bruno Castonguay…..Gatineau

1631…Carlos Pinera…..Gatineau

1522…Carole Varin…..Gatineau

3724…Caroline Dulude…..Gatineau

5297…Caroline Sauve…..Gatineau

3522…Caroline St-Pierre…..Gatineau

3182…Carolyne Dube…..Gatineau

6470…Catherine Belair-Noel…..Gatineau

668…Catherine Pelletier…..Gatineau

654…Caty Lebreux…..Gatineau

2811…Celine Couture…..Gatineau

1023…Chad Levac…..Gatineau

4845…Chantal Henri…..Gatineau

2743…Chris Duplain…..Gatineau

2777…Christian Bourgeois…..Gatineau

1220…Christian F. Courtemanche…..Gatineau

2113…Christian Jacques…..Gatineau

6415…Christian Renaud…..Gatineau

623…Christian Robert…..Gatineau

5261…Christian Rousseau…..Gatineau

6034…Christina Chirip…..Gatineau

6037…Christine Chouinard…..Gatineau

3901…Christine Hearn…..Gatineau

2136…Christine Vasseur…..Gatineau

5126…Christopher Daniel…..Gatineau

2352…Cinthia Lepine…..Gatineau

2300…Claude Laramee…..Gatineau

1336…Claude Wauthier…..Gatineau

2613…Craig Beckett…..Gatineau

5815…Cristiano Rezende…..Gatineau

3673…Cynthia Savard…..Gatineau

1629…Cyr Lavoie…..Gatineau

946…Dani Grandmaitre…..Gatineau

1815…Daniel Grenier…..Gatineau

6133…Danny Jeannot…..Gatineau

61…Dany Beliveau…..Gatineau

4111…Darya Shapka…..Gatineau

1426…David Blais…..Gatineau

1813…David Currie…..Gatineau

6327…Denis Fugere…..Gatineau

2053…Denis Ladouceur…..Gatineau

4755…Dominique Babin…..Gatineau

1933…Dominique Bernier…..Gatineau

6043…Dominique Cornut…..Gatineau

137…Doug Welsby…..Gatineau

4758…Elaine Laroche…..Gatineau

4598…Elizabeth Sousa…..Gatineau

5627…Emmanuelle Hupe…..Gatineau

6074…Eric Doyon…..Gatineau

2015…Eric Guay…..Gatineau

557…Eric Patry…..Gatineau

1147…Eric Silins…..Gatineau

1237…Estelle Marcoux…..Gatineau

245…Felix Noel…..Gatineau

3856…France Gelinas…..Gatineau

1301…Francois Dionne…..Gatineau

2476…Francois Gagnon…..Gatineau

5673…Francois Laferriere…..Gatineau

6407…Francois Roy…..Gatineau

6374…Francois Toulouse…..Gatineau

3537…Frederic Thibault-Chabot…..Gatineau

6398…Frederick Lafreniere…..Gatineau

1892…Gaetan Lafrance…..Gatineau

585…Genevieve Bolduc…..Gatineau

255…Genevieve Fontaine…..Gatineau

2166…Gerald Turmel…..Gatineau

722…Ghislain St-Laurent…..Gatineau

2160…Gilles Brazeau…..Gatineau

1514…Gilles-Philippe Pronovost…..Gatineau

5596…Gilly Griffin…..Gatineau

2484…Grant Collier…..Gatineau

151…Greg Soucy…..Gatineau

5870…Greg Stainton…..Gatineau

5466…Guy Corneau…..Gatineau

2820…Guy Desjardins…..Gatineau

669…Guylaine Brunet…..Gatineau

334…Heather Escalante…..Gatineau

2343…Helene Le Scelleur…..Gatineau

4725…Helene Tremblay-Allen…..Gatineau

1209…Herve Morissette…..Gatineau

2580…Hugo Trudel…..Gatineau

6025…Isabelle Caron…..Gatineau

3414…Isabelle Moses…..Gatineau

768…Isabelle Phaneuf…..Gatineau

2964…Isabelle Teolis…..Gatineau

2032…Isabelle Veilleux…..Gatineau

4761…J.-F. Gagne…..Gatineau

2350…Jacques De Guille…..Gatineau

1258…James Buell…..Gatineau

2933…Jean-Francois Pouliotte…..Gatineau

2439…Jean-Pascal Paris…..Gatineau

191…Jean-Philippe Dumont…..Gatineau

4824…Jean-Pierre Plouffe…..Gatineau

4326…Jennifer Scarizzi…..Gatineau

1893…Jerome Belanger-Cote…..Gatineau

3580…Jinny Williamson…..Gatineau

1541…Joanne Leblond…..Gatineau

1253…Johanne Audet…..Gatineau

6090…Johanne Finn…..Gatineau

92…Johnny Lemieux…..Gatineau

939…Jonathan Gilbert…..Gatineau

3915…Josee Charette…..Gatineau

5670…Josee Labonte…..Gatineau

1303…Josee Patry…..Gatineau

3739…Judith Parisien…..Gatineau

3619…Julie Breton…..Gatineau

3689…Julie Damboise…..Gatineau

767…Julie Defoy…..Gatineau

897…Julie Demers…..Gatineau

5797…Julie Piche…..Gatineau

5026…Julie-Anne Labonte…..Gatineau

5016…Julien Dufort-Lemay…..Gatineau

5683…Karine Leblond…..Gatineau

1409…Karine Pellerin…..Gatineau

414…Katia Audet…..Gatineau

4139…Katie Webster…..Gatineau

3817…Krista Benoit…..Gatineau

6211…Langis Parise…..Gatineau

4813…Lee Petrin…..Gatineau

882…Lissa Comtois-Silins…..Gatineau

2601…Livain Michaud…..Gatineau

778…Lori Mousseau…..Gatineau

4041…Louis Christophe Laurence…..Gatineau

26…Louis Duchesne…..Gatineau

718…Louis Dupont…..Gatineau

6120…Louis Hebert…..Gatineau

3510…Louis Simon…..Gatineau

2775…Louise Boudreault…..Gatineau

924…Louise Fortier…..Gatineau

3654…Louise Rousseau…..Gatineau

2081…Luc Beaudoin…..Gatineau

1798…Luc Perrier…..Gatineau

11…Luc Santerre…..Gatineau

5694…Lucie Lalonde…..Gatineau

502…Lynda Beaudoin…..Gatineau

2500…Lyne Cholette…..Gatineau

234…Lynn Melancon…..Gatineau

3869…Maja Muharemagic…..Gatineau

5485…Manon Damboise…..Gatineau

1003…Manon Laliberte…..Gatineau

3421…Marc Andre Nault…..Gatineau

4862…Marc Belanger…..Gatineau

5171…Marc Champagne…..Gatineau

4370…Marc Dureau…..Gatineau

5043…Marc Lacerte…..Gatineau

776…Marc Mousseau…..Gatineau

6471…Marc Noel…..Gatineau

1302…Marc Parisien…..Gatineau

1319…Marc Tremblay…..Gatineau

5687…Marc-Etienne Lesieur…..Gatineau

1997…Marcia Jones…..Gatineau

4085…Maria Petropoulos…..Gatineau

4534…Marie Rodrigue…..Gatineau

6117…Marie-France Harvey…..Gatineau

3779…Marie-France Rault…..Gatineau

1421…Marie-Josee Desroches…..Gatineau

437…Marie-Michele Clement…..Gatineau

1860…Mario Dupuis…..Gatineau

3857…Mario Ouellet…..Gatineau

6428…Mark Ellison…..Gatineau

1644…Mark Laviolette…..Gatineau

7…Mark Schindel…..Gatineau

1573…Mark Stocksley…..Gatineau

1254…Martin Corriveau…..Gatineau

2052…Martin Dompierre…..Gatineau

2995…Martin Freniere…..Gatineau

999…Martin Labelle…..Gatineau

4907…Martin Labine…..Gatineau

406…Martin Laforest…..Gatineau

1692…Martin Leduc…..Gatineau

308…Martine Pellerin…..Gatineau

5262…Maryse Mercier…..Gatineau

398…Maryse Robert…..Gatineau

6087…Mateo Farfan…..Gatineau

6236…Mathieu Rioux…..Gatineau

1736…Mathieu Sayeur…..Gatineau

5119…Mathieu Tremblay…..Gatineau

590…Mathilde Cote…..Gatineau

562…Maude Lavoie…..Gatineau

1887…Maurice Tremblay…..Gatineau

3908…Maxim Bellemare…..Gatineau

2724…Maxime Brinck-Croteau…..Gatineau

1558…Melanie Desmarais…..Gatineau

5042…Melanie Gauthier…..Gatineau

5121…Melanie Mercier…..Gatineau

4864…Mia Overduin…..Gatineau

2428…Michel Biage…..Gatineau

1767…Michel Brown…..Gatineau

28…Michel Emond…..Gatineau

1363…Michel Lessard…..Gatineau

3395…Michel Mercier…..Gatineau

162…Michel Ouellet…..Gatineau

5852…Michele Simpson…..Gatineau

685…Michelle Hartery…..Gatineau

1852…Miguel Gagnon…..Gatineau

1120…Mika Raja…..Gatineau

2843…Mikaly Gagnon…..Gatineau

5319…Mike Hotte…..Gatineau

4865…Miriam Lopez-Arbour…..Gatineau

2014…Myriam Godin…..Gatineau

405…Nadia Lavallee…..Gatineau

3301…Nancy Jean…..Gatineau

857…Natalie Brun Del Re…..Gatineau

5419…Nathalie Brunet…..Gatineau

2157…Nicolas Chalifoux…..Gatineau

1480…Nicolas Gagnon…..Gatineau

4680…Nicole Boudreau…..Gatineau

494…Nizar Ayoub…..Gatineau

219…Noel Paine…..Gatineau

777…Olivier Beauchamp…..Gatineau

93…Olivier Lebeau…..Gatineau

125…Pascal Laforest…..Gatineau

3548…Pascal Tremblay…..Gatineau

1547…Pascale Therriault…..Gatineau

6031…Pat Charron…..Gatineau

310…Patrice Forget…..Gatineau

6323…Patrick Duplain…..Gatineau

1640…Patrick Gauthier…..Gatineau

4479…Patty Soles…..Gatineau

1902…Paul Beland…..Gatineau

1946…Paul Eagan…..Gatineau

3244…Paul Gould…..Gatineau

2039…Paul Shea…..Gatineau

6240…Paul-Emile Roy…..Gatineau

5232…Peggy Duarte…..Gatineau

464…Philippe Boutin…..Gatineau

1785…Philippe Lajeunesse…..Gatineau

1488…Pierre Francois Blais…..Gatineau

4134…Pierre Villeneuve…..Gatineau

2789…Ray Burke…..Gatineau

4401…Raymond Desjardins…..Gatineau

594…Raymonde D'amour…..Gatineau

5672…Rejean Lacroix…..Gatineau

1949…Renaud Dunn…..Gatineau

2147…Rene Chabot…..Gatineau

1900…Rene Hatem…..Gatineau

3642…Renee Leblanc…..Gatineau

5991…Richard Audet…..Gatineau

5…Rick Whitford…..Gatineau

3107…Robert Chasse…..Gatineau

6492…Said Irene…..Gatineau

4099…Sandra Roberts…..Gatineau

3556…Sanjay Vachali…..Gatineau

2593…Sean Boushel…..Gatineau

4239…Selena Grinham…..Gatineau

3635…Serge Boucher…..Gatineau

4863…Serge Dussault…..Gatineau

4716…Serge Guindon…..Gatineau

1952…Shawn Robertson…..Gatineau

5743…Shelley Milton…..Gatineau

4336…Shelley Moody…..Gatineau

4480…Somphane Souksanh…..Gatineau

3001…Sonja Adcock…..Gatineau

1467…Sophie Gauvreau…..Gatineau

1524…Sophie Martel…..Gatineau

5407…Stephane Boudrias…..Gatineau

1146…Stephane Siegrist…..Gatineau

561…Stephane Sirard…..Gatineau

500…Stephanie McMullen…..Gatineau

4262…Stephanie Racine…..Gatineau

4108…Stephanie Seguin…..Gatineau

1638…Steve Roussin…..Gatineau

2971…Steves Tousignant…..Gatineau

1148…Susie Simard…..Gatineau

1333…Susi-Paula Gaudencio…..Gatineau

3456…Suzanne Ramsay…..Gatineau

2718…Sylvain Michaud…..Gatineau

1373…Sylvain Sirois…..Gatineau

6371…Tamara Thibeault…..Gatineau

4604…Tammy Rose…..Gatineau

461…Tanya Tobin…..Gatineau

2915…Tayeb Mesbah…..Gatineau

1428…Tena Gallichon…..Gatineau

2943…Terry Sancartier…..Gatineau

4169…Thanh Loan Nguyen…..Gatineau

3930…Tudor Banea…..Gatineau

383…Valerie Morin…..Gatineau

3848…Veronique Simoneau…..Gatineau

4889…Vincent Bolduc…..Gatineau

6227…Vincent Proulx…..Gatineau

5838…Wayne Saunders…..Gatineau

419…Wendy Larose…..Gatineau

4807…Yvan Laforest…..Gatineau

6400…Yves Lafreniere…..Gatineau

1777…Yves Saint-Germain…..Gatineau

1726…Yves Theriault…..Gatineau

5607…Zachary Healy…..Gatineau

1685…Zahida Assari…..Gatineau

4830…Zoe Couture…..Gatineau

3921…Alex Miles…..Gloucester

5476…Allan Crisford…..Gloucester

1364…Amy O'reilly…..Gloucester

5453…Belinda Coballe…..Gloucester

3582…Cam Wilson…..Gloucester

879…Catherine Clifford…..Gloucester

942…Cathy Gould…..Gloucester

3658…Chanel Huard…..Gloucester

4650…Daniel McGarry…..Gloucester

4128…Danielle Thibeault…..Gloucester

1676…Darren White…..Gloucester

5481…Dave Currie…..Gloucester

6265…David Tinsley…..Gloucester

540…Don Day…..Gloucester

4919…Gilles Philion…..Gloucester

5900…Gillian Todd-Messinger…..Gloucester

1074…Jackie Millette…..Gloucester

6163…Jeannie Leblanc…..Gloucester

317…Joel Willison…..Gloucester

4001…John Girard…..Gloucester

1944…John Ledo…..Gloucester

2192…Jonathan Gardam…..Gloucester

3471…Joseph Rios…..Gloucester

4303…Karine Moreau…..Gloucester

2824…Lee Dixon…..Gloucester

636…Linda Simard…..Gloucester

4439…Lisa Macgillivray…..Gloucester

3560…Lucie Villeneuve…..Gloucester

3774…Mariette Ledo…..Gloucester

6068…Matthew Dewtie…..Gloucester

6006…Michael Bergeron…..Gloucester

2620…Michael G. Lepage…..Gloucester

5361…Michael Hook…..Gloucester

2673…Mona Tessier…..Gloucester

5669…Nicole Labelle…..Gloucester

4538…Patricia Suys…..Gloucester

2221…Richard F. Proulx…..Gloucester

63…Savvas Farassoglou…..Gloucester

4096…Sonja Renz…..Gloucester

5390…Tiffany Belair…..Gloucester

4967…Tim Morin…..Gloucester

2838…Tom Fottinger…..Gloucester

1611…Trevor Duff…..Gloucester

3878…Una Beaudry…..Gloucester

5745…Virginia Mofford…..Gloucester

2431…Andrew Downes…..Greely

3710…Angele Vanderlaan…..Greely

3572…Ann Westell…..Greely

356…Brett Reynolds…..Greely

843…Carol Boucher…..Greely

1841…Casey Goheen…..Greely

4023…Claire Johnstone…..Greely

1052…Claire Maxwell…..Greely

1374…Dave Erling…..Greely

5394…David Benyon…..Greely

154…David Harding…..Greely

1384…Jeff Oliver…..Greely

2839…Jennifer Frechette…..Greely

2395…John Baranyi…..Greely

1713…John Sterling…..Greely

359…Jon Hamilton…..Greely

844…Joseph Boucher…..Greely

707…Joseph Clarmo…..Greely

1415…Karin Johnson…..Greely

2734…Keith Decoste…..Greely

1839…Kevin Goheen…..Greely

5213…Michael J. Patrick Anderson…..Greely

4313…Michel Gaudreault…..Greely

252…Patricia Brander…..Greely

2858…Randall Holmes…..Greely

571…Rob Johnston…..Greely

3202…Scott Evans…..Greely

6193…Scott Mcleod…..Greely

5471…Stephanie Courcelles…..Greely

1563…Travis Maxwell…..Greely

1669…Zachary Routhier…..Greely

2430…Annie Jean…..Hull

5008…Jasmine Lefebvre…..Hull

5996…Julie Ballard…..Hull

4236…Debra Marr…..Iroquois

2108…Erika Clow-Hawkins…..Jasper

2224…Tara Lamb…..Jasper

5986…Adam Ashbourne…..Kanata

5410…Adam Boyle…..Kanata

3441…Adam Pelham…..Kanata

3489…Adrian Salt…..Kanata

5887…Afshan Thakkar…..Kanata

5233…Al Daggett…..Kanata

3879…Alicia Gerwing…..Kanata

3196…Alistair Edwards…..Kanata

3447…Allen Piddington…..Kanata

350…Alyson Ferguson…..Kanata

4120…Anand Srinivasan…..Kanata

3091…Andrea Carisse…..Kanata

6207…Andrea Nicholls…..Kanata

1354…Anita Cadieux…..Kanata

881…Anne Collis…..Kanata

1964…Barbara Wiens…..Kanata

337…Barbara Williams…..Kanata

176…Bernie Armour…..Kanata

1379…Bianca Liebner…..Kanata

5007…Bianca Santerre…..Kanata

5574…Bill Gilchrist…..Kanata

1856…Bobbie Nevin…..Kanata

723…Brandon Greening…..Kanata

1544…Brandon Shirley…..Kanata

5788…Brittney Pavlovic…..Kanata

5490…Carmen Davidson…..Kanata

4608…Caron Fitzpatrick…..Kanata

253…Cathi Yabsley…..Kanata

984…Cecilia Jorgenson…..Kanata

3931…Chandan Banerjee…..Kanata

994…Cherie Koshman…..Kanata

2889…Cheryl Levi…..Kanata

2236…Chris Brown…..Kanata

3138…Chris Cowie…..Kanata

2011…Christine Fraser…..Kanata

1114…Christine Pollex…..Kanata

2918…Cindy Molaski…..Kanata

1690…Cindy Southgate…..Kanata

940…Colleen Gilchrist…..Kanata

4428…Colleen Kilty…..Kanata

4775…Conrad Bellehumeur…..Kanata

6338…Copperfield Jean-Louis…..Kanata

3321…Dan Kelly…..Kanata

3495…Danny Schwager…..Kanata

2489…Daryle Smith…..Kanata

2010…David Muldoon…..Kanata

1589…David Ogden…..Kanata

5915…Deanne Van Rooyen…..Kanata

1088…Debbie Olive…..Kanata

5888…Dhanya Thakkar…..Kanata

4385…Diane Boyle…..Kanata

4339…Donna Atkinson…..Kanata

302…Donna Brennen…..Kanata

6315…Donna Clark…..Kanata

528…Donna Gow…..Kanata

4705…Doug Glasgow…..Kanata

802…Douglas Miller…..Kanata

2511…Drew Bursey…..Kanata

3833…Elana Graham…..Kanata

5048…Eva Klassen…..Kanata

3558…Fiona Valliere…..Kanata

5572…Francine Giannotti…..Kanata

315…Gary Woodworth…..Kanata

4590…Genevieve Le Jeune…..Kanata

6381…Gi Wu…..Kanata

5548…Ginette Ford…..Kanata

3179…Greg Dow…..Kanata

3341…Greg Layhew…..Kanata

2911…Greg McNeill…..Kanata

3612…Guy Campeau…..Kanata

6271…Guy Turgeon…..Kanata

1768…Harvey Chatterton…..Kanata

4768…Heather Chanter…..Kanata

2008…Hugh Wright…..Kanata

2013…Ian Govan…..Kanata

1402…J.P. Tremblay…..Kanata

5241…Jaclyn Shepherd…..Kanata

2376…James Derosenroll…..Kanata

2738…James Muldoon…..Kanata

583…James Vieveen…..Kanata

6385…James Wildgen…..Kanata

3176…Jan Donak…..Kanata

6306…Janet Atkins…..Kanata

5442…Janet Chadwick…..Kanata

4486…Janice Tughan…..Kanata

1494…Jared Semenchuk…..Kanata

4897…Jason Hillier…..Kanata

2846…Jeff Goold…..Kanata

5775…Jeffrey O'connor…..Kanata

3721…Jennifer Burn…..Kanata

4975…Jennifer Campbell…..Kanata

3142…Jennifer Croisier…..Kanata

5497…Jennifer Delorme…..Kanata

904…Jennifer Donohue…..Kanata

3419…Jennifer Nason…..Kanata

1117…Jennifer Prieur…..Kanata

472…Jennifer Wilson…..Kanata

246…Jessica Dean…..Kanata

5912…Jody Vallati…..Kanata

887…John Cooper…..Kanata

2962…John Sullivan…..Kanata

5158…Jonathan Letendre…..Kanata

5974…Joshua Childs…..Kanata

5798…Karen Piddington…..Kanata

174…Kathleen Westbury…..Kanata

894…Kelly Ann Davis…..Kanata

3350…Kelly Livingstone…..Kanata

3477…Kelly Ross…..Kanata

5665…Kenneth Klassen…..Kanata

3274…Keri Hillier…..Kanata

1735…Kerry Kennedy…..Kanata

3055…Kevin Boyd…..Kanata

85…Kevin Donak…..Kanata

3458…Kevin Rankin…..Kanata

2510…Kim Duval…..Kanata

1954…Kim Robertson…..Kanata

2771…Kimberley Bohn…..Kanata

5540…Krista Ferguson…..Kanata

1466…Krista Levesque…..Kanata

4948…Kristin Bennett…..Kanata

1443…Lanny Underhill…..Kanata

5491…Laurie Davis…..Kanata

5500…Lesley Dewsnap…..Kanata

382…Lianna Macdonald…..Kanata

993…Lida Koronewskij…..Kanata

4079…Lillian Ng…..Kanata

2397…Lisa Mayhew…..Kanata

4419…Lise Gray…..Kanata

1932…Logan Daley…..Kanata

4429…Lois Kirkup…..Kanata

5661…Louise King…..Kanata

895…Luisa De Amicis…..Kanata

4391…Lynda Ciavaglia…..Kanata

3159…Lyne Denis…..Kanata

2719…M Gabriele Castelnuovo…..Kanata

6206…Man Nguyen…..Kanata

4476…Maneesh Sharma…..Kanata

4406…Manorie Edirisinghe…..Kanata

1399…Marcel Butz…..Kanata

4386…Mark Brownhill…..Kanata

5162…Mark Fagnan…..Kanata

5642…Mark Jorgenson…..Kanata

3482…Mark Ruddock…..Kanata

5367…Marlene Alt…..Kanata

4424…Mary Anne Jackson-Hughes…..Kanata

2424…Mary Campbell…..Kanata

4837…Mary-Anne Sauve…..Kanata

4006…Melissa Hall…..Kanata

1989…Michael Best…..Kanata

2782…Michael Brennan…..Kanata

5879…Michael Sutherland…..Kanata

1803…Michel Gosselin…..Kanata

1017…Michele Lemay…..Kanata

6173…Michelle Lyster…..Kanata

1691…Mike Southgate…..Kanata

2238…Mike Watford…..Kanata

5667…Mikkyal Koshman…..Kanata

330…Miriam Mustapha…..Kanata

1787…Monica Van Dam…..Kanata

1064…Nancy McGuire…..Kanata

5298…Natalie Damiano…..Kanata

4976…Neil Campbell…..Kanata

1218…Neil Marshall…..Kanata

3372…Neil Maxwell…..Kanata

5894…Neil Thomson…..Kanata

466…Nicole Myslivecek…..Kanata

4413…Pamela Ford…..Kanata

855…Patricia Brown…..Kanata

1248…Paul Maskell…..Kanata

4189…Pauline Joly…..Kanata

3116…Peter Clark…..Kanata

4607…Peter Fraser…..Kanata

4200…Peter Johnston…..Kanata

5958…Peter Zimmerman…..Kanata

6310…Philip Boyer…..Kanata

1827…Philip Rushworth…..Kanata

5909…Philip Tughan…..Kanata

1800…Philippe Sauve…..Kanata

5037…Prabhu Vaithilingam…..Kanata

4835…Renata Hogan-Sullivan…..Kanata

4327…Renee Johnston…..Kanata

3375…Rob McAulay…..Kanata

4767…Robert Chanter…..Kanata

1658…Robert Charbonneau…..Kanata

199…Robyn Hardage…..Kanata

5801…Sandra Plourde…..Kanata

2783…Sandy Brennan…..Kanata

2739…Sarah Muldoon…..Kanata

3305…Scott Jewer…..Kanata

1953…Shelley McDonald…..Kanata

4076…Shelly Nesbitt…..Kanata

3101…Sheri Cayouette…..Kanata

190…Sindy Dobson…..Kanata

2831…Sridhar Erukulla…..Kanata

2568…Stephane Bedard…..Kanata

1353…Stephen Cadieux…..Kanata

3139…Steven Cowie…..Kanata

2047…Sue Ackerman…..Kanata

4582…Sue Peck…..Kanata

4584…Susan Harvey…..Kanata

455…Susan Pagnutti…..Kanata

4215…Sylvie Olsen…..Kanata

1637…Taylor Sicard…..Kanata

995…Terry Koss…..Kanata

1702…Terry Mesdag…..Kanata

1219…Theresa Marshall…..Kanata

2772…Tiffany Boire…..Kanata

5752…Tim Moses…..Kanata

3019…Tom Auger…..Kanata

5950…Tom Winter…..Kanata

160…Tommy Des Brisay…..Kanata

4202…Tracey Dunfield…..Kanata

293…Valerie Desjarlais…..Kanata

6250…Vanessa Sloan…..Kanata

5159…Veronique Breton…..Kanata

3884…Victoria Gebert…..Kanata

5161…Vince Fagnan…..Kanata

2836…Vincent_Andy Fong…..Kanata

3600…Wei Zhou…..Kanata

1103…Wendy Patton…..Kanata

2433…Wendy Rostek…..Kanata

4258…Wilf Sullivan…..Kanata

2163…William Matthews…..Kanata

393…William Potts…..Kanata

3712…Celeste St. John…..Kars

4586…Ginny Flood…..Kars

5674…Guy Laliberte…..Kars

5980…Kevin Adamsons…..Kars

6041…Matthew Cook…..Kars

3354…Paula Lund…..Kars

5789…Carole Perkins…..Kemptville

3058…Cheryl Brennan…..Kemptville

5510…Connie Duclos…..Kemptville

2486…Dale Richardson…..Kemptville

3521…Dave Springer…..Kemptville

2781…David Brennan…..Kemptville

2143…Dawn Murray…..Kemptville

4789…Emily Conway…..Kemptville

1111…Gerald Piette…..Kemptville

4833…Glenna Bigras…..Kemptville

4962…Grant Lowe…..Kemptville

5105…Jacob Banks…..Kemptville

2195…Jeff Swrjeski…..Kemptville

4831…Joyce Cavanagh…..Kemptville

5242…Luke Foster…..Kemptville

3888…Mary Mejia…..Kemptville

4666…Michael Munroe…..Kemptville

3034…Paul Bedard…..Kemptville

4986…Rory Blaisdell…..Kemptville

3266…Roxanne Harrington…..Kemptville

1619…Russ Beaton…..Kemptville

3734…Sheri Steeves…..Kemptville

35…Simon Sukstorf…..Kemptville

3405…Stephanie Mombourquette…..Kemptville

1921…Steven De Ville…..Kemptville

3148…Teena Dacey…..Kemptville

421…Valerie Sayah…..Kemptville

1545…Mike Walsh…..Kenmore

563…Angela Stewart…..Kinburn

4230…Debbie Turcotte…..Kinburn

5869…Jackie Stadnyk…..Kinburn

1179…Kathy Twardek…..Kinburn

3524…Ronald Stadnyk…..Kinburn

6500…Aaron Clow…..Kingston

2259…Aaron Dries…..Kingston

5197…Alain Gosselin…..Kingston

678…Alan Cohoon…..Kingston

2600…Alfred Barr…..Kingston

3254…Allan Gudlaugson…..Kingston

121…Allison Mowat…..Kingston

717…Alyson Mahar…..Kingston

6244…Andreas Schabetsberger…..Kingston

6171…Andrew Lloyd…..Kingston

1870…Andrew Wallace…..Kingston

4952…Angela Allen…..Kingston

5165…Arthur Hesford…..Kingston

1819…Audethy Tallack…..Kingston

2426…Barb Parker…..Kingston

1714…Ben Doherty…..Kingston

2959…Benoit Stockless…..Kingston

5907…Bill Truelove…..Kingston

5294…Brenda Flaherty…..Kingston

5795…Brian Phillips…..Kingston

698…Bruno Chagnon…..Kingston

86…Cam Miller…..Kingston

6365…Carsten Sorensen…..Kingston

4868…Chelsey Hutson…..Kingston

4753…Chris Carter…..Kingston

3765…Chris Plaza…..Kingston

6257…Chris Stevenson…..Kingston

4850…Christine Powers-Tomsons…..Kingston

6069…Christopher Doan…..Kingston

150…Christopher Horeczy…..Kingston

1836…Chuck Douglas…..Kingston

6190…Colin McCue…..Kingston

3570…Colleen Webber…..Kingston

2339…Cory Vale…..Kingston

3894…Crystal Parker…..Kingston

3439…Dan Peebles…..Kingston

5494…Dani Delaloye…..Kingston

4827…Daniel Gosselin…..Kingston

5127…Daniel Rondeau…..Kingston

5929…Daryl Watters…..Kingston

3262…Dave Hammond…..Kingston

1620…Dave Johnston…..Kingston

4373…David Mailey…..Kingston

1215…David Robinson…..Kingston

5873…David Steeves…..Kingston

2256…Debbie Hawes…..Kingston

4550…Deborah Hynes…..Kingston

3346…Denis Levesque…..Kingston

5741…Derek Milner…..Kingston

5978…Duart Townsend…..Kingston

3853…Ed Tardif…..Kingston

5349…Elizabeth McQuillan…..Kingston

5916…Elizabeth Vezina…..Kingston

3328…Emily Koolen…..Kingston

3840…Emily Quinn-Black…..Kingston

6480…Etienne Marcoux…..Kingston

813…Frederic Drolet…..Kingston

2258…Frederic Jean…..Kingston

149…Frederick Lavoie…..Kingston

3312…George Jones…..Kingston

695…George Lackonick…..Kingston

3185…Glen Duckett…..Kingston

2367…Greg Phillips…..Kingston

664…Guillaume Proulx…..Kingston

5066…Helga Grodzinski…..Kingston

5995…Hugo Babin…..Kingston

5358…Hugo Boilard…..Kingston

2360…Jacklyn Power…..Kingston

33…James Brown…..Kingston

4741…James Krahn…..Kingston

5949…Jan Wilson…..Kingston

3877…Jason Chor…..Kingston

5611…Jason Hiltz…..Kingston

968…Jason Howe…..Kingston

3252…Jean-Marc Grimard…..Kingston

2313…Jeff Barr…..Kingston

2201…Jeff Teeple…..Kingston

627…Jeffrey Reid…..Kingston

510…Jillian Brenner…..Kingston

5267…Jim Terfry…..Kingston

1065…Jody Mcinnis…..Kingston

124…Joey Steacy…..Kingston

3839…John Black…..Kingston

3952…John Brooks…..Kingston

3850…John Brown…..Kingston

6007…Jon Berrey…..Kingston

6030…Jordan Charboneau…..Kingston

5848…Jordan Shoniker…..Kingston

3165…Joseph Dilworth…..Kingston

6378…Juli Wheeler…..Kingston

3010…Julie Anghelescu…..Kingston

3036…Julie Belanger…..Kingston

5742…Katrin Milner…..Kingston

3855…Kelly Campbell…..Kingston

2496…Kelly Morrice…..Kingston

6267…Kelly Tobias…..Kingston

4185…Kerri Tadeu…..Kingston

3854…Kit Orme…..Kingston

5309…Krzysztof Butkiewicz…..Kingston

616…Lance Marshall…..Kingston

6070…Leslie Doering…..Kingston

6348…Linda McMillan…..Kingston

3741…Line Gosselin…..Kingston

4699…Liza Tzotzos…..Kingston

3295…Louise Hunter…..Kingston

793…Lyne Lefrancois…..Kingston

2921…Marcel Neron…..Kingston

42…Margarita Sviajina…..Kingston

681…Marielle Houle…..Kingston

2799…Mark Chabot…..Kingston

2362…Mary-Anne Macdonald…..Kingston

690…Mary-Elizabeth Irwin…..Kingston

485…Matthew Charlesworth…..Kingston

1901…Matthew Sprague…..Kingston

3385…Melissa McIlroy…..Kingston

2322…Michael Avery…..Kingston

4698…Michael Clarke…..Kingston

5256…Michael Divittorio…..Kingston

2274…Michael Muise…..Kingston

628…Michel Pearson…..Kingston

3628…Michelle Kerr…..Kingston

702…Michelle Simiana…..Kingston

2149…Mike Lapensee…..Kingston

3844…Monica Pereira…..Kingston

6194…Murray McTavish…..Kingston

5176…Nadine Kopp…..Kingston

4738…Noelani Shore…..Kingston

4400…Pamela Decker…..Kingston

849…Pascal Brisson…..Kingston

818…Patricia Ambrose…..Kingston

5111…Paul Daley…..Kingston

5277…Paul Thompson…..Kingston

1738…Peter Vrooman…..Kingston

2363…Ralph Feisthauer…..Kingston

6142…Ray Konigs…..Kingston

5172…Rhonda Murphy…..Kingston

1975…Robert Allen…..Kingston

2031…Robert Bard…..Kingston

2346…Robert Meade…..Kingston

790…Robert Thomas…..Kingston

3650…Robyn Broeders…..Kingston

5372…Roman Antoniewicz…..Kingston

2232…Rosario Messana…..Kingston

6402…Sergio Grice…..Kingston

79…Shane Bourgeois…..Kingston

5249…Shannon Brown…..Kingston

791…Shawn Kadlec…..Kingston

5943…Shelley Williams…..Kingston

1121…Shoba Ranganathan…..Kingston

3852…Sonja Chisholm…..Kingston

2268…Sony Chris Marchal…..Kingston

703…Stefanie Arthurs…..Kingston

792…Stephane Brisson…..Kingston

1075…Stephanie Milner…..Kingston

2851…Stephen Hall…..Kingston

3081…Steve Bycok…..Kingston

2761…Steven Beattie…..Kingston

2179…Steven Doherty…..Kingston

4382…Susan Blake…..Kingston

467…Susan Stark…..Kingston

5110…Sylvie Bouchard…..Kingston

2248…Terri Heffernan…..Kingston

102…Tim Keith…..Kingston

615…Tim Macdonald…..Kingston

2746…Timothy Holmes-Mitra…..Kingston

2697…Tommy Villeneuve…..Kingston

1820…Tony Phillips…..Kingston

6503…Toure Alfa-Toga…..Kingston

2676…Travis Loughery…..Kingston

1357…Trevor Martin…..Kingston

691…Troy Irwin…..Kingston

4871…Victor Lopes…..Kingston

4505…Lucie Dufour…..La Peche

3805…Amy Vanderspank…..Lanark

1433…Scott Shaver…..Lanark

6033…Derek Cheff…..L'ange Gardien

13…Adam Robinson…..L'ange-Gardien

1506…Samuel Chenevert…..L'ange-Gardien

1537…Stephane Gosselin…..L'ange-Gardien

4275…Melissa Lanigan…..Lansdowne

3864…Adelle Brazeau…..Limoges

3791…Alain Giroux…..Limoges

4739…Ann Duguay…..Limoges

2029…Chantel Oshowy-Carvallo…..Limoges

1323…Denis Benoit…..Limoges

614…Joanne Froment…..Limoges

3033…Joey Beaudin…..Limoges

3997…Judy Gagne…..Limoges

4552…Marc Benoit…..Limoges

5097…Serge Froment…..Limoges

4808…Karen McDonald…..L'orignal

6212…Manon Parisien…..L'orignal

152…Patrick Lalonde…..L'orignal

3986…Susan Draper…..Low

2098…Chris Crain…..Maberly

4173…Frederick Barrett…..Maberly

1734…Nancy Villemure…..Maberly

3758…Susan Marble…..Maberly

910…Jennifer Duffy…..Maitland

911…Penny Duffy…..Maitland

3319…Jennifer Kellar…..Mallorytown

5174…Joyce Mills…..Mallorytown

3067…Robert Browne…..Mallorytown

1922…Amy Moustgaard…..Manotick

6291…Brad Ysseldyk…..Manotick

6016…Charles Bruce…..Manotick

1376…Christian Vaillancourt…..Manotick

6071…Emily Donaldson…..Manotick

2370…Gerald Leahy…..Manotick

2764…Guy Beaudoin…..Manotick

6341…Hollee Kew…..Manotick

409…Jocelynn Cook…..Manotick

6072…Karen Donaldson…..Manotick

1597…Laura Wilson…..Manotick

2117…Malcolm Todd…..Manotick

6255…Paul Steers…..Manotick

5531…Robert Fabes…..Manotick

3338…Robert Lange…..Manotick

5059…Sara Wilson…..Manotick

3474…Theresa Roberts…..Manotick

848…Yvonne Brandreth…..Manotick

3526…Michele Steeves…..Maxville

4685…Angus Macdonald…..Merrickville

1238…Barbara Bacon…..Merrickville

4682…Isabelle Paris…..Merrickville

3059…Jodi Brennan…..Merrickville

4740…Krista Jensen…..Merrickville

5383…Michael Barkhouse…..Merrickville

1296…Penny Foxwell…..Merrickville

804…Rick Bowes…..Merrickville

4533…Will Starr…..Merrickville

2881…Andre Lasalle…..Metcalfe

4861…Barb Beiersdorfer…..Metcalfe

307…Brittney Potvin…..Metcalfe

5352…Bruce Bourgeault…..Metcalfe

5149…Erika Morris…..Metcalfe

997…Kazimierz Krzyzanowski…..Metcalfe

3933…Keith Beardsley…..Metcalfe

2009…Luc Aubrey…..Metcalfe

2218…Rob Howell…..Metcalfe

4435…Sylvie J Lapointe…..Metcalfe

6304…Krista Atchison…..Moose Creek

1918…Cindy Waldner…..Morewood

5641…Isabella Jordan…..Morrisburg

4653…Kelly Ryan…..Mountain

59…Raymond Sherrer…..Mountain

5856…Allan Smith…..Munster

418…Colleen O'Connell-Campbell…..Munster

554…Jamie Dumont…..Munster

1154…Nancy Ann Smith…..Munster

514…Norman Watt…..Munster

1960…Shelley Hindle…..Munster

1534…Steve Lachaine…..Munster

153…Alain Gonthier…..Navan

534…Brian Barber…..Navan

5446…Carole Charlebois…..Navan

3359…Marcella Macdonald…..Navan

5058…Marie Labrie…..Navan

5688…Marie-France Levesque…..Navan

4686…Matthew Valiquette…..Navan

5002…Melanie Vetter…..Navan

1412…Mike Rozon…..Navan

4445…Mychele Malette…..Navan

896…Paul De Grandpre…..Navan

826…Rosemary Barber…..Navan

3939…Veronique Bergeron…..Navan

1413…Vicki Rozon…..Navan

 

Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, no. 923. Sent by mail in 1963.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Sigel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

© David K. Edwards. Chewing gum trodden into the pavement and ossified. You can lick it or kick it, Jackie Chan.

Big Dutch card. Photo: 20th Century Fox. Fabian in North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959).

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Sigel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

The original shed to serve Aberayron (opened in 1911) is thought to have been destroyed in 1925 by fire. Consequently, in 1926, the ex-Cambrian Railways shed at Wrexham Central was dismantled and re-erected on the same site. Classified as a 'sub' to Machynlleth, this later shed was a typical Cambrian Railways shed construction of a metal frame covered in pitched timber cladding with a slated roof. It measured 75ft x 15ft. The shed was officially closed in April 1962.

Photography by R. Casserley. 18.8.63

 

John Andrew: Working at Aberayron Railway Station.

On 5 October 1956 at the age of 20, I was sent to Aberaeron for six months’ training to become a signalman and to learn the duties involved. This was to make me the youngest signalman on British Railways. I had previously worked as a porter in the Goods Department in Aberystwyth Station. The intention was to become a relief signalman on the Aberystwyth –Moat Lane Section, covering holidays and sickness. However, when the time came to return to Aberystwyth, I had got engaged to my landlord’s daughter and had no wish to return to Aberystwyth, so Mr Oliver Veltom, Manager of Oswestry Division, decided I could stay in Aberayron.

 

Aberayron Station was small: there was an office, a waiting room, a toilet, a stove, an oil store and a concrete cabin where the train staff ate their food.

 

The work in the station was varied and interesting. In the morning I would open up the yard and assist the guard with the shunting to form up the train points on the yard – these were hand-operated for each siding. As signalman I would then contact Felinfach Station and obtain permission for the train to occupy the section of the line between the two stations. This was done with the control of a ‘staff’ (a kind of key) which, when handed to the driver, gave him the right of way for that section: signals and points were set to ‘Go’. If a ‘staff’ failed, a request form permission to take the train forward had to be put in writing and a taxi was called to take the request to the next station. The train could not move forward until a written reply was brought back by the taxi driver (Mrs Ann Jones of Regent Street). Whenever a train departed, all times were recorded on a log book, and again when it reached Felinfach.

The work in the office was more or less that of a clerk, answering telephone enquiries, taking orders for cattle feed from farmers or the agent of the cattle-food company.

 

I would also assist in making uploads for delivery by lorry and assist loading the truck from the store, and record all parcels for delivery. Parcels being sent off were weighed, charged and stamped, much as the Post Office does. There were two lorries attached to the station – one for collecting and delivering parcels within the town and the other for collections and deliveries over about a 10-mile radius, as far as Plwmp to the south, Llanrhystud to the north and from Bethania to Trefneter and Felinfach inland.

 

A lot of pups were sent from Aberayron to Birmingham, London, Manchester and other destinations. We had to arrange for these animals to be fed and watered at various stations they passed through.

 

We kept a daily rolling-stock return, which had to be submitted to Oswestry every afternoon and usually we would phone them with the details during the morning, especially if we had any unusual rolling stock in the station, things like ‘ crocodiles’ for carrying telegraph poles, as a close watch was kept on specialist vehicles.

 

We made out the pay sheets and worked out the PAYE tax codes for all the Station staff. Payday was on Friday and all cash arrived from Oswestry on Thursday. We sorted wages and each man had a tobacco tin with his name on it to contain his pay. Once a month the pensioners would get paid and they talked of times gone by when they called in the station to collect their pension.

 

Once a week all signal lamps had to be brought in, cleaned, trimmed, re-oiled and taken out to the signals again. The distant signal was 800 yards out from the station oil store and we could usually jump on the train for a one-way journey and walk back with the old lamp to clean up.

 

A lot of the day was spent assisting the porter to unload trucks of cattle food, etc. into the stores. We had two, one for Silcock’s feed and the other for Levers Feed, Crosxxxx and Calthrops.

 

Flour arrived weekly and we delivered it the same day to Bowen, Crown Bakery and Spillers, and Quay Parade.

 

J D Lloyd was a big user of the railway and several truck-loads a week were delivered to their warehouses in Water Street, South Road and behind the Monachty Arms.

 

Coal merchants were notified of coal deliveries and were given 3 days in which to collect the coal, which was bagged at the station. Failure to collect would lead to a charge for leverage. In practice, we usually gave the coal merchants four days. in my time the cola merchants were Dewi ‘Glo’ (Dewi Jones, Regent Street) and Lewis ‘Y Glo’ (Iorrie Lewis, of Ael y Bryn and later of Weston), whose business was later bought by his assistant Ernie Lewis (father of John ‘Y Glo’).

 

One troublesome consignment was day-old chicks, arriving at 7 20 p.m. when one had to phone out to a country address and get the farmer to call for them. As a result, the shift could often not finish until 9.00 p.m.

 

The coffins of those who had died away from Aberaeron were sometimes brought back by train for burial. These would be collected at the station by Mr John Elwyn Evans in his hearse.

 

When I began work at Aberayron Station, there were two-holiday carriages on site. Holiday-makers would send us their grocery orders in advance and we would then pass them on to local grocers, who often gave us a discount in appreciation.

 

Accidents were rare but I do remember an engine going off the rails, as it was being shunted into a siding and a crane had to be brought from Machynlleth to recover it. This led to an official enquiry. There was also a sad incident when Jim ‘Llain’, a deaf and dumb man, walked along the line between Aberayron and Llanerch Ayron Halt and was struck down by an oncoming train and killed.

 

As signalmen, Bill Bowen and I were in charge. We worked a shift system – early (5.45 a.m. – 12.55 p.m.) and late (12.40 p.m. – 8.00 p.m.).

 

On one occasion the auditor’s visit produced an interesting result. For two weeks every year, we had to cover the holiday period at Ciliau Aeron. I used my car for the 4-mile journey only to be told that this was not permitted. Instead, I was allowed ‘walking time’ to and fro – 8 miles at 20 minutes per mile, which came to 2 hours and 40 minutes a day. I received back pay of around £50 and so I bought my first camera from Thomas the Chemist (Aeron Pharmacy, now Freddie Moulton’s shop in Bridge Street)!

 

I was at Aberayron Station from 1956 to 1964 and a list of my colleagues during those years is provided overleaf.

 

June 2011.

 

Station Master: Signalmen:

 

Porter:

 

Shift 1

Engine Driver: Fireman: Guard:

 

Shift 2

Engine Driver: Fireman: Guard:

 

Engine Cleaner: Engine Cleaner (relief):

 

Lorry Drivers:

(at various times)

 

ABERAYRON STATION STAFF, 1956

 

(Supplied by John Andrew) Herbert Evans

 

John Andrew (Regent Street)

William (Bill) Bowen (Newfoundland Terrace) Evan Jones (Maesycrugiau)

 

Will Jones (‘Will Dolgader’)

 

Johnny Jones (Queen Street) David Leonard (Darkgate Street) Bill Williams (Quay Parade)

 

John (Jack) Evans (Racine) Tommy Owen (Llanilar)

Oswald Evans (Darkgate Street)

 

David Roderick

Jackie Edwards (Llanbadarn Fawr)

 

William Griffiths (Will yr Erw) Owen Davies (Cau)

Haydn Davies

Tommy Handley (Lampeter) Roy Williams (Tenby)

 

Other staff at different periods

 

Engine Cleaners:

 

Guard: Porters:

 

Station Master Replacements:

 

Gwilym Jones (Ystrad Meurig)

Glyn Roberts (Llithfaen, North Wales)

Haydn Davies (Fireman later in place of D Leonard)

 

Len Wiseman (in place of Oswald Evans) Idris Evans (in place of Bill Williams)

 

Bill Andrew (Regent Street) Gerald Davies

Glyn Jones (Pennant)

 

Ron Evans (Lampeter) Eifion Rees (Carmarthen)

  

Vintage French postcard. Editions Filma, No. 61. Series Les Vedettes du Cinéma. Fox-Film.

 

Gladys Brockwell (1894-1929) was an American screen actress.

 

The daughter of actress Billie Brockwell, Brockwell first appeared on the stage at the age of three. She made her screen debut in Philadelphia for the Lubin Company in 1913, later working with D.W. Griffith. Joining Fox Studios, Brockwell was one of the busiest actresses in town and easily made the transition to sound films. Gladys Brockwell contributed to one hundred and seventeen American films, mostly silent ones, These include Frank Beal's Broken Commandments (1919, with G. Raymond Nye and Spottiswoode Aitken), Frank Lloyd's Oliver Twist (1922 version, with Jackie Coogan in the title role and James A. Marcus), Wallace Worsley's The Hunchback of the Notre Dame (1923 version, with Lon Chaney and Patsy Ruth Miller), William Beaudine's Penrod and Sam (1923, in which was the mother of the lead, Ben Alexander), Frank Borzage's Seventh Heaven (1927 version, with Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell), Henry King and Sam Taylor's The Woman Disputed (1928, with Norma Talmadge and Gilbert Roland), and Brian Foy's Lights of New York (1928, the first all-talkie).

 

Married to director Robert Broadwell, she was also married for a brief period to Harry Edwards, former husband of actress Louise Glaum. On June 27, 1929, Brockwell was a passenger in a car with her boyfriend, advertising man Thomas Stanley Brennan, when the car plunged over a 75 foot embankment in Calabasas. Brockwell was pinned under the car and sustained compound fractures to her jaw, a fractured skull and several other serious injuries Brennan was seriously hurt and survived his injuries. While hospitalized, Brockwell received four blood transfusions and died from peritonitis which developed as a result of her several injuries. Brennan stated that dust and cinders blew into his eyes causing him to lose control of the vehicle. He was exonerated of blame by the coroner's jury.

 

Source: IMDB, English and French Wikipedia.

John Andrew: Working at Aberayron Railway Station.

 

On 5 October 1956 at the age of 20, I was sent to Aberaeron for six months’ training to become a signalman and to learn the duties involved. This was to make me the youngest signalman on British Railways. I had previously worked as a porter in the Goods Department in Aberystwyth Station. The intention was to become a relief signalman on the Aberystwyth –Moat Lane Section, covering holidays and sickness. However, when the time came to return to Aberystwyth, I had got engaged to my landlord’s daughter and had no wish to return to Aberystwyth, so Mr Oliver Veltom, Manager of Oswestry Division, decided I could stay in Aberayron.

 

Aberayron Station was small: there was an office, a waiting room, a toilet, a stove, an oil store and a concrete cabin where the train staff ate their food.

 

The work at the station was varied and interesting. In the morning I would open up the yard and assist the guard with the shunting to form up the train points on the yard – these were hand-operated for each siding. As signalman, I would then contact Felinfach Station and obtain permission for the train to occupy the section of the line between the two stations. This was done with the control of a ‘staff’ (a kind of key) which, when handed to the driver, gave him the right of way for that section: signals and points were set to ‘Go’. If a ‘staff’ failed, a request form permission to take the train forward had to be put in writing and a taxi was called to take the request to the next station. The train could not move forward until a written reply was brought back by the taxi driver (Mrs Ann Jones of Regent Street). Whenever a train departed, all times were recorded on a logbook, and again when it reached Felinfach. The work in the office was more or less that of a clerk, answering telephone enquiries, taking orders for cattle-feed from farmers or the agent of the cattle-food company.

 

I would also assist in making uploads for delivery by lorry and assist in loading the lorry from the store, and record all parcels for delivery. Parcels being sent off were weighed, charged and stamped, much as the Post Office does. There were two lorries attached to the station – one for collecting and delivering parcels within the town and the other for collections and deliveries over about a 10-mile radius, as far as Plwmp to the south, Llanrhystud to the north and from Bethania to Trefneter and Felinfach inland.

 

A lot of pups were sent from Aberayron to Birmingham, London, Manchester and other destinations. We had to arrange for these animals to be fed and watered at various stations they passed through.

 

We kept a daily rolling-stock return, which had to be submitted to Oswestry every afternoon and usually we would phone them with the details during the morning, especially if we had any unusual rolling stock in the station, things like ‘ crocodiles’ for carrying telegraph poles, as a close watch was kept on specialist vehicles.

 

We made out the pay-sheets and worked out the PAYE tax codes for all the Station staff. Payday was on Friday and all cash arrived from Oswestry on Thursday. We sorted wages and each man had a tobacco tin with his name on it to contain his pay. Once a month the pensioners would get paid and they talked of times gone by when they called to the station to collect their pension.

 

Once a week all signal lamps had to be brought in, cleaned, trimmed, re-oiled and taken out to the signals again. The distant signal was 800 yards out from the station oil store and we could usually jump on the train for a one-way journey and walk back with the old lamp to clean up.

 

A lot of the day was spent assisting the porter to unload trucks of cattle food, etc. into the stores. We had two, one for Silcock’s feed and the other for Levers Feed, Crosxxxx and Caltrops.

 

Flour arrived weekly and we delivered it the same day to Bowen, Crown Bakery and Spillers, Quay Parade.

 

J D Lloyd was a big user of the railway and several truckloads a week were delivered to their warehouses in Water Street, South Road and behind the Monachty Arms.

 

Coal merchants were notified of coal deliveries and were given 3 days in which to collect the coal, which was bagged at the station. Failure to collect would lead to a charge for leverage. In practice, we usually gave the coal merchants four days. in my time the coal merchants were Dewi ‘Glo’ (Dewi Jones, Regent Street) and Lewis ‘Y Glo’ (Lorrie Lewis, of Ael y Bryn and later of Weston), whose business was later bought by his assistant Ernie Lewis (father of John ‘Y Glo’).

 

One troublesome consignment was day-old chicks, arriving at 7 20 p.m. when one had to phone out to a country address and get the farmer to call on them. As a result, the shift could often not finish until 9.00 p.m.

 

The coffins of those who had died away from Aberaeron were sometimes brought back by train for burial. These would be collected at the station by Mr John Elwyn Evans in his hearse.

 

When I began work at Aberayron Station, there were two-holiday carriages on site. Holiday-makers would send us their grocery orders in advance and we would then pass them on to local grocers, who often gave us a discount in appreciation.

 

Accidents were rare but I do remember an engine going off the rails, as it was being shunted into a siding and a crane had to be brought from Machynlleth to recover it. This led to an official enquiry. There was also a sad incident when Jim ‘Llain’, a deaf and dumb man, walked along the line between Aberayron and Llanerch Ayron Halt and was struck down by an oncoming train and killed.

 

As signalmen, Bill Bowen and I were in charge. We worked a shift system – early (5.45 a.m. – 12.55 p.m.) and late (12.40 p.m. – 8.00 p.m.).

 

On one occasion the auditor’s visit produced an interesting result. For two weeks every year, we had to cover the holiday period at Ciliau Aeron. I used my car for the 4-mile journey only to be told that this was not permitted. Instead, I was allowed ‘walking time’ to and fro – 8 miles at 20 minutes per mile, which came to 2hours and 40 minutes a day. I received back pay of around £50 and so I bought my first camera from Thomas the Chemist (Aeron Pharmacy, now Freddie Moulton’s shop in Bridge Street)!

 

I was at Aberayron Station from 1956 to 1964 and a list of my colleagues during those years is provided overleaf.

 

June 2011.

 

Station Master: Signalmen:

 

Porter:

 

Shift 1

Engine Driver: Fireman: Guard:

 

Shift 2

Engine Driver: Fireman: Guard:

 

Engine Cleaner: Engine Cleaner (relief):

 

Lorry Drivers:

(at various times)

 

ABERAYRON STATION STAFF, 1956

 

(Supplied by John Andrew) Herbert Evans

 

John Andrew (Regent Street)

William (Bill) Bowen (Newfoundland Terrace) Evan Jones (Maesycrugiau)

 

Will Jones (‘Will Dolgader’)

 

Johnny Jones (Queen Street) David Leonard (Darkgate Street) Bill Williams (Quay Parade)

 

John (Jack) Evans (Racine) Tommy Owen (Llanilar)

Oswald Evans (Darkgate Street)

 

David Roderick

Jackie Edwards (Llanbadarn Fawr)

 

William Griffiths (Will yr Erw) Owen Davies (Cau)

Haydn Davies

Tommy Handley (Lampeter) Roy Williams (Tenby)

 

Other staff at different periods

 

Engine Cleaners:

 

Guard: Porters:

 

Station Master Replacements:

 

Gwilym Jones (Ystrad Meurig)

Glyn Roberts (Llithfaen, North Wales)

Haydn Davies (Fireman later in place of D Leonard)

 

Len Wiseman (in place of Oswald Evans) Idris Evans (in place of Bill Williams)

 

Bill Andrew (Regent Street) Gerald Davies

Glyn Jones (Pennant)

 

Ron Evans (Lampeter) Eifion Rees (Carmarthen)

 

An unidentified 57xx class 0-6-0PT nuns into Aberayron in the summer of 1964

December 19, 2015 (photo: Dec. 31, 2014)

 

Listed below are the 1,633 runners who have registered (as of Dec. 19, 2015) for the Resolution Run, taking place in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, on the early evening of December 31, 2015. What a way to start your new-year's celebration!

 

** The run is presented by the Running Room stores across Canada and in 3 USA states, and is sponsored by Pure Protein®

 

www.resolutionrun.ca/register-cities-s14071

 

** If you live near one of these cities, why not register for this year's race, or put it on the calendar for next year?

 

See also, pictures taken by a runner, from:

2014,

2013,

2012,

2011,

2010,

2009.

 

-------------------------------------------------------------

The runners for the 5k and 10k races are listed by community, and alphabetically by first name. The larger local communities are listed first.

 

A. Ontario (Ottawa, Kanata, Nepean, Orleans, etc.)

B. Québec

C. Other Canadian provinces

D. Outside Canada

............................................................................

A.1 Ottawa 5k

 

Adam Kearney

Aidan Newey

Aisha Suhail

Alan Bolster

Alexander Cau

Alexandra Wilgosh

Alexandre Beaulieu

Allison Dakers

Andrea Clancy

Andreas Weichert

Andy Blenkarn

Andy Lancaster

Angela Quinlan

Angie Kelly

Ann Arsenault

Ann Wesch

Anna Afghan

Anne Fraser

Anne MacDonald

Arlene MacIver

Ashley Cowan

Aurélie Thériault Brillon

Barbara Dundas

Barbara Mingie

Bart Hruda

Ben Grove

Benjamin Rundle

Bernhard Walter

Bilge Diker

Brenda Highmore

Brenda Thomson

Brian Mann

Brian Newman

Bruce Snider

Cameron McEwen

Camille Neyson

Carly St. Germain

Carol Gage

Caroline George

Carolyn Chacksfield

Carrie Reid

Carrie Snider

Carrol Lunau

Catherine Ann Brown

Catherine Healy

Catherine Mavriplis

Cathy Croteau

Catriona Birnie

Celeste Irvine-Jones

Chad Evans

Charlene Caines

Charles Proulx

Cheryl Batchelor

Cheryl McIntyre

Chris Godwin

Christen Den

Christine Boisvert

Christine Derouin

Christine Heron

Christine Warning

Christine Wheeler

Cici Waugh

Claudette Charbonneau

Colleen Bastien

Colleen Hughes

Connie Yuan

Coreen Corcoran

Corinne Ramey

Curtis Hientz

Cynthia Flett

Daniel Charbonneau

Dave Yurach

David Birnie

David Chacksfield

David Derousie

David Desormeaux

David Moffat

David Robbins

Dawn Sheppard

Dawne Rennie

Debbie Kacew

Debbie Sullivan

Deborah Kacew

Demetri Papadatos

Dena Kaplan

Denise Hyde

Denise Walter

Derek hughes

Diana Bourke

Diana Crawford

Diana Harrison

Diane Faubert

Dominique Barrette

Donna Cousineau

Donna Mandeville

Drake Jensen

Elaine Fournier

Elizabeth Labelle

Ellen Manchee

Elsa Varady

Emi Koyanagi

Emily Levesque

Emma Chacksfield

Emma Snider

Erica Dath

Erin Baydak

Erin Collins

Fiona Gilfillan

François Brouard

Gabriela Corluka

Gerry Guillot

Gina Rosa

Harriet Merks

Heather Gordon

Heather Lewis

Heather Martellacci

Heather Stone

Howard Voight

Ina Mann

Isabelle Beaulieu

Iwona Bierylo

Jack Silverstein

Jackie Mantle

Jackson Cau

Jacques Fauteux

Jane Heintz Grove

Jane Maxwell

Janet Lancaster

Janet Murray

Janet White

Janice Bailey

Janice Dunn

Janice Tibbetts

Janice Yemensky

Janik Cazabon

Janna Balkwill

Jason Organ

Jean Kneale

Jean-Paul Beaulieu

Jean-Pierre Ebacher

Jeff Little

Jeffrey Simpson

Jenika Heim

Jennifer Broad

Jennifer Evans

Jennifer Martin

Jennifer Moorehead

Jennifer O'Brien

Jennifer Salahub

Jérémie Neyson

Jerry Ritt

Jessica Turner

Jill Swan

Jim Balkwill

Joan Katz

Joan Norgren

Joanne Lostracco

Joanne McAndless

Joanne Sheahan

John Downey

John Horrigan

Jordan Pepin

Joseph Whitfield

Joshua Flett

Judy McIntosh

Judy Robertson

Judy Taylor

Julie Nantel

Julie Pearson

Julie Stephens

Julie Villeneuve

Karen Afghan

Karen Evans

Karen Harrington

Karen White

Karen Yantha

Karin Buhrmann

Karla Weys

Kate Chacksfield

Katherine Arnup

Katherine Gormley

Katherine Kacew

Kathleen Belair

Kathleen O'Brien

Kathleen Thompson

Kathryn Burke

Kathryn MacInnis

Kathy Adair

Kathy Prentice

Kathy Thomas

Katie Fraser

Kelly Lehto

Kelly Mcgurrin

Kelly St-Jacques

Ken Reynolds

Ken Walker

Kent wallace

Kerry Colpitts

Kerry-Anne Livingstone

Khadija Ahmed

Kim Chretien

Kim Fisher

Krissie Wilson

Kristen Bignell

Kristin Cook

Larry Menard

Laura Cluney

Leandro da Costa

Leila Moharib

Lesley Ouimet

Leslie Reaume

Lev Silverstein

Liane Cau

Lillian Serrouya

Linda Beehler

Lisa Pacarynuk

Lorna Newman

Louise Mandeville

Lucie Simpson

Lucy Lightbown

Luiza Cruceru

Lynn Hannah

Lynn Pacarynuk

Lynn Zolinski

Mackenzie Danner

Marc Langlois

Marc-Andre Lussier

Marg MacGillivray

Margaret Buist

Maria Alvarez

Maria Ward

Marianne Mount

Marielle Mooy

Marisa Caruso

Mark Templin

Marlene Mathon

Martine Lacasse

Mary Blaney

Mary Mackinnon

Mary Murphy

Maryanne Jackson-Hughes

Mary-Ellen Harper

Maryse Deslauriers

Matthew Ho

Meg Steele

Melissa Lett

Melissa Mondor

Michael Arthur

Michael Balkwill

Michael Morin

Michael Stefanison

Michel Charette

Michele Hardy

Micheline Mathon

Michelle Harte

Mike Seymour

Nan Cudmore

Nancy KENMIR

Nancy Wasserman

Natacha Riendeau

Natalie Rundle

Nathalie Gagnon

Nathan Chaput

Nick Charette

Nicky Carpenter

Owen Frank

Pat Liston

Patrcia Balkwill

Patricia Chafe

Patricia Voight

Patrick Blenkarn

Patrick Burt

Patrick McKenna

Pierre Bellemare

Pierre Mandeville

Piyatida Danner

Quinn Fortier

Ramon Maldonado

Ravi Pendakur

Raymond Ouimet

Reid Reynolds

Rhianna Gordon

Richard Lewis

Richard McLaughlin

Richard Weichert

Rick Derouin

Rick Palmer

Robert Adolfson

Robert Cau

Robert Statham

Robin Bois

Robin Corcoran

Ron Sullivan

Ron Taylor

Rosemary O'Brien

Roula Eatrides

Russ Black

Ruth Hurst

Ryan O'Connor

Saari Fauteux-McLellan

Saba Desta

Sally Little

Sandra Burton

Sarah Cleary

Sari Abdallah

Scott Burton

Scott MacIver

Sean Fortier

Shannon Renaud

Sharon Brodo

Shawn Thomson

Shawn Tippins

Sherrie Dagg

Shirley Black

Snow Jackie

Sofia Lazaridis

Sophie Rheault

Stan Baldwin

Stan CUMMINGS

Stan Grabstas

Stephane Parent

Stephanie Breau-Godwin

Stephanie Lemay

Stephanie Patenaude

Stephen Brode

Sue Ashton

Sue Franklin

Susan Ayala

Susan Hayward

Susan Johnston

Susie James

Sylvie Sarault

Tammy Dopson

Tammy Elizabeth Kendrew

Terri Bolster

Theresa Hendricks

Timothy Ramey

Tina Bradford

Todd Mortimer

Tony Bettino

Trevor Allen

Trudy Price

Valerie Noftle

Vera Sarkissian

Vicki Bencze

Vincent Labrosse

Vivian Tors

Wael Hussein

Wendy Cummings

Wendy McCutcheon

Wendy Statham

William Saltman

William Sheahan

 

A.1 Ottawa 10k

 

Alex Renwick

Alex Weatherston

Alexandre James

Alison Goss

Allan Stanley

Amy White

Angela King-Suuronen

Angela Nuelle

Anita Choquette

Anna Dodd

anna shannette

Anna Streib

Anne McCarthy

Audrey Taylor

August Wehrmann

Barbara Schedler Fischer

Ben Mooy

Bernard Rousseau

Beth Martin

Beverly Denison

Bob McCulloch

Brian Bax

Brittany Descarie-Smith

Bryan Dickie

Bryan Hetherington

Caitlin Chisholm

Carl Krentz

Carrie Snider

Cassandra Wilson

Catherine Ramey

Chantal Campbell

Chantal Pilon

Charles Bordeleau

Chelle Marshall

Cheryl Giles

Chloe Halpenny

Chris Renwick

Christian Figueredo

Christiane Zeithammel

Christina Gates

Christina Martinez

Christine Hicks

Christine Weatherston

Christopher Galley

Christopher Nicholson

Claude Schryer

Coco Donati

Colleen Grebstad

Courtney Laidler

Craig Piche

Dan Roy

Dana Timus

Darrell Nicholson

Darryl Bilodeau

Dawn Lyons

Dawn Reid

Deb Hogan

Deborah Wolfe

Denise Schwarz

Derek Baker

Diedre Viljoen

Dominique Roy

Don C. Cumming

Donald Bastin

Doug Baines

Doug Mouser

Doug Welsby

Ebert Ephraim

Edmund Thomas

Elise De Francesco

Emilie Creede

Emily Kirke

Emma Holmes

Eric Demers

Erin O'Grady

Felipe Diaz

Francois Trudel

Gabrielle Nadeau

German Espinal

Gillian Montoya

Ginette Lalonde-Kontio

Ginette Lavigne

Ginette Tognet

Glen Gobel

Glenn Campbell

Gordon Buchanan

Greg Bryson

Greta Chase

Guillaume Bourdeloux

Guy Desjardins

Gyro Inman

Hashem Mawlawi

Heather Duff

Heather Saumur

Helen St. Denis

Helene Boyer

Ian Young

In-Leng Ng

Irène Dionne

Jackie Millette

James Buell

James McKirdy

James Moretton

Jamie Tompkins

Jane Lefeuvre

Janice Buell

Jay Rached

Jeff Bardsley

Jen Johnston

Jennifer Hughes Doucet

Jennifer Laughton

Jennifer Spence

Jenny Fowler

Jessica Milne

Jill Baker

Jo-Ann Brault

Joanna Simpson

Joanne perry

Joe Gunn

Joe Smith

Jon Clark

Jonathan Boucher

Josee Poirier

Josephine Pasternak

Judith Heroux

Karen Ephraim

Karen Jeffery

Katherin Halhed

Katherine Halhed

Kathleen Roach

Kathlene Allen

Kathryn Szymczyk

Kathy Dalley-Hunter

Kathy Heney

Kathy Knight-Robinson

Kathy Van Zeyl

Katie Weaver-Rutten

Keith Hendricks

Keith Laughton

Kelly Slumkoski

Kerry Waddell

Kevin Woodley

Kiana Moody

Kristian Suuronen

Kristin Goff

Laco Kovac

Lars Rannes

Laura Stewart

Laura-Lee Brenneman

Lauren Mouser

Laurie Hunt

Leann Halpenny

Linda Newton

Lise Patterson

Lori Mitchell

Lorraine Montoya

Louise Rachlis

Lucie Labelle

Luc-Rock Paquin

Lynda Bordeleau

Madeline Matthews

Malcolm Parsons

Mandy Brooks

Mario Dignard

Marjan Cencen

Mark Mccourt

Martha Ainslie

Martha Mason-Ward

Matthew Chan

Melanie Reed

Mélanie Rivest

Michael Arts

Michael McAuley

Michael Thompson

Michelle Davidson

Michelle Leclair

Michelle Prawer

Mickey Ainslie Holmes

Mirella Giudice

Nancy Porteous

Nick Fidler

Nicole Boyer

Nicole McCann

Nora Ballantyne

Pam Archibald

Pam Kirk

Pascal Bessette

Pat Buchik

Patrice Brassard

Patricia Beh

Patricia Coons

Patrick Hurteau

Paul Denys

Paul Lawless

Paul Roy

Penina Krongold

Peter Andrews

Philippe Boyer

Philippe Doucet

Pierre Deschamps

Pierre LeBlanc

Pilar Bryson

PK Leung

Rachel Nicholson

Rachelle Scully

Ralph Prentice

Renata Manchak

Rene Yaraskavitch

Richard Duranceau

Richard Ernst

Richard Wall

Rob Vanasse

Rob Walsh

Robert Boggs

Roberta Blackburn

Robyn Krentz

Roger Couture

Roger Hunter

Rosemary Nicholson

Ruth Farey

Samuel Nicholson

Sandra Monaghan

Sarah Heer

Scott Marks

Sharleen Conrad

Shawnda Parsons

Shayne Chamberlain

Sindy Hooper

Steacy Johnson

Stephen Woroszczuk

Susan Mack

Suzanne Lafrance

Suzanne MacLean

Suzanne Potvin

Sydney Switzer

Sylvain Brassard

Sylvie Jacques

Tamara Mabley-Chaisson

Tamsin Douglas

Tania Tooke

Tara Delage

Thomas Fischer

Tom Donovan

Tony Machado

Tony Wu

Tracy Wilson

Trevor Chaisson

Valerie Bellemare

Valerie Flynn

Veronika Cencen

Viola Caissy

Wendy Hough

William Britton

William Mouser

Yunsun Hwang

Yves Prevost

 

A.2 Kanata 5k

 

Amy Armour

Andrea Haas

Arlene Steadman

Bernie Armour

Bonnie Shaw

Carmen Davidson

Cathy Harris

Cecilia Jorgenson

Colleen Kilty

Daniel Riendeau

Darene Toal-Sullivan

Deborah Mahon

Denise Vierich

Dick Keilty

Elowyn Rodriguez

Emillia Moelgaard

Emily Keilty

Gail Pindar

Gord Champagne

Helen German

Helen Roper

Jaimie Young

Jan mattingly

Janice Tughan

Janik Lowe

Jessi Mirault

Joan Champagne

John Albert

Jordan Pumphrey

Justin Mirault

Kim Ennis

Liz Murphy

Marie-France Horton

Mark Jorgenson

Martin Shaw

Mary Young

Nancy Young

Naomi Morbey

Nathalie Roy

Pamela Ford

Patti Harle

Remi Roy

Ron Pumphrey

Ronald Mahon

Sharon Lee

Sophie ROY

Stefania Gemmell

Susan Brimmell

Suzanne Dunas-Skinner

Tania Johnston

Tom Harle

Trevor Mahon

Wayne mattingly

 

A.2 Kanata 10k

 

Andria Robin

Ben Bourgeois

Dennis Lewis

Doug McMillan

Elizabeth Blacquiere

Grazyna Jalowiecki

Jaimee Fleming

James Muir

Jennifer Lyon

Jennifer McAndrew

Jim Scott

Julie Armstrong

Kristi Herridge

Lynn Douglas

Manon Desharnais

Paul Doucette

Shannon Cheney

Sheena Brooks

Sherry Connors

Steve Ristow

Tania Louisseize-Letourneau

 

A.3 Nepean 5k

 

Beverley Kemp

Brenda Stanul

Caitlin McMann

Carole Gervais

Catherine Taylor Kelly

Christine Henry

Christopher Hill

Clark Carvish

Dan McGlinchey

Danielle Schneiderman

Darlene Roberts

Dave Henry

David Reid

David Summerbell

Denise Rigden

Dev Kohli

Donna Billard

Donna McKibbon

Emily Sandwell

Gerry Blathwayt

Gillian Brown

Hieu Nguyen

Janet Rumball

Jean Paul Rozon

Joyce McGlinchey

Judy Tubman-Reid

Kara Veurtjes

Katherine Kacew

Kathy Lewis

Kim LaForce

Kimberley Brigden

Krista-Lee Thompson

Laura Cater

Laura Crockatt

Lee Gerig

Lee James

Liz Keighley

Lynda Rozon

Lynn Scott

Marc Lavoie

Marc Rigden

Margaret O'Brien

Mariette Marleau

Marlene Mcafee

Mary Macies

Melanie Dompierre

Michel Dompierre

Michelle Rozon

Nadine Parker

Nancy Harris

Nancy Kelly

Nicole James

Pete Stanul

Preston McMann

Rachel Groulx

Rachel Schneiderman

Randy Roberts

Rebecca Gunn

Rhoda Walker

Rob Veurtjes

Robyn Kemp

Samantha Yocum

Sarah Roach

Shannon Howatt

Tim Brown

Tim LaForce

Tim Sandwell

Tina Ryan

Trish Stanke

Usha Peart

Vicky Eatrides

 

A.3 Nepean 10k

 

Alex Meacoe

Barry Kemp

Cathy McGarrity

Chris McGarrity

Corey Wilson

Daniel Lacasse

Ellen Dickson

Gerald Welsh

Heatherth Wall

Helen Bolt

Ian Taylor

Jeanette Alexiuk

John Farrell

Joseph Emas

Karen Beutel

Karen Lauer

Kym Ashton

Michael Eisen

Murray Kelly

Pete Ashton

Shona Kemp

 

A.4 Orléans, or Orleans, 5k

 

Alex Lewis

Amanda Russo

Amelie Dube

Ben Kachmar

Brenna Koscher

Brent Smyth

Carole Parent

Celiane Dussault

Cheryl Hughes

Christian Dussault

Cynthia Graham

Cynthia Taylor

Daniel St-James

David Boswell

David Parke

Deborah Baldwin

Diane Levesque

Dominique Cusson

Eann Hodges

Elrik Smyth

Eric Dussault

Evelyn Housch

Farnaz Saeidi

François Dupont

Gary Housch

Glen Sharp

Hélène Dutrisac

Jamie Kelly

Janet Desloges

Janice Christensen

Janice Mcintyre

Joanne Henry

Jocelyne Boivin

John Vice

John White

Jonathan Boswell

Judy Marsh

Karen Gibson

Kathy Berry

Kelly Kennedy

Kelly Koscher

Kyle Simpson

Linda Leslie

Lise Hogue

Lou Descarie

Lynn Lewis

Malaika James

Malcolm Mcintyre

Marie-Eve Dussault

Melissa Boswell

Melissa Graham

Mevan Perera

Michael Hughes

Michelle Quintal

Nadine Labrecque

Nicholas Parke

Nicole Houle

Nirmalee Perera

Rob Vice

Robert Morin

Sandy Moger

Sarah Boswell

Sarah Simpson

Simon Roussin

Sonia Marcotte

Stephanie Ettinger

Stuart Taylor

Suzanne Chartrand-MacKenzie

Suzette Boswell

Sylvie Ouellette

Tresha Thompson

Valerie Jean

Yvette Dube

 

A.4 Orleans 10k

 

Alia Blais

Andrew Bouchier

Benoit Dionne

Benoit Lecuyer

Brent Kelly

Carole Boucher

Carole Villeneuve

Cecile Landry

Chiara Ansell

Christopher Mes

Dan Thoms

Daniel Chretien

Danielle Dube

Denise Pittuck

Don Lavictoire

Elise Adams

Eric Mondor

Jason Roberts

Jennifer Parker

Johanne Morin

Julie Boivin

Julie Mes

Karen Mondoux

Kory McDonald

Krista Klages

Leanne Richardson

Linda Descarie

Lucia Scianname

Lyne Rama

Lynn Giroux

Marc-Richard Therrien

Marigold Edwards

Marlene Thoms

Marthe Bergevin

Michael Adams

Michael Garuk

Nancy Roberge

Natalie Loyer

Nicholas Roberge

Paul Dube

Pedro Ibarra

Philippa Gross

Scott Harding

Steve Outhouse

Sue Clement

Suzanne Cote

Sylvie King

Todd Sloan

Veronique Mousseau

Vincent Young

Yan Giroux

 

A.5 Stittsville 5k

 

Allyssia Villeneuve

Amelie Chiasson

Andrea Currie

Armando Cabrera

Cathy Chalmers

Claire Collis

Dan Pak

Francoise Stewart

Greg Johnston

Jane Commanda

Jane Martin

Joanne Macneill

Joaquin Fernandez

John Guigue

John McCauley

Karen Johnston

Kelly Ferreira

Laurie Grice

Louise Guigue

Lyndsay Grice

Marcia McCauley

Morgan Guigue

Steve Cashman

Sue McKean

Velvet Embleton

 

A.5 Stittsville 10k

 

Daniel Farrell

Jon Andrews

Laurel Andrews

Rebecca Skinner

 

A.6 Other Ontario 5k

 

Katlin Duval….Alexandria

 

Almonte

Amy Toderian

Barbara Booth

Beverley Toderian

Bob Bassett

Bob Mosher

Vicki Bassett

 

Arnprior

Chris Hale-Love

Denise Murch-D'Amours

Diana Briggs

Leslie Farrell

Mealnie Liard

 

Karen Woodhall….Ashton

Michael Woodhall….Ashton

Patti Waddell….Ashton

Janet Jones….Bancroft

melissa rossignol….Barrie

Lisa Faulkner….Bourget

Sue Peeke….Bourget

Pam Hadley….Braeside

Jennifer Aubertin….Burlington

 

Carleton Place

Amanda Etherington

Amber Ballantyne

Caleb Etherington

Claire Campbell

Eileen Campbell

Grace Campbell

Jillian Dean

Lois Ann Graham

Mac Graham

Mikolt Horvath

Paul Nichols

Robin Andrew

Robin Brooks

Skylar Etherington

Suzan Ballantyne

Taylor Brooks

Travis Foster

 

Emile St-Jean….Carlsbad Springs

Frédérike Bergeron….Carlsbad Springs

Sharon St-Jean….Carlsbad Springs

 

Carp

Christine Toll

Ellyn Floyd

Jo-Anne Graham

Katie Ferguson

Marco Valenti

Matt Ferguson

Peggy Cooke

Randall Toll

Sally Miller-Taylor

 

André Paris….Casselman

Danielle Carrière-Paris….Casselman

Denise Charette….Casselman

Marie-Claude Gravel….Casselman

Stéphanie Charette….Casselman

 

Brian Smith….Chesterville

Mary Lynn Plummer….Chesterville

Linda Brunet….Clarence Creek

Lynn St-Onge….Clarence Creek

Suzanne Brunet….Clarence Creek

Catherine Watson….Clarence Rockland

Roberto Almeida….Cobourg

Carrie Ouimet….Cornwall

Chantal Desnoyers….Cornwall

Diane Ledoux….Cornwall

Joyce Duval….Cornwall

Julie Jarvo….Cornwall

Peggy Seguin….Cornwall

Alex Charette….Cumberland

Caroline Joanisse….Cumberland

Denis Charette….Cumberland

Lynne Charette….Cumberland

Simone Joanisse….Cumberland

Jennifer Campbell….Dunrobin

Neil Campbell….Dunrobin

Sandi Charbonneau….Embrun

Natalie Gamauf….Fitzroy Harbour

Holly Goguen….Frankville

Bruce Grant….Gloucester

Carolyn Garcia Garcia….Gloucester

Dave Marcotte….Gloucester

David Campbell….Gloucester

Erika Penno….Gloucester

Rob Carrick….Gloucester

Theresa Humphrys….Gloucester

John Gordon….Gore Bay

Frances Muldoon….Greely

Jillian Lush….Hammond

Elise Larocque….Hawkesbury

Renée Chartrand….Hawkesbury

Sydney Morgan….Ingleside

Martine Mainville….Johnstown

 

Kemptville

Barbara Springer

Carmen Mackay

David Springer

Diana Tallman

Don Tallman

Jordan Springer

Kyle Springer

 

Allan Dean….Kinburn

Amanda Burke….Kinburn

Dawn Dean….Kinburn

Terry Burke….Kinburn

Michale Fyke….Lanark

Ursula Martin….Lanark

Christian Faubert….Limoges

Judith Faubert….Limoges

 

Manotick

Alexa Ives

Andy Ives

Jenna Wilson

Jill Payne

Lynn Wright

Sara Wilson

 

Karen Murray….Martintown

Cianne Larivière….Metcalfe

Craig Killin….Metcalfe

Isabelle Paquette….Metcalfe

Laurie Brown….Metcalfe

Steve Brown….Metcalfe

Sylvie J Lapointe….Metcalfe

Tamra White….Metcalfe

Maria Glidden….Mississauga

Deb Bazinet….Moose Creek

Frances Rousse….Moose Creek

Guylaine Villeneuve….Moose Creek

Alan Madge….Morrisburg

Jocelyn Madge….Morrisburg

Ada Gorrie….Munster

Krista Bowman….Navan

Steve Call….Navan

Deborah Burnham….North Augusta

Lonney Burnham….North Augusta

Carl Rogala….North Gower

Kerry Rogala….North Gower

Nathalie Woodstock….North Gower

Ben Scheffer….Osgoode

Celine Audette….Osgoode

Crystal Scheffer….Osgoode

Debbie Kinny….Osgoode

Leanne Stinson….Oxford Station

 

Perth

Brian McGregor

Caitlin McGregor

David Simpkin

James Simpkin

Kathy Litalien

Sacha Simpkin

 

Ainsley Christensen….Petawawa

Alison Morris….Petawawa

Jennifer Tarini….Prescott

David McIntyre….Renfrew

Jody Smaggus….Renfrew

 

Richmond

Barbara Annas

Charles Laperle

Dana Green

Marie Claude Legacy

Norma Green

 

Rockland

Adaline Keith

Ginette Snook

Lise Joly

Lucie Clermont

Michael Snook

Steven Clermont

 

Mary Sweetlove….Russell

Rebecca Weisgerber….Russell

Susan Fetzer….Russell

Colette Verjans….Sarsfield

Matt Verjans….Sarsfield

Guy MacLeod….Sharbot Lake

Martha macLeod….Sharbot Lake

Mary Hawkins-Nugent….Smiths Falls

Donna Greenhorn….Spencerville

Janet Greenhorn….Spencerville

Ada Smith-Sparling….St. Catherines

Julie Filion….St-Pascal

Christine Charette….St-Albert

Marie-France MacMillan….St-Albert

Debbie Armstrong….Trenton

Arlene Dupuis….Vars

Joanne Leblanc….Welland

Sue Landry….Westport

Steve Small….Woodlawn

 

A.6 Other Ontario 10k

 

Eric Mckinnon….Alexandria

Sue Duval….Alexandria

Jennifer Smith Seguin….Almonte

Katie Beamish….Ashton

Lois Simms-Baldwin….Belleville

Kerry Robertson….Bourget

Ria Robertson….Bourget

Chris Nicholas….Braeside

Joanne Nicholas….Braeside

Stephen Kuban….Brampton

 

Carleton Place

Amy Stevens

Candice Meredith

Christina Turney

Lisa Brown

Sharon McKinnon

 

Eric Brown….Carp

Denis Dore….Clarence Creek

Lorraine Kozlowski….Clarence Creek

Terry Quenneville….Cornwall

 

Cumberland

Daniel Benson

Gayle Mellon

John Joanisse

Josee Adam

Paul Mellon

 

Debbie Olive….Dunrobin

Fabio Carmosino….Dunrobin

Andy Schan….Embrun

Mike walsh….Embrun

 

Gloucester

Benson Yee

Brenda Campbell

Diane Stufko

Janet McKeage

John Gilmour

Karen Carriere

Lorna Palmer

Sherry Johnson

Sydney Gilmour

 

Tessie Douglas….Hammond

Dominique Cavill….Kemptville

Helene Lamadeleine….Kemptville

Jim Miller….Kemptville

Teena Dacey….Kemptville

Zaid Jahoor….Killaloe

Susan Mingie….Kitchener

Melonie Williams….Lanark

Kathi Wilson….Lunenburg

Michel Gareau….Lunenburg

Lori Urquhart….Merrickville

Sally Macinnis….Merrickville

Mory Ghanem….Milton

Romy Machinga….Milton

Cam Mitchell….Mountain

Laure Mitchell….Mountain

Reta Hamilton….Munster

Debra Burns….Navan

Wally Burns….Navan

Alex Gaillard….Newington

Eva Moore….Newington

Kevin Moore….Newington

Marianne Moore….Newington

Julie Sincennes….Niagara Falls

Chris Angel….North Augusta

Kristy Tait-Angel….North Augusta

Laurie Goodwin….North Gower

Linda Henderson….North Gower

Natalie Smith….North Gower

Max Waller….Osgoode

Cindy Gale….Pembroke

Janet Carleton….Perth

Rita Jackson….Perth

Dale Morris….Petawawa

Ashley McGillis….Renfrew

Sandra McGillis….Renfrew

Jaclyn Jerome….Richmond

David Stevens….Rideau Ferry

Erin Crotty….Rockcliffe

Ken Brough….Rockcliffe

 

Rockland

Christine Hehle

Christine Lepan

Kerry Laliberte

Normand Laliberte

Steven Bradley

Yves Lefebvre

 

Russell

Dan Faughnan

Derek Johnston

Donna Johnston

Jeff Murphy

Maureen Toohey

Peter Cicalo

Tina Malo

 

Shirley Meilleur….Summerstown

Shelley Shanessy….Trenton

Kevin McGee….Vanier

Kathleen Morris….Winchester

Alain Phaneuf….Woodlawn

 

B. Québec 5k

 

Gatineau

Alain Boisvert

Alison Sorrell

Andre Nault

Anne Bertrand

Anye Lariviere

Audrey-Anne Offroy

Benjamin Johnston

Breann Ronquist

Carole Bertrand

Caroline Huppe

Chantal Dompierre

Christian Marcoux

Danielle Moisan

Denis Boivin

Denise Boivin

Diane Desaulniers

Diane McDougall

Dominique Kenney

Edith Gendron

Fanny Descary

George Johnston

Guy Sirois

Harley Blixhavn

Jacob Johnston

Janie Bertrand

Jean Larose

Jenny Tardiff

Jonathan Crombie

Jonathan Séguin

Josée Lévesque

Judith Lachance

Julie Côté

Kelley Madore

Kim Lamy

Kyna Allard

Luc Miron

Luc Séguin

Lynn McFadden

Mario Desjourdy

Meghann Mcalear

Mélanie Jamieson

Melanie Rainville

Melanie Sabourin

Melany Gauvin

Michele Laplante

Nancy Godin

Natacha Lévesque

Natasha Gareau

Nathalie Deslauriers

Olivier Houle

Pierre Briere

Renee-marie Belair

Rob LeBlanc

Rose-Marie Meretei

Roxanne Takpanie

Shelley Moody

Sophie Tremblay

Suzie Larocque

Sylvia Bouchard

Sylvie Veilleux

Tracey Latimer

TracyLyn Tardiff

Valerie Laframboise

Zinab Bassuny

 

Robert Lee….Beaconsfield

Alex Vaillancourt….Beauharnois

Claire Trudel….Beauharnois

Joelle Vaillancourt….Beauharnois

André Pilon….Cantley

Josée Benoit….Cantley

Lydia Pilon….Cantley

Nathalie Gauthier….Cantley

Alice Wegmueller….Grenville sur la Rouge

Michel Paquette….Grenville sur la Rouge

Bonnie Macgregor….Grenville sur la Rouge

Diane Corbeil….Laval

Nathalie Pouliot….Longueuil

Glen Swan….Pontiac

Julie Kirkham….Shawville

Jean-Philippe Côté….Terrebonne

Linda Jeffery….Terrebonne

Sophie Guimont….Terrebonne

Carmine Cirella….Val-d'Or

Danielle Gagné….Val-d'Or

Michel Côté….Val-d'Or

Maryse Riendeau….Valleyfield

Micheline Quenneville….Valleyfield

Diane Morin….Wakefield

Roch Charron….Wakefield

 

B. Québec 10k

 

Gatineau

Aisha Bassuny

Amy Gagnon

Anelise Alarcon-Moreno

Angela Britten

Annie Bayeur

Annie Valade

Catherine Rooney

Chantal Tubie

Christophe Rene

Dan Pariseau

Daniel Mercer

Danielle Labonté

David Sun

Diane Déry

Diane Ouellette

Elyse Crochetiere

Emilie Belanger

Eric Fournier

Eric Giffard

Eric Hardy

Eric Hebert

Francois Larose

Guylene Theriault

Helena Botelho

Isabelle Beaudry

Isabelle Daly

Jean Faullem

Jennifer Jackson

Joanne Cadieux

Joel Charbonneau

John-Joseph Timinski

Jonathan Raby

Julie Cousineau

Julie Piche

Kayleigh Felice

Larocque Jeffrey

Leah Desjardins

Liana Griffin

Louise Ferland

Marie-Pascal Berthelot

Mario Auclair

Martin Gagnon

Mathieu Larocque

Matthew Saayman

Maude Demers

Mélanie Bouchard

Melanie Lecault

Michel Locas

Nadine Maltais

Nathalie Kock

Nathalie Vachon

Normand Lechasseur

Odette Bernier

Pascal McDonald

Pascal Parent

Rafaëlle Devine

Raphael Mcdonald

Richard Caouette

Richard McDonald

Roch Courcy

Shayna Stawicki

Sheila Laplante

Susi-Paula Gaudencio

Tatiana Barkova-Dufour

Walter Liston

 

Andrea Benoit Desrochers….Cantley

Claude Desrochers….Cantley

Guy Beaulieu….Cantley

Marie-Claude Cote….Cantley

Patrick Mountford….Cantley

Agathe Lalande….Chelsea

Bruce Devine….Chelsea

Ian Hunter....Chelsea

Michelle Hoyt….Chelsea

Elizabeth Herring….Hatley

Michèle Lampron….Hull

Karolyne Chenier….L'Ange-Gardien

Monique Dube….L'Ange-Gardien

Raymonde Larocque….Matane

Karine Garcia….Pierrefonds

Jane Swan….Pontiac

Janice Swan….Pontiac

Martin Swan….Pontiac

Seamus Swan….Pontiac

Jeff Begley….Saint-Donat-de-Monclair

Veronique Bessette….St-Jean-sur-Richelieu

Annie Larocque….Val-des-monts

Sylvie Arsenault….Val-des-monts

Vidalia Botelho….Val-des-monts

 

C. Other Canadian Provinces 5k

 

Kristina Morin….Calgary….Alberta

Gary Boyle….Quispamsis….New Brunswick

Rosemary Boyle….Quispamsis….New Brunswick

Stephanie Boyle….Quispamsis….New Brunswick

Garry Luffman….Baie Verte….Newfoundland

Lillian Sheppard….St. John's….Newfoundland

Philip Sheppard….St. John's….Newfoundland

Debbie Kemp….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia

Jared Richards….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia

Matthew Flanagan….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia

Meghan Magawan….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia

Shauna Richards….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia

Connor Boudreau….Stellarton….Nova Scotia

Kerry Hughes….Stellarton….Nova Scotia

Skylar Boudreau….Stellarton….Nova Scotia

 

C. Other Canadian Provinces 10k

 

Megan Boggs….Edmonton….Alberta

Jocelyn Poirier-Hardy….West Vancouver….British Columbia

Peter Carpenter….Riverview….New Brunswick

Sally Carpenter….Riverview….New Brunswick

 

D. Outside Canada 5k

 

Erin Smith….Pensacola….Florida

Susan Morbey….Amherst….New Hampshire

Rene Cooper….Malta….New York

Julie Ayotte….Springfield….Virginia

 

D. Outside Canada 10k

 

Reed Fendley….LaGrange….Kentucky

John Dudley….Boston….Massachusetts

Dara Byrne….Maplewood….New Jersey

Anna Lessnikova….Trentin….Other

Martin Lissnik….Trentin….Other

Gregg McLeod….West Kirby….Other

Matthias Vetsch….Zufikon….Switzerland

Nancy Buchanan….Zufikon….Switzerland

 

West-German postcard by ISV, no. A 98. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Sigel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

British postcard by Cinema Chat. Photo: Fox.

 

Gladys Brockwell (1894-1929) was an American screen actress.

 

The daughter of actress Billie Brockwell, Brockwell first appeared on the stage at the age of three. She made her screen debut in Philadelphia for the Lubin Company in 1913, later working with D.W. Griffith. Joining Fox Studios, Brockwell was one of the busiest actresses in town and easily made the transition to sound films. Gladys Brockwell contributed to one hundred and seventeen American films, mostly silent ones, These include Frank Beal's Broken Commandments (1919, with G. Raymond Nye and Spottiswoode Aitken), Frank Lloyd's Oliver Twist (1922 version, with Jackie Coogan in the title role and James A. Marcus), Wallace Worsley's The Hunchback of the Notre Dame (1923 version, with Lon Chaney and Patsy Ruth Miller), William Beaudine's Penrod and Sam (1923, in which was the mother of the lead, Ben Alexander), Frank Borzage's Seventh Heaven (1927 version, with Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell), Henry King and Sam Taylor's The Woman Dispited (1928, with Norma Talmadge and Gilbert Roland), and Brian Foy's Lights of New York (1928, the first all-talkie).

 

Married to director Robert Broadwell, she was also married for a brief period to Harry Edwards, former husband of actress Louise Glaum. On June 27, Brockwell was a passenger in a car with her boyfriend, advertising man Thomas Stanley Brennan, when the car plunged over a 75 foot embankment in Calabasas. Brockwell was pinned under the car and sustained compound fractures to her jaw, a fractured skull and several other serious injuries Brennan was seriously hurt and survived his injuries. While hospitalized, Brockwell received four blood transfusions and died from peritonitis which developed as a result of her several injuries. Brennan stated that dust and cinders blew into his eyes causing him to lose control of the vehicle, he was exonerated of blame by the coroner's jury.

 

Source: IMDB, English and French Wikipedia.

Dutch postcard, no. 1061.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Siegel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy (Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Dutch postcard by Uitgeverij Int. Filmpers, Amsterdam (I.F.P.), no. WPS 33 / 261. Photo: Chancellor. Caption: Read "Song Parade". More than 20 song texts every month.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Siegel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

French postcard by E.D.U.G., no. 154.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Sigel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

August 8th, 9th and 10th, 2008 - Banquet at the Country Club of Terre Haute.

 

SEATED ON THE FLOOR front row left to right:

Jay Quinn, Mary Jane Aten Faust, Jackie Malone Bovenschen, Julia Kuykendall Rowe, Margaret Whitmer Ferguson and John Enyart.

 

Second row seated left to right:

Nancy Dreher Brant, Doris Shaffer Williams, Sue Ellen Maehler Williams, Wayne Bovenschen, Janie Kessel Poths, Rob Robbins, Julius Loeser, Katy Farmer Loeser, Mary Farmer Conrad, Alyce Reese Dressler and Judy Stein Hadley.

 

Third row, 1st row standing left to right:

Stewart "Deb" Freigy, Evelyn Stewart Beasing, Judy Schwartz Davis, C. Sue Edwards Longo, Nancy Criss Town, LaDonna Grimes Haase, Marsha Myers Miller, June Knight Shassere, Carol Kassabaum Kord, Carolyn Gates Steinbaugh, Sylvia Bradfield Mitchell, Virginia "Gyp" Nehf Claussen, Nancy Meisenhelder Martin, Dianne Stine Varon, Linda Richmond Lamb, Diane Neal Andrews, Kay Stewart Farmer, Coach Bill Malloy and Linda Simon Foos.

 

Let me try the last row squeezing everyone else in; left to right:

Larry Clark, Don Barr, John Blouch, Molly Winn Barr, Don Bonness, Bob Topping, Barbara Ellis Loos, Carol Hale Kruzan, Bob Harlow, Carol Kantmann Nickel, David Cutler, Billy Taylor, Bill Bredeweg, Becky Carr Evers, Larry Rush, Dan Keegan, Jim Bullard, John Russell, Sharon Harpold Belote, Dave Coffin, Glen Miller, Carole Nattkemper Batt, Ed Tryon and Mike Silverman.

 

See also: (2010 Army Run results for Ottawa & area runners); (2009 Army Run results)

.

.

Sept. 6, 2010. For the half-marathon race, the following local runners have registered with the Running Room for the Sept. 19th Canada Army Run in Ottawa. The list is sorted by community (Ottawa first) and then by first name.

 

Part A. Ottawa

Part B. Other Communities (e.g., Kanata, Nepean, Gatineau)

 

A. Ottawa

 

1…Adam Martin

2…Adriana Ducic

3…Adrien Barrieau

4…Adwin Gallant

5…Aideen Smith

6…Aili Ignacy

7…Alain Vermette

8…Alan Born

9…Alan Mulawyshyn

10…Alan Yeadon

11…Alecks Zarama

12…Alex Peach

13…Alexa Hutchinson

14…Alexis Tervo

15…Alia Waterfall

16…Alice Adamo

17…Alison Cunningham

18…Alison McCray

19…Alison Mulawyshyn

20…Alison Young

21…Allan Gauci

22…Allison Seymour

23…Amanda Brown

24…Amanda Haddad

25…Amanda Halladay

26…Amanda Main

27…Amanda Mulawyshyn

28…Amanda Pavlovic

29…Amber Steeves

30…Amelie Armstrong

31…Amy Donaghey

32…Amy Johnson

33…Amy Rose

34…André François Giroux

35…Andre Morency

36…Andre Rancourt

37…Andrea Matthews

38…Andrea Wenham

39…Andrew Ha

40…Andrew Hawley

41…Andrew Kelly

42…Andrew Matwick

43…Andrew Mendes

44…Andrew Ng

45…Andrew Norgaard

46…Andrew Postma

47…andrew staples

48…Andrew Young

49…Andy Acelvari

50…Angela Lamb

51…Angela Romany

52…Angela Walter

53…Anika Clark

54…Anita Barewal

55…Anita Choquette

56…Anita Portier

57…Anka Crowe

58…Ann Lanthier

59…Ann MacDonald

60…Anna Aylett

61…Anna Dabros

62…Anna Wilkinson

63…Anna-Maria Frescura

64…Anne Finn

65…Anthony Robertson

66…Antonia Marrs

67…Ashleigh Craig

68…Ashley Allott

69…Ashley Harrington

70…Audra Swinton

71…Audrey Corsi Caya

72…B Schmidt

73…Barbara Burkhard

74…Barbara Chisholm

75…Barbara Mingie

76…Barry Walker

77…Beate Pradel

78…Ben-Zion Caspi

79…Bernard Charlebois

80…Berny Gordon

81…Betty Bulman

82…Beverly Clarkson

83…Bhaskar Gopalan

84…Bill McEachern

85…Billy Wilson

86…Bob McGillivray

87…Bonnie Stewart

88…Brad Mackay

89…Brad Wood

90…Brandon McArthur

91…Breanne Merklinger

92…Brent Miller

93…Brian Davis

94…Brian O'Higgins

95…Brian Ray

96…Brian Senecal

97…Brian Storosko

98…Brian Tweedie

99…Brigitte Jackstien

100…Brittany Hinds

101…Bruce McLaurin

102…Bruce Sheppard

103…Bryan Hofmeister

104…Cal Mitchell

105…Cameron Fraser

106…Candice Therien

107…Carly Lachance

108…Carmelle Sullivan

109…Carmen Vierula

110…Catherine Caron

111…Catherine Pound

112…Catherine Wallace

113…Cathy Green

114…Cecilia Ho

115…Chad Scarborough

116…Chad Wilson

117…Chantal Campbell

118…Chantal Pilon

119…Chantelle Lalonde

120…Charlene Mathias

121…Charlene Ruberry

122…Charlotte Newton

123…Cherrie Meloche

124…Cheryl Kardish-Levitan

125…Cheryl McIntyre

126…Cheryl Shore

127…Chris Bowen

128…Chris Bright

129…Chris Brown

130…Chris Dannehl

131…Chris Durham-Valentino

132…Chris Morris

133…Chris Rath

134…Chris Spiteri

135…Chris Weicker

136…Chris Woodcock

137…Christian Cattan

138…Christie Bitar

139…Christina Jensen

140…Christina Mullally

141…Christine Geraghty

142…Christine Hodge

143…Christine Meldrum

144…Christine Pratley-Moore

145…Christine Rath

146…Christine Smith

147…Christine Vaillancourt

148…Christopher Kelly

149…Christopher Mallette

150…Cindy Lim

151…Cindy Robinson

152…Clare MacRae

153…Claude Béland

154…Claude Papineau

155…Claudia Brown

156…Claudia Veas

157…Clyde MacLellan

158…Colette Nault

159…Colin Daniel

160…Colleen Bigelow

161…Colleen Crane

162…Connie Acelvari

163…Constance Craig

164…Coreen Corcoran

165…Corri Barr

166…Cory Kwasny

167…Courtenay Beauregard

168…Craig Blair

169…Curtis McGrath

170…Cynthia Elliott

171…Dan Moore

172…Dana Derousie

173…Dana Wall

174…Danene Whiting

175…Daniel Barnes

176…Daniel Munro

177…Daniel Pharand

178…Daniel Pohl

179…Danielle Leguard-White

180…Dara Hakimzadeh

181…Daria Strachan

182…Darlene Joyce

183…Darlene Whiting

184…Darrell Bridge

185…Dave Goods

186…Dave Johnston

187…Dave Marcotte

188…Dave Poff

189…Dave Silvester

190…Dave Yurach

191…David Aaltonen

192…David Delaney

193…David Fobert

194…David Gerrard

195…David Gregory

196…David Kirk

197…David Lemieux

198…David Liimatainen

199…David Murray

200…David Stewart

201…David Tischhauser

202…David Wright

203…Dawn Bruyere

204…Dawn Fallis

205…Dawn Montgomery

206…Dawn More

207…Dean Justus

208…Deanna Murray

209…Deb Hogan

210…Debby Duford

211…Deborah Kacew

212…Deborah Newhook

213…Denis Carriere

214…Denise Senecal

215…Denise Thibault

216…Dennis Bulman

217…Derek Love

218…Derek Spriet

219…Derrick Ward

220…Diana Harrison

221…Diane Boisvert

222…DJ Butcher

223…Djordje Zutkovic

224…Dominique Au-Yeung

225…Don Andersen

226…Don Cooper

227…Don Orr

228…Dona Hill

229…Dona Pino

230…Donald Waldock

231…Donna Justus

232…Donna Manweiler

233…Donna Moffatt

234…Doreen Lipovski

235…Doris McLean

236…Dorothy Kitchen

237…Dot Harvey

238…Douglas Cooper

239…Duaine Simms

240…Dung Bui

241…Edie Knight

242…Edith Anderson

243…Edith Bostwick

244…Edith Duarte

245…Edith Grienti

246…Edmund Thomas

247…Eileen Tosky-McKinnon

248…Eira Macdonell

249…Elaine Rufiange

250…Eleanor Thomas

251…Eleonora Karabatic

252…Elisabeth Fowler

253…Elizabeth Jones

254…Elizabeth Millaire

255…Elle Bouliane

256…Ellen Carter

257…Ellen O'Halloran

258…Emilee Lloyd-Krusky

259…Emilie Brouzes

260…Émilie Comtois-Rousseau

261…Emily Gusba

262…Emily MacLean

263…Emily Mantha

264…Emmanuelle Arnould-Lalonde

265…Ena Malvern

266…Enya Hamel

267…Eric Arnold

268…Erin Wall

269…Erin White

270…Esther Seto

271…Eva Burnett

272…Evamarie Weicker

273…Evan May

274…Evelyne Gionet

275…Fannie Gouault

276…Felice Pleet

277…Fiona Grant

278…Frances Furmankiewicz

279…Francine Millen

280…Francois Dumaine

281…Francois Pineau

282…Francoise Mulligan

283…Frank D'Angelo

284…Franz Kropp

285…Fuen Leal-Santiago

286…Gabe Batstone

287…Gabriel Castro

288…Gabriela Balajova

289…Gabriela Fonseca

290…Gail Baker-Gregory

291…Gary Bazdell

292…Gary Guymer

293…Gary Wilkes

294…Gavin Lemoine

295…Geb Marett

296…Geneva Collier

297…Gennifer Stainforth

298…Geof Dudding

299…Geoff Cooper

300…Geoff Dunkley

301…George Ferrier

302…Gerald Nigra

303…Gerry Doucette

304…Gilles St-Pierre

305…Gillian Andersen

306…Ginette Lalonde-Kontio

307…Ginny Strachan

308…Glen Chiasson

309…Golmain Percy

310…Gord Baldwin

311…Gord Coulson

312…Graham Thatcher

313…Graig Halpin

314…Grant Stewart

315…Graziella Panuccio

316…Greg Godsell

317…Greg Morris

318…Greta Chase

319…Greta Smith

320…Gurminder Singh

321…Guy Giguere

322…Hali Smith

323…Harold Geller

324…Heather Baker

325…Heather Bigelow

326…Heather Hopkins

327…Heather Paulusse

328…Heather Phillips

329…Heather Watts

330…Heather Williams

331…Heidi Schissel

332…Helen Yemensky

333…Héléne Lepine

334…Holly Johnson

335…Hong Pang

336…Ian Beausoleil-Morrison

337…Ian Graham

338…Ian MacVicar

339…Ian McNaughton

340…Ingrid Koenig

341…Irène Dionne

342…Irv Marucelj

343…Irvin Hill

344…Isabelle Deschenes

345…Jack Jensen

346…Jackie Kachuik

347…Jacqueline Thorne

348…Jade Sillick

349…Jaime Girard

350…James Fraser

351…James Godefroy

352…Jamie Hurst

353…Jane Gibson

354…Jane Maxwell

355…Jane Rooney

356…Jane Scott

357…Jane Spiteri

358…Jane Waterfall

359…Jane Weldon

360…Janet Cooper

361…Janet Curran

362…Janet Huffman

363…Janice Richard

364…Jared Broughton

365…Jasmine Brown

366…Jason Chouinard

367…Jason Frew

368…Jason Stewart

369…Jay Rached

370…Jay Shaw

371…Jayne Barlow

372…Jeff Hausmann

373…Jeff Waterfall

374…Jeffery Vanderploeg

375…Jeffrey Green

376…Jeffrey Muller

377…Jeffrey Reid

378…Jen Peirce

379…Jenelle Power

380…Jennea Grison

381…Jennifer Ajersch

382…Jennifer Baudin

383…Jennifer Bucknall

384…Jennifer Elliott

385…Jennifer Fraser

386…Jennifer Kaufman

387…Jennifer Leblanc

388…Jennifer Morris

389…Jessalynn Miller

390…Jessica Brown

391…Jessica Evans

392…Jessica Lanouette

393…Jessica McKittrick

394…Jessica Ouvrard

395…Jill Ainsworth

396…Jill Baker

397…Jill Dickinson

398…Jill Frook

399…Jim Carter

400…Jim Walsh

401…Jimmy Novak

402…Joann Garbig

403…Joanne Collins

404…Joanne Foley-Grimes

405…Joanne Fox

406…Joanne Merrett

407…JoAnne Schmid

408…Jocelyne Grandlouis

409…Jodi Ashton

410…Jody McKinnon

411…Joel Proulx

412…Joelle D'Aoust

413…Johanna Jennings

414…Johanne Bertrand

415…John Emard

416…John Manwaring

417…John Oliver

418…John Welsh

419…John-Paul Yaraskavitch

420…Jolene Harvey

421…Jolene Savoie

422…Jonathan Charbonneau

423…Jonathan Freedman

424…Jonathan Lemieux

425…Jonathan Woodman

426…Joni Ogawa

427…Josee Surprenant

428…Josette Day

429…Josh Bowen

430…Josh McKinnon

431…Joy Halverson

432…Julia Brothers

433…Julia De Ste Croix

434…Julia Johnston

435…Juliann Castell

436…Julie Burke

437…Julie Dale

438…Julie Farmer

439…Julie Laplante

440…Julie Lefebvre

441…Julie Rutberg

442…Justin Maheux

443…Justin McAtamney

444…Justin McKinnon

445…Kara Wheatley

446…Karen Burns

447…Karen Cook

448…Karen Dillon

449…Karen Genge

450…Karen Sauve

451…Karina Tuyen Hua

452…Karl St-Hilaire

453…Kate Corsten

454…Kate Kurys

455…Kate Sherwood

456…Kate Truglia

457…Katherine Ann Aldred

458…Katherine MacDonald

459…Katherine Richardson

460…Katherine Ryan

461…Kathleen Gifford

462…Kathleen Talarico

463…Kathryn Laflamme

464…Kathy Heney

465…Kathy Lewis

466…Kathy McGilvray

467…Kathy Rutledge

468…Katie Rutledge-Taylor

469…Kazutoshi NISHIZAWA

470…Keith Holman

471…Keith Johnson

472…Keith Mulligan

473…Keith Savage

474…Kelly Bell

475…Kelly Harrington

476…Kelly St-Jacques

477…Ken Hardage

478…Ken McNair

479…Ken Whiting

480…Kendall Miller

481…Kendra Kehoe

482…Kerri Cook

483…Kevin Hubich

484…Kevin Mercer

485…Kevin O'Brien

486…Kiley Thompson

487…Kim Benjamin

488…Kim Moir

489…Kim Shelp

490…Kimberley Low

491…Kimberley Salisbury

492…Krista MacDonald

493…Kristin Harrison

494…Kristina Jensen

495…Kristine Dempster

496…Kristine Simpson

497…Krysten Chase

498…Kyla Kelly

499…Kyle Miersma

500…Lalonde Martine

501…Lambros Pezoulas

502…Laura Cluney

503…Laura Smith

504…Laura Walker-Ng

505…Lauren Gamble

506…Laurent Roy

507…Laurie Gorman

508…Laurie Hardage

509…Lawrence Wong

510…Leah Beaudette

511…Lee Blue

512…Leigh Howe

513…Leona Emberson

514…Leslie McLean

515…Leslie-Anne Bailliu

516…Lia Eichele

517…Lian Bleckmann

518…Liliane Langevin

519…Linda Doyle

520…Lindsay Grace

521…Lindsay Wilson

522…Lisa Francis

523…Lisa Gibson

524…Lisa Grison

525…Lisa Hans

526…Lisa Headley

527…Lisa Hogan

528…Lisa Kawaguchi

529…Lise Perrier

530…Liz Van Dijk

531…Lori Blais

532…Lori Howell

533…Lorina Herbert

534…Lorna MCCREA

535…Lorretta Pinder

536…Louise Morin

537…Lucas Smith

538…Luis Ramirez

539…Luis Villegas

540…Lyndsey Hill

541…Lynn Diggins

542…Lynn McLewin

543…Lynn Nightingale

544…Lynn Sewell

545…Lynn Stewart

546…Lyse Langevin

547…Madeleine Gravel

548…Magali Johnson

549…Malcolm Williams

550…Mandy Smith

551…Maple Yap

552…marc cholette

553…Marc Patry

554…Marcel Mathurin

555…Marcella Ost

556…Marci Dearing

557…Margaret Davidson

558…Margaret Michalski

559…Marian McMahon

560…Marilyn Warren

561…Mario Villemaire

562…Mark Boyle

563…Mark Burchell

564…Mark McGill

565…Mark Whiting

566…Martin Dinan

567…Martin Sullivan

568…Mary Jean Price

569…Mary Kate Williamson

570…Mary Murphy

571…Mathew Pearson

572…Matt Parenteau

573…Matthew Chan

574…Matthew Eglin

575…Matthew Payne

576…Maureen Feagan

577…Mauricio Salgado

578…Meagan Morris

579…Meaghan Curran

580…Melanie Caulfield

581…Melinda Newman

582…Melissa Hammell

583…Melissa Hyde

584…Melissa Madill

585…Melissa White

586…Meredith Rocchi

587…Michael Arts

588…Michael Blois

589…Michael Corneau

590…Michael D'Asti

591…Michael Gilligan

592…Michael Hogan

593…Michael Lang

594…Michael Maranto

595…Michael McAuley

596…Michael McNeill

597…Michael Yetman

598…Michel Bouchard

599…Micheline Lalonde

600…Michelle Cicalo

601…Michelle Keough

602…Michelle McAuliffe

603…Michelle Saunders

604…Mike Chambers

605…Mike Cummings

606…Mike Elston

607…Mike Henry

608…Mike Hopper

609…Mike Kowal

610…Mike Lavery

611…Mike Mazerolle

612…Mike Peralta

613…Mike White

614…Monica Martinez

615…M-Rosa Mangone-Laboccetta

616…Murielle Cassidy

617…Nada Milosevic

618…Nadine Tischhauser

619…Nancy Amos

620…Nancy C Green

621…Nancy Colton

622…Nancy Dlouhy

623…Nancy Ferguson

624…Nancy Fowler

625…Nancy Green

626…Nancy Lau

627…Nardine Kwasny

628…Natalie Quimper

629…Natasha Carraro

630…Nathan Rotman

631…Nelson Lewis

632…

633…Nick Brunette-D'Souza

634…Nick Leswick

635…Nicky Saldanha

636…Nicole Byrne

637…Nicole Duguay

638…Nicole Mikhael

639…Nicole Slunder

640…Nina Franchina

641…Ondina Buttle

642…Paige Waldock

643…Pamela Biron

644…Pamela Ellison

645…Pascal Michaux

646…Pat Farley

647…Patricia Hachey

648…Patricia Wait

649…Patrick Byrne

650…Patrick Finn

651…Patrick Hebert

652…Patrick Marion

653…Patrick Miron

654…Patti Gamble

655…Paul dalgleish

656…Paul Denys

657…Paul MacNeil

658…Paul Malvern

659…Paul Masson

660…Paul Rosenberg

661…Paul Steeves

662…Paul Tessier

663…Paula Gherasim

664…Paula Piilonen

665…Peter Bayne

666…Peter Green

667…Peter Hammond

668…Peter Linkletter

669…Peter Mason

670…Peter Morel

671…Peter Winfield

672…Phillip Edwards

673…Prichya Sethchindapong

674…Quinn Murphy

675…Rachelle LeBlanc

676…Rajkumar Nagarajan

677…Ramy Abaskharoun

678…Rand Freeman

679…Randy Biberdorf

680…Randy McElligott

681…Ratnesh Singh

682…Raymond Boucher

683…Raymonde Langevin

684…Rebecca Dorval

685…Rebekah Swatton

686…Regan Mathurin

687…Remi Bourlon

688…Renata Manchak

689…Rene van Diepen

690…Renee Lamoureux

691…Rene-Louis Bourgeau

692…Reza Mashkoori

693…Rhiannon Andersen

694…Rhiannon Vogl

695…Rich Manery

696…Richard Bourassa

697…Richard Cheng

698…Richard Hanson

699…Richard Lewis

700…Richard Wall

701…Rick Dobson

702…Rick Emond

703…Rick O'Shaughnessy

704…Rob Criger

705…Rob Joseph

706…Robert Brown

707…Robert Christie

708…Robert Lee

709…Robert McGrath

710…Robert Moulie

711…Robin Sheedy

712…Rodney Ryan

713…Roger Langevin

714…Roger Pankhurst

715…Roger Zemek

716…Romeo Monette

717…Ron Armstrong

718…Ron Jande

719…Ron Mierau

720…Rose Parent

721…Russ Mirasty

722…Ruth Farey

723…RuthAnne Corley

724…Ryan Gillies

725…Ryan Kidman

726…S. Jack

727…Samantha 'Fatty' Hunter

728…Sandra Boyko

729…Sandra Chong

730…Sandra Moorman

731…Sanja Denic

732…Sara Mohr

733…Sara Tubman

734…Sarah Chalk

735…Sarah Dooley

736…Sarah Scott

737…Scott Beauchamp

738…Scott Colvin

739…Scott Doran

740…Scott Felman

741…Scott Gibson

742…Scott Townley

743…Sean Conrad

744…Sean McGrath

745…Sean O'Brien

746…Sébastien Taillefer

747…Sera Chiuchiarelli

748…Serge Richard

749…Shannon Renaud

750…Shari Goodfellow

751…Shari Nurse

752…Sharleen Conrad-Beatty

753…Sharon Chomyn

754…Sharon Ferdinand

755…Sharon Tobin

756…Shauna Graham

757…Shawn Murray

758…Shawn Rycroft

759…Sheila Barth

760…Sheila McIsaac

761…Shelley Chambers

762…She-Yang Lau-Chapdelaine

763…Simon Roussin

764…Sondra MacDonald

765…Sonia Gilroy

766…Sonia Granzer

767…Sophie Gravel

768…Soraya Moghadam

769…Stacey Brennan

770…Stèfan Tobin

771…Stephane Castonguay

772…Stephanie Brodeur

773…Stephanie Crisford

774…Stephanie Gauthier

775…Stephanie Gordon

776…Stephen LaPlante

777…Stephen Woroszczuk

778…Steve Astels

779…Steve Forrest

780…Steven Craft

781…Steven Turner

782…Stuart Laubstein

783…Susan Durrell

784…Susan Farrell

785…Susan Johnston

786…Susan Lacosta

787…Susan Mak Chin

788…Susan Richards

789…Suzanne Belzile

790…Suzanne MacLean

791…Sylvain Huard

792…Sylvie Rochon

793…Takuya Tazawa

794…Tammey Degrandpre

795…Tammy Frye

796…Tanya Frye

797…Tara Benjamin

798…Tarjinder Kainth

799…Terri Bolster

800…Terri-Lee Lefebvre

801…Terry Monger

802…Terry Muldoon

803…Terry Porter

804…Theresa Tam

805…Thomas Robinson

806…Tim Irwin

807…Timon LeDain

808…Tina Fallis

809…Tina Head

810…Tom Boudreau

811…Tom Brown

812…Tong Pang

813…Tonja Leach

814…Tony Kittridge

815…Tracie Royal

816…Tracy Corneau

817…Travis Smith

818…Trevor Johnson

819…Tricia Brown

820…Trina Bender

821…Tyler Dickerson

822…Val Lafranchise

823…Vanessa Brochet

824…Vanessa Buchanan

825…Vello Mijal

826…Vernon White

827…Veronique Boily

828…Vic Baker

829…Viola Caissy

830…Wade Smith

831…Walter Pamic

832…Walter Wood

833…Wayne Williams

834…Wendy Low

835…Will Simmering

836…Will Summers

837…Will Youngson

838…Willem Stevens

839…William Chisholm

840…William Morley

841…Winter Fedyk

842…Yan Zawisza

843…Yandu Oppacher

844…Yolande Simoneau

845…Zach McKeown

 

B. Other Communities

 

846…Terry Koronewski……..Alexandria

847…Ashley Page……..Almonte

848…Christina Kealey……..Almonte

849…Jenny Sheffield……..Almonte

850…Judi Sutherland……..Almonte

851…Linda Berkloo……..almonte

852…Tanya Yuill……..Almonte

853…Bette-Anne Dodge……..Arnprior

854…Constance Palubiskie……..Arnprior

855…Erin Tighe……..Ashton

856…Angela Hartley……..Athens

857…Christina Ward……..Athens

858…Heather Johnston……..Athens

859…Kevin Hartley……..Athens

860…Barbara Sweeney……..Aylmer

861…Chelsea Honeyman……..Aylmer

862…David Michaud……..Aylmer

863…Natalie Frodsham……..Beachburg

864…Carol-Anne McInnes……..Belleville

865…Craig McInnes……..Belleville

866…Edward Kooistra……..Belleville

867…Norma Barrett……..Belleville

868…Rhonda Cassibo……..Belleville

869…Christine Lalonde……..Bourget

870…Luc Lalonde……..Bourget

871…Pierre Lacasse……..Bourget

872…Kylie Howison……..Brockville

873…Tim Audet……..Brockville

874…Richard Bisson……..Cantley

875…Bonnie Levesque……..Carleton Place

876…Jennifer Blackburn……..Carleton Place

877…John Graham……..Carleton Place

878…Leanna Knox……..Carleton Place

879…Roger Kinsman……..Carleton Place

880…Ron Romain……..Carleton Place

881…Tom Kemp……..Carleton Place

882…Anna Li……..Carp

883…Elysa Esposito……..Carp

884…Gerard Rumleskie……..Carp

885…Hans Buser……..Carp

886…Ileana Tierney……..Carp

887…Lana Reid……..Carp

888…Peter Parkhill……..Carp

889…Raina Ho……..Carp

890…Rob Gaudet……..Carp

891…Shona Daniels……..Carp

892…Bob Sweetlove……..casselman

893…Mary Sweetlove……..casselman

894…Andy Best……..Chalk River

895…Angela Nuelle……..Chelsea

896…Ariane Brunet……..Chelsea

897…Benoit Perry……..Chelsea

898…Guillaume D'aoust……..Chelsea

899…Ian Hunter……..Chelsea

900…Jeff Bardsley……..Chelsea

901…Murielle Brazeau……..Chelsea

902…Raymond Brunet……..Chelsea

903…Sophie Brunet……..Chelsea

904…Yvan Dion……..Chelsea

905…Cathleen Bourret……..Chesterville

906…Bruce Oattes……..Cobden

907…Carole Buxcey……..Cobden

908…Chris Hornell……..Cobourg

909…Abigail Fontaine……..Cornwall

910…Cathy Richer……..Cornwall

911…Garth Wigle……..Cornwall

912…Joanne Filliol……..Cornwall

913…John St. Marseille……..Cornwall

914…Kathleen Hay……..Cornwall

915…Laurie Parisien……..Cornwall

916…Marc Besner……..Cornwall

917…Nancy Kelly……..Cornwall

918…Norman Marcotte……..Cornwall

919…Scott Heath……..cornwall

920…Stacie King……..Cornwall

921…Terry Quenneville……..Cornwall

922…Jane McLaren……..Cornwall,

923…John Speirs……..Deep River

924…Robin Engel……..Dundas

925…Timothy Engel……..Dundas

926…Christine Andrus……..Dunrobin

927…Gordon Colquhoun……..Dunrobin

928…Janet Campbell……..Dunrobin

929…Pamela Colquhoun……..Dunrobin

930…Alexandrea Watters……..Elgin

931…David McCulloch……..Embrun

932…Eric Deschamps……..Embrun

933…Robert Lindsay……..Embrun

934…Stéphane Gougeon……..Embrun

935…Sylvie Beauchamp……..Embrun

936…Richard Kellett……..Farnham

937…Jay Buhr……..Finch

938…Glenda O'Rourke……..Fitzroy Harbour

939…Jessica Craig……..Fitzroy Harbour

940…Denise Roy……..Fournier

941…Pierre Doucette……..Gananoque

942…Steacy Kavaner……..Gananoque

943…Alexandre Boudreault……..Gatineau

944…Alexandria Wilson……..Gatineau

945…Allan Wilson……..Gatineau

946…Anne-Marie Chapman……..Gatineau

947…Anne-Marie Regimbal……..Gatineau

948…Augusto Gamero……..Gatineau

949…Benoit Gagnon……..Gatineau

950…Bernard Audy……..Gatineau

951…Brenda Cox……..Gatineau

952…Carolyne Dube……..Gatineau

953…Céline Couture……..Gatineau

954…Chad Levac……..Gatineau

955…Chantale Lussier-Ley……..Gatineau

956…Christian Bourgeois……..Gatineau

957…Cristiano Rezende……..Gatineau

958…Dani Grandmaître……..Gatineau

959…Darya Shapka……..Gatineau

960…Dominique Kane……..Gatineau

961…Eric Silins……..Gatineau

962…François Laferrière……..Gatineau

963…Frédéric Thibault-Chabot……..Gatineau

964…Gilly Griffin……..Gatineau

965…Graham Wilson……..Gatineau

966…Greg Stainton……..Gatineau

967…Guy Corneau……..Gatineau

968…Guy Desjardins……..Gatineau

969…Hannah Juneau……..Gatineau

970…Hélène Belleau……..Gatineau

971…Isabelle Moses……..Gatineau

972…Isabelle Teolis……..Gatineau

973…Jean-Francois Pouliotte……..Gatineau

974…Jean-Philippe Dumont……..Gatineau

975…Jinny Williamson……..Gatineau

976…Jonathan Gilbert……..Gatineau

977…Josee Labonte……..Gatineau

978…Julie Demers……..Gatineau

979…Julie Piche……..Gatineau

980…Karine Leblond……..Gatineau

981…Katie Webster……..Gatineau

982…Kyle Hunter……..Gatineau

983…Lalonde Lucie……..Gatineau

984…Leisa McGillivray……..Gatineau

985…Lissa Comtois-Silins……..Gatineau

986…Louis Christophe Laurence……..Gatineau

987…Louis Simon……..Gatineau

988…Louise Boudreault……..Gatineau

989…Louise Fortier……..Gatineau

990…Mabel Wapachee……..Gatineau

991…Magali Couture……..Gatineau

992…Manon Damboise……..Gatineau

993…Manon Laliberté……..Gatineau

994…Marc André Nault……..Gatineau

995…Marc-Etienne Lesieur……..Gatineau

996…Mark Ellison……..Gatineau

997…Martin Labelle……..Gatineau

998…Martin Larose……..Gatineau

999…Michel Mercier……..Gatineau

1000…Michele Simpson……..Gatineau

1001…Mika Raja……..Gatineau

1002…Mikaly Gagnon……..Gatineau

1003…Nancy Jean……..Gatineau

1004…Natalie Brun del Re……..Gatineau

1005…Nathalie Brunet……..Gatineau

1006…Noel Paine……..Gatineau

1007…Pascal Tremblay……..Gatineau

1008…Patty Soles……..Gatineau

1009…Paul Gould……..Gatineau

1010…Philippe Houle……..Gatineau

1011…Pierre Villeneuve……..Gatineau

1012…Ray Burke……..Gatineau

1013…Raymond Desjardins……..Gatineau

1014…Réjean Lacroix……..Gatineau

1015…Robert Chassé……..Gatineau

1016…Sandra Roberts……..Gatineau

1017…Sanjay Vachali……..Gatineau

1018…Shelley Milton……..Gatineau

1019…Somphane Souksanh……..Gatineau

1020…Sonja Adcock……..Gatineau

1021…Sophie Caron……..Gatineau

1022…Stephane Boudrias……..Gatineau

1023…Stéphane Siegrist……..Gatineau

1024…Stéphanie Séguin……..Gatineau

1025…Steves Tousignant……..Gatineau

1026…Susie Simard……..Gatineau

1027…Suzanne Ramsay……..Gatineau

1028…Tanya O'Callaghan……..Gatineau

1029…Tayeb Mesbah……..Gatineau

1030…Terry SanCartier……..Gatineau

1031…Todd Keesey……..Gatineau

1032…Wayne Saunders……..Gatineau

1033…Zachary Healy……..Gatineau

1034…Belinda Coballe……..Gloucester

1035…Cam Wilson……..Gloucester

1036…Catherine Clifford……..Gloucester

1037…Cathy Gould……..Gloucester

1038…Danielle Thibeault……..Gloucester

1039…Dave Currie……..Gloucester

1040…David Clement……..Gloucester

1041…Gillian Todd-Messinger……..Gloucester

1042…Ingrid Brosseau……..Gloucester

1043…Jackie Millette……..Gloucester

1044…John Frappier……..Gloucester

1045…John Girard……..Gloucester

1046…Joseph Rios……..Gloucester

1047…Karen Beattie……..Gloucester

1048…Ken McFarlane……..Gloucester

1049…Keri Burgess……..Gloucester

1050…Lee Dixon……..Gloucester

1051…Lucie Villeneuve……..Gloucester

1052…Michele Boyer……..Gloucester

1053…Nicole Labelle……..Gloucester

1054…Sonja Renz……..Gloucester

1055…Tiffany Belair……..Gloucester

1056…Tom Fottinger……..Gloucester

1057…Virginia Mofford……..Gloucester

1058…Ann Westell……..Greely

1059…Carol Boucher……..Greely

1060…Claire Johnstone……..Greely

1061…Claire Maxwell……..Greely

1062…David Benyon……..Greely

1063…Jennifer Frechette……..Greely

1064…Randall Holmes……..Greely

1065…Scott Evans……..Greely

1066…Stephanie Courcelles……..greely

1067…Louise Galipeau……..Hammond

1068…Adam Boyle……..Kanata

1069…Adam Pelham……..Kanata

1070…Adrian Salt……..Kanata

1071…Afshan Thakkar……..Kanata

1072…Alistair Edwards……..Kanata

1073…Allen Piddington……..Kanata

1074…Amanda Archibald……..Kanata

1075…Anand Srinivasan……..Kanata

1076…Andrea Carisse……..Kanata

1077…Andrew Fewtrell……..Kanata

1078…Anne Collis……..Kanata

1079…Bernie Armour……..Kanata

1080…Bill Gilchrist……..Kanata

1081…Brenda Pavlovic……..Kanata

1082…Brian Archibald……..Kanata

1083…Brittney Pavlovic……..Kanata

1084…Carmen Davidson……..Kanata

1085…Cecilia Jorgenson……..Kanata

1086…Chandan Banerjee……..Kanata

1087…Cherie Koshman……..Kanata

1088…Cheryl Levi……..Kanata

1089…Chris Cowie……..Kanata

1090…Christine Pollex……..Kanata

1091…Cindy Molaski……..Kanata

1092…Colleen Gilchrist……..Kanata

1093…Colleen Kilty……..Kanata

1094…Crystal Thompson……..Kanata

1095…Dan Kelly……..Kanata

1096…Daniel Farrell……..Kanata

1097…Danny Schwager……..Kanata

1098…Deanne Van Rooyen……..Kanata

1099…Debbie Olive……..Kanata

1100…Deirdre Luesby……..Kanata

1101…Dhanya Thakkar……..Kanata

1102…Diane Boyle……..Kanata

1103…Fiona Valliere……..Kanata

1104…Francine Giannotti……..Kanata

1105…Gina Rossi……..Kanata

1106…Ginette Ford……..Kanata

1107…Greg Dow……..Kanata

1108…Greg Layhew……..Kanata

1109…Greg McNeill……..Kanata

1110…Jan Donak……..Kanata

1111…Janet Chadwick……..Kanata

1112…Janice Tughan……..Kanata

1113…Jeff Goold……..Kanata

1114…Jeff Zhao……..Kanata

1115…Jeffrey O'Connor……..Kanata

1116…Jennifer Delorme……..Kanata

1117…Jennifer Donohue……..Kanata

1118…Jennifer Nason……..Kanata

1119…Jennifer Prieur……..Kanata

1120…Jody Vallati……..Kanata

1121…John Cooper……..Kanata

1122…John Sullivan……..Kanata

1123…Karen Piddington……..Kanata

1124…Katalijn MacAfee……..Kanata

1125…Kathleen Westbury……..Kanata

1126…Kelly Ann Davis……..Kanata

1127…Kelly Livingstone……..Kanata

1128…Kelly Ross……..Kanata

1129…Kennerth Klassen……..Kanata

1130…Keri Hillier……..Kanata

1131…Kevin Boyd……..Kanata

1132…kevin rankin……..Kanata

1133…Kimberley Bohn……..Kanata

1134…Krista Ferguson……..Kanata

1135…Kristin Eagan……..Kanata

1136…Lauren Eyre……..Kanata

1137…Laurie Davis……..Kanata

1138…Lesley Dewsnap……..Kanata

1139…Lida Koronewskij……..Kanata

1140…Lillian Ng……..Kanata

1141…Lise Gray……..Kanata

1142…Lois Kirkup……..Kanata

1143…Louise King……..Kanata

1144…Luisa De Amicis……..Kanata

1145…Lynda Ciavaglia……..Kanata

1146…Lyne Denis……..Kanata

1147…Mark Brownhill……..Kanata

1148…Mark Jorgenson……..Kanata

1149…Mark Ruddock……..Kanata

1150…Marlene Alt……..Kanata

1151…Mary Anne Jackson-Hughes……..Kanata

1152…Melanie Coulson……..Kanata

1153…Melissa Hall……..Kanata

1154…Michael Brennan……..Kanata

1155…Michael Sutherland……..Kanata

1156…Michele LeMay……..Kanata

1157…Michelle Calder……..Kanata

1158…Mikkyal Koshman……..Kanata

1159…Nancy McGuire……..Kanata

1160…Neil Maxwell……..Kanata

1161…Neil Thomson……..Kanata

1162…Nolan MacAfee……..Kanata

1163…Pamela Ford……..Kanata

1164…Patricia Brown……..Kanata

1165…Peter Clark……..Kanata

1166…Peter Zimmerman……..Kanata

1167…Philip Tughan……..Kanata

1168…Rhonda Boudreau……..Kanata

1169…Robyn Hardage……..Kanata

1170…Sandra Plourde……..Kanata

1171…Sandy Brennan……..Kanata

1172…Scott Jewer……..Kanata

1173…Sharon Lee……..Kanata

1174…Sharon Skerritt……..Kanata

1175…Shelly Nesbitt……..Kanata

1176…Sheri Cayouette……..Kanata

1177…Shirley Ivan……..Kanata

1178…Sindy Dobson……..Kanata

1179…Smitha Srinivasan……..Kanata

1180…Sridhar Erukulla……..Kanata

1181…Steven Cowie……..Kanata

1182…Stuart Swanson……..Kanata

1183…Terry Koss……..Kanata

1184…Thomas Cain……..Kanata

1185…Tiffany Boire……..Kanata

1186…Tim Moses……..Kanata

1187…Tom Auger……..Kanata

1188…Tom Winter……..Kanata

1189…Vicky Neufeld……..Kanata

1190…Vincent_Andy Fong……..Kanata

1191…Wei Zhou……..Kanata

1192…Wendy Patton……..Kanata

1193…Guy Laliberte……..Kars

1194…Carole Perkins……..Kemptville

1195…Cheryl Brennan……..Kemptville

1196…Dave Springer……..Kemptville

1197…David Brennan……..Kemptville

1198…Karen Nickleson……..Kemptville

1199…Paul Bedard……..Kemptville

1200…Roxanne Harrington……..Kemptville

1201…Stephanie Mombourquette……..Kemptville

1202…Teena Dacey……..Kemptville

1203…Jackie Stadnyk……..Kinburn

1204…Kathy Twardek……..Kinburn

1205…Ronald Stadnyk……..Kinburn

1206…Joey Beaudin……..Limoges

1207…Judy Gagne……..Limoges

1208…Susan Draper……..Low

1209…Jennifer Duffy……..Maitland

1210…Penny Duffy……..Maitland

1211…Jennifer Kellar……..Mallorytown

1212…Robert Browne……..Mallorytown

1213…Andrew Colautti……..Manotick

1214…Chris Bourne……..Manotick

1215…Guy Beaudoin……..Manotick

1216…Robert Fabes……..Manotick

1217…Robert Lange……..Manotick

1218…Shirley MacGregor Ford……..Manotick

1219…Theresa Roberts……..Manotick

1220…Yvonne Brandreth……..Manotick

1221…Julianna Choi……..Markham

1222…Heather Purdy……..Martintown

1223…Michele Steeves……..Maxville

1224…Jodi Brennan……..Merrickville

1225…Michael Barkhouse……..Merrickville

1226…Andre Lasalle……..Metcalfe

1227…Kazimierz Krzyzanowski……..Metcalfe

1228…Michelle Crook……..Metcalfe

1229…Sylvie J Lapointe……..Metcalfe

1230…Isabella Jordan……..Morrisburg

1231…Allan Smith……..Munster

1232…Nancy Ann Smith……..Munster

1233…Carole Charlebois……..Navan

1234…Marcella MacDonald……..Navan

1235…Marie-France Lévesque……..Navan

1236…Mychele Malette……..navan

1237…Paul de Grandpré……..Navan

1238…Rosemary Barber……..Navan

1239…Veronique Bergeron……..Navan

1240…Wally Burns……..Navan

1241…Alain Phaneuf……..Nepean

1242…Alan Rushforth……..Nepean

1243…Alison Hill……..Nepean

1244…Allen Mackinder……..Nepean

1245…Andrew Johnston……..Nepean

1246…Angela MacNeil……..Nepean

1247…Angie MacDonald……..Nepean

1248…Anne-Josée Marion……..Nepean

1249…Caroline Bachynski……..Nepean

1250…Carolyn Frank……..Nepean

1251…Carolyn Perkins……..Nepean

1252…Cassandra Williams……..Nepean

1253…Chris Fitzgerald……..Nepean

1254…Chris Van Norman……..Nepean

1255…Christopher Hill……..Nepean

1256…Corey Wilson……..Nepean

1257…Dan Lacasse……..Nepean

1258…Dana Lee……..Nepean

1259…Dave Summerbell……..Nepean

1260…David Holmes……..Nepean

1261…David Mersereau……..Nepean

1262…Debbie Van Norman……..Nepean

1263…Denis Therrien……..Nepean

1264…Donna McKibbon……..Nepean

1265…Doug Simpson……..Nepean

1266…Erik Kristjansson……..Nepean

1267…Exequiel Alcober……..Nepean

1268…Face Wallace……..Nepean

1269…Gary Vrckovnik……..Nepean

1270…Helen Lum Young……..Nepean

1271…Ian MacLean……..Nepean

1272…Jack Kwan……..Nepean

1273…Jamie Hayami……..Nepean

1274…Jane Hext……..Nepean

1275…Jason Pantalone……..Nepean

1276…Jeff Slavin……..Nepean

1277…Jennifer McDonell……..Nepean

1278…Jeremy Garbas-Tyrrell……..Nepean

1279…John Cooke……..Nepean

1280…John Tegano……..Nepean

1281…Jon Schmeler……..Nepean

1282…Joseph Emas……..Nepean

1283…Karleen Heer……..Nepean

1284…Kathleen O'Leary……..Nepean

1285…Kathleen Stringer……..Nepean

1286…Katya Duhamel……..Nepean

1287…Kelly MacGregor……..Nepean

1288…Kerry Nolan……..Nepean

1289…Marie-Andree Dubreuil……..Nepean

1290…Marika Holmes……..Nepean

1291…Mark White……..Nepean

1292…Martyn Hodgson……..Nepean

1293…Mary Cooke……..Nepean

1294…Miranda Cole……..Nepean

1295…Moiz Syed……..Nepean

1296…Nicole Steinert……..Nepean

1297…Norm Duhamel……..Nepean

1298…Patti-Lynn Dougan……..Nepean

1299…Peter Dinsdale……..Nepean

1300…Rena Fulton……..Nepean

1301…Richard Thomas……..Nepean

1302…Ruth Glenwright……..Nepean

1303…Sandra Lett……..Nepean

1304…Sarah Hudson……..Nepean

1305…Sarah Matthews……..Nepean

1306…Scott Hems……..Nepean

1307…Scott MacMillan……..Nepean

1308…Shannon Matheson……..Nepean

1309…Sharye Marcus……..Nepean

1310…Shawna Thornhill……..Nepean

1311…Stephanie Dunne……..Nepean

1312…Steve Zinck……..Nepean

1313…Tanya Mykytyshyn……..Nepean

1314…Tim McNaughton……..Nepean

1315…Tony Blake……..Nepean

1316…Yusu Guo……..Nepean

1317…Christopher Sylvestre……..North Dundas Township

1318…Natalie Smith……..North Gower

1319…Alain Brulé……..Orleans

1320…André Larouche……..Orleans

1321…Andria George-Worth……..Orleans

1322…Andy Coughlin……..Orleans

1323…Anik Adam……..Orleans

1324…Anke Berndt……..Orleans

1325…Ann Marie David……..Orleans

1326…Anne McCarthy……..Orleans

1327…Arlene O'Brien……..Orleans

1328…Bonnie Ferguson……..Orleans

1329…Brad Hart……..Orleans

1330…Brenda Paquet……..Orleans

1331…Brian Wiens……..Orleans

1332…Carl Hume……..Orleans

1333…Carmen Saumure……..Orleans

1334…Carol Cameron……..Orleans

1335…Chantal Delangy……..Orleans

1336…Charles Momy……..Orleans

1337…Charles Sincennes……..Orleans

1338…Chris Henderson……..Orleans

1339…Chris Morrison……..Orleans

1340…Christina Michaud……..Orleans

1341…CIndy Ettinger……..Orleans

1342…Claire Chretien……..Orleans

1343…Claude Desgagne……..Orleans

1344…Coco Comtois……..Orleans

1345…Cynthia Taylor……..Orleans

1346…Dan Matthews……..Orleans

1347…Dana Nalley……..Orleans

1348…Daniel Caron……..Orleans

1349…Dave Trumpower……..Orleans

1350…Dean Durnford……..Orleans

1351…Deborah Baldwin……..Orleans

1352…Denis Hogan……..Orleans

1353…Donna Johnston……..Orleans

1354…Eann Hodges……..Orleans

1355…Elise Grenier……..Orleans

1356…Eric Fortier……..Orleans

1357…Frédéric-Francois Desmarais……..Orleans

1358…Ginette Jolin……..Orleans

1359…Jacqueline Barry……..Orleans

1360…Jacqueline Evans……..Orleans

1361…James Carere……..Orleans

1362…Jane Schofield……..Orleans

1363…JaneAnn Swim……..Orleans

1364…Jason Roberts……..Orleans

1365…Jean Magne……..Orleans

1366…Jean Stewart……..Orleans

1367…Jeff Danforth……..Orleans

1368…Jennifer Aaltonen……..Orleans

1369…Jennifer Caldbick……..Orleans

1370…Jillian Stow……..Orleans

1371…Jocelyne Boivin……..Orleans

1372…John Potter……..Orleans

1373…John Roach……..Orleans

1374…Judith Finn……..Orleans

1375…Judy Thomson……..Orleans

1376…Julie Bossé……..Orleans

1377…Julie Dregas……..Orleans

1378…Karen Bowers……..Orleans

1379…Kathleen Gould Morin……..Orleans

1380…Kathryn McNicoll……..Orleans

1381…Kathy Wiens……..Orleans

1382…Keith David……..Orleans

1383…Ken Bernard……..Orleans

1384…Ken Cavanagh……..Orleans

1385…Kevin Piccott……..Orleans

1386…Kim Tremblay……..Orleans

1387…Kimberly Croft……..Orleans

1388…Kristy Singleton……..Orleans

1389…Laura Regnier……..Orleans

1390…Linda LeBlanc……..Orleans

1391…Line Richard……..Orleans

1392…Lise King……..Orleans

1393…Louise Smith……..Orleans

1394…Luc St-Jean……..Orleans

1395…Lyne Orser……..Orleans

1396…Marie-Josee Homsy……..Orleans

1397…Marieve Lavigne……..Orleans

1398…Marshall Clark……..Orleans

1399…Marthe Bergevin……..Orleans

1400…Max LeBreton……..Orleans

1401…Megan Thomson……..Orleans

1402…Melanie Trumpower……..Orleans

1403…Melissa Vroom……..Orleans

1404…Na Lin……..Orleans

1405…Nadine Mattingly……..Orleans

1406…Nancy Camacho……..Orleans

1407…Nancy Neilson……..Orleans

1408…Natacha Kenney……..Orleans

1409…Nick Tang……..Orleans

1410…Nicole Clark……..Orleans

1411…Nicole Flanagan……..Orleans

1412…Nicolle Saulnier……..Orleans

1413…Ninon Parent……..Orleans

1414…Pamela Wilson……..Orleans

1415…Patricia Coons……..Orleans

1416…Patti Craven……..Orleans

1417…Peter Belair……..Orleans

1418…Pierrette Caron……..Orleans

1419…Randy Boucher……..Orleans

1420…Rob Dinardo……..Orleans

1421…Robert Sauve……..Orleans

1422…Ronald Fitzgerald……..Orleans

1423…Sandra Craig-Browne……..Orleans

1424…Sandra Faubert……..Orleans

1425…Sandy Clark……..Orleans

1426…Sandy Moger……..Orleans

1427…Scot Bryant……..Orleans

1428…Shanna Bancroft……..Orleans

1429…Shari DeJong……..Orleans

1430…Sonia Laneuville……..Orleans

1431…Stan Baldwin……..Orleans

1432…Stella Gaerke……..Orleans

1433…Stephan Cronier……..Orleans

1434…Stephane Burelle……..Orleans

1435…Stephane Parent……..Orleans

1436…Stephanie Currie-McCarragher……..Orleans

1437…Stéphanie Ducharme……..Orleans

1438…Stephen Boyd……..Orleans

1439…Susan Poisson……..Orleans

1440…Suzanne Daleman……..Orleans

1441…Tammy Peters……..Orleans

1442…Tanja Scharf……..Orleans

1443…Tara Redmond……..Orleans

1444…Terri-Lynn Kennedy……..Orleans

1445…Terry Flynn……..Orleans

1446…Todd Overtveld……..Orleans

1447…Tony Thatcher……..Orleans

1448…Trevor Gillis……..Orleans

1449…Trevor Kirkland……..Orleans

1450…Trina Perras……..Orleans

1451…Yves Ducharme……..Orleans

1452…Jane Holski……..Oxford Mills

1453…Shaun Dunne……..Oxford Mills

1454…Steve Thompson……..Oxford Mills

1455…Anitra Bennett……..Pembroke

1456…Carole Groleau……..Pembroke

1457…Cheryl-Lynn Luffman……..Pembroke

1458…Douglas Thorlakson……..Pembroke

1459…Edward Alexander……..Pembroke

1460…Frank Grattan……..Pembroke

1461…Garry Hartlin……..Pembroke

1462…George Garrard……..Pembroke

1463…Laurie Thorlakson……..Pembroke

1464…Leanne Van Bavel……..Pembroke

1465…Michelle Rousselle……..Pembroke

1466…Mike Desjardins……..Pembroke

1467…Nevin Gaudon……..Pembroke

1468…Shawn Dickie……..Pembroke

1469…Cairyn Spence……..Perth

1470…Dana Lennox……..Perth

1471…Francis Gillespie……..Perth

1472…Lynn Marsh……..Perth

1473…Sue Matte……..Perth

1474…Tania Ireton……..Perth

1475…Brodie Doyle……..Petawawa

1476…Dave Macmillan……..Petawawa

1477…Dennene Huntley……..Petawawa

1478…Dwayne Lushman……..Petawawa

1479…Hector Clouthier……..Petawawa

1480…Joanne Mallet……..Petawawa

1481…Josh Bruinsma……..Petawawa

1482…Leah MacArthur……..Petawawa

1483…Mary Jensen……..Petawawa

1484…Meaghan Purdy……..Petawawa

1485…Robert Jensen……..Petawawa

1486…Selena Neily……..Petawawa

1487…Tracy Gorman……..Petawawa

1488…Vivian Overton……..Petawawa

1489…Jeanne D'Arc Lapointe……..Plantagenet

1490…Johanne Larabie……..Plantagenet

1491…Robert Lapointe……..Plantagenet

1492…Tony Larabie……..Plantagenet

1493…Amanda Lamoureux……..Pontiac

1494…Stephanie McKinnon……..Port Elgin

1495…Claudine Dirksen-Fenard……..Prescott

1496…Joe Noonan……..Prescott

1497…Mark Dirksen……..Prescott

1498…Richard Hart……..Prescott

1499…Alan Orton……..Pte-Claire

1500…Jeanne Rowan……..Renfrew

1501…John Jr. Fuller……..Renfrew

1502…Nina De Bos……..Renfrew

1503…Paul Rowan……..Renfrew

1504…Catherine McKenna……..Richmond

1505…Cheryl Gillies……..Richmond

1506…Colleen Piercey……..Richmond

1507…Dan Todd……..Richmond

1508…Gabby Doiron……..Richmond

1509…Joanne Kadoski……..Richmond

1510…Kristina Pistor……..Richmond

1511…Lea Sutherland……..Richmond

1512…Michael McKenna……..Richmond

1513…Robin Annas……..Richmond

1514…Matthew Churchill……..Rideau Ferry

1515…Ana Pereira……..Rockland

1516…Charles Carriere……..Rockland

1517…Frank Lalonde……..Rockland

1518…Julie MacDonald……..Rockland

1519…Nathalie J. Arseneault……..Rockland

1520…Therese Contant……..Rockland

1521…Brett Kendall……..Rosemere

1522…Peter Cicalo……..Russell

1523…Laura James……..Smiths Falls

1524…Rebecca Holmes……..South Mountain

1525…Amanda Smith……..Spencerville

1526…Cheryl Smith……..ST Pascal Baylon

1527…Leo Riendeau……..St.Albert

1528…Alexander Loslo……..Stittsville

1529…Angus MacDonald……..Stittsville

1530…Ben Legault……..Stittsville

1531…Brent Hodgson……..Stittsville

1532…Carole Hargrave……..Stittsville

1533…Catherine Postma……..Stittsville

1534…Cathy Pomeroy……..Stittsville

1535…Cheryl Lathrope……..Stittsville

1536…Chris Stacey……..Stittsville

1537…Corey Cole……..Stittsville

1538…Danielle Comeau-MacMillan……..Stittsville

1539…Darlene Nielsen……..Stittsville

1540…Dave McLean……..Stittsville

1541…Debbie Brown……..Stittsville

1542…Debbie Seltitz……..Stittsville

1543…Denis Boucher……..Stittsville

1544…Don Fletcher……..Stittsville

1545…Doug Nielsen……..Stittsville

1546…Elaine Sicoli……..Stittsville

1547…Elizabeth McHugh……..Stittsville

1548…Elizabeth Rhodenizer……..Stittsville

1549…Fred Owen……..Stittsville

1550…Garth Loslo……..Stittsville

1551…Greg Rusch……..Stittsville

1552…Jane Martin……..Stittsville

1553…Janet MacDonald……..Stittsville

1554…Jeff Conrad……..Stittsville

1555…Jennifer Anderson……..Stittsville

1556…Joaquin Fernandez……..Stittsville

1557…Joe MacMillan……..Stittsville

1558…Kirsten Maludzinski……..Stittsville

1559…Kyle MacKay……..Stittsville

1560…Laurel Rosene……..Stittsville

1561…Linda Corriveau……..Stittsville

1562…Louise MacKay……..Stittsville

1563…Lynn Messager……..Stittsville

1564…Marie-Elyse Boucher……..Stittsville

1565…Mark Rhodenizer……..Stittsville

1566…Mary Young……..Stittsville

1567…Matthew McKinnell……..Stittsville

1568…Mike McDonald……..Stittsville

1569…Ralph Richardson……..Stittsville

1570…Rebecca Richardson……..Stittsville

1571…René Lessard……..Stittsville

1572…Robert Canthal……..Stittsville

1573…Robert Postma……..Stittsville

1574…Roger Egan……..Stittsville

1575…Sean Gagnon……..Stittsville

1576…Shelley Baran……..Stittsville

1577…Steve Cashman……..Stittsville

1578…Stuart MacKay……..Stittsville

1579…Suzanne Savoie……..Stittsville

1580…Walter Hawes……..Stittsville

1581…Ed Overton……..Val-des-Monts

1582…Meaghan Henry……..Val-des-Monts

1583…Richard Blanchette……..Val-des-Monts

1584…Arlene Dupuis……..Vars

1585…Aimee Lemieux……..Wakefield

1586…Archie Smith……..Wakefield

1587…Julie Payette……..Wakefield

1588…Shirley Curran……..Wakefield

1589…Bob Reddick……..Westport

1590…Diane Graham-Lynn……..Westport

1591…John Fuoco……..Westport

1592…Pat Reddick……..Westport

1593…Richard Simard……..White Lake

1594…Chantal Lajoie……..Williamstown

1595…Amy Collins……..Winchester

1596…Chris Phillips……..Winchester

1597…Gillian Erickson……..Winchester

1598…Gina Porteous……..Winchester

1599…Kelly Geddis……..Woodlawn

1600…Renee Crompton……..Woodlawn

1601…Richard Crompton……..Woodlawn

 

Independence came to Jamaica in 1962. The musical soundtrack of this era was the upbeat, energised Ska - the first truly modern Jamaican music. Based on the offbeat, Ska mixed together US jump-up Rhythm and Blues with indigenous Jamaican music such as Mento to produce a unique sound.

 

Ska music and Studio One records are virtually synonymous. Whilst Studio One would release many styles of Reggae during its forty year history - Rocksteady, Roots, Dancehall, Dub and the rest - Ska was the first and gave Jamaican music it's own identity throughout the world. the inspiration for the rhythm of Ska came from the Southern US Rhythm and Blues records that Coxsone Dodd had discovered while working as a migrant farm worker in Florida in the 1950s. It was here that he decided to start a sound-system on returning to Jamaica. Back home he began importing R'n'B records that soon became the staple music of any Kingston dance. Amongst the important R'n'B artists of the day for Jamaicans were Roscoe Gordon, Wynonie Harris, Amos Milburn, Fats domino and Louis Jordon. Listening back to these records it is possible to hear the roots of this new Jamaican sound.

 

The second most important element of Ska was the Jazz that the Alpha Boys School educated musicians brought to this new music. Roland Alphonso, Don Drummond and Johnny Moore - the frontline horns of The Skatalites - all attended the Alpha School. Alongside many other great musicians such as Joe Harriott, Rico Rodriguez and Wilton Gaynair, the boys were taught Classical, Military and Jazz music under the strict supervision of the Catholic nuns who ran the school. One of the music directors was Lennie Hibbert who himself would record for Studio One. The Jamaican big band leaders such as Eric Deans recruited many new band members after they left Alpha: Don Drummond, Tommy McCook, Roland Alphonso and Johnny Moore all spent time with the Deans Orchestra.

 

Don Drummond, the most progressive of the musicians who attended Alpha, was also, unfortunately, the most troubled - to the extent that he would at times register himself into mental health care. Drummond's complex personality had nonetheless a positive influence on the Skatalites: many of the groups most haunting songs were written by Drummond, who was as much inspired by his Rastafarian faith as by the new modal Jazz in America. Johnny Moore recalls that Drummond learnt his modal styling by post, sending and receiving material from a music course in the US.

 

Although strict, the nuns encouraged the musicians. Sister Ignatius, who ran the school, encouraged the musicians to play and even had a record deck in the school so the boys could dance to Ska!.

 

By the late 1950s the sound-system dominated the Kingston music scene. Alongside Coxsone's downbeat Soundsystem you would find sounds such as Duke Reid the Trojan, King Edwards and many more. The music was strictly US R'n'B and Jazz. As the competition increased for exclusive tracks to play, Coxsone began recording one-off acetate records to play solely on his Downbeat Soundsystem. The music he first recorded was a Jamaican interpretation of American Rhythm and Blues and for this he hired musicians such as Cluett Johnson and The Blues Blasters and Herman Hersang's City Slickers, recording in the various studios around Kingston such as Ken Khouri's federal Studios. Coxsone soon became aware of the large potential audience for this music and by the 1960s was releasing records commercially on a wide range of his own record labels - Worldisc, Supreme, Cariboo, Coxsone, Sensational, Muzik City, Rolando & Powie and more!

 

In 1963 Coxsone opened his own studio at 13 Brentford Road, Kingston. He named the building (and his new label) studio One and set about defining the future sound of Jamaican music.

 

Coxsone employed the musicians on a weekly wage basis to write new songs and rhythms. At first the recording equipment was a one-track tape recorder, meaning that all songs were recorded live. When the equipment became two-track the musicians would record all week, and the singers came to the studio in the evening and weekends. The in-house band at the start featured many future members of the Skatalites. It was not until 1964 that they actually gave themselves the name The Skatalites. the Skatalites were Tommy McCook, Roland Alphonso (tenor saxes), Lester Sterling (alto sax), Don Drummond (trombone), Johnny Moore (trumpet), Jackie Mittoo (piano), Jah Jerry or Ernest Ranglin (guitar), Lloyd Brevett (bass) and Lloyd Knibb (drums) and they became the house band at Studio One. The Skatalites dominated Ska. As well as playing on every record made at Studio One during this time, they also played on a large number of recordings for other producers such as Duke Reid (Treasure Isle Records) and Justin Yap (Top Deck). As they were exclusively signed to Studio One, this moonlighting often involved slight alterations of the original line-up, or recording under a different name.

 

The Skatalites brought a wide variety of influences into the music. Ska could include Jazz, Pop, jump-up R'n'B, westerns and other film soundtracks, easy listening and even Classical music. Additionally Don Drummond, Johnny Moore and Roland Alphonso regularly spent time playing music at Count Ossie's Rastafarian encampment in the hills of Kingston.

 

Songs such as "President Kennedy", based on a Cuban rhythm popularised by Mongo Santamaria and UK mod Georgie Fame sit next to melancholic instrumentals such as "Scambalena". You will also find gospel Ska from The Maytals, alongside storming dancehall classics such as "Arte Bella" and Eastern-flavoured modal songs such as "El Bang Bang". the artists who The Skatalites backed in turn, also brought their own influences into the music lyrically. Joe Higgs' "Song My Enemies Sing" is inspired by Kahil Gabran. The youthful Rude Boy culture that was beginning to enter the dancehall also became the subject of many Ska songs, whether for them or against them, by groups such as The wailers and The Ethiopians.

 

The Skatalites were perhaps too good to last. In 1963 the Jamaican government sent a delegation to the World's Fair in America to promote Jamaican music, specifically Ska. the visit was organised by government minister Edward Seaga, who chose Byron Lee and The Dragonaires over The Skatalites. that the uptown middle-class bandleader Byron Lee had no connection with Ska was clear to everyone involved, and The Skatalites felt rejected by the establishment. More dramatically, in 1965 Don Drummond killed his girlfriend, the dancer Marguerita, and then gave himself up to the police.

 

www.savagejaw.co.uk/studio1/ska.html

 

VIDEOS: A Brief History Of Ska

www.youtube.com/watch?v=AesId12OKsY

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=CDAiQ-P7GoA&feature=related

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=zA9bZgfr86Y&feature=related

Dutch postcard. Photo: Ufa.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Siegel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy (Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Belgian collectors card in The Twist Series, no. 2.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Siegel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

West-German postcard by Krüger. Photo: Terb Agency.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Sigel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, offered by Les Carbones Korès "Carboplane", no. FK 98 A. Editions P.I. was the French license holder for Universum Film AG (Ufa). Photo: Terb Agency / Ufa.

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Sigel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

More than 100 dedicated DMPS employees from a variety of departments were honored at a special luncheon on Wednesday at the Wakonda Club in Des Moines. Chief of Human Resources Dr. Anne Sullivan offered congratulations, and Superintendent Dr. Tom Ahart presented retirees with a golden apple for their service.

 

Students Aviva Adams-Wilk (Cowles Montessori School), Shakira Stiefvater (Callanan Middle School) and Courtnei Caldwell (Hoover High School) talked about the special teachers in their lives and the impact school has had on them.

 

Congratulations to our retiring employees!

 

Anderson, Rhonda

Andresen, Kimberly

Andrews, Kathleen

Balkema, James

Banks, Leane

Barnes, Steve

Bass, Cynthia

Behling, Denise

Bennett, Ronald

Berry, Mary

Blackford, Cynthia

Boal, Anne

Brandt, Marsha

Brier, Sandra

Brocksmith, Karen

Brones, Laura

Caligiuri, Mari

Callaghan-Mitchell, Barbara

Carlson, Philip

Carter, Shelley

Charron, Karen

Clausen, Katherine

Cockrell, Stephen

Collins, Melinda

Colton, Patricia

Cooley, Terance

Cooper, Janyce

Crandell, Kathleen

Cropp, Billie Jo

Cross, Karen

Culver, Peggy

Cusmano, Patricia

Dahm, Leslie

Day, Barbara

Decker, Mary

Dickerson, Donna

Dinsdale, Linda

Dunivan, Sandra

Durham, Dawn

Edwards, Pamela

Faust, Gloria

Fogle, Deborah

Forsgren, Thomas

Fritch, Marcia

Gaylord-Crispin, Marjorie

Gier, Kay

Graham, Kay

Grandanette, Joseph

Greiner-Glas, Susan

Hansen, Kathryn

Hanson, Steven

Harrington, Diane

Heideman, Julie

Henline, Thomas

Hetzel, Jannan

Hilger, Mary

Holmgren, Ronald

Holmgren, Teresa

Horn, Sarah

Hoyt, Lynne

Huston, Steven

James, Ethel

Jasso, Michael

Jefferson, Lucy

Johnson, Camille

Johnson, John

Johnston, Michael

Jones, Sarah (Jackie)

Jones, Karen

Jones, Melinda

Kerman, Lonny

Khalastchi, Barbara

King, Bonnie

Kitterman, Darrell

Kleinschrodt, Juli

Kulzer, Howard

Lehman, Kathleen

Leonetti, Juli

Lewis, Mary

Logsdon, Michael

Loux, Donna

Lowe, Julia

Lynch, Gene

Lynch, Nancy

Maass, Karen

Markle, Todd

Mattila, Lin

Mcdonald, Susan

Metge, Maria

Miller, Diann

Morain, Diane

Murillo, Janet

Murphy, Kathleen

Nemmers, Linda

Nemmers, Theodore

Neswold, Vicki

Nichols-Wood, Barbara

Nigro, Roberta

Nizzi, Jerry

O’lear, Laura

Parrish, Terry

Paul, Kathleen

Paulsen, Mary

Pearson, Genevieve

Reynolds, Kathy

Riordan, Therese

Robinson, Barbara

Rodriguez, Linda

Root, Valerie

Rosin, Julie

Schwering, Jeanette

Sircy, Katherine

Skinner, Peggy

Smith, Thomas

Smith, Birdie Mae

Smith, Jean

Smith, J Kirby

Stancel, Kenneth

Stark, Lee

Stetson, Deborah

Stinson, Donna

Stone-Flomo, Cassandra

Swanson, Carol

Swanson, Thomas

Sweet, David

Tebo, Janette

Thompson, Shari

Trullinger, Christy

Tursi, Madelyn

Van De Pol, Carol

Virden, Mark

Walag, John Michael

West, Sheila

Westover, Mary

Wilkinson, Rena

Williams, Patti

Wilson, Wanda

Winslow, Joanne

.

 

Listed below are the local (Ottawa & area) participants -- sorted by cities and first name -- in the May 29, 2011, Ottawa Race Weekend Marathon.

 

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See also:

 

1 a) "2012" Ottawa Race Weekend photos.

 

1 b) "2013" Ottawa Race Weekend photos.

 

2) an alphabetic listing (2011) of ALL Ottawa, Gatineau and area marathoners, including stats and pics.

 

3) a steadicam™ video, running the Ottawa marathon. (You're in the race!)

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

 

One-third of the 4,200 marathon participants are from the local Ottawa area. The rest come from other parts of Ontario and Québec, and beyond.

 

Click here and enter a bib # search. You will receive the full 2011 individual race results and race photos.

 

Thank-you to Sportstats.

   

List of Local Marathon Participants, including the bib #:

 

Bib # .... Name .... City

 

2519….Cathy Maclean….Alexandria

4495….James Houseman….Alexandria

1049….John Zawada….Alexandria

4263….Pamela Kalinowski….Alexandria

1050….Aaron Barter….Almonte

5034….Bob Thomson….Almonte

964…..Brad Jones….Almonte

1939….Corinne Lalonde….Almonte

1174….Dale Joynt….Almonte

4610….Jenny Sheffield….Almonte

4484….Kaija Mountain….Almonte

4975….Nigel Jarrett….Almonte

4799….Rodney Carriveau….Almonte

3735….Sherry Burke….Almonte

4447….Anne Blimkie….Arnprior

4224….Constance Palubiskie….Arnprior

4731….David Moon….Arnprior

4148….Emily Sheffield….Arnprior

4225….Gregory Palubiskie….Arnprior

4036….Karen Elliott….Arnprior

3582….Mark Nibourg….Arnprior

1335….Mike Poirier….Arnprior

2718….Tracey Harrod….Arnprior

4512….Greg Dods….Ashton

4511….Leslie Dods….Ashton

71……Irina Mashkantseva….Athens

1141….David Michaud….Aylmer

304…..Fraser Mills….Aylmer

966…..Raymond Dawes….Barry's Bay

966…..Raymond Dawes….Barry's Bay

2225….Scott Blain….Beachburg

2348….Brenda Young….Brockville

755…..Henry De Souza….Brockville

161…..Luiz Claudio Santos….Brockville

160…..Sandra Santos….Brockville

3618….Shannon Forrest….Brockville

1961….Susan Filion….Brockville

2784….Tony Dunbar….Brockville

1597….Fraser Brownlee….Calabogie

1597….Fraser Brownlee….Calabogie

819…..Emmanuel Tousignant….Cantley

2184….Francois Chapleau….Cantley

1854….Guy Charron….Cantley

1890….Isabelle Laberge….Cantley

1624….Lorraine Savoie-Doucet….Cantley

3965….Marie-Claude Côté….Cantley

4281….Michel Lafontaine….Cantley

998…..Rene Morin….Cantley

2601….Sylvie Rioux….Cantley

2343….Bill Bowers….Carleton Place

4608….Chris Loder….Carleton Place

3273….Doug Bowers….Carleton Place

2017….James McGuire….Carleton Place

4152….Rob Illingworth….Carleton Place

956…..Stephen Tuttle….Carleton Place

2342….Trent Bowers….Carleton Place

2843….Victoria Tuttle….Carleton Place

2394….William Martin….Carleton Place

2967….Elizabeth Anvari….Carp

1808….Eric Janveaux….Carp

655…..Murray Stonebridge….Carp

5100….Shona Daniels….Carp

2815….Andy Best….Chalk River

2223….Matt Foote….Chalk River

2140….Angie Cameron….Chelsea

1868….Barbara Falardeau….Chelsea

3797….Claude Motard….Chelsea

303…..Daniel Olson….Chelsea

297…..Dave McMahon….Chelsea

637…..Dave Rayner….Chelsea

4782….Ed Hanrahan….Chelsea

2805….Ian Hunter….Chelsea

5050….Ingrid Felso….Chelsea

1035….Maurice Samm….Chelsea

1313….Shaun Touchie….Chelsea

5062….Oliver Brochert….Chesterville

5061….Peggy Brochert….Chesterville

2569….Marianne Black….Constance Bay

162…..Allan Savage….Cornwall

2122….Elizabeth Wattie….Cornwall

2391….Patrick Clarke….Cornwall

2832….Richard Pilon….Cornwall

1950….Shawn Crockett….Cornwall

2062….Adam Goddard….Deep River

2350….Ben Wilson….Deep River

259…..Barry Wood….Dunrobin

2206….Ben Bridgstock….Dunrobin

1405….Felicity Poole….Dunrobin

3311….Marnie Armstrong….Dunrobin

1672….Robert Armstrong….Dunrobin

3635….Sue Armstrong….Dunrobin

3947….Curtis Wiebe….Eganville

1994….Guillaume Dore….Embrun

345…..Michael Salter….Embrun

2979….Michel Leclair….Embrun

4487….Erin Montpetit….Gananoque

2213….Lana Saunders….Gananoque

4592….Steacy Kavaner….Gananoque

 

GATINEAU NAMES

 

2700….Alain Cadieux

1827….Alain Gilbert

920…..Albert Quintal

4123….Alexandra Miglietta

3691….Alexandre Larocque

2106….Andre April

4133….Andre Mayer

2864….Anelise Alarcon-Moreno

2837….Angela Yeung

2849….Anissa Caron

2455….Annik Levesque

4845….Arthur Bunny Stec

4205….Barry Wood

664…..Benoit Gravelle

1206….Benoit Guerette

868…..Bernard Labine

887…..Brian Letourneau

4161….Carolyne Dube

2866….Celine Couture

4479….Chantal Paquet

4985….Chantal Roy

2260….Charles Filion

429…..Christian Jacques

4494….Christian Renaud

2552….Christian Vezina

4456….Christopher Daniel

3425….Cinthia Lepine

106…..Craig Beckett

2571….D. Fabrice Kagame

4781….Daniel Genet

312…..Daniel Mercer

3368….Darrell De Grandmont

3713….Dave Jenniss

3496….Edith Raymond

100…..Eric Deshaies

222…..Eric Larochelle

4927….Eric Toulouse

1839….Estelle Marcoux

745…..Etienne Saint-Pierre

1307….Evelyne Lord Tarte

2963….Fabien Ancelin

3398….Felix Noel

884…..Francis Lepage

1059….Francis Theriault

842…..Francois Belletete

395…..François Cunningham

2254….François Roy

5102….Frank Roxburgh

3309….Frederick Blangez

3873….Genevieve Boudreault

144…..Gilles Moreau

3515….Guylaine Dubreuil

1571….Isabelle Veilleux

3805….Jacqueline Akerman

2755….James Buell

4693….Jean-Alexis Marquis

3498….Jean-Charles Daoust

3053….Jeanfrancois Laplante

1805….Jeanfrancois Seguin

275…..J-Francois Fillion

4625….Joe Crowley

1596….Johanne Audet

2862….Julie Piche

5097….Karine Gingras

4765….Karine Martin

2807….Keri Lalande

358…..Kynan Cappuccino

1863….Laurence Wright

1131….Laurent Bellard

1677….Laurent Tardif

2666….Leonie Maciag

3479….Louis Laurence

2890….Louis Trottier

4727….Louise Selby-Fisher

2385….Luc Beaudoin

3049….Luc Cyr

441…..Luc Levesque

1560….Luc Perrier

2103….Lyne Cholette

3057….Lynn Melancon

3642….Magali Peries

854…..Manuelle Mimouni-Rongy

3501….Marc Belanger

3139….Marc Charron

2764….Marc Dumouchel

152…..Marc Parisien

288…..Marc-Andre Charette

3284….Marie Rodrigue

3067….Marie-Claude Allard

2299….Marie-Josée Desroches

4380….Marie-Pier Nassif

484…..Mario Charette

1804….Mark Stocksley

3458….Martin Bouchard

308…..Martin Desbiens

3363….Martin Laforest

863…..Martin Lambert

3157….Maryse Champagne

3677….Mathieu Blais

2009….Mathieu Proulx

749…..Mathieu Rioux

886…..Matthew Dunn

1441….Maxime Tourigny

2288….Michel Careau

542…..Michel Lortie

2760….Michele Patry

4453….Michele Simpson

2806….Mikaly Gagnon

5039….Monik Beauchemin

4358….Nadia Lavallee

3112….Nathalie Garon

2120….Olivier Duhaime

50……Pascal Renard

3870….Patricia Harrison

3689….Patrick Dupont

713…..Patrick St-Pierre

1923….Patrick White

3459….Paul Beland

2910….Peter Balogh

1116….Phil Tisserand

1324….Philippe Guiet

5055….Pierre Menard

2522….Rafid Haidar

4682….Remi Vezina

2240….Rex Fyles

2418….Rheal Labelle

4938….Richard Borsos

2236….Richard Dunn

955…..Richard Sevigny

386…..Roger Larche

5115….Roman Kaufman

1811….Ronald Toulouse

4021….Said Faddoul

391…..Samuel Frechette

4613….Sandra Roberts

4429….Sarah Labrecque

2406….Shawn Robertson

1184….Stephan Meyer

4070….Susie Simard

2723….Suzanne Ramsay

5084….Suzie Chateauneuf

1670….Sylvie Lamoureux

1713….Sylvie Peladeau

2400….Tan Nguyen

1173….Tayeb Mesbah

2883….Terry Sancartier

779…..Tesfamariam Baraki

2354….Tim Scapillato

2450….Timothy Jones

4087….Valerie Parent

3961….Veronique Tremblay

2041….Véronique-Etienne Lauzon

1317….Yan Michaud

1849….Yannick Cozannet….Gatineau

 

END OF GATINEAU NAMES

 

3522….Amy O'Reilly….Gloucester

5098….Carl Puskas….Gloucester

2766….Claude Brault….Gloucester

3972….Edmund Binggeli….Gloucester

4387….Gerrie Normoyle….Gloucester

2599….J Dewar….Gloucester

1232….Jeannie Leblanc….Gloucester

1444….Joel Willison….Gloucester

4860….John Girard….Gloucester

4598….Kathy Dalley-Hunter….Gloucester

950…..Savvas Farassoglou….Gloucester

5007….Sondus Khan….Gloucester

4630….Virginia Mofford….Gloucester

153…..Vladimir Pestov….Gloucester

1906….Alain Boucher….Greely

3419….Derek Dean….Greely

4342….Isabelle Bouchard….Greely

1353….Jon Hamilton….Greely

1855….Keith Decoste….Greely

3584….Krista Varga….Greely

3761….Michel Provencher….Hawkesbury

3114….Yanik Tessier….Hawkesbury

1864….Andy Clapson….Hull

292…..Tommy Szabo….Hull

1200….Pascal Peladeau….Jasper

1340….Abdelfettah Fredj….Kanata

1263….Adam Bemrose….Kanata

1737….Adrian Salt….Kanata

4767….Akbar Garjani….Kanata

4146….Alastair McCartney….Kanata

2824….Allen Piddington….Kanata

2085….Angie Wilkes….Kanata

4983….Anne Murphy….Kanata

1835….Brandon Greening….Kanata

3886….Brian Emond….Kanata

4622….Cecilia Jorgenson….Kanata

2125….Chris Murawsky….Kanata

4461….Claudia McSmythurs….Kanata

3293….Craig Lyons….Kanata

3746….Crystal Thompson….Kanata

2762….Dan Kelly….Kanata

889…..Dave Jones….Kanata

751…..David Sloan….Kanata

2330….Derrick Baldwin….Kanata

3814….Dwight McDougall….Kanata

2273….Greg McNeill….Kanata

2414….Guy Turgeon….Kanata

4339….Heather MacAskill….Kanata

3943….Huot Mok….Kanata

1984….Ian Govan….Kanata

4095….Jan Donak….Kanata

843…..Jeff Goold….Kanata

4872….Jennifer Prieur….Kanata

2664….Jennifer Quinlan….Kanata

809…..Jessee Rodriguez….Kanata

2671….Jody Gelowitz….Kanata

1964….John Pool….Kanata

3122….Jordan Jones….Kanata

686…..Julian Scott….Kanata

4092….Karen Piddington….Kanata

1941….Karen Ramsay….Kanata

881…..Keith Fenerty….Kanata

1733….Kerry Kennedy….Kanata

3819….Lauren Eyre….Kanata

3529….Laurie Armstrong….Kanata

3069….Laurie Davis….Kanata

1319….Logan Daley….Kanata

142…..Loretta Masaro….Kanata

5073….Marjorie Coakwell….Kanata

3636….Mark Aberdeen….Kanata

4075….Mark Jorgenson….Kanata

4591….Martine Dumas….Kanata

4503….Maureen Fleguel….Kanata

995…..Michael Best….Kanata

5069….Michael Long….Kanata

4144….Michael Patton….Kanata

4121….Nancy Huynh….Kanata

532…..Ouray Viney….Kanata

4058….Peter Chapman….Kanata

4073….Peter Zimmerman….Kanata

2393….Rachel Chan….Kanata

2046….Ray Wong….Kanata

1284….Rene Bilodeau….Kanata

835…..Richard Bellefeuille….Kanata

4233….Robert Fenton….Kanata

934…..Robert Shaw….Kanata

4403….Rosa Pool….Kanata

1630….Sabrina Hamilton….Kanata

2888….Samantha Anstey….Kanata

2665….Sandra Plourde….Kanata

1286….Sarah Wildgen….Kanata

2115….Sean Theriault….Kanata

2693….Shelly Nesbitt….Kanata

3402….Silvesta Ng….Kanata

2829….Sridhar Erukulla….Kanata

420…..Stephen Cadieux….Kanata

5031….Tanis Roadhouse….Kanata

2218….Terence Rea….Kanata

3955….Tim Moses….Kanata

3530….Timothy Barratt….Kanata

2261….Tomislav Bracika….Kanata

2148….Vanessa Sloan….Kanata

808…..Vincent Andy Fong….Kanata

2555….Vincent Grajewski….Kanata

3703….Wei Zhou….Kanata

3077….Paula Lund….Kars

4745….Carole Perkins….Kemptville

2366….Dale Richardson….Kemptville

1364….Guy Van Kralingen….Kemptville

4050….Teena Dacey….Kemptville

2190….Charles Colwell….Kinburn

2189….Ed Colwell….Kinburn

1623….Patrick Cadieux….L'Ange-Gardien

944…..Robert Binette….L'Ange-Gardien

2037….Samuel Chenevert….L'Ange-Gardien

1809….Stephane Gosselin….L'Ange-Gardien

1837….Jason Mcneely….Lansdowne

131…..Dale Gladwin….Maitland

376…..Mike Crawford….Maitland

3946….Pryce Wood….Maitland

1993….Alma Meech….Manotick

1083….Charles Bruce….Manotick

1274….Dmitry Kabrelyan….Manotick

2685….Fiona Valliere….Manotick

5126….G. Hussain Choudhry….Manotick

2179….Guy Bunny Beaudoin….Manotick

1714….Laura Wilson….Manotick

844…..Paul Nightingale….Manotick

979…..Rick Lage….Manotick

4156….Robert Fabes….Manotick

2686….Robert Lange….Manotick

4750….Alison Greenop….Merrickville

3591….Jenn Ross….Merrickville

2060….Jim Miller-Cushon….Merrickville

207…..Pat McNeely….Merrickville

178…..Andre Lasalle….Metcalfe

3740….Geo Scott….Metcalfe

2367….Emilie Tessier….Mont-Laurier

3329….Patrick Chauvin….Mont-Laurier

4113….Allan Smith….Munster

3319….Allison McKenzie….Munster

681…..Alain Gonthier….Navan

5047….Jan Donker….Navan

640…..Andrew Toulouse….Nepean

4003….Anne Burnell….Nepean

4147….Chanchoura Schmoll….Nepean

2646….Chantelle Woods….Nepean

2971….Chris Van Norman….Nepean

1895….Christopher Bredeson….Nepean

2938….Colleen Bird….Nepean

869…..Corey Wilson….Nepean

2201….Craig Lynch….Nepean

4639….Dana Lee….Nepean

402…..David Daze….Nepean

4195….Diane Mensah….Nepean

4223….Elaine Robertson….Nepean

4124….Idris Ismail….Nepean

3966….Jamie Hayami….Nepean

2759….Jana Seymour….Nepean

4099….Janice Richard….Nepean

3608….Jeff Perras….Nepean

2813….Jennifer Wills….Nepean

1197….John Frizzell….Nepean

1795….John Gallinger….Nepean

239…..Jonathan Woodman….Nepean

535…..Joseph Emas….Nepean

1620….Judith Proulx-Snedden….Nepean

4934….Karen Beutel….Nepean

4478….Karleen Heer….Nepean

1381….Kathi Robertson….Nepean

1980….Ken Donovan….Nepean

4949….Kenneth Gehrels….Nepean

4002….Larry Brunet….Nepean

4947….Laura McLellan….Nepean

4057….Lillian Hayward….Nepean

4448….Marc-Andre St-Laurent….Nepean

4290….Mark White….Nepean

2591….Melanie Nason-Green….Nepean

1953….Mike Maclean….Nepean

3607….Miranda Georgakopoulos….Nepean

2277….Natalie Oake….Nepean

1219….Patrick Murnaghan….nepean

924…..Patrick Owens….Nepean

3619….Paul Allen….Nepean

4513….Paul Charron….Nepean

3772….Paul Huliganga….Nepean

3986….Paula Tejada-Hache….Nepean

2518….Peter Page….Nepean

1189….Randy Cocek….Nepean

4680….Rick O'Shaughnessy….Nepean

4969….Robert Muir….Nepean

1888….Ryan Baker….Nepean

2101….Shelley Neill….Nepean

3370….Stephan Popowych….Nepean

1878….Susan Ross….Nepean

4353….Tanya Mykytyshyn….Nepean

4758….Yorgos Alibalis….Nepean

4145….Brian Andrews….North Gower

3726….Aaron Lai….Orleans

603…..Alan-John Sigouin….Orleans

4897….Andre Boutet….Orleans

632…..Andrew Duggan….Orleans

3514….Andrew Lannan….Orleans

4061….Anita Taylor….Orleans

2820….Barry Lightowlers….Orleans

2758….Brent Kelly….Orleans

1140….Brian Wiens….Orleans

4973….Bruce Barteaux….Orleans

2810….Carole Barabe….Orleans

2256….Carole Gagnon….Orleans

4071….Chantale Charbonneau….Orleans

4060….Charles Momy….Orleans

4104….Chris Morrison….Orleans

3774….Clarence Malenfant….Orleans

2773….Dan Macdonald….Orleans

3640….Dave Crawford….Orleans

2804….Dave King….Orleans

5113….David Tischhauser….Orleans

2930….Don Lavictoire….Orleans

2998….Eric Carriere….Orleans

2770….Erica Sabatino….Orleans

822…..Francois Deleseleuc….Orleans

5118….Frederic-Franco Desmarais….Orleans

4808….Gary Housch….Orleans

2728….Gilles Primeau….Orleans

4939….Greg Beliveau….Orleans

4169….Helene Boyer….Orleans

1745….Helene Fortier….Orleans

4871….Iris Felix….Orleans

2527….Isabel Seguin….Orleans

3716….James Waite….Orleans

4056….Janette Marquardt….Orleans

3962….Jason Roberts….Orleans

5025….Jean-Noel Gilbert….Orleans

2099….Jenna Bender….Orleans

2875….Jennifer Hausman….Orleans

2632….Jim Ward….Orleans

2906….Joan Tourangeau….Orleans

1323….John Heffernan….Orleans

5066….John Madower….Orleans

2914….John Tardif….Orleans

4930….Judith Finn….Orleans

2652….Kathy Wiens….Orleans

659…..Ken Lindsay….Orleans

5032….Linda Brunet….Orleans

1711….Linda Houle-Robert….Orleans

2625….Lissa Allaire….Orleans

1469….Louise Hamelin….Orleans

2659….Louise Laurin….Orleans

767…..Luc Charlebois….Orleans

4052….Marie-Helene Labrie….Orleans

3864….Mark Iezzi….Orleans

1776….Mathieu Mili….Orleans

2244….Matthew Upton….Orleans

2191….Melanie Trumpower….Orleans

4129….Michelle Ward….Orleans

4166….Moira Carriere….Orleans

2800….Mylene Quesnel….Orleans

2865….Neale Chisnall….Orleans

1590….Patricia Coons….Orleans

2861….Paul Menard….Orleans

3959….Peter Belair….Orleans

4229….Peter Lariviere….Orleans

4038….Ralph Hodgins….Orleans

2667….Robert Leblanc….Orleans

4074….Robert Simard….Orleans

4785….Romeo Glenn Sumido….Orleans

2731….Serge Arseneault….Orleans

4110….Stan Baldwin….Orleans

1223….Stephane Montpetit….Orleans

791…..Steven Tremblay….Orleans

418…..Stuart Barr….Orleans

2954….Suzanne Daleman….Orleans

2431….Terry Brown….Orleans

4363….Veronique Ferland….Orleans

4822….Bob Ireland….Osgoode

 

OTTAWA NAMES

 

5119….Aaron Auyeung....Ottawa

2911….Abdel Idris

4538….Abdulhak Nagy

1073….Adam Rudner

3595….Admassu Abebe

2958….Ahmed Saba

3063….Alain Dugas

3650….Alain Gendron

2630….Alan Born

1078….Alan Chaput

1057….Albert Saikaley

1909….Alek Mackie

1575….Alex Cullen

2142….Alex Sintu

4109….Alexandra Pettit

2334….Alexis Dallaire

3876….Alison Dewar

5080….Alison Trant

2147….Alistair Forster

1034….Allan Macphee

4844….Amanda Konnik

5008….Amandeep Kanwal

2697….Amira Mohamed

3154….Amy Coy

2913….Amy Donaghey

3025….Amy Mckay

4214….Andre Campeau

4107….Andrea Matthews

914…..Andreas Weichert

3039….Andree-Anne Girard

2188….Andrew Gibson

2096….Andrew Ha

3526….Andrew Ledger

1193….Andrew Macdonald

1607….Andrew Rude

3815….Andy Mazerolle

2069….Andy Skinn

5123….Angela Abbey

4404….Angela Rowland

4001….Angelina Singson Boucher

2543….Angelo Fatoric

2025….Angie Boucher

4631….Ann Macdonald

4079….Ann Marie Fyfe

3714….Anna Bretzlaff

4473….Anna Pham

4981….Anna Westerlund

4216….Anne Strangelove

2023….Arash Mahin

431…..Arif Aziz

159…..Arkadiusz Rydel

4165….Arnoldo Guerra

2376….Art Binch

4574….Audrey Corsi Caya

953…..Avdo Nalic

4454….Aydin Mirzaee

3505….Barry Knapp

116…..Ben Cattaneo

1195….Ben Lee

3238….Ben Lindsay

826…..Benoit Gauthier

4884….Benoit Labreche

4250….Berkan Pazarci

1876….Bernard Charlebois

281…..Bernard Couchman

752…..Beth Sabourin

1020….Beverley Wells

2931….Bill McEachern

2985….Blair Bobyk

1099….Bob Laughton

2215….Bob McGillivray

2157….Bonnie Wilken

4472….Brad Nixon

2331….Bradley Sinclair

1422….Breelyn Lancaster

5051….Brenda Cerson

4469….Brenda Leifso

5079….Brenda Wannell

1550….Brenda Wills

3687….Brendon Andrews

4819….Brent McRann

5048….Brian McNeill

1903….Brian Robar

3696….Brigitte Fontille

905…..Bruce Haydon

1822….Bruce Lefebvre

2676….Bruce McLaurin

2885….Bruce Sheppard

2500….Cal Martell

1209….Cal Mitchell

398…..Caleb Netting

1584….Camille West

2314….Carolyn Botting

4437….Carolyn Denyer-Perkins

3258….Carolyn Leckie

165…..Carolyn Tapp

5059….Casey Cerson

3776….Cassandra Chouinard

1604….Catherine Henry

5075….Catherine Milley

4078….Catherine Rivard

4312….Cathy Mckinnon

3877….Cathy Pacella

4632….Cathy Takahashi

1846….Cayman Rock

439…..Chad Humeniuk

2822….Chantal Campbell

4089….Chantal Pilon

1127….Charles Johnson

1963….Charles Pryce

1605….Chelsea Howard

5130….Cheney Glenn

1491….Cheryl Mason

2117….Chris Bartholomew

2722….Chris Fenwick

925…..Chris Galley

739…..Chris Jermyn

3586….Chris Snow

3860….Chris Steele

1925….Chris Warren

1880….Christe Desgranges-Farquh

2918….Christian Cattan

2574….Christian Lavoie

2674….Christine Geraghty

1850….Christine Turmaine

895…..Christopher Edwards

3666….Christopher Kelly

3519….Christopher MacKay

4449….Christopher Mah

1654….Christopher Murray

1053….Christopher Paine

2073….Christopher Reid

2081….Christopher Yule

3834….Cindy Chung

4116….Claude Beland

2905….Claude Papineau

388…..Claude Tardif

4086….Colin Marvin

417…..Colin McFarlane

1731….Colleen Bastien

4106….Colleen Bigelow

1311….Colleen Daly

2112….Colleen McCutcheon

2794….Cory Van Hoof

2510….Craig Crawley

4971….Craig Forcese

502…..Craig Kowalik

3757….Craig Taylor

4827….Crystal Shreve

1817….Dale Sandy

1228….Damien Boyle

4126….Dan Carnrite

3020….Dan Howes

1942….Dan St-Arnaud

1997….Daniel Anderson

1625….Daniel Gauthier

1830….Daniel Reifler

2039….Daren Kelland

2950….Darlene Joyce

536…..Darren Gilmour

693…..Daryl Howes

3974….Dave Goods

341…..Dave Marcotte

670…..Dave Silvester

2420….David Adderley

1947….David Bedard

4067….David Bergeron

981…..David Dawson

500…..David De Almeida

804…..David Duchesne

4997….David Fobert

848…..David Hunter

4476….David Innes

677…..David McCaw

1800….David McClintock

2538….David Morgan

277…..David Nogas

4065….David Perry

156…..David Rain

5071….David Tappin

258…..David Toomey

2842….Dawn Lomer

3480….Dean Belway

4773….Deborah Yu

5041….Debra Ducharme

4820….Denis Gratton

4885….Dennene Huntley

4551….Dennis Benoit

3685….Dennis Smith

2221….Dennis Toews

1182….Dennis Waite

2040….Derek Schroeder

2638….Derek Spriet

4980….Diana Babor

4937….Diana Devine

2828….Diane Robertson

3387….Diego Tremblay

1813….Don Harrison

334…..Donald Drysdale

2672….Doreen Lipovski

2687….Doug Eagle

506…..Duaine Simms

1175….Dustin Beach

4157….Ed Lander

351…..Eddy Smith

3024….Edith Duarte

168…..Edmund Thomas

2540….Edward Fox

3482….Elana Fric-Shamji

773…..Eloi Duguay

1608….Emelyn Rude

4100….Emily Joyce

4946….Emma Salt

5070….Emmy Verdun

1254….Erendira Perez

951…..Eric Arseneault

1255….Eric Betteridge

763…..Eric Edora

831…..Eric Heiden

531…..Eric Stadnyk

4084….Erica Beatty

1647….Erin Enros

1966….Erin Mayo

2857….Erin O'Donnell

3593….Etienne Goudreau

1585….Eunice West

4728….Evan Solomon

837…..Faris Cornell

2860….Faye Goldman

5081….Fiona Murray

2887….Fletcher Cudmore

4178….Francesca Craig

2617….Francis Fernandes D Sousa

4882….Francis Lauzier

4189….Franco Pasqualini

2573….Frank Brunetta

2934….Frank D'Angelo

4887….Frank Keeley

2072….Fred Pelletier

3411….Gabriel Alvarez

2874….Gabriela Balajova

412…..Garth Rayburn

4188….Genevieve Ashton

4636….Gennifer Stainforth

4130….Geoffrey Delage

1493….George Wehbi

4726….Georgette Demers

2280….Gerry Conlin

4681….Gerry Doucette

2969….Gilles St-Pierre

2164….Gino Rinaldi

1226….Glenn Boustead

5122….Gloria Fox

690…..Glynn Barnard

409…..Graham Acreman

2283….Graham Schuler

1056….Graham Suffield

2098….Graham Thatcher

3745….Grant Armstrong

1812….Grant Blanchard

1132….Greg Friesen

3871….Greg Kehoe

2432….Greg Lamb

1434….Greg MacDougall

3298….Greg Newsham

413…..Greg Potts

3404….Gregory Lemoyne

354…..Gurminder Singh

173…..Guy Boyd

1234….Haben Kalaty

1250….Haley Abugov

4191….Hannah Wilkinson

5091….Heather Earle

372…..Heather Hillsburg

2169….Heather Lewis

3577….Heather Mccready

1833….Heather Watson

2012….Heather Watts

2523….Heather Willett

4329….Heidi Lenz

4409….Heidi Vallinga

129…..Helen Gagne

5087….Helene Lepine

1641….Henrick Lafleche

4221….Howard Cohen

4888….Howard Manderson

3108….Hudson Lytle

4350….Hugo Prudhomme

2819….Ian Breneman

3003….Ian Murphy

3004….Ian Scowcroft

261…..Ian Simpson

3728….Ina Bartlett

4528….Ione Jayawardena

5103….Irene Dionne

2972….Irene Perry

3721….Isabel Tremblay

2143….Ivan Stefanov

2511….Jackie Benn

4303….Jackie Forman

4180….Jacquelyn Wingrove

2079….James Beaupre

4015….James Campbell

4880….James Carere

481…..James Dutrisac

2351….James Jun

1215….James Peltzer

1820….Jamie Anderson

2408….Jamie Driscoll

3585….Jamie Hurst

4481….Jamie Lee

3499….Jamila Gubbels

3916….Jane Brunetta

3592….Jane Rooney

2779….Janet Lovelady

4650….Janet Sol

4867….Janice Morlidge

1164….Jared Broughton

784…..Jason Bussey

2268….Jason Duhaime

283…..Jason Lawton

366…..Jason Mackey

3232….Jason Riordon

2769….Jason Stewart

4660….Jason Williams

2053….Jean Lapointe

907…..Jeff Bowes

999…..Jeff McCue

3213….Jeff Moore

1220….Jeffrey Reid

1040….Jeffrey Smith

2670….Jen Milligan

2074….Jennifer Crain

4902….Jennifer Fraser

4702….Jennifer Hartley

4081….Jennifer Moores

3863….Jennifer North

948…..Jennifer Wallis

2871….Jenny Kehrberger

960…..Jeremy Leal

4140….Jesper Lind

2118….Jessica Eamer

2247….Jessica Evans

4974….Jesula Drouillard

2943….Jill Ainsworth

357…..Jill Donak

2982….Jill Kolisnek

1556….Jim Penman

2584….Jim Ryan

4441….Jim Stewart

2834….Joanne Bradley

2310….Joanne Kurtz

1907….Joanne Lennon

3854….Jo-Anne Macdonald

183…..Joe Ross

1856….Joe Smith

834…..Joe Tegano

2460….Joel Koffman

3736….Joey Palomaki

1203….John Beaudoin

2071….John Gelder

373…..John Gorman

3811….John O'Connell

1971….John Ruttle

4879….John Scoles

2078….John Stoddart

917…..John Welsh

1334….John Wilson

2123….John Young

4059….Jolene Savoie

3127….Jonathan Hache

4555….Jonathan Hurn

1310….Jonathan Liddell

5116….Jonathan Racicot

1595….Jonathan Timlin

3670….Jose Marti Castillo Barba

3995….Josée Surprenant

1657….Joseph Kozar

4961….Joseph Rios

403…..Josh Bates

2285….Josh Roy

3339….Joshua Brunetta

4970….Juan Navarro

4896….Julie Burke

1712….Julie Dale

4716….Julie Laflamme

4017….Julie Lefebvre

4219….Julie Samson

1972….Julie Soucy

5095….Justin Pike

576…..Kailey McLachlan

525…..Karen Atkinson

5064….Karen Burns

4619….Karen Dillon

4082….Karen Jeffery

4427….Karen Meades

3820….Karen Oberthier

3968….Karen Sauve

2546….Kari Ferlatte

861…..Karim Fekih

1207….Karim Seddiki

4451….Karine Bunny Circé

1245….Kate McGrath

2648….Kate Borowec

119…..Kate Corsten

1322….Katherine Halhed

4179….Kathleen Gifford

2088….Kathy Kyritzopoulos

3214….Katie O'connell

2701….Kazutoshi Nishizawa

49……Kd Pacer

4587….Keegan Kuiack

1569….Keith Gallop

445…..Keith Pomakis

4102….Keith Savage

864…..Kelly Knoll

2100….Keltie Voutier

3686….Ken Backer

2134….Ken Farquhar

814…..Ken Grant

4094….Ken Hoffman

1900….Ken Morrison

3637….Ken Whiting

2061….Kenneth Inbar

4604….Kerry Nolan

1413….Kerstin Hogg

3396….Kevin Jones

2259….Kevin Matthews

666…..Kevin Ready

4806….Kevin Shaw

4200….Kevin Wannell

4672….Kezia Martin

4904….Kia Goutte

1047….Kieran Jones

3634….Kim Baars

3988….Kim Benjamin

4009….Kim Moir

2768….Kim St-Denis

5036….Kim White

2451….Kim Wright

2020….Kimberley Marcheterre

4414….Kimberly Rennie

3126….Kimberly Vo

3741….Kindra Lewis

3405….Kita Szpak

2275….Kris Bulmer

2789….Krista Macdonald

1330….Kristin Konnyu

3008….Kristin MaCrae

3697….Kristine Simpson

3771….Kristopher Dixon

1379….Krzysztof Blazejewicz

5058….Kumar Saha

2679….Kuniko Soda

604…..Kurt Stolberg

1985….Kyle Bazinet

1100….Lara Small

3150….Larry Bierworth

700…..Laura Bayne

3941….Laura Moran

4581….Laurel Rasmus

4640….Lauren Gamble

4582….Lauren Geloso

3026….Lauren Wells

2170….Laurent-Gill Bussieres

923…..Lawrence Conway

786…..Lawrence Varga

4825….Leah Beaudette

3963….Leigh Howe

2083….Leon Sutherland

4982….Lesley Pacer Holmes

3679….Leslie Robertson

2634….Lester Kovac

3491….Linda Lewis

2212….Lisa Addison

4564….Lisa Bernier

4432….Lisa Dagenais

2307….Lisa Potter

2108….Lise Patterson

3917….Loc Pham

987…..Louis Bastiand

1341….Louis Comerton

4762….Louise Rachlis

1233….Lucas Mccall

3997….Lucie Villeneuve

3722….Lucille Roy

2621….Luc-Rock Paquin

4542….Luis Cabezas

2352….Luvy Gonzalez

2594….Lyman Jones

4000….Lynda Poulin

1886….Lynn Ferron

3061….Mandy Smith

2964….Marc Patry

2175….Marc-Andre Lacombe

4518….Marc-Andre Millaire

2155….Marc-Andre O'Rourke

4921….Marcel Losier

4886….Marcel Neron

3788….Maria Jacko

3838….Maria Pooley

4055….Marie Maltais

4987….Marie-Josee Sevigny

5127….Mark Boyle

2178….Mark Bunny Wigmore

115…..Mark Carney

872…..Mark Caulfield

2551….Mark Coates

440…..Mark Manners

1066….Mark Mclean

1018….Mark Seebaran

5121….Markus Besemann

3785….Martha McGrath

2426….Martin Corsten

480…..Marwan Dirani

2788….Mary Martineau

3887….Mathew Samuel

3937….Mathieu Cayer

3629….Mathieu Pigeon

1308….Matin Fazelpour

416…..Matt Brillinger

3861….Matt Mulligan

3055….Matt Nicol

1511….Matthew Campbell

3511….Matthew Dewolfe

1186….Matthew Eglin

1190….Matthew Morash

2580….Matthew Osika

2174….Matthew Perkins

171…..Matthew Whyte

282…..Max Bunny Reede

1305….Maxime Rousseaux

4016….Meagan Campbell

1388….Meagan Olivier

4482….Meg Mccallum

2086….Megan Tam

2897….Meghan McKenna

181…..Mehmet Danis

4586….Melanie Farrell

4667….Melissa Perks

2102….Michael D’Eca

1514….Michael Dent

2248….Michael Groves

4439….Michael Hall

2251….Michael Hansen

3322….Michael Kelland

360…..Michael Martin

4638….Michael Price

3729….Michael Stomphorst

4215….Michael Strangelove

172…..Michael Wing

1327….Michel Gagnon

5005….Michel Leclerc

2622….Michelle Davidson

4571….Michelle Keough

276…..Michelle Schuler

2882….Michelle Zunti

414…..Mick Yetman

291…..Mike Christie

4661….Mike Clarke

1325….Mike Corbett

2680….Mike Cummings

175…..Mike Davis

4883….Mike MacNeil

1914….Mike Mccluskie

1021….Mike Newman

821…..Mike Stanley

1181….Mike White

1013….Miyuki Okawa

2022….Mohammad Mahin

4520….Monica Richard

3521….Morgan Marston

5074….Nahie Bassett

4019….Nancy Ferguson

1797….Nancy Lau

3383….Nancy Macdonell

3015….Naomi Schwartz

1502….Nathan Forester

361…..Nathaniel Hutchinson

3540….Negin Hatam

1606….Neil Wilson

4054….Nenad Marovac

1629….Nicholas Galambos

3198….Nicholas Marum

1561….Nick Davies

3506….Nick Gamache

2909….Nicole Mikhael

5117….Nik Hazledine

4663….Nishita Jerath

654…..Noel Harrington

3359….Norman Yanofsky

845…..Olivier Dumetz

2119….Omer Majeed

419…..Pascal Bessette

1345….Pascal Ilboudo

3665….Pascale Harvey

1645….Pat Barbeau

4213….Patrick Clermont

2312….Patrick Dumond

544…..Patrick Girard

980…..Patrick Gorman

2633….Patrick Miron

1304….Paul Chouinard

4818….Paul Hansen

4064….Paul Holmes

1632….Paul Mikota

714…..Paul Steeves

2576….Paul Tessier

169…..Paul Van Den Bosch

1387….Paul Von Schoenberg

4502….Paula Hall

1934….Penny Vezina

4928….Peter Harrison

2901….Peter Jurt

3451….Peter Kielstra

2491….Peter Lyman

1151….Peter Mason

2135….Peter Saturley

1757….Peter Shand

483…..Peter Valentine

573…..Peter Way

3789….Peter Wismer

3054….Phat Nguyen

2107….Phil King

511…..Philip Hogg

2318….Pierre Boudreau

1208….Pierre Paquette

3688….Pierrick Le Monnier

1867….Prichya Sethchindapong

3403….Rachel Fahlman

2211….Rajkumar Nagarajan

2623….Randy Mcelligott

1183….Ranjit Bose

1698….Ranjith Senthivadivel

2193….Ray Townsend

1924….Ray Wong

107…..Raymond Boucher

170…..Rebecca Van Den Bosch

3132….Rebecca Volk

2550….Rene Dionne

1244….Rene Hawkes

4304….Rene-Louis Bourgeau

3866….Reyse Netzke

1045….Ricardo Araujo

3824….Richard Bercuson

1065….Richard F Proulx

3243….Richard Leblanc

1707….Richard Meredith

2782….Richard Tanguay

2802….Richard Wall

3109….Rick Dearden

2161….Rick Dobson

3423….Rick Grant

2846….Rick O'Grady

2585….Rita Abrahamsen

1054….Rob Gallaher

961…..Rob Thomas

574…..Robert Berthiaume

909…..Robert Bowness

2765….Robert Kalbfleisch

186…..Robert North

1373….Robert Parenteau

4931….Robin Mounsteven

3996….Robin Sheedy

4301….Robin Tilsworth

1113….Rod Zylstra

3235….Roger Glidden

1929….Roger Langevin

278…..Roger Wyllie

2598….Roland Chan

3699….Romano Panopio

2410….Ron Newhook

3520….Ron Walker

1728….Rory Martin

2785….Rosina Mauro

3615….Ross Galbraith

2961….Ross MacLachlan

2783….Ryan Allen

280…..Ryan Lalonde

2442….Ryan Macdonald

828…..Ryan Rogers

4648….Sander Post

4671….Sandra Nevill

4302….Sandy Whittaker

4534….Sanjay Mohanta

5086….Sarah Chalk

3623….Sarah Davison

4131….Sarah Mackay

3573….Sarah Melville

4774….Sarah Mustapha

3500….Sari Velichka

3518….Scott Bowen

728…..Scott Burton

663…..Scott Healey

4458….Scott Lexy

528…..Scott McIntyre

1011….Scott Rudan

3436….Scott Sherman

344…..Scott Stephens

847…..Sean Horrall

1472….Sean Maddox

3969….Sean O'brien

2447….Sean Poulter

2292….Sean Ryan

933…..Serge Cote

3920….Seth Powter

317…..Shahab Athari

3297….Shannon Olson

3534….Shannon Weatherhead

2856….Shaul Ben-Yimini

2863….Shauna Hanratty

4733….Sheena Sumarah

4370….Shehryar Sarwar

1752….Sheila Hodges

359…..Shiraz Mawani

2830….Simon Rivers-Moore

4007….Solita Pacheco

4829….Sonia Granzer

4644….Sonia Higgins

2717….Sonya Bisson

1799….Stephan De Wit

4138….Stephane Burelle

2907….Stephane Perras

4646….Stephanie Dunne

337…..Stephen Anderson

1046….Stephen Fertuck

849…..Stephen Lee

1196….Stephen Macdonald

2771….Stephen Miller

3791….Stephen Osmond

2858….Stephen Woroszczuk

4091….Steve Astels

352…..Steve Findlay

816…..Steve Forrest

3767….Steven Collins

1101….Steven Paradine

4901….Steven West

2515….Stuart Bell

741…..Stuart Jolliffe

3033….Stuart Ludwig

4573….Susan Mak Chin

2158….Susan Morris

2220….Susan Rodocanachi

2851….Suzanne Sinnamon

3027….Svetlana Nikonorkina

1198….Sylvain Huard

3513….Sylvain St-Laurent

4412….Sylvie Chiasson

3228….Tadeu Fantaneanu

2959….Tanya Gracie

4624….Tanya Richard

3493….Tara Benjamin

3768….Tara Story

2305….Tarah Hunter

2529….Tarik Khan

2612….Taylor Evans

2940….Ted Zahavich

669…..Terry-Lynn Sigouin

1999….Thai Le

1576….Theresa Kavanagh

4828….Thi Vu

2502….Thomas Benak

852…..Thomas Gardiner

1306….Thomas Westfall

4275….Tiffany Holland

928…..Tim Barber

2644….Tim Hobbs

4889….Tim Keith

871…..Tim Wieclawski

1591….Tim Wightman

2688….Timothy Moses

2082….Tobin Paterson

1602….Todd Morin

4345….Tom Blackwell

2881….Tom Boudreau

952…..Tom Lawson

4891….Tom Woodward

1384….Tony Redican

4814….Tony Tran

5068….Tony Zezza

4952….Trent Abbott

1834….Trent Abbott

2006….Trent McBain

1241….Trevor Allen

2949….Trevor Davies

595…..Trevor Martin

2655….Tricia Brown

4450….Trisha Bunny Conway

3663….Ulric Shannon

3918….Una Blumberga

2199….Urban Wong

2021….Val Walker

3990….Valerie Falcioni

4411….Valerie Kowal

1743….Veronique Boily

2809….Veronique Houle

430…..Victor Gallant

1908….Virginia Vince

2908….Wade Smith

3598….Warren Silver

4077….Wendy Gifford

5014….Wendy McCutcheon

3764….Wendy Wagner

271…..Wesley Huffman

2048….Will Costain

2194….William Summers

2219….Wolfgang Mohaupt

3422….Yong Bai

4892….Yvon Carriere

4620….Yvon Martineau

3040….Zach Mckeown....Ottawa

  

END OF OTTAWA NAMES

 

3583….Phillipa Thompson….Oxford Mills

4903….Steve Thompson….Oxford mills

2131….Brenda Duhaime….Pakenham

900…..Ian Rae….Pakenham

1787….Christian Roy….Pembroke

614…..Jason Vallis….Pembroke

1667….John Gagnon….Pembroke

2489….Krista Johnson….Pembroke

4548….Phillip Bennett….Pembroke

2357….Robin Hill….Pembroke

3948….Steven Cressman….Pembroke

1097….Stewart Campbell….Pembroke

4430….Yves Roy….Pembroke

4442….Cathy James….Perth

2582….Christopher Ryan….Perth

1026….Eldon Paisley….Perth

1211….Matthew McLean….Perth

2595….Michael Degagne….Perth

2920….Darryl Cathcart….Petawawa

3489….Derek Crabbe….Petawawa

582…..Jeffrey Martin….Petawawa

875…..Kevin Britton….Petawawa

5015….Lori Rudderham….Petawawa

4894….Randall M. Binnie….Petawawa

3720….Richard Tarrant….Petawawa

342…..Joejon Noonan….Prescott

3179….Amanda Bennett….Renfrew

235…..Colleen M. Berry….Renfrew

4203….Kaitlyn Arbuthnot….Renfrew

3344….Rebecca Dunbar….Renfrew

3809….April Constantineau….Richmond

3831….Bill Williams….Richmond

4251….Dawn Carruthers….Richmond

4474….Elizabeth McIntyre….Richmond

4605….Gabby Doiron….Richmond

922…..Roger Crispin….Richmond

4584….Angelique Delorme….Rockland

182…..Carl Lacroix….Rockland

2756….Charles Carriere….Rockland

346…..Frank Lalonde….Rockland

3708….Julie Barrette….Rockland

347…..Kyle Rimmington….Rockland

3675….Mario Chartrand….Rockland

2412….Philippe Leblanc….Rockland

3707….Sidney Elbaz….Rockland

3266….Andrew Goodwin….Russell

5060….Keith Jones….Russell

3760….Mary Lynn Lackie….Russell

4419….Mellan Garry Mellan….Smiths Falls

692…..John Macmillan….Spencerville

946…..Alain Bellemare….Stittsville

5042….Alana Thomson….Stittsville

2852….Angus Macdonald….Stittsville

5043….Brent Thomson….Stittsville

4824….Catherine Dabee….Stittsville

4635….Cathie Radley….Stittsville

1594….Chris Leger….Stittsville

2042….Dale Costello….Stittsville

2320….Daniel Farris….Stittsville

3929….Darren Johnston….Stittsville

2485….David Hartholt….Stittsville

4267….Eric Morrison….Stittsville

1921….Gary Banks….Stittsville

2933….Gregory Rusch….Stittsville

2238….Ian Dunn….Stittsville

3604….Jason Lyons….Stittsville

3957….Jennifer Cameron….Stittsville

2018….Jennifer Foulon….Stittsville

3614….Joanne Di Cresce….Stittsville

4544….Jonathan Daniel….Stittsville

1243….Katie McClean….Stittsville

4445….Keith Farrier….Stittsville

2289….Kevin Haggerty….Stittsville

2029….Louise Chayer Ayers….Stittsville

4097….Michelle Cole….Stittsville

2030….Mireille Moore….Stittsville

5120….Patrick Lessard….Stittsville

4455….Philip Lynch….Stittsville

2757….Ralph Richardson….Stittsville

3977….Shelley Baran….Stittsville

3956….Shelly O'Brien….Stittsville

1287….Summer Griffin….Stittsville

4601….Suzanne Savoie….Stittsville

768…..Terrance Archer….Stittsville

2870….Tim Radley….Stittsville

1765….Tom Lilly….Stittsville

1788….Pierre Daoust….Thurso

2879….Kirk Duguid….Vanier

3915….Barbara Clarke….Woodlawn

4197….Christine Jerumanis….Woodlawn

 

I'm absolutely in love with this.

Jackie and Everdeen came over today, and they got all dolled up testing out their Halloween make up, and this was her's. I love how this turned out!

She looks like a barbie.

 

Model: Alexandria Edwards

I'm absolutely in love with this.

Jackie and Alex came over today, and they got all dolled up testing out their Halloween make up, and this was her's. I love how this turned out!

She looks like a barbie.

    

Model: Alexandria Edwards

December 20, 2016 (photo: Dec. 31, 2015)

 

Listed below are the 1,600 runners who have registered (as of Dec. 20, 2016) for the Resolution Run, taking place in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, on the early evening of December 31, 2015. What a way to start your new-year's celebration!

 

** The run is presented by the Running Room stores across Canada and in 6 USA locations, and is sponsored by Pure Protein®

 

www.resolutionrun.ca/register-cities-s14071

 

** If you live near one of these cities, why not register for this year's race, or put it on the calendar for next year?

 

See also, pictures taken by a runner, from December 31 in :

2015,

2014,

2013,

2012,

2011,

2010,

2009.

 

-------------------------------------------------------------

The runners for the 5k and 10k races are listed by community, and alphabetically by first name. The larger local communities are listed first.

 

A. Ontario (Ottawa, Kanata, Nepean, Orleans, etc.)

B. Québec

C. Other Canadian provinces

D. Outside Canada

............................................................................

A.1 Ottawa 5k

 

Abhu Dhanda

Aidan Newey

Albert Van Benthem

Alexander Cau

Alexandra Phelps

Alexandra Thompson

Alexandre Beaulieu

Alison Barry

Allison Clyde

Alyssa Doering

Amy Tsoi

Amy Wade

Andrew Weston

Angela Gehrels

Angela Quinlan

Anna Afghan

Anne MacDonald

Anne Young

Antoine Landrivon

Antonietta Chiocchio

Ashley Cowan

Ashley Walker

Ava Momoli

Barbara Dundas

Barbara McAllister

Barbara Raymond

Ben Grove

Betty Bulman

Blaine Pinch

Bob Fay

Bob McNeil

Brenda Ashe

Brenda Derouin

Brenda Gaitens

Brenda Thomson

Bruce Steel

Camille Neyson

Carmen Parsons

Carole Levesque

Caroline Haering

Caroline Horsburgh

Caroline Ladanowski

Carolyn Chacksfield

Carrie Reid

Carrol Lunau

Carrolyn Johnston

Cassandra Wilson

Catherine Lafontaine

Catherine Mavriplis

Cathy Datars

Celeste Irvine-Jones

Chantal Beaudin

Chantal St-Pierre

Chantal Zeitoun

Chelsey Payton-Stewart

Cheryl McIntyre

Cheryl Pleadwell

Chloe Lavoie

Christa Kovac

Christine Derouin

Christine Di Loreto

Christine Dubois

Christine Fay

Christine Heron

Claire Trudel

Claudia Rutherford

Coreen Corcoran

Cory Johnstone

Craig McAllister

Craig Seko

Cynthia Clavering

Cynthia Piche

Cynthia Roy

Cynthia Thompson

Dan McGlinchey

Danielle Beaulieu

Danielle Henfrey

Danielle Porteous

Dara M Burry

Darion Brown

David Chacksfield

David Desormeaux

Deb Tully

Debby Duford

Denise Gravel Tropper

Dennis Bulman

Diana Crawford

Diana Harrison

Diane Faubert

DJ Thomas

Dominique Montpetit

Dominique Roy

Dominique Vidmar

Donald Waldock

Donna Chevrier

Donna Cousineau

Donna Heyligen

Donna Mandeville

Dvora Rotenberg

Elaine Fournier

Elizabeth Burn

Elliot Pruneau

Emi Koyanagi

Emilie Moniz

Emily Ginn

Emma Chacksfield

Emma Spreekmeester

Erika Mayer

Erin Cordeiro

Fernande Whitfield

Fiona Gilfillan

France Bonneville

Francine Millen

Franco Momoli

Francois Brouard

Fraser Green

Gail Hutchinson

Gail Lively

Geneviève Lafond

Geoffrey Brown

George Moubayed

Ginette Lalonde-Kontio

Ginette Robitaille

Glenn Campbell

Grady Arnott

Guillaume Landrivon

Guy Desjardins

Hanna Stewart

Harriet Merks

Heather Fraser

Heather Gordon

Heather Lewis

Heather Martellacci

Heather Patrick

Ina Mann

Isabelle Beaulieu

Iwona Bierylo

J Smith

Jack Momoli

Jack Silverstein

Jackie Millette

Jacob Price

Jacqueline Mantle

Jacques Lavoie

Jane Heintz Grove

Jane Lebel

Jane Maxwell

Janet Murray

Janet Rumball

Janet White

Janice Bailey

Janice Rail

Janice Tibbetts

Janik Cazabon

Janna Balkwill

Jason Organ

Jean-Paul Beaulieu

Jeff Greenwood

Jeffery Gaitens

Jennifer Blahey

Jennifer Evans

Jennifer Laewen

Jennifer Martin

Jennifer Spence

Jenny Kenmir

Jérémie Neyson

Jessica Wade

Jill Hollingsworth

Jim Balkwill

Joan McNeil

Jo-Ann Brault

Joanne McAndless

Joe Whitfield

Joelyn Ragan

John Downey

John Villeneuve

Joyce McGlinchey

Judy Dwyer

Judy Taylor

Julie Michel

Julie Nantel

Julie Pearson

Julie Stephens

Kaia Gilfillan

Karen Afghan

Karen Knox

Karen White

Karen Yantha

Karine Henrie

Karla Weys

Kate Chacksfield

Katherine Soltys

Kathleen Belair

Kathleen Thompson

Kathy Thomas

Katie Grove

Kelly Mcgurrin

Kelly Mezzetta

Ken Kirkby

Ken Reynolds

Kent Wallace

Kerry Colpitts

Kerry-Anne Livingstone

Kim Caron

Kim Wilson

Kristen Richardson

Kristin Janson

Landy Steel

Laura Cluney

Laura Jammal

Laura Robinson

Laura Sabourin

Laura Twiss

Leandre Pruneau

Lev Silverstein

Liane Cau

Lillian Serrouya

Linda Beehler

Lori Peever

Louise Mandeville

Louise Ouellette-Bolduc

Lynn Hannah

Lynn Pacarynuk

Madeleine Menard

Malcolm Parsons

Mandy Elms

Manny Sorrentino

Marg MacGillivray

Marie-Chantal Bertrand

Marie-France Horton

Marisa Caruso

Mark Mccourt

Martine Lacasse

Mary Murphy

Maxwell Baechler

May Chow

Mayssa Rousseau

Meaghan McClure

Melanie Reed

Melinda Mollineaux

Melissa Ouellet

Michael Balkwill

Michael Dalrymple

Michael Goheen

Michel Charette

Michele Badour

Michele Lemay

Micheline Mathon

Michelle McCormack

Michelle Nicholson

Mimi Chander

Miranda Gouchie

Mitchell Richardson

Murielle Cassidy

Nancy Kenmir

Nancy Porteous

Natacha Riendeau

Obe Brown

Oliver Cowley

Pablo Sobrino

Palka Chowdhry

Pam Elliott

Pamela Martin

Patrcia Balkwill

Patricia Thibault

Patrick Hurteau

Patrick Liston

Peter Kielstra

Peter Orange

Peter Smith

Phillip Bottriell

Phillip Edwards

Pierre Lavoie

Pierre Mandeville

Rebecca Casagrande

Reg Grayston

Reid Reynolds

Renee Sobrino-Spence

Rhonda Birenbaum

Rhonda Wallbank

Richard Lewis

Richard Wall

Rick Derouin

Rick O'Connor

Rick Palmer

Rob Carrick

Robert Adolfson

Robert Cau

Ron Taylor

Ross Howarth

Roula Eatrides

Roxane Robillard

Ruth Hurst

Ryan Mendonca

Ryan O'Connor

Saba Desta

Sabine Beaubrun

Samantha Baxter

Sandra Burton

Sandra Leduc

Sarena Bacon

Scott Burton

Shannon Kelly

Sharon Twiss

Sharon Wade

Shawn Thomson

Shawnda Parsons

Sheena Zain

Sherrie Dagg

Sherry Boulay

Simone Sobrino-Spence

Sophie Gilfillan

Stacey Hallman

Stephan Seillier

Stephane Parent

Steven Cornick

Sue Ashton

Sue Van Den Beek

Sylvia Bakker

Sylvie Sarault

Tammy Dopson

Tammy Elizabeth Kendrew

Tara Donaghy

Taylor Johnson

Teresa Matias

Theresa Humphrys

Tim Olynych

Tom Beran

Tony Bettino

Tracey Gibbons

Tracy Wilson

Tristan Dalrymple

Trudy Price

Vanessa Meikle

Vicky Eatrides

Wendy Harrison

Wendy McCutcheon

Will Carrick

Zoe Heilig

 

A.1 Ottawa 10k

 

Alex Renwick

Alex Weatherston

Alexander Baker

Alexandra Schlesiger

Alison Goss

Amanda Belliveau

Ana Brule

Andrew Marshall

Andrew Shortt

Angela Gagne

Angie Steadman

Anita Choquette

Annette Vermaeten

Ann-Marie Vezina

Ashley Chisholm

Bernhard Walter

Beverly Denison

Bob McCulloch

Bonnie Gazal

Brad Anderson

Brenda Jenkins

Brendan Dooley

Brendan White

Brian Bax

Brian Newman

Bruce Contant

Candice McMullen

Carole Barabé

Carole Dolan

Carole Parent

Cassandra Letourneau-Duynstee

Catherine Ramey

Caz Ducros

Celin Alexiuk

Chantal Pilon

Charles Proulx

Charlotte Newton

Charlotte Nutt

Chelsie Smith

Chloe Bessette

Chris Garrett

Chris Renwick

Christine Murray

Christine Weatherston

Christopher Snow

Christopher Wereley

Claude Schryer

Colin Morgan

Danny Sutton-Long

David Dawson

David Elliott

David Lemay

David Orchard

David Tuck

Debbie Meyer

Deborah Wolfe

Denise Harrison

Denise Walter

Derek Baker

Diane Dupuis

Don C. Cumming

Don Cumming

Donald Bastin

Doug Baines

Douglas McNeill

Duane Faris

Edmund Thomas

Elise De Francesco

Elizabeth Richards

Elizabeth Rodgers

Ellen Curtis

Elysia Van Zeyl

Emily Denison

Emily Diamond

Emily Harari-Bousquet

Emma Morgan

Eric Comeau

Eric Young

France Catherine Ritchot

Fuen Leal-Santiago

Geoff Roth

George Rae

Gerard De Francesco

German Espinal

Gina Bies

Graeme Barber

Graeme Danko

Gregg Reddin

Greta Chase

Heather Duff

Helen Mackie

Helen St. Denis

Helene Boyer

Hilary Dudley

Ian Hunter

Ilonka Jozsa

Irene Dionne

Irene Schelenz

Isabelle Comeau

Janet Lovelady

Jason Corrigan

Jayme Rae

Jeff Bloor

Jennifer Friberg

Jennifer Jarvis

Jennifer McNaughtan

JF Fauteux

Jill Baker

Jillian Andrews

Jo Pasternak

Joan Norgren

Joanne Bezzubetz

Joanne Bradley

Joanne Hart

JoAnne MacNeil

joanne Perry

Jodi Wereley

Joe Gunn

John Balint

John Dudley

Joshua Locke

Joyce White

Judy Robertson

Julie Chretien

Julie Lopez

Karen Jeffery

Katherine Beaudette

Katherine Gormley

Katherine Halhed

Katherine Kacew

Kathi Subramaniam

Kathleen Van Benthem

Kathy Dalley-Hunter

Kathy Heney

Kawal Deogun

Keith Josephson

Kelly Gray Sabourin

Kelly Slumkoski

Kevin Morgan

Kevin Woodley

Kim Barrett

Kim Fisher

Kimberly Rennie

Kory McDonald

Kristin Danko

Kristin Goff

Kristina Jensen

Krysten Chase

Kyle Wilstermann

Lauree Bangs

Lauren Carroll

Laurie Bezzubetz

Laurie Hunt

Lee Beaudette

Lesli Zanetti

Lisa Labre

Logan Martin

Lori Blais

Lori Mitchell

Lorna Newman

Lorraine Klassen

Lorraine Montoya

Maggie Julian

Manon Phaneuf

Marcel Lavoie

Marcelle Gauthier

Marie-Josée Hamel

Mary Anne Jackson-Hughes

mary blaney

Mary Byford

Mathieu Comeau

Meg Stickl

Melissa Krulick

Meritt MacKeen

Michae Richardson

Michael Arts

Michael Keleher

Michael Purcell

Michel Rene de Cotret

Michel St-Jean

Michelle Beauchamp

Michelle Comeau

Michelle Langan

Min Tolley

Natalie Tam

Nathan Cato

Nathan Chaput

Nick Roberts

Nicole Boyer

Nicole Hill

Noreen Marchildon

Pam Clarke

Pascal Bessette

Pat Buchik

Patricia Harrison

Patricia Muldoon

Paul Lawless

Paula Archambault

Pedro Ibarra

Peter Andrews

Peter Bateson

Pierre Deschamps

PK Leung

Ralph Prentice

Ramon Maldonado

Renata Manchak

Renee Corrigan

Richard Duranceau

Richard Ernst

Rita Morbia

Rob Williams

Robert Adolfson

Robert MacLeod

Robert Statham

Rocio Battisti

Roger Hunter

Rosemary O'Reilly

Sandra Monaghan

Sara Charbonneau

Sarah Boni

Sarah Curtis

Sarah Funnell

Sarah Palmer

Sarah Stinson

Sari Abdallah

Shari Nurse

Sharleen Conrad

Shayne Chamberlain

Sheila Sankey

Shelley Baran

Sherry Johnson

Sophie Rheault

Stefan Molitor

Steve Mitchell

Susan Lentini

Suzanne Lafrance

Svetlana Ulitsky

Sydney Maxwell

Sylvain Huard

Tamsin Douglas

Tania Tooke

Tierney Winnett

Tiffany Glover

Vello Mijal

Vicki Bencze

Vicki Plant

Vicky Dalrymple

Vilma Salvati

Viviane Rossini

Wendy Reid

Wendy Statham

Yadly St-Martin

Yang Lee

Yann Lemieux

Yves Prevost

 

A.2 Kanata 5k

 

Alison Edwards

Amy Armour

Andrea Haas

Bernie Armour

Cathie Watson

Cathy Harris

Christine LaRocque

Colleen Kilty

Cynthia Hartlin

Darene Toal-Sullivan

Denise Vierich

Gail Pindar

Gord Champagne

Heather Moses

Helen German

Jaimie Young

Janet Lancaster

Janice Tughan

Jay Pilon

Jen Sotozaki

Jennifer Sturt

Joan Champagne

John Albert

Jordan Pumphrey

Karalee Bowles

Karen Martel

Kerry-Anne Hogan

Krista Quantrill

Lauren Goudge

Leslie Miller

LIZ MURPHY

Mary Murphy

Mary Nute

Mary Young

Michael Poloni

Michaela Sturt

Pamela Ford

Ron Pumphrey

Sandra Forbes

Sarah Taylor

Serge Zolotov

Sharon Lee

Susan Brimmell

Suzanne Dunas-Skinner

Tammy Frye

Tracy McNulty

Trevor Mahon

Victoria Manoli Zolotov

 

A.2 Kanata 10k

 

Adina Manoli

Bhuvana Gopalan

Carrie Manson

Daniel Riendeau

Dennis Lewis

Elizabeth Saylor

Heather Stone

Helen Roper

Ian Goudge

James Muir

Jennifer Lyon

Julie Armstrong

Kara Fenerty

Kristi Herridge

Lynn Douglas

Mallory Swatton

Manon Desharnais

Nora Lara

Rebecca Bergeron

Sarah Gray

Tania Louisseize

Wayne Willmott

Wendy Macleod

 

A.3 Nepean 5k

 

Alex Brancatelli

Alex Mitchell

Allison Sutherland

Angel Gallinger

Angelina Battista

Anik MacRae

Anita Herweyer

Barb Berry

Bradley Rick

Brenna Edmonds

Caitlin McMann

Cameron Denne

Cameron McEwen

Christine Henry

Christopher Hill

Darren Herweyer

Donna McKibbon

Eleanor Hastings

Gerry Blathwayt

Gino Brancatelli

Gregory Sreblowski

Heather MacIver

Jean Paul Rozon

Jeff Threader

John Farrell

Kathleen O'Leary

Kathy Lewis

Kendra Pammett

Kim LaForce

Kimberley Brigden

Kym Ashton

Laura Cater

Leigh Couture

Lori Nash

Luca Brancatelli

Lynda Rozon

Marco Brancatelli

Margaret O'Brien

Mariette Marleau

Marlene Shade

Mary Macies

Megan Harper

Mimi Hadi-Kho

Pam Casselman

Sandra Brancatelli

Sarah Roach

Sierra Weber

Steve Best

Susan Karami

Tim LaForce

Timothy LaForce

Trish Stanke

Wendy Threader

 

A.3 Nepean 10k

 

Barb Berry

Christopher Grose

Clark Carvish

Daniel Lacasse

Daniel Maillet

Douglas Grose

Jeanette Alexiuk

Jennifer Buckingham

Joseph Emas

Josie Qiu

Laura Crockatt

Lori Harper

Maya Shrestha

Michelle Catton

Nadine Parker

Nicholas Grose

Peter Ashton

Samer Forzley

Serena McCauley

Sonja Dods

Tim Brown

 

A.4 Orléans, or Orleans, 5k

 

Aiesha Roy

Allison Leclair

André Parent

Andrea Ives

Andree Bertrand

Anita Paradis

Anita Taylor

Annabelle Mineault

Ashley Oakey

Ben Kachmar

Benoit Gignac

Brenda Gosselin

Brigitte Tremblay

Caron Jackman

Cedrik Lafleur

Cheryl Smith

Christine Racicot

Cynthia Graham

Cynthia Taylor

Daniel Ducharme

Daniel St-James

Danielle Woodland

Darlene Proulx

Deborah Baldwin

Denise Thomas

Diane Laursen

Emilie deHaas

Emma Snider

Evelyne Bruneau

Francine Tisdelle

Francis Sommers

Guy Doucet

Hélène Dutrisac

Jane Featherstone

Janice Mcintyre

Jean-François LeMay

Jeremie Lafleur

Jo-Ann Nixon

Jocelyne Boivin

Johanne Morin

John Vice

Judy Marsh

JuStine Chrétien

Karen O'Hagan

Karina Chilibeck

Kathy Prentice

Katrina Tusikov

Krista Macdonald

Linda Leslie

Lorraine Doucet

Louise Martin

Lucia MacLellan

Lynn Giroux

Madison Taylor

Malcolm Mcintyre

Marthe Bergevin

Mary Beth McGowan

Maxwell Greenway

Melissa Graham

Melodie deHaas

Michelle Elston

Nicole Houle

Paula McClintock

Peter Thomas

Rob Vice

Robert Starkey

Sandy Moger

Sarah Niman

Serge Lafleur

Shona Thirsk

Shonda Horton

Stan Baldwin

Stephanie deHaas

Stephanie Ettinger

Stuart Taylor

Susan Poisson

Suzanne Chartrand-MacKenzie

Tresha Thompson

Uzo Onochie-Roy

Viviane Loiselle

 

A.4 Orleans 10k

 

Aimee Dugas

Amélie Dube

Brent Kelly

Chiara Ansell

Christopher Mes

Claudette Turcotte

Colette Levesque

Daniel Chretien

Danielle Bennett

Danielle Dube

David Parke

Dina Van Den Hanenberg

Donald MacLellan

Eann Hodges

Gaetan Y. Levesque

Janet Hart

Janine Stewart

Jasmine Chretien

Jason FitzGerald

Jennifer Parker

Joseph MacKeen

Julie Mes

Karen Mondoux

Kristina Perrier

Lee Hart

Louis-Antoine Chretien

Louise Bourgon

Lucia MacLellan

Marie-Josee Legault

Marlene Thoms

Mathis Dube

Michael Adams

Natalie Loyer

Nicolas Ducharme

Paul Dube

Philippa Gross

Pierre Laferrière

Sylvie King

Vanessa Pinto

Veronique Dugas

Vincent Young

William Wong

 

A.5 Stittsville 5k

 

Andrea Currie

Cathy Chalmers

Cheryl Caswell

Claire Collis

Dan Pak

Dave McLean

Francoise Stewart

Greg Johnston

Isabella McLean

Jane Martin

Joanne Gage

Joaquin Fernandez

John Guigue

Karen Johnston

Karen Rintoul

Louise Guigue

Richard Mcsheffrey

Roxane Macinnis

Shanon Gagnon

Sue McKean

Valerie McSheffrey

 

A.5 Stittsville 10k

 

Aynsley D'Angelo

Cheryl Dunlap

Cormac McCarthy

Jane Schofield

Julie McDonald

Nancy Boyd

Rebecca Skinner

Susan Fullerton

 

A.6 Other Ontario 5k

 

Danielle Duval…..Alexandria

Katlin Duval…..Alexandria

Barbara Booth…..Almonte

Bob Bassett…..Almonte

Bob Mosher…..Almonte

Corinne Ward…..Almonte

Mark Blaskie…..Almonte

Sheryl Somerton…..Almonte

Vicki Bassett…..Almonte

 

Arnprior

 

Christyl Fenton

Denise Murch-D'Amours

Diana Briggs

Jane Dowd

Jodi Rosekat

Kimberly Duff

Leslie Farrell

Tracey Schock

Tracy Campbell

 

Denis Doucette…..Ashton

Kim Bell…..Ashton

Janet Jones…..Bancroft

Lois Simms-Baldwin…..Belleville

William Baldwin…..Belleville

Francine Lacasse…..Bourget

Pierre Lacasse…..Bourget

Sue Peeke…..Bourget

Darlene Cushman…..Bracebridge

Nigel Ford…..Bracebridge

Nicole Murray…..Braeside

Claire Campbell…..?

Ann Emon…..Calabogie

 

Carleton Place

 

Bonnie Levesque

Cherie Leitch

Eileen Campbell

Gillian Amm

Grace Campbell

Lauren Amm

Leslie Garagan

Lois Ann Graham

Mac Graham

Megan Garagan

Paula Amm

Robin Andrew

T.J. Overton

Taro Izumi

Travis Foster

 

André Bergeron…..Carlsbad Springs

Chantal Bergeron…..Carlsbad Springs

Emile St-Jean…..Carlsbad Springs

Kathleen Weedmark…..Carlsbad Springs

Sharon St-Jean…..Carlsbad Springs

Christine Toll…..Carp

Ellyn Floyd…..Carp

Katie Ferguson…..Carp

Marco Valenti…..Carp

Matt Ferguson…..Carp

Peggy Cooke…..Carp

Randy Toll…..Carp

Sally Miller-Taylor…..Carp

André Paris…..Casselman

Danielle Carrière-Paris…..Casselman

Denise Charette…..Casselman

Stéphanie Charette…..Casselman

Mary Lynn Plummer…..Chesterville

Christiane Rochon…..Clarence Creek

Linda Brunet…..Clarence Creek

Lynn St-Onge…..Clarence Creek

Michel Charbonneau…..Clarence Creek

Suzanne Brunet…..Clarence Creek

Connie Weber…..Cobden

Dan Kirkness…..Cobden

Chantal Desnoyers…..Cornwall

Diane Gilligan…..Cornwall

Diane Ledoux…..Cornwall

Joyce Duval…..Cornwall

Kathleen Hay…..Cornwall

Stacie Currier…..Cornwall

Alexandre Riopelle…..Cumberland

Camille Riopelle…..Cumberland

Cathy Rodrigue…..Cumberland

Jacob Riopelle…..Cumberland

Lise-Anne Bonneville…..Cumberland

Megane Riopelle…..Cumberland

Nathalie Lefebvre…..Cumberland

Patrick Bonneville…..Cumberland

Robert Riopelle…..Cumberland

Simone Joanisse…..Cumberland

Jennifer Campbell…..Dunrobin

Neil Campbell…..Dunrobin

Emily Zufelt-Boulerice…..Embrun

Joan Bell…..Embrun

Robin Bell…..Embrun

Tania Lecompte…..Embrun

Angele Gaulin-Marchand…..Gloucester

Catherine Gaudet…..Gloucester

Clemencia Serna…..Gloucester

David Pratt…..Gloucester

Denis Marchand…..Gloucester

Elaine Willcock.....Gloucester

Raul Perez…..Gloucester

Sylvie Corbin…..Gloucester

Claire Johnstone…..Greely

Frances Muldoon…..Greely

Kathy Kitt…..Greely

Lana Pieroway…..Greely

Madeline Simpson…..Hamilton

Jillian Lush…..Hammond

Elise Larocque…..Hawkesbury

Renée Chartrand…..Hawkesbury

Evan McKeever…..Johnstown

Carmen Saumure…..Kemptville

Colleen Battista…..Kemptville

Diana Tallman…..Kemptville

Don Tallman…..Kemptville

Laurie Stenfert…..Kemptville

Robert Bakker…..Keswick

Dawn Dean…..Kinburn

Kriz Stevens…..Kingston

Carole Dugas…..Lanark Highlands

Fernand Dugas…..Lanark Highlands

Michel Laplante…..Limoes

Madeleine Laplante…..Limoges

Noelle Cameron…..Limoges

Lenny Guizzetti…..London

Frances Brazeau…..Manotick

Lynda Hachey…..Manotick

Lynn Wright…..Manotick

Marc Hachey…..Manotick

Regan Hachey…..Manotick

Renée Hachey…..Manotick

Tori Reid…..Manotick

Craig Killin…..Metcalfe

Julianne Oelke-Simonsen…..Metcalfe

Laurie Brown…..Metcalfe

Shelley Bakker…..Metcalfe

Steve Brown…..Metcalfe

Sylvie Lapointe…..Metcalfe

Tia Bakker…..Metcalfe

Wendy Bissonnette…..Metcalfe

Julie Andre…..Moose Creek

Alan Madge…..Morrisburg

Jocelyn Madge…..Morrisburg

Reta Hamilton…..Munster

Evelyne Gagnon…..Navan

Krista Bowman…..Navan

Lucy Gagnon…..Navan

Catherine Steranka…..Osgoode

Celine Audette…..Osgoode

Andrew Brokenshire…..Oshawa

Jack Cowan Brokenshire…..Oshawa

Leanne Stinson…..Oxford Station

David Wood…..Pembroke

Jane Wood…..Pembroke

Kelly Bredlaw…..Pembroke

Noah Barone…..Pembroke

Tammy Blackmore…..Pembroke

Tracy McBride…..Pembroke

Christopher Brown…..Perth

Nathaniel Brown…..Perth

Sonja Lukassen…..Perth

Mark Dirksen…..Prescott

David McIntyre…..Renfrew

Jody Smaggus…..Renfrew

Terry Doucette…..Renfrew

Anthony Steele…..Richmond

Charles Laperle…..Richmond

Cheryl Gillies…..Richmond

Dana Green…..Richmond

Marie Claude Legacy…..Richmond

Norma Green…..Richmond

Wendy Steele…..Richmond

Erin Crotty…..Rockcliffe

Ginette Snook…..Rockland

Kirsten McLaughlin…..Rockland

Mike Snook…..Rockland

Tanya Desnoyers…..Rockland

Bob Sweetlove…..Russell

Brenda Bakker…..Russell

Dawn Taylor…..Russell

Ian Hunter…..Russell

Mary Sweetlove…..Russell

Mitch Taylor…..Russell

Susan Fetzer…..Russell

Alicia Rosborugh…..Smiths Falls

Tina Rosborough…..Smiths Falls

Donna Greenhorn…..Spencerville

Janet Greenhorn…..Spencerville

Christine Charette…..St-Albert

Elena Lionello…..Timmins

Mark Lionello…..Timmins

Alison Pratt…..Toronto

Christina Digan…..Toronto

Debbie Armstrong…..Trenton

Linda Young…..Vanier

Arlene Dupuis…..Vars

David Potter…..Vernon

Jackie Bourgoin…..White Lake

Steven Bourgoin…..White Lake

Trish Headrick…..White Lake

Trish Schlievert…..White Lake

Brad Thomas…..Whity

Taryn Stones…..Whity

Dan Schaefer…..Williamstown

Penny MacGregor…..Winchester

Ruthie MacGregor…..Winchester

 

A.6 Other Ontario 10k

 

Sue Duval…..Alexandria

Beverley Toderian…..Almonte

Linda Melbrew…..Almonte

Lesley McMann…..Arnprior

Natalie Kelman…..Arnprior

Pete How…..Arnprior

Suzann Townend…..Carleton Place

Rick Blanchard…..Carlsbad Springs

Sue Blanchard…..Carlsbad Springs

Christine Harrison…..Carp

Stephanie Anctil…..Casselman

Brad Rand…..Cornwall

Emily Rand…..Cornwall

Marnie Rand…..Cornwall

Steve Rand…..Cornwall

Daniel Benson…..Cumberland

Gayle Mellon…..Cumberland

John JOANISSE…..Cumberland

Josee Adam…..Cumberland

Paul Mellon…..Cumberland

John Garrett…..Dunrobin

Lynn Garrett…..Dunrobin

Lisa Fedak…..Embrun

Marc Boulerice…..Embrun

 

Gloucester

 

Benson Yee

Darryl Blais

John Palmer

Kelly Dean

Laura Da Silva

Lorna Palmer

Nick Dean

Victor Da Silva

 

Roxann Cook…..Greely

Scott Campbell…..Greely

Melanie Therrien…..Hawkesbury

Pierre Grignon…..Hornell Heights

Donald Leclerc…..Kapuskasing

Carmen Saumure…..Kemptville

Dominique Cavill…..Kemptville

Helene Lamadeleine…..Kemptville

Jim Miller…..Kemptville

Sara Howse…..Kemptville

Susan Mingie…..Kitchener

Dawn Kiddell…..Lancaster

Sarah Bowker…..London

Ginette Talbot…..Manotick

Laura Glasper…..Manotick

Laurie Mclean…..Manotick

Lewis LeClerc…..Manotick

Loni Greenwood…..Manotick

Deb Templeton…..Merrickville

Steve Templeton…..Merrickville

Amy Cain…..Metcalfe

Eva Moore…..Newington

Kevin Moore…..Newington

Chris Angel…..North Augusta

Kristy Tait-Angel…..North Augusta

Laurie Goodwin…..North Gower

Crystal Scheffer…..Osgoode

Eric Scheffer…..Osgoode

Peter Casey…..Oxford Mills

Cindy Gale…..Pembroke

David Watson…..Pembroke

Volkert Bobeldijk…..Pembroke

Janet Carleton…..Perth

Rita Jackson…..Perth

Brenda McPeak…..Petawawa

Claudine Fenard…..Prescott

Jaclyn Jerome…..Richmond

David Stevens…..Rideau Ferry

Ken Brough…..Rockcliffe

Francine Foisy…..Rockland

Joelle Cantin…..Rockland

Lucie Clermont…..Rockland

Marie Christine Neilon…..Rockland

Steven Clermont…..Rockland

Alain Léger…..St-Isidore

Marie-France Léger…..St-Isidore

Julie Filion…..St-Pascal

Emma Bowman…..Toronto

Marc-Andre Lussier…..Waterford Drive

Émilie Montour…..Wendover

Amy Toderian…..Whitby

Donna Magher…..Williamstown

Kathleen Morris…..Winchester

Jocelyne Barsalou…..Woodlawn

  

B. Québec 5k

 

Gatineau

 

Alain Boisvert

Alex Meacoe

Alison Riddle

Amy Gagnon

Andrea Caillier

Anik Viau

Annie Croteau

Benoît Laurin-Jolicoeur

Carole Bertrand

Caroline Huppe

Cassandra Charlebois

Chandelle Jones

Christine Horton

Christine Malette

Cindy Laliberte

Danielle Moisan

Danny de Repentigny

Danny Demers

Dominique Brisebois

Dominique Kenney

Donna Murray

Edith Gendron

Édith Lacasse

Elsa Bédard-Marenger

Eniko Galgoczi

Eric Fournier

Erica Pashley

Estelle Desaulniers-Coulombe

Florence Cecil

Francine Roy

Genevieve St-Georges

Guy Sirois

Helene de Repentigny

Isabelle Desbiens

Isabelle Leger

Jade Cecil

Jean-Pierre Lamarche

Jenny Tardiff

Jérémy Pelletier

Jessica Audette

Jocelyne Lajeunesse

Julie Cousineau

Karrie Rose

Kayla St-Jean

Kelley Madore

Laurie-Anne Rocca

Léticia Bédard-Marenger

Louis Charest

Louise Labine

Luc Levesque

Lucie Prevost

Marie-Ève Labine

Marie-France Lafleur

Marie-Pascal Berthelot

Marie-Pierre Léger

Martine Belanger

Martyne Guindon

Melanie Demers

Nancy Godin

Nancy Vohl

Natacha Levesque

Nathalie Godin

Nathalie Lafond

Noemi Palacios

Pascal Gauthier

Pierrette Jutras

Rafaelle Devine

Renee LeBlanc

Roger Smith

Roxane Caron

Samuel Friesen

Sarah Demers

Sheila Laplante

Stephanie Berry

Susie Allard

Suzie Larocque

Sylvie Marenger

Sylvie Veilleux

TracyLyn Tardiff

Valerie Laframboise

 

Denys Ouellet…..Bromont

Caroline Zenss…..Cantley

Joanie Benoit-Desrochers…..Cantley

Josée Benoit…..Cantley

Sylvain Boies…..Cantley

Julie Beaulieu…..Chelsea

Karen Robetson…..Chelsea

Heather Ferguson…..Dollard des Ormeaux

Bonnie Macgregor…..Grenville-sur-la-Rouge

Michel Paquette…..Grenville-sur-la-Rouge

Diane Corbeil…..Laval

Guy Daoust…..Laval

Veronique Larouche…..Levis

Raymonde Larocque…..Matane

Vicky Princz…..Montreal

Jeremie Vincent…..Saint Jean sur Richeleiu

Maryse Riendeau…..Salaberry de Valleyfield

Emilie Boisvenu…..Val-des-Monts

Marylene Gauthier…..Val-des-Monts

Ann-Marie Etheridge…..Wakefield

  

B. Québec 10k

 

Gatineau

 

Anne Marie Lafortune

Anneke Saacks

Annie Gascon

Annie Valade

Catherine Rooney

Christine St-Laurent

Christophe Rene

Dennis O'Gallagher

Diane Ouellet

Eric Brassard

Ève Beauchemin

Francois Bédard

Isabelle Daly

James Deltour

Jean Larose

Jeffrey Larocque

Joëlle Lafond

Josee Savoie

Liana Griffin

Louise Ferland

Marc Hunt

Martine Pellerin

Mélanie Jamieson

Michel Lapointe

Nadine Maltais

Nancy Beauchemin

Nathalie Morin

Normand Lechasseur

Palma Perrier

Pamela Kirk

Pascal McDonald

Patrick Da Costa

Paula Molnar

Rachel Laferrière

Raphael McDonald

Richard McDonald

Rock Junior Tardy-Lacroix

Roger Couture

Roxanne Takpanie

Sean Maddox

Tatiana Barkova-Dufour

Tim Draper

 

Andre Pilon…..Cantley

Andréa Benoit-Desrochers…..Cantley

Claude Desrochers…..Cantley

Guy Beaulieu…..Cantley

Lydia Pilon…..Cantley

Nathalie Gauthier…..Cantley

Elizabeth Herring…..Canton de Hatley

Agathe Lalande…..Chelsea

Bruce Devine…..Chelsea

Chantal Giroux…..Grenville sur la rouge

Alex Smith…..L'Ange-Gardien

Julie Mailhiot…..L'Ange-Gardien

Marc Smith…..L'Ange-Gardien

Monique Dube…..L'Ange-Gardien

François Vincent…..Saint Jean sur Richeleiu

Jeff Begley…..Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm

Veronique Bessette…..St-Jean-sur-Richelieu

Roxanne Binette…..Trois-Rivières

Annie Larocque…..Val-des-monts

Sylvie Arsenault…..Val-des-monts

  

C. Other Canadian Provinces 5k

 

Heather Macleod…..Alexis CreekBritish Columbia

Mathew Lock…..Alexis CreekBritish Columbia

Drew De Kergommeaux…..Kelowna…..British Columbia

Martin Giddy…..HalifaxNova Scotia

Susy Giddy…..HalifaxNova Scotia

Paula MacNeil…..Sydney MinesNova Scotia

 

C. Other Canadian Provinces 10k

 

Leah Vininsky-Oakes…..Victoria…..British Columbia

John Mildon…..Annapolis Royal…..Nova Scotia

Melissa Keddie…..Annapolis Royal…..Nova Scotia

  

D. Outside Canada 5k

 

Julie Ayotte…..SpringfieldVirginia

Kevin Leduc…..San FranciscoCalifornia

Jeremy Dutton…..LisbonNew York

Brian Terry…..MassenaNew York

Tricia Terry…..MassenaNew York

Emily DeRouchie-McMahon…..OgdensburgNew York

Luc Brunet…..LondonEngland

Rebecca Baechler…..LondonEngland

  

D. Outside Canada 10k

 

Nina Stridh Stenberg…..Norrköping…..Sweden

Delphine Desgranges…..Saint Arnoult en Yvelines…..France

Aaron Smith…..Canton…..Michigan

Alexander Smith…..Canton…..Michigan

Bruce Smith…..Canton…..Michigan

Cameron Smith…..Canton…..Michigan

Christine Smith…..Canton…..Michigan

 

(Plus 229 other runners not named)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Nürburgring

 

Location

 

Nürburg, Germany

Coordinates: 50°20′08″N 6°56′51″E

Time zone GMT +1 (DST: +2)

FIA Grade 1

Major events FIA Formula One

German Grand Prix

European Grand Prix

Luxembourg Grand Prix

Superbike World Championship, DTM, 24 Hours Nürburgring, 1000km Nürburgring, VLN

GP-Strecke (2002–present)

Surface Asphalt

Length 5.148 km (3.199 mi)

Turns 16

Lap record 1:29.468 (Germany Michael Schumacher, Ferrari F2004, 2004, Formula One)

GP-Strecke (1984–2001)

Surface Asphalt

Length 4.556 km (2.831 mi)

Turns 12

Lap record 1:18.354 (Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya, Williams FW23, 2001, Formula One)

Nordschleife (1983–present)

Surface Asphalt/concrete

Length 20.81 km (12.93 mi)

Turns 154

Lap record 6:11.13 (West Germany Stefan Bellof, Porsche 956, 1983, WEC)

Combined circuit (1984–present)

Surface Asphalt/concrete

Length 25.947 km (16.123 mi)

Turns 170

Lap record 8:10.921 (France Kévin Estre, McLaren MP4-12C GT3, 2014 24 Hours Nürburgring, FIA GT3)

Nordschleife (1927–1982)

Surface Asphalt/Concrete

Length 22.8 km (14.2 mi)

Turns 160

Lap record 7:06.4 (Switzerland Clay Regazzoni, Ferrari 312T, 1975, Formula One)

Südschleife (1927–1973)

Surface Asphalt

Length 7.747 km (4.814 mi)

Turns 27

Lap record 2:44.0 (Belgium Jacky Ickx, Ferrari Dino 166, 1968, Formula Two)

Gesamtstrecke (1927–1982)

Surface Asphalt

Length 28.265 km (17.563 mi)

Turns 187

Lap record 15:06.1 (Monaco Louis Chiron, Bugatti Type 35C, 1929, Grand Prix)

Website www.nuerburgring.de

Tower of the Nürburg castle

 

Nürburgring is a 150,000-capacity motorsports complex located in the town of Nürburg, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It features a Grand Prix race track built in 1984, and a much longer old "North loop" track which was built in the 1920s around the village and medieval castle of Nürburg in the Eifel mountains. The north loop is 20.8 km (12.9 mi) long and has more than 300 metres (1,000 feet) of elevation change from its lowest to highest points. Jackie Stewart nicknamed the old track "The Green Hell".

 

Originally, the track featured four configurations: the 28.265 km (17.563 mi)-long Gesamtstrecke ("Whole Course"), which in turn consisted of the 22.810 km (14.173 mi) Nordschleife ("North Loop"), and the 7.747 km (4.814 mi) Südschleife ("South Loop"). There also was a 2.281 km (1.417 mi) warm-up loop called Zielschleife ("Finish Loop") or Betonschleife ("Concrete Loop"), around the pit area.[1]

 

Between 1982 and 1983 the start/finish area was demolished to create a new GP-Strecke, and this is used for all major and international racing events. However, the shortened Nordschleife is still in use for racing, testing and public access.

 

History

1925–1939: The beginning of the "Nürburg-Ring"

 

In the early 1920s, ADAC Eifelrennen races were held on public roads in the Eifel mountains. This was soon recognised as impractical and dangerous. The construction of a dedicated race track was proposed, following the examples of Italy's Monza and Targa Florio courses, and Berlin's AVUS, yet with a different character. The layout of the circuit in the mountains was similar to the Targa Florio event, one of the most important motor races at that time. The original Nürburgring was to be a showcase for German automotive engineering and racing talent. Construction of the track, designed by the Eichler Architekturbüro from Ravensburg (led by architect Gustav Eichler), began in September 1925.

 

The track was completed in spring of 1927, and the ADAC Eifelrennen races were continued there. The first races to take place on 18 June 1927 showed motorcycles and sidecars. The first motorcycle race was won by Toni Ulmen on an English 350 cc Velocette. The cars followed a day later, and Rudolf Caracciola was the winner of the over 5000 cc class in a Mercedes Compressor. In addition, the track was opened to the public in the evenings and on weekends, as a one-way toll road.[citation needed] The whole track consisted of 174 bends (prior to 1971 changes), and averaged 8 to 9 metres (26 to 30 ft) in width. The fastest time ever around the full Gesamtstrecke was by Louis Chiron, at an average speed of 112.31 km/h (72 mph) in his Bugatti.

 

In 1929 the full Nürburgring was used for the last time in major racing events, as future Grands Prix would be held only on the Nordschleife. Motorcycles and minor races primarily used the shorter and safer Südschleife. Memorable pre-war races at the circuit featured the talents of early Ringmeister (Ringmasters) such as Rudolf Caracciola, Tazio Nuvolari and Bernd Rosemeyer.

1947–1970: The Green Hell

Nürburgring circuit map, taken at the 1964 German Grand Prix; the legend advises "No driving in the Eifel (mountains) without a lap on the Nürburgring".

The Nordschleife from 1927–1967, with small changes also until 1982

 

After World War II, racing resumed in 1947 and in 1951, the Nordschleife of the Nürburgring again became the main venue for the German Grand Prix as part of the Formula One World Championship (with the exception of 1959, when it was held on the AVUS in Berlin). A new group of Ringmeister arose to dominate the race – Alberto Ascari, Juan Manuel Fangio, Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, John Surtees, Jackie Stewart and Jacky Ickx.

 

On 5 August 1961, during practice for the 1961 German Grand Prix, Phil Hill became the first person to complete a lap of the Nordschleife in under 9 minutes, with a lap of 8 minutes 55.2 seconds (153.4 km/h or 95.3 mph) in the Ferrari 156 "Sharknose" Formula One car. Over half a century later, the highest-performing road cars have difficulty breaking 8 minutes without a professional race driver or one very familiar with the track. Also, several rounds of the German motorcycle Grand Prix were held, mostly on the 7.7 km (4.8 mi) Südschleife, but the Hockenheimring and the Solitudering were the main sites for Grand Prix motorcycle racing.

 

In 1953, the ADAC 1000 km Nürburgring race was introduced, an Endurance race and Sports car racing event that counted towards the World Sportscar Championship for decades. The 24 Hours Nürburgring for touring car racing was added in 1970.

 

By the late 1960s, the Nordschleife and many other tracks were becoming increasingly dangerous for the latest generation of F1 cars. In 1967, a chicane was added before the start/finish straight, called Hohenrain, in order to reduce speeds at the pit lane entry. This made the track 25 m (82 ft) longer. Even this change, however, was not enough to keep Stewart from nicknaming it "The Green Hell" following his victory in the 1968 German Grand Prix amid a driving rainstorm and thick fog. In 1970, after the fatal crash of Piers Courage at Zandvoort, the F1 drivers decided at the French Grand Prix to boycott the Nürburgring unless major changes were made, as they did at Spa the year before. The changes were not possible on short notice, and the German GP was moved to the Hockenheimring, which had already been modified.

1971–1983: Changes

Relative location of the Nürburgring. (around Nürburg, not to scale).

 

In accordance with the demands of the F1 drivers the Nordschleife was reconstructed by taking out some bumps, smoothing out some sudden jumps (particularly at Brünnchen), and installing Armco safety barriers. The track was made straighter, following the race line, which reduced the number of corners. The German GP could be hosted at the Nürburgring again, and was for another six years from 1971 to 1976.

 

In 1973 the entrance into the dangerous and bumpy Kallenhard corner was made slower by adding another left-hand corner after the fast Metzgesfeld sweeping corner. Safety was improved again later on, e.g. by removing the jumps on the long main straight and widening it, and taking away the bushes right next to the track at the main straight, which made that section of the Nürburgring dangerously narrow. A second series of three more F1 races was held until 1976. However, primarily due to its length of over 22 kilometres (14 mi), and the lack of space due to its situation on the sides of the mountains, increasing demands by the F1 drivers and the FIA's CSI commission were too expensive or impossible to meet. For instance, by the 1970s the German Grand Prix required five times the marshals and medical staff as a typical F1 race, something the German organizers were unwilling to provide. Additionally, even with the 1971 modifications it was still possible for cars to become airborne off the track. The Nürburgring was also unsuitable for the burgeoning television market; its vast expanse made it almost impossible to effectively cover a race there. As a result, early in the season it was decided that the 1976 race would be the last to be held on the old circuit.

 

Niki Lauda, the reigning world champion and only person ever to lap the full 22,835-metre (14.189 mi) Nordschleife in under 7 minutes (6:58.6, 1975), proposed to the other drivers that they boycott the circuit in 1976. Lauda was not only concerned about the safety arrangements and the lack of marshals around the circuit, but did not like the prospect of running the race in another rainstorm. Usually when that happened, some parts of the circuit were wet and other parts were dry, which is what the conditions of the circuit were for that race. The other drivers voted against the idea and the race went ahead. Lauda crashed in his Ferrari coming out of the left-hand kink before Bergwerk, for causes that were never established. He was badly burned as his car was still loaded with fuel in lap 2. Lauda was saved by the combined actions of fellow drivers Arturo Merzario, Guy Edwards, Brett Lunger, and Harald Ertl, rather than by the ill-equipped track marshals.

 

The crash also showed that the track's distances were too long for regular fire engines and ambulances, even though the "ONS-Staffel" was equipped with a Porsche 911 rescue car, marked (R). The old Nürburgring never hosted another F1 race again, as the German Grand Prix was moved to the Hockenheimring for 1977. The German motorcycle Grand Prix was held for the last time on the old Nürburgring in 1980, also permanently moving to Hockenheim.

 

By its very nature, the Nordschleife was impossible to make safe in its old configuration. It soon became apparent that it would have to be completely overhauled if there was any prospect of Formula One returning there. With this in mind, in 1981 work began on a 4.5 km (2.8 mi)-long new circuit, which was built on and around the old pit area.

 

At the same time, a bypass shortened the Nordschleife to 20,832 m (12.944 mi), and with an additional small pit lane, this version was used for races in 1983, e.g. the 1000km Nürburgring endurance race, while construction work was going on nearby. In training for that race, the late Stefan Bellof set the all-time lap record for the 20.8 km (12.9 mi) Nordschleife in his Porsche 956, which is still unbeaten at 6:11.13, or over 200 km/h (120 mph) on average (partially because no major racing has taken place there since 1984).

 

Meanwhile, more run-off areas were added at corners like Aremberg and Brünnchen, where originally there were just embankments protected by Armco barriers. The track surface was made safer in some spots where there had been nasty bumps and jumps. Racing line markers were added to the corners all around the track as well. Also, bushes and hedges at the edges of corners were taken out and replaced with Armco and grass.

 

The former Südschleife had not been modified in 1970/71 and was abandoned a few years later in favour of the improved Nordschleife. It is now mostly gone (in part due to the construction of the new circuit) or converted to a normal public road, but since 2005 a vintage car event has been hosted on the old track layout, including part of the parking area.[2]

1984: The new Grand Prix track

Complete distance of 2002 in comparison with the track of 1927.

Aerial photograph of GP-Strecke

 

The new track was completed in 1984 and named GP-Strecke (German: Großer Preis-Strecke: literally, "Grand Prix Course"). It was built to meet the highest safety standards. However, it was considered in character a mere shadow of its older sibling. Some fans, who had to sit much farther away from the track, called it Eifelring, Ersatzring, Grünering or similar nicknames, believing it did not deserve to be called Nürburgring. Like many circuits of the time, it offered few overtaking opportunities.

 

Prior to the 2013 German Grand Prix both Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton said they like the track. Webber described the layout as "an old school track" before adding, "It’s a beautiful little circuit for us to still drive on so I think all the guys enjoy driving here." While Hamilton said "It’s a fantastic circuit, one of the classics and it hasn’t lost that feel of an old classic circuit."[3]

 

To celebrate its opening, an exhibition race was held, on 12 May, featuring an array of notable drivers. Driving identical Mercedes 190E 2.3–16's, the line-up was Elio de Angelis, Jack Brabham (Formula 1 World Champion 1959, 1960, 1966), Phil Hill (1961), Denis Hulme (1967), James Hunt (1976), Alan Jones (1980), Jacques Laffite, Niki Lauda (1975, 1977)*, Stirling Moss, Alain Prost*, Carlos Reutemann, Keke Rosberg (1982), Jody Scheckter (1979), Ayrton Senna*, John Surtees (1964) and John Watson. Senna won ahead of Lauda, Reutemann, Rosberg, Watson, Hulme and Jody Scheckter, being the only one to resist Lauda's overwhelming performance who – having missed the qualifying – had to start from the last row and overtook all the others except Senna.[4][5]

 

The asterisk ( * ) in the previous paragraph indicate that titles which were not yet won at the time of the race are not mentioned here, so there were nine former and two future Formula 1 World Champions competing, in a field of 20 cars with 16 Formula 1 drivers; the other four were local drivers: Klaus Ludwig, Manfred Schurti, Udo Schütz and Hans Herrmann.

 

Besides other major international events, the Nürburgring has seen the brief return of Formula One racing, as the 1984 European Grand Prix was held at the track, followed by the 1985 German Grand Prix. As F1 did not stay, other events were the highlights at the new Nürburgring, including the 1000km Nürburgring, DTM, motorcycles, and newer types of events, like truck racing, vintage car racing at the AvD "Oldtimer Grand Prix", and even the "Rock am Ring" concerts.

 

Following the success and first world championship of Michael Schumacher, a second German F1 race was held at the Nürburgring between 1995 and 2006, called the European Grand Prix, or in 1997 and 1998, the Luxembourg Grand Prix.

 

For 2002, the track was changed, by replacing the former "Castrol-chicane" at the end of the start/finish straight with a sharp right-hander (nicknamed "Haug-Hook"), in order to create an overtaking opportunity. Also, a slow Omega-shaped section was inserted, on the site of the former kart track. This extended the GP track from 4,500 to 5,200 m (2.80 to 3.23 mi), while at the same time, the Hockenheimring was shortened from 6,800 to 4,500 m (4.23 to 2.80 mi).

 

Both the Nürburgring and the Hockenheimring events have been losing money due to high and rising Formula One license fees charged by Bernie Ecclestone and low attendance due to high ticket prices[citation needed]; starting with the 2007 Formula One season, Hockenheim and Nürburgring will alternate for hosting of the German GP.

Rain clouds gather over the Ring during the 2011 German Grand Prix.

 

In Formula One, Ralf Schumacher collided with his teammate Giancarlo Fisichella and his brother at the start of the 1997 race which was won by Jacques Villeneuve. In 1999, in changing conditions, Johnny Herbert managed to score the only win for the team of former Ringmeister Jackie Stewart. One of the highlights of the 2005 season was Kimi Räikkönen's spectacular exit while in the last lap of the race, when his suspension gave way after being rattled lap after lap by a flat-spotted tire that was not changed due to the short-lived 'one set of tires' rule.

 

Prior to the 2007 European Grand Prix, the Audi S (turns 8 and 9) was renamed Michael Schumacher S after Michael Schumacher. Schumacher had retired from Formula One the year before, but returned in 2010, and in 2011 became the second Formula One driver to drive through a turn named after them (after Ayrton Senna driving his "S for Senna" at Autódromo José Carlos Pace).

Alternation with Hockenheim

See also: Hockenheimring

 

In 2007, the FIA announced that Hockenheimring and Nürburgring would alternate with the German Grand Prix with Nürburgring hosting in 2007. Due to name-licensing problems, it was held as the European Grand Prix that year. However, in 2008 the European Grand Prix was held at Valencia Street Circuit, Eastern Spain.

Panorama main entrance of Nürburgring

Fatal accidents

Main article: List of Nürburgring fatal accidents

 

While it is unusual for deaths to occur during sanctioned races, there are many accidents and several deaths each year during public sessions. It is common for the track to be closed several times a day for cleanup, repair, and medical intervention. While track management does not publish any official figures, several regular visitors to the track have used police reports to estimate the number of fatalities at somewhere between 3 and 12 in a full year.[6] Jeremy Clarkson noted in Top Gear in 2004 that "over the years this track has claimed over 200 lives".[7]

Nordschleife racing today

 

Several touring car series still compete on the Nordschleife, using either only the simple 20.8 km (12.9 mi) version with its separate small pit lane, or a combined 24.4 km (15.2 mi)-long track that uses a part of the original modern F1 track (without the Mercedes Arena section, which is often used for support pits) plus its huge pit facilities. Entry-level competition requires a regularity test (GLP) for street-legal cars. Two racing series (RCN/CHC and VLN) compete on 15 Saturdays each year, for several hours.

 

The annual highlight is the 24 Hours Nürburgring weekend, held usually in mid-May, featuring 220 cars – from small 100 hp (75 kW) cars to 700 hp (520 kW) Turbo Porsches or 500 hp (370 kW) factory race cars built by BMW, Opel, Audi, Mercedes-Benz, over 700 drivers (amateurs and professionals), and up to 290,000 spectators.

Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 racing at the Nürburgring Nordschleife VLN Race 8, 2010

 

In 2015 the World Touring Car Championship is scheduled to host the FIA WTCC Race of Germany at the Nordschleife as a support category to the 24h.

 

Automotive media outlets and manufacturers use the Nordschleife as a standard to publish their lap times achieved with production vehicles.

 

BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld made history on 28 April 2007 as the first driver in over 30 years to tackle the Nürburgring Nordschleife track in a contemporary Formula One car.[8] Heidfeld’s three demonstration laps round the German circuit in an F1.06 were the highlight of festivities celebrating BMW’s contribution to motorsport. About 45,000 spectators showed up for the main event, the third four-hour VLN race of the season, and the subsequent show by Heidfeld. Conceived largely as a photo opportunity, the lap times were not as fast as the car was capable of, BMW instead choosing to run the chassis at a particularly high ride height to allow for the Nordschleife's abrupt gradient changes and to limit maximum speeds accordingly. Former F1 driver Hans-Joachim Stuck was injured during the race when he crashed his BMW Z4.

 

As part of the festivities before the 2013 Nürburgring 24 Hour race, Michael Schumacher and other Mercedes-Benz drivers took part in a promotional event which saw Schumacher complete a demonstration lap of the Nordschleife at the wheel of a 2011 Mercedes W02.[9] As with Heidfeld's lap, and also partly due to F1's strict in-season testing bans, the lap left many motorsport fans underwhelmed.[10]

Nordschleife public access

 

Since its opening in 1927, the track has been used by the public for the so-called "Touristenfahrten," i.e. anyone with a road-legal car or motorcycle, as well as tour buses, motor homes, or cars with trailers. It is opened mainly on Sundays, but also many Saturdays and weekday evenings. The track may be closed for weeks during the winter months, depending on weather conditions and maintenance work. Passing on the right is prohibited, and some sections have speed limits.

Nordschleife is often open to the public. Three Caterhams are entering Brünnchen, a spectator vantage point.

Porsche GT3 RS approaching Adenauer Forst, a blind chicane on the Nordschleife.

Crashed BMW Z3 M coupé on the recovery truck

 

This Nürburgring is a popular attraction for many driving enthusiasts and riders from all over the world, partly because of its history and the challenge it provides. The lack of oncoming traffic and intersections sets it apart from regular roads, and the absence of a blanket speed limit is a further attraction.

 

Normal ticket buyers on these tourist days cannot quite complete a full lap of the 20.8 km (12.9 mi) Nordschleife, which bypasses the modern GP-Strecke, as they are required to slow down and pass through a 200-metre (220 yd) "pit lane" section where the toll gates are installed. On busier days, a mobile ticket barrier is installed on the main straight in order to reduce the length of queues at the fixed barriers. This is open to all ticket holders. On rare occasions, it is possible to drive both the Nordschleife and the Grand Prix circuit combined.

 

Drivers interested in lap times often time themselves from the first bridge after the barriers to the last gantry (aka Bridge-to-Gantry or BTG time) before the exit.[11] However, the track's general conditions state that any form of racing, including speed record attempts, is forbidden.[12] The driver's insurance coverage may consequently be voided, leaving the driver fully liable for damage. Normal, non-racing, non-timed driving accidents might be covered by driver's insurance, but it is increasingly common for UK insurers especially to insert exclusion clauses that mean drivers and riders on the Nürburgring only have third-party coverage[13] or are not covered at all.[14]

 

Drivers who have crashed into the barriers, suffered mechanical failure or been otherwise required to be towed off track during Touristenfahrten sessions are referred to as having joined the 'Bongard Club'. This nickname is derived from the name of the company which operates the large yellow recovery flatbed trucks which ferry those unfortunate drivers and their vehicles to the nearest exit.[15] Due to the high volume of traffic, there is an emphasis on quickly clearing and repairing any compromised safety measures so the track can be immediately re-opened for use.

 

Additionally, those found responsible for damage to the track and safety barriers on track are required to pay for those repairs, along with the time and cost associated with personnel and equipment to address those damages, making any accident or breakdown a potentially expensive incident. Because it is technically operated as a public toll road, failing to report an accident or instance where track surfaces are affected is considered unlawfully leaving the scene of an accident.[16] This is all part of the rules and regulations which aim to ensure a safe experience for all visitors to the track.

Commercial aspects

 

One of the original purposes of the Nordschleife was as a test track for auto manufacturers, and its demanding layout had been traditionally used as a proving ground. Weekdays are often booked for so-called Industriefahrten for auto makers and the media. With the advent of the Internet, awareness of the Nordschleife has risen in Germany and abroad, in addition to publicity in print media. In 1999, Porsche reported that their new 996 GT3 had lapped the Nürburgring in under eight minutes, and in subsequent years, manufacturers from overseas also showed up to test cars. Some high-performance models are promoted with videotaped laps published on the web, and the claimed lap times are generating discussion. Few of these supercars are actually entered in racing where the claims could be backed up.

 

The TV Series Top Gear has also used the Nordschleife for its challenges, often involving Sabine Schmitz. In addition, during series 17 (summer 2011) of Top Gear, James May was very critical of the ride quality of cars whose development processes included testing on the Nordschleife, saying that cars which were tested at Nordschleife got ruined.

 

Other pastimes are hosted at the Nürburgring, such as the Rock am Ring, Germany's biggest rock festival, attracting close to 100,000 rock fans each year since 1985. Since 1978, the Nordschleife is also the venue of a major running event (Nürburgring-Lauf/Run am Ring). In 2003, a major cycling event (Rad am Ring) was added and it became the multi-sports event Rad & Run am Ring.

 

In 2009, new commercial areas opened, including a hotel and shopping mall. In the summer of 2009, ETF Ride Systems opened a new interactive dark ride application called "Motor Mania" at the racetrack, in collaboration with Lagotronics B.V.[17] The roller coaster "ring°racer" was scheduled to open in 2011 but never started its operations due to technical failures.

 

In 2012, the track was preparing to file for bankruptcy as a result of nearly $500 million in debts and the inability to secure financing.[18] On 1 August 2012, the government of Rheinland-Pfalz guaranteed $312 million to allow the track to meet its debt obligations.[19]

 

In 2013, the Nürburgring was for sale for US$165 million (€127.3 million).[20] The sale process was by sealed-bid auction with an expected completion date of "Late Summer". This meant there was to be a new owner in 2013, unencumbered by the debts of the previous operation, with the circuit expected to return to profitability.[21]

 

On March 11, 2014 it was reported that the Nürburgring was sold for 77 million euros ($106.8 million). Düsseldorf-based Capricorn Development was the buyer. The company was to take full ownership of the Nürburgring on January 1, 2015.[22] But in October 2014, Russian billionaire, the chairman of Moscow-based Pharmstandard, Viktor Kharitonin, bought a majority stake in the Nürburgring.[23]

 

In May 2015, the Nürburgring was set to hold the first Grüne Hölle Rock festival as a replacement for the Rock am Ring festival,[24] but it fell through. Grüne Hölle Rock has changed their name to Rock im Revier and will be held in the Schalke area.[25]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Nürburgring

 

Location

 

Nürburg, Germany

Coordinates: 50°20′08″N 6°56′51″E

Time zone GMT +1 (DST: +2)

FIA Grade 1

Major events FIA Formula One

German Grand Prix

European Grand Prix

Luxembourg Grand Prix

Superbike World Championship, DTM, 24 Hours Nürburgring, 1000km Nürburgring, VLN

GP-Strecke (2002–present)

Surface Asphalt

Length 5.148 km (3.199 mi)

Turns 16

Lap record 1:29.468 (Germany Michael Schumacher, Ferrari F2004, 2004, Formula One)

GP-Strecke (1984–2001)

Surface Asphalt

Length 4.556 km (2.831 mi)

Turns 12

Lap record 1:18.354 (Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya, Williams FW23, 2001, Formula One)

Nordschleife (1983–present)

Surface Asphalt/concrete

Length 20.81 km (12.93 mi)

Turns 154

Lap record 6:11.13 (West Germany Stefan Bellof, Porsche 956, 1983, WEC)

Combined circuit (1984–present)

Surface Asphalt/concrete

Length 25.947 km (16.123 mi)

Turns 170

Lap record 8:10.921 (France Kévin Estre, McLaren MP4-12C GT3, 2014 24 Hours Nürburgring, FIA GT3)

Nordschleife (1927–1982)

Surface Asphalt/Concrete

Length 22.8 km (14.2 mi)

Turns 160

Lap record 7:06.4 (Switzerland Clay Regazzoni, Ferrari 312T, 1975, Formula One)

Südschleife (1927–1973)

Surface Asphalt

Length 7.747 km (4.814 mi)

Turns 27

Lap record 2:44.0 (Belgium Jacky Ickx, Ferrari Dino 166, 1968, Formula Two)

Gesamtstrecke (1927–1982)

Surface Asphalt

Length 28.265 km (17.563 mi)

Turns 187

Lap record 15:06.1 (Monaco Louis Chiron, Bugatti Type 35C, 1929, Grand Prix)

Website www.nuerburgring.de

Tower of the Nürburg castle

 

Nürburgring is a 150,000-capacity motorsports complex located in the town of Nürburg, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It features a Grand Prix race track built in 1984, and a much longer old "North loop" track which was built in the 1920s around the village and medieval castle of Nürburg in the Eifel mountains. The north loop is 20.8 km (12.9 mi) long and has more than 300 metres (1,000 feet) of elevation change from its lowest to highest points. Jackie Stewart nicknamed the old track "The Green Hell".

 

Originally, the track featured four configurations: the 28.265 km (17.563 mi)-long Gesamtstrecke ("Whole Course"), which in turn consisted of the 22.810 km (14.173 mi) Nordschleife ("North Loop"), and the 7.747 km (4.814 mi) Südschleife ("South Loop"). There also was a 2.281 km (1.417 mi) warm-up loop called Zielschleife ("Finish Loop") or Betonschleife ("Concrete Loop"), around the pit area.[1]

 

Between 1982 and 1983 the start/finish area was demolished to create a new GP-Strecke, and this is used for all major and international racing events. However, the shortened Nordschleife is still in use for racing, testing and public access.

 

History

1925–1939: The beginning of the "Nürburg-Ring"

 

In the early 1920s, ADAC Eifelrennen races were held on public roads in the Eifel mountains. This was soon recognised as impractical and dangerous. The construction of a dedicated race track was proposed, following the examples of Italy's Monza and Targa Florio courses, and Berlin's AVUS, yet with a different character. The layout of the circuit in the mountains was similar to the Targa Florio event, one of the most important motor races at that time. The original Nürburgring was to be a showcase for German automotive engineering and racing talent. Construction of the track, designed by the Eichler Architekturbüro from Ravensburg (led by architect Gustav Eichler), began in September 1925.

 

The track was completed in spring of 1927, and the ADAC Eifelrennen races were continued there. The first races to take place on 18 June 1927 showed motorcycles and sidecars. The first motorcycle race was won by Toni Ulmen on an English 350 cc Velocette. The cars followed a day later, and Rudolf Caracciola was the winner of the over 5000 cc class in a Mercedes Compressor. In addition, the track was opened to the public in the evenings and on weekends, as a one-way toll road.[citation needed] The whole track consisted of 174 bends (prior to 1971 changes), and averaged 8 to 9 metres (26 to 30 ft) in width. The fastest time ever around the full Gesamtstrecke was by Louis Chiron, at an average speed of 112.31 km/h (72 mph) in his Bugatti.

 

In 1929 the full Nürburgring was used for the last time in major racing events, as future Grands Prix would be held only on the Nordschleife. Motorcycles and minor races primarily used the shorter and safer Südschleife. Memorable pre-war races at the circuit featured the talents of early Ringmeister (Ringmasters) such as Rudolf Caracciola, Tazio Nuvolari and Bernd Rosemeyer.

1947–1970: The Green Hell

Nürburgring circuit map, taken at the 1964 German Grand Prix; the legend advises "No driving in the Eifel (mountains) without a lap on the Nürburgring".

The Nordschleife from 1927–1967, with small changes also until 1982

 

After World War II, racing resumed in 1947 and in 1951, the Nordschleife of the Nürburgring again became the main venue for the German Grand Prix as part of the Formula One World Championship (with the exception of 1959, when it was held on the AVUS in Berlin). A new group of Ringmeister arose to dominate the race – Alberto Ascari, Juan Manuel Fangio, Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, John Surtees, Jackie Stewart and Jacky Ickx.

 

On 5 August 1961, during practice for the 1961 German Grand Prix, Phil Hill became the first person to complete a lap of the Nordschleife in under 9 minutes, with a lap of 8 minutes 55.2 seconds (153.4 km/h or 95.3 mph) in the Ferrari 156 "Sharknose" Formula One car. Over half a century later, the highest-performing road cars have difficulty breaking 8 minutes without a professional race driver or one very familiar with the track. Also, several rounds of the German motorcycle Grand Prix were held, mostly on the 7.7 km (4.8 mi) Südschleife, but the Hockenheimring and the Solitudering were the main sites for Grand Prix motorcycle racing.

 

In 1953, the ADAC 1000 km Nürburgring race was introduced, an Endurance race and Sports car racing event that counted towards the World Sportscar Championship for decades. The 24 Hours Nürburgring for touring car racing was added in 1970.

 

By the late 1960s, the Nordschleife and many other tracks were becoming increasingly dangerous for the latest generation of F1 cars. In 1967, a chicane was added before the start/finish straight, called Hohenrain, in order to reduce speeds at the pit lane entry. This made the track 25 m (82 ft) longer. Even this change, however, was not enough to keep Stewart from nicknaming it "The Green Hell" following his victory in the 1968 German Grand Prix amid a driving rainstorm and thick fog. In 1970, after the fatal crash of Piers Courage at Zandvoort, the F1 drivers decided at the French Grand Prix to boycott the Nürburgring unless major changes were made, as they did at Spa the year before. The changes were not possible on short notice, and the German GP was moved to the Hockenheimring, which had already been modified.

1971–1983: Changes

Relative location of the Nürburgring. (around Nürburg, not to scale).

 

In accordance with the demands of the F1 drivers the Nordschleife was reconstructed by taking out some bumps, smoothing out some sudden jumps (particularly at Brünnchen), and installing Armco safety barriers. The track was made straighter, following the race line, which reduced the number of corners. The German GP could be hosted at the Nürburgring again, and was for another six years from 1971 to 1976.

 

In 1973 the entrance into the dangerous and bumpy Kallenhard corner was made slower by adding another left-hand corner after the fast Metzgesfeld sweeping corner. Safety was improved again later on, e.g. by removing the jumps on the long main straight and widening it, and taking away the bushes right next to the track at the main straight, which made that section of the Nürburgring dangerously narrow. A second series of three more F1 races was held until 1976. However, primarily due to its length of over 22 kilometres (14 mi), and the lack of space due to its situation on the sides of the mountains, increasing demands by the F1 drivers and the FIA's CSI commission were too expensive or impossible to meet. For instance, by the 1970s the German Grand Prix required five times the marshals and medical staff as a typical F1 race, something the German organizers were unwilling to provide. Additionally, even with the 1971 modifications it was still possible for cars to become airborne off the track. The Nürburgring was also unsuitable for the burgeoning television market; its vast expanse made it almost impossible to effectively cover a race there. As a result, early in the season it was decided that the 1976 race would be the last to be held on the old circuit.

 

Niki Lauda, the reigning world champion and only person ever to lap the full 22,835-metre (14.189 mi) Nordschleife in under 7 minutes (6:58.6, 1975), proposed to the other drivers that they boycott the circuit in 1976. Lauda was not only concerned about the safety arrangements and the lack of marshals around the circuit, but did not like the prospect of running the race in another rainstorm. Usually when that happened, some parts of the circuit were wet and other parts were dry, which is what the conditions of the circuit were for that race. The other drivers voted against the idea and the race went ahead. Lauda crashed in his Ferrari coming out of the left-hand kink before Bergwerk, for causes that were never established. He was badly burned as his car was still loaded with fuel in lap 2. Lauda was saved by the combined actions of fellow drivers Arturo Merzario, Guy Edwards, Brett Lunger, and Harald Ertl, rather than by the ill-equipped track marshals.

 

The crash also showed that the track's distances were too long for regular fire engines and ambulances, even though the "ONS-Staffel" was equipped with a Porsche 911 rescue car, marked (R). The old Nürburgring never hosted another F1 race again, as the German Grand Prix was moved to the Hockenheimring for 1977. The German motorcycle Grand Prix was held for the last time on the old Nürburgring in 1980, also permanently moving to Hockenheim.

 

By its very nature, the Nordschleife was impossible to make safe in its old configuration. It soon became apparent that it would have to be completely overhauled if there was any prospect of Formula One returning there. With this in mind, in 1981 work began on a 4.5 km (2.8 mi)-long new circuit, which was built on and around the old pit area.

 

At the same time, a bypass shortened the Nordschleife to 20,832 m (12.944 mi), and with an additional small pit lane, this version was used for races in 1983, e.g. the 1000km Nürburgring endurance race, while construction work was going on nearby. In training for that race, the late Stefan Bellof set the all-time lap record for the 20.8 km (12.9 mi) Nordschleife in his Porsche 956, which is still unbeaten at 6:11.13, or over 200 km/h (120 mph) on average (partially because no major racing has taken place there since 1984).

 

Meanwhile, more run-off areas were added at corners like Aremberg and Brünnchen, where originally there were just embankments protected by Armco barriers. The track surface was made safer in some spots where there had been nasty bumps and jumps. Racing line markers were added to the corners all around the track as well. Also, bushes and hedges at the edges of corners were taken out and replaced with Armco and grass.

 

The former Südschleife had not been modified in 1970/71 and was abandoned a few years later in favour of the improved Nordschleife. It is now mostly gone (in part due to the construction of the new circuit) or converted to a normal public road, but since 2005 a vintage car event has been hosted on the old track layout, including part of the parking area.[2]

1984: The new Grand Prix track

Complete distance of 2002 in comparison with the track of 1927.

Aerial photograph of GP-Strecke

 

The new track was completed in 1984 and named GP-Strecke (German: Großer Preis-Strecke: literally, "Grand Prix Course"). It was built to meet the highest safety standards. However, it was considered in character a mere shadow of its older sibling. Some fans, who had to sit much farther away from the track, called it Eifelring, Ersatzring, Grünering or similar nicknames, believing it did not deserve to be called Nürburgring. Like many circuits of the time, it offered few overtaking opportunities.

 

Prior to the 2013 German Grand Prix both Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton said they like the track. Webber described the layout as "an old school track" before adding, "It’s a beautiful little circuit for us to still drive on so I think all the guys enjoy driving here." While Hamilton said "It’s a fantastic circuit, one of the classics and it hasn’t lost that feel of an old classic circuit."[3]

 

To celebrate its opening, an exhibition race was held, on 12 May, featuring an array of notable drivers. Driving identical Mercedes 190E 2.3–16's, the line-up was Elio de Angelis, Jack Brabham (Formula 1 World Champion 1959, 1960, 1966), Phil Hill (1961), Denis Hulme (1967), James Hunt (1976), Alan Jones (1980), Jacques Laffite, Niki Lauda (1975, 1977)*, Stirling Moss, Alain Prost*, Carlos Reutemann, Keke Rosberg (1982), Jody Scheckter (1979), Ayrton Senna*, John Surtees (1964) and John Watson. Senna won ahead of Lauda, Reutemann, Rosberg, Watson, Hulme and Jody Scheckter, being the only one to resist Lauda's overwhelming performance who – having missed the qualifying – had to start from the last row and overtook all the others except Senna.[4][5]

 

The asterisk ( * ) in the previous paragraph indicate that titles which were not yet won at the time of the race are not mentioned here, so there were nine former and two future Formula 1 World Champions competing, in a field of 20 cars with 16 Formula 1 drivers; the other four were local drivers: Klaus Ludwig, Manfred Schurti, Udo Schütz and Hans Herrmann.

 

Besides other major international events, the Nürburgring has seen the brief return of Formula One racing, as the 1984 European Grand Prix was held at the track, followed by the 1985 German Grand Prix. As F1 did not stay, other events were the highlights at the new Nürburgring, including the 1000km Nürburgring, DTM, motorcycles, and newer types of events, like truck racing, vintage car racing at the AvD "Oldtimer Grand Prix", and even the "Rock am Ring" concerts.

 

Following the success and first world championship of Michael Schumacher, a second German F1 race was held at the Nürburgring between 1995 and 2006, called the European Grand Prix, or in 1997 and 1998, the Luxembourg Grand Prix.

 

For 2002, the track was changed, by replacing the former "Castrol-chicane" at the end of the start/finish straight with a sharp right-hander (nicknamed "Haug-Hook"), in order to create an overtaking opportunity. Also, a slow Omega-shaped section was inserted, on the site of the former kart track. This extended the GP track from 4,500 to 5,200 m (2.80 to 3.23 mi), while at the same time, the Hockenheimring was shortened from 6,800 to 4,500 m (4.23 to 2.80 mi).

 

Both the Nürburgring and the Hockenheimring events have been losing money due to high and rising Formula One license fees charged by Bernie Ecclestone and low attendance due to high ticket prices[citation needed]; starting with the 2007 Formula One season, Hockenheim and Nürburgring will alternate for hosting of the German GP.

Rain clouds gather over the Ring during the 2011 German Grand Prix.

 

In Formula One, Ralf Schumacher collided with his teammate Giancarlo Fisichella and his brother at the start of the 1997 race which was won by Jacques Villeneuve. In 1999, in changing conditions, Johnny Herbert managed to score the only win for the team of former Ringmeister Jackie Stewart. One of the highlights of the 2005 season was Kimi Räikkönen's spectacular exit while in the last lap of the race, when his suspension gave way after being rattled lap after lap by a flat-spotted tire that was not changed due to the short-lived 'one set of tires' rule.

 

Prior to the 2007 European Grand Prix, the Audi S (turns 8 and 9) was renamed Michael Schumacher S after Michael Schumacher. Schumacher had retired from Formula One the year before, but returned in 2010, and in 2011 became the second Formula One driver to drive through a turn named after them (after Ayrton Senna driving his "S for Senna" at Autódromo José Carlos Pace).

Alternation with Hockenheim

See also: Hockenheimring

 

In 2007, the FIA announced that Hockenheimring and Nürburgring would alternate with the German Grand Prix with Nürburgring hosting in 2007. Due to name-licensing problems, it was held as the European Grand Prix that year. However, in 2008 the European Grand Prix was held at Valencia Street Circuit, Eastern Spain.

Panorama main entrance of Nürburgring

Fatal accidents

Main article: List of Nürburgring fatal accidents

 

While it is unusual for deaths to occur during sanctioned races, there are many accidents and several deaths each year during public sessions. It is common for the track to be closed several times a day for cleanup, repair, and medical intervention. While track management does not publish any official figures, several regular visitors to the track have used police reports to estimate the number of fatalities at somewhere between 3 and 12 in a full year.[6] Jeremy Clarkson noted in Top Gear in 2004 that "over the years this track has claimed over 200 lives".[7]

Nordschleife racing today

 

Several touring car series still compete on the Nordschleife, using either only the simple 20.8 km (12.9 mi) version with its separate small pit lane, or a combined 24.4 km (15.2 mi)-long track that uses a part of the original modern F1 track (without the Mercedes Arena section, which is often used for support pits) plus its huge pit facilities. Entry-level competition requires a regularity test (GLP) for street-legal cars. Two racing series (RCN/CHC and VLN) compete on 15 Saturdays each year, for several hours.

 

The annual highlight is the 24 Hours Nürburgring weekend, held usually in mid-May, featuring 220 cars – from small 100 hp (75 kW) cars to 700 hp (520 kW) Turbo Porsches or 500 hp (370 kW) factory race cars built by BMW, Opel, Audi, Mercedes-Benz, over 700 drivers (amateurs and professionals), and up to 290,000 spectators.

Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 racing at the Nürburgring Nordschleife VLN Race 8, 2010

 

In 2015 the World Touring Car Championship is scheduled to host the FIA WTCC Race of Germany at the Nordschleife as a support category to the 24h.

 

Automotive media outlets and manufacturers use the Nordschleife as a standard to publish their lap times achieved with production vehicles.

 

BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld made history on 28 April 2007 as the first driver in over 30 years to tackle the Nürburgring Nordschleife track in a contemporary Formula One car.[8] Heidfeld’s three demonstration laps round the German circuit in an F1.06 were the highlight of festivities celebrating BMW’s contribution to motorsport. About 45,000 spectators showed up for the main event, the third four-hour VLN race of the season, and the subsequent show by Heidfeld. Conceived largely as a photo opportunity, the lap times were not as fast as the car was capable of, BMW instead choosing to run the chassis at a particularly high ride height to allow for the Nordschleife's abrupt gradient changes and to limit maximum speeds accordingly. Former F1 driver Hans-Joachim Stuck was injured during the race when he crashed his BMW Z4.

 

As part of the festivities before the 2013 Nürburgring 24 Hour race, Michael Schumacher and other Mercedes-Benz drivers took part in a promotional event which saw Schumacher complete a demonstration lap of the Nordschleife at the wheel of a 2011 Mercedes W02.[9] As with Heidfeld's lap, and also partly due to F1's strict in-season testing bans, the lap left many motorsport fans underwhelmed.[10]

Nordschleife public access

 

Since its opening in 1927, the track has been used by the public for the so-called "Touristenfahrten," i.e. anyone with a road-legal car or motorcycle, as well as tour buses, motor homes, or cars with trailers. It is opened mainly on Sundays, but also many Saturdays and weekday evenings. The track may be closed for weeks during the winter months, depending on weather conditions and maintenance work. Passing on the right is prohibited, and some sections have speed limits.

Nordschleife is often open to the public. Three Caterhams are entering Brünnchen, a spectator vantage point.

Porsche GT3 RS approaching Adenauer Forst, a blind chicane on the Nordschleife.

Crashed BMW Z3 M coupé on the recovery truck

 

This Nürburgring is a popular attraction for many driving enthusiasts and riders from all over the world, partly because of its history and the challenge it provides. The lack of oncoming traffic and intersections sets it apart from regular roads, and the absence of a blanket speed limit is a further attraction.

 

Normal ticket buyers on these tourist days cannot quite complete a full lap of the 20.8 km (12.9 mi) Nordschleife, which bypasses the modern GP-Strecke, as they are required to slow down and pass through a 200-metre (220 yd) "pit lane" section where the toll gates are installed. On busier days, a mobile ticket barrier is installed on the main straight in order to reduce the length of queues at the fixed barriers. This is open to all ticket holders. On rare occasions, it is possible to drive both the Nordschleife and the Grand Prix circuit combined.

 

Drivers interested in lap times often time themselves from the first bridge after the barriers to the last gantry (aka Bridge-to-Gantry or BTG time) before the exit.[11] However, the track's general conditions state that any form of racing, including speed record attempts, is forbidden.[12] The driver's insurance coverage may consequently be voided, leaving the driver fully liable for damage. Normal, non-racing, non-timed driving accidents might be covered by driver's insurance, but it is increasingly common for UK insurers especially to insert exclusion clauses that mean drivers and riders on the Nürburgring only have third-party coverage[13] or are not covered at all.[14]

 

Drivers who have crashed into the barriers, suffered mechanical failure or been otherwise required to be towed off track during Touristenfahrten sessions are referred to as having joined the 'Bongard Club'. This nickname is derived from the name of the company which operates the large yellow recovery flatbed trucks which ferry those unfortunate drivers and their vehicles to the nearest exit.[15] Due to the high volume of traffic, there is an emphasis on quickly clearing and repairing any compromised safety measures so the track can be immediately re-opened for use.

 

Additionally, those found responsible for damage to the track and safety barriers on track are required to pay for those repairs, along with the time and cost associated with personnel and equipment to address those damages, making any accident or breakdown a potentially expensive incident. Because it is technically operated as a public toll road, failing to report an accident or instance where track surfaces are affected is considered unlawfully leaving the scene of an accident.[16] This is all part of the rules and regulations which aim to ensure a safe experience for all visitors to the track.

Commercial aspects

 

One of the original purposes of the Nordschleife was as a test track for auto manufacturers, and its demanding layout had been traditionally used as a proving ground. Weekdays are often booked for so-called Industriefahrten for auto makers and the media. With the advent of the Internet, awareness of the Nordschleife has risen in Germany and abroad, in addition to publicity in print media. In 1999, Porsche reported that their new 996 GT3 had lapped the Nürburgring in under eight minutes, and in subsequent years, manufacturers from overseas also showed up to test cars. Some high-performance models are promoted with videotaped laps published on the web, and the claimed lap times are generating discussion. Few of these supercars are actually entered in racing where the claims could be backed up.

 

The TV Series Top Gear has also used the Nordschleife for its challenges, often involving Sabine Schmitz. In addition, during series 17 (summer 2011) of Top Gear, James May was very critical of the ride quality of cars whose development processes included testing on the Nordschleife, saying that cars which were tested at Nordschleife got ruined.

 

Other pastimes are hosted at the Nürburgring, such as the Rock am Ring, Germany's biggest rock festival, attracting close to 100,000 rock fans each year since 1985. Since 1978, the Nordschleife is also the venue of a major running event (Nürburgring-Lauf/Run am Ring). In 2003, a major cycling event (Rad am Ring) was added and it became the multi-sports event Rad & Run am Ring.

 

In 2009, new commercial areas opened, including a hotel and shopping mall. In the summer of 2009, ETF Ride Systems opened a new interactive dark ride application called "Motor Mania" at the racetrack, in collaboration with Lagotronics B.V.[17] The roller coaster "ring°racer" was scheduled to open in 2011 but never started its operations due to technical failures.

 

In 2012, the track was preparing to file for bankruptcy as a result of nearly $500 million in debts and the inability to secure financing.[18] On 1 August 2012, the government of Rheinland-Pfalz guaranteed $312 million to allow the track to meet its debt obligations.[19]

 

In 2013, the Nürburgring was for sale for US$165 million (€127.3 million).[20] The sale process was by sealed-bid auction with an expected completion date of "Late Summer". This meant there was to be a new owner in 2013, unencumbered by the debts of the previous operation, with the circuit expected to return to profitability.[21]

 

On March 11, 2014 it was reported that the Nürburgring was sold for 77 million euros ($106.8 million). Düsseldorf-based Capricorn Development was the buyer. The company was to take full ownership of the Nürburgring on January 1, 2015.[22] But in October 2014, Russian billionaire, the chairman of Moscow-based Pharmstandard, Viktor Kharitonin, bought a majority stake in the Nürburgring.[23]

 

In May 2015, the Nürburgring was set to hold the first Grüne Hölle Rock festival as a replacement for the Rock am Ring festival,[24] but it fell through. Grüne Hölle Rock has changed their name to Rock im Revier and will be held in the Schalke area.[25]

Jim with Pace car.

 

Driven by Emerson Fittipaldi; 500 production replicas – coupes and convertibles

 

The 2008 edition of the Indianapolis 500 represents Corvette’s 10th time as the official pace car – and a record fifth-consecutive year – and Chevrolet’s 19th time as the manufacturer selected to lead the field.

 

2007 Chevrolet Corvette Patrick Dempsey

2006 Chevrolet Corvette C6 Lance Armstrong

2005 Chevrolet Corvette Gen. Colin Powell

2004 Chevrolet Corvette C5 Morgan Freeman

2003 Chevy SSR Herb Fishel

2002 2003 Chevrolet Corvette Jim Caviezel

2001 Oldsmobile Bravada Elaine Irwin-Mellencamp

2000 Oldsmobile Aurora Anthony Edwards

1999 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Jay Leno

1998 Chevrolet Corvette Parnelli Jones

1997 Oldsmobile Aurora Johnny Rutherford

1996 Dodge Viper GTS Robert A. Lutz

1995 Chevrolet Corvette Jim Perkins

1994 Ford Mustang Cobra Parnelli Jones

1993 Chevrolet Camaro Z-28 Jim Perkins

1992 Cadillac Allante Bobby Unser

1991 Dodge Viper RT/10 Carroll Shelby

1990 Chevrolet Beretta Jim Perkins

1989 20th Anniversary Pontiac Trans Am Bobby Unser

1988 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme Gen. Chuck Yeager

1987 Chrysler LeBaron Carroll Shelby

1986 Chevrolet Corvette Gen. Chuck Yeager

1985 Oldsmobile Calais James Garner

1984 Pontiac Fiero John Callies

1983 Buick Riviera Convertible Duke Nalon

1982 Chevrolet Camaro Z28 Jim Rathmann

1981 Buick Regal V-6 Duke Nalon

1980 Pontiac Turbo-Trans Am Johnnie Parsons

1979 Ford Mustang Jackie Stewart

1978 Chevrolet Corvette Jim Rathmann

1977 Oldsmobile Delta 88 James Garner

1976 Buick Turbocharged V-6 Marty Robbins

1975 Buick Century Custom 'Free Spirit' James Garner

1974 Hurst/Olds Cutlass Jim Rathmann

1973 Cadillac Eldorado Jim Rathmann

1972 Hurst/Olds Cutlass Jim Rathmann

1971 Dodge Challenger Eldon Palmer

1970 Oldsmobile 4-4-2 Rodger Ward

1969 Chevrolet Camaro SS Jim Rathmann

1968 Ford Torino GT William C. Ford

1967 Chevrolet Camaro Mauri Rose

1966 Mercury Comet Cyclone GT Benson Ford

1965 Plymouth Sports Fury P.M. Buckminster

1964 Ford Mustang Benson Ford

1963 Chrysler '300' Sam Hanks

1962 Studebaker Sam Hanks

1961 Ford Thunderbird Sam Hanks

1960 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight Sam Hanks

1959 Buick Electra 225 Sam Hanks

1958 Pontiac Bonneville Sam Hanks

1957 Mercury Turnpike Cruiser F.C. Reith

1956 DeSoto Fireflite Pacesetter L.I. Woolson

1955 Chevrolet Bel Air T.H. Keating

1954 Dodge Royal 500 William C. Newburg

1953 Ford Crestline Sunliner William C. Ford

1952 Studebaker Commander P.O. Peterson

1951 Chrysler New Yorker V-8 Dave Wallace

1950 Mercury Benson Ford

1949 Oldsmobile 88 'Rocket' Wilbur Shaw

1948 Chevrolet Stylemaster Six-Series Wilbur Shaw

1947 Nash Ambassador George W. Mason

1946 Lincoln Continental Henry Ford II

1941 Chrysler-Newport (Phaeton) A.B. Couture

1940 Studebaker Champion Harry Hartz

1939 Buick Roadmaster Series 80 Charles Chayne

1938 Hudson '112' Stuart Baits

1937 LaSalle Series 50 Ralph DePalma

1936 Packard One-Twenty Tommy Milton

1935 Ford Model 48 Harry Mack

1934 LaSalle Model 350 'Big Boy' Rader

1933 Chrysler Imperial (Phaeton) Byron Foy

1932 Lincoln Model KB Edsel Ford

1931 Cadillac 370 Twelve 'Big Boy' Rader

1930 Cord L-29 Wade Morton

1929 Studebaker Series F-10 President George Hunt

1928 Marmon '8' (Model 78) Joe Dawson

1927 LaSalle V-8 Series 303 'Big Boy' Rader

1926 Chrysler Imperial E-80 Louis Chevrolet

1925 Rickenbacker Eight Eddie Rickenbacker

1924 Cole V-8 Series 890 Lew Pettijohn

1923 Duesenberg Model A Fred S. Duesenberg

1922 National Sextet Barney Oldfield

1921 H.C.S. Series 6 Harry C. Stutz

1920 Marmon Model 34 Barney Oldfield

1919 Packard 335 Col. J. G. Vincent

1916 Premier Model 656 Frank E. Smith

1915 Packard Model 548 Carl G. Fisher

1914 Stoddard-Dayton Carl G. Fisher

1913 Stoddard-Dayton Carl G. Fisher

1912 Stutz Carl G. Fisher

1911 Stoddard-Dayton Model 11-A Carl G. Fisher

       

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A continuacion una pequeña lista de famosos vegetarianos que en varias oportuniades han manifestado su repudio hacia la explotacion animal, muchos han aprovechado su fama para hacer campañas en contra de esta misma causa:

  

•GENIOS VEGETARIANOS:

 

Albert Einstein

Pythagorus

Voltaire

Leonardo Da Vinci

Charles Darwin

Sir Isaac Newton

Platon

Jean Jacques Rousseau

George Bernard Shaw

Isaac Bashevis Singer

Socrates

Mark Twain

  

•FAMOSOS VEGETARIANOS ( algunos actores):

 

Carrie Ann Moss (Matrix)

Tobey Maguire (Hombre araña)

Joaquin Phoenix (Del gladiador)

Richard Gere (de mujer bonita)

Natalie Portman

Edward Furlong (John Connor - terminator I )

Alicia Silverstone

Alissa Milano

David Duchovny (expedientes X)

Rosanna Arquette

Alex Baldwin (Actor americano)

Drew Barrymore

Kim Basinger

Dan Castellaneta (voz de Homer Simpson)

Cameron Diaz

Horlando Bloom

Christian Bale

Josh Hartnett

Naomi Watt

Elijah Wood (Frodo)

Kate Winslet

Rachael Leigh Cook

James Cromwell

Sara Crowe

Amanda Dickinson

Mike Farrell

Michael J. Fox

Fiona Fullerton

Bob Gunter

Brad Pitt

Woody Harrelson

Nigel Hawthorne

Mariel Hemmingway

Sherrie Hewson

Dustin Hoffman

Penny Horner

Reina James

Louise Jameson

Jean Kasem

Cheryl Kennedy

Lindy Lawton

Jarrett Lennon

Jennie Linden

Rachel Lindsay

Joanna Lumley

Cal Macaninch

Virginia Madsen

Charlotte Martin

Bill Maynard

Paul McGann

Glenda McKay

Ian McKellen

Virginia McKenna

Rue McLanahan (Las Chicas de Oro)

Amanda Mealing

Spike Milligan

Hayley Mills

Anthony Perkins

Polly Perkins (Trish en Eldorado)

River Phoenix

Tracey Pollen

Linda Regan

Eric Richard

Brooke Shields

Cathy Shipton

John Gordon Sinclair

Marina Sirtis (Star Trek)

Liv Tyler

Clint Walker

Pamela Armstrong

Andrea Arnold

Bob Barker

Phil Cool

Barbara Edwards

Larry Hagman

Kevin Nealon

Leonard Nimoy (Spock en Star Trek)

Jonathan Taylor Thomas

Christine Elise

Pam Ferris

Michael J. Fox

Jennie Garth

Bob Gunter

Woody Harrelson

Mariel Hemmingway

Ashley Judd

Gerard Kennedy

Cloris Leachman

Willamina Love

Joanna Lumley

Vanessa Marcil

Rue McClanahan

Alexandra Paul

Cassandra Peterson

  

• CANTANTES VEGETARIANOS:

 

Abnegation (Punk Rock) Band out of Penn (vegano)

Alan Wilder (Depeche Mode)

Annie Lennox (Cantante de Eurythmics)

Antony Kiedis (Voc. Red Hot Chili Ppeppers)

Barry White (Vegano)

B52s

Belinda Carlisle

Benjamin Zephaniah

Beverley Craven

Billy Idol

Blur

Bob Dylan

Boy George

BOYAA T.R.I.B.E

Brad Delp

Bryan Adams

Captain Sensible

Carol Decker (Cantante fundador de T' Pau)

Cathy Dennis

Charlie Burchill (Guitarrista de Simple Minds)

Charlie Watts (Stones)

Chris Martin (Voc. Coldplay)

Chris Novoselic (Nirvana)

Chrissie Hynde

Consolidated

Corinne Drewery (Swing Out Sister)

Damon Albarn (Blur)

Daniel Johns (Cantante y guitarrista de Silverchair)

Dave Davies (Kinks)

Dave Goodman (Sex Pistols)

Dave Scott

David Gedge

Dee Anderson

Des'ree (Cantante pop britanico)

Dick Dale (King of surf)

Dizzie Gillespie

Doris Pearson (Five Star)

Doug Savor

Dweezil, Moon, Ahmet, Diva Zappa (Hijos de Frank Zappa)

Earth Crisis (Hardcore Band)

Eddie Grant

Eddie Jackson (Queensryche)

Eddie Vedder (Cantante principal de Pearl Jam)

Edgar Froese (Fundador y cabeza de Tangerine Dream)

Edward Kowalczyk (Cantante principal de 'LIVE')

Elkie Brooks

Elvis Costello

Emmanuel (Cantante mexicano)

Enrique Bunbury (Héroes del Silencio)

Farin Urlaub (Cantante del grupo aleman "Die Ärzte")

Fini Tribe

Fiona Apple

Gary Barlow (Take That)

Gary Clail

Gary Glitter

Geoff Tate (Cantante de Queensryche)

George Harrison (Beatles)

Gladys Knight

Grace Slick

Heather Small

Howard Jones (Cantante y compositos britanico)

Ilan Chester (Cantante y compositor, nació en Israel, creció en Venezuela)

Indigo Girls

Jackie Quinn

James

Jane Weidlin (ex Go-Go's)

Jason Orange (Take That)

Jeff Beck

Jessica Cody (Vocalista de Brunswick Spirit)

Jim Kerr (Cantante de Simple Minds)

Jimmy Somerville

Joan Armatrading

Joan Baez (Cantante de folk)

Joe Jackson

John and Yoko Lennon

John Dankworth

Johnny Marr

Jon Anderson (Yes)

Juan Gabriel (Cantante y Compositor mexicano)

Judith Durham (The Seekers)

Julian Cope

Julie Felix

Justine Frischman (Elastica)

K D Lang

Kate Bush

Keith Potger

Keni St George

Kevin Godley

Kirk Hammett (Guitarrista de metallica)

Kirsty Hawkshaw (Opus III)

Larry Mullen Junior (Bateria y fundador de 'U2')

LaToya Jackson

Lene Lovich

Lenny Kravitz

Leonard Cohen (Poeta canadiense y músico)

Linda Perry (4 Non Blondes)

Lisa Loeb

Living Colour

Marilyn

Marisa Robles

Mark Owen (Take That)

Martin & Gary Kemp (Spandau Ballet)

Martin Barre (Guitarrista de Jethro Tull)

Martin Gore (Depeche Mode)

Meatloaf

Michael Bolton

Michael Diamond (Beastie Boys)

Michael Franks (Cantante de jazz)

Moby (vegano)

Montserrat Caballe (Cantante de ópera española)

Morrissey (Cantante de The Smiths)

Mutabaruka

Natalie Merchant (ex- 10.000 Maniacs)

Neil Codling (Suede)

Nekro (Músico argentino)

Norman Blake (Teenage Fanclub)

Olivia Newton John

Omar Hakim (Perteneció al primer grupo de Sting)

Ozzy Osborne

Paul & Linda McCartney

Peter Buck (REM guitarrista)

Peter Cunnah (Ream)

Peter Frame

Peter Gabriel

Phil Collen (Def Leppard)

Polly Jean Harvey

Prince

Rebel MC

Ricardo Mollo (Rockero argentino, novio de Natalia Oreiro)

Ricardo Montaner (Cantante nació en Argentina, creció en Venezuela)

Richard Thompson

Rick Allen (Def Leppard)

Rikki Rocket

Ringo Starr (y su esposa, Barbara Bach)

Robert Smith (The Cure)

Rose Alba

Sarah Cracknell (St Etienne)

Sarah McLachlan

Sarah Washington

Seal

Shelter

Shirley Bassey

Sinead O'Connor

Sinitta

Siouxsie Sioux

Steve Howe (Guitarrista de Yes)

Steve Perry (Journey)

Steve Vai

Susannah Hoffs (ex Bangles)

Tanita Tikaram

Terry "Geezer" Butler (Ozzy Osbourne)

The Beloved

The Captain & Tennille

The Shamen

Tim Rogers

Tom Scholz

Tony Hicks (Hollies)

Vanessa Williams

Vijay Hariharan (Puritan)

Vivian Campbell (Def Leppard)

Weird Al Yankovic

Wendy James (Transvision Vamp)

Wendy O. Williams (cantante principal de Plasmatics)

Willy M (London Beat)

Womack & Womack

Yehudi Menuhin

   

Dutch postcard by Uitg. Takken, Utrecht, no. AX 4600. Photo: 20th Century Fox. Fabian in Hound-Dog Man (Don Siegel, 1959).

 

American singer and actor Fabian Forte (1943) a.k.a. Fabian is a former teen idol from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s who entertained audiences with his music, performances, and films. Eleven of his songs reached the Billboard Hot 100. 20th Century Fox had enjoyed success casting pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley, and decided to do the same thing with Fabian. Until 1999, he starred in dozens of feature films, television movies, and series.

 

Fabiano Anthony Forte, stage name Fabian, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1943. He was the son of Josephine and Dominic Forte; his father was a Philadelphia police officer. Fabian was discovered in 1957 by Bob Marcucci and Peter DeAngelis, the owners of Chancellor Records. At the time, record producers were looking to the South Philadelphia neighborhoods in search of teenage talents with good looks. Frankie Avalon, also from South Philadelphia, tipped them off about Fabian. At 15, he won second prize as "The Promising Male Vocalist of 1958". His first local hit was Lilli Lou in 1958. This helped Fabian meet Dick Clark, who agreed to try Fabian at one of Clark's record hops, where singers would perform to teenage audiences. Fabian lip-synched to a song and Clark wrote "the little girls at the hop went wild. They started screaming and yelling for this guy who didn't do a thing but stand there. I've never seen anything like it." Clark told Marcucci "you got a hit, he's a star. Now all you have to do is teach him to sing." Clark eventually put the young singer on American Bandstand where he sang 'I'm in Love'. From then he had a series of successes in a short time with songs by composers Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, such as 'I'm a Man' (1958), 'Hound Dog Man' (1959), 'Turn Me Loose' (1959) and his biggest hit 'Tiger' (1959), which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts. A few years later, he already had a dozen hits, eight albums, and three gold records to his name. His singing career more or less came to an end at the age of eighteen when he bought out his contract with Marcucci. It happened in the wake of the Payola scandal between 1959 and 1962. Forte testified before Congress that his recordings had been doctored electronically to "significantly improve his voice. Nik Cohn later wrote that the record people had produced "a computer product" with Fabian: "He brought the basic requirements with him - an olive complexion, duck-tail hairdo and assembly-line face [...] They had him dressed up, had him learn how to talk real nice, had his voice trained. They made him really round and flawless like a billiard ball. There was only one catch: he couldn't sing ..."

 

Fabian signed a deal with 20th Century Fox. The studio had enjoyed success casting teen idol pop stars in films, such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone. They decided to do the same thing with Fabian. He played his first role in the film drama Hound-Dog Man (Don Siegel, 1959), with Stuart Whitman and Carol Lynley. The film was not a success, but the title song, sung by Fabian, became a hit in 1959. The studio, however, tried again in two smaller roles, supporting a bigger star – the comedy High Time (Blake Edwards, 1959), with Bing Crosby, and the Western North to Alaska (Henry Hathaway, 1959), with John Wayne. Both films were popular especially the latter and in November 1960 his contract with the studio was amended with an increase in salary – it was now a seven-year deal with an option for two films a year. Controversial was his role as a psychopathic killer in the episode A Lion Walks Among Us (Robert Altman, 1961) of the TV programme Bus Stop. The episode was extremely violent, leading other parties to refuse to broadcast it, and the programme was even discussed in the US Senate. However, the series was good for Fabian's acting career and saw him regarded with more respect. He later said this was his best performance. Fabian appeared in Five Weeks in a Balloon (Irwin Allen, 1962) with Red Buttons and Barbara Eden. The film was loosely based on the 1863 novel of the same name by Jules Verne. He also played a suitor to James Stewart's daughter in the hit comedy Mr. Hobbs Takes a Holiday (Henry Koster, 1962) and a soldier in the star-studded war film The Longest Day (Andrew Marton, a.o., 1962).

 

Fabian had not become a film star but was in demand as an actor, appearing in episodes of series like The Virginian, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, and The Eleventh Hour. In November 1965, he was contracted by American International Pictures. His first film for the company was alongside Beach Party stars Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in the stock car racing film Fireball 500 (William Asher, 1966). AIP then sent him to Italy to play a role originally intended for Avalon in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (Mario Bava, 1966), supporting Vincent Price. Back in the United States, he made another stock car racing film for AIP, Thunder Alley (Richard Rush, 1967), opposite Funicello. His fourth movie for AIP was Maryjane (Maury Dexter, 1968), where Fabian played a school teacher fighting the evils of the marijuana trade. He returned to racing car dramas with The Wild Racers (Daniel Haller, 1968), partly financed by Roger Corman and shot in Europe. This was not a big hit on release but has developed a cult following. In his seventh and last film for AIP, A Bullet for Pretty Boy ( Larry Buchanan, 1970), he played gangster Charles Arthur Floyd opposite Jocelyn (Jackie) Lane. To raise his profile, he posed nude for Playgirl magazine. In 1973, he picked up singing again, only to quit temporarily in 1977 and return in 1981. He performed in the context of numerous revival shows, for example as a trio with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell. However, he would not reach the popularity of his teenage years. Fabian has been married three times. His first marriage was to model Kathleen Regan in 1966. They had two children together, Christian and Julie, but divorced in 1979. He married Kate Netter in 1980; they divorced in 1990. In 1998 he married American beauty queen Andrea Patrick. In 2002, Fabian received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch and German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

January 17, 2016, 9:58 a.m.

 

10k Race Participants

 

per website: www.runottawa.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Richmond-10K-...

 

..................................................................

listed information below:

 

bib number (in order)

placing

time

pace per km

bib

name

residence

M/F

category

place in category

 

10k FEMALE RACERS

 

2…..52 1:00:23 6:02 2 Jetje Antonietti Ottawa F 60-69 3 of 12

 

11….10 0:47:32 4:45 11 Daphne Ballard Ottawa F 40-49 3 of 19

 

12….21 0:52:46 5:17 12 Vicki Bencze Ottawa F 40-49 5 of 19

 

20….43 0:57:07 5:43 20 Terri Bolster Ottawa F 60-69 1 of 12

 

23….18 0:52:10 5:13 23 Lucie Boudreau Gatineau F 50-59 6 of 34

 

25….60 1:02:26 6:15 25 Amelie Brouillard Duhamel-Ouest F 20-29

8 of 9

 

27….14 0:50:00 5:00 27 Karen Burns Orleans F 50-59 4 of 34

 

28….51 1:00:22 6:02 28 Laura Butler North Gower F 50-59 16 of 34

 

30….48 0:59:44 5:58 30 Anne-Marie Carter-Mcauslan Carleton Place F 60-69 2 of 12

 

37….3 0:43:09 4:19 37 Melanie Clement Kanata F 30-39 2 of 19

 

39….69 1:04:23 6:26 39 Peggy Cooke Carp F 50-59 23 of 34

 

45….65 1:03:25 6:20 45 Deena Desson Richmond F 50-59 20 of 34

 

47….47 0:59:26 5:57 47 Sheryl Dore Ottawa F 50-59 13 of 34

 

49….53 1:00:41 6:04 49 Stephanie Dunne Ottawa F 60-69 4 of 12

 

50….61 1:02:47 6:17 50 Robbie Duval Williamstown F 50-59 18 of 34

 

51….20 0:52:26 5:15 51 Sue Duval Alexandria F 50-59 7 of 34

 

53….13 0:49:58 5:00 53 Marigold Edwards Ottawa F 50-59 3 of 34

 

59….92 1:13:49 7:23 59 Cynthia Field-Rose Ottawa F 60-69 10 of 12

 

60….50 1:00:17 6:02 60 Ellyn Floyd Carp F 50-59 15 of 34

 

62….70 1:04:43 6:28 62 Sandy Fredette Ashton F 50-59 24 of 34

 

65….73 1:05:05 6:30 65 Zoe Frouin Ottawa F 50-59 27 of 34

 

66….37 0:56:25 5:39 66 Tammy Frye Kanata F 30-39 12 of 19

 

67….74 1:05:51 6:35 67 Tanya Frye Ottawa F 30-39 17 of 19

 

68….59 1:02:24 6:14 68 Lyson Gélinas Drummondville F 20-29 7 of 9

 

69….35 0:55:05 5:31 69 Christine Geraghty Ottawa F 30-39 11 of 19

 

73….88 1:09:39 6:58 73 Cheryl Gillies Richmond F 50-59 31 of 34

 

76….4 0:43:34 4:21 76 Stephanie Gordon Ottawa F 30-39 3 of 19

 

79….38 0:56:38 5:40 79 Tessa Grant Mallorytown F 20-29 3 of 9

 

81….67 1:03:39 6:22 81 Norma Green Richmond F 50-59 22 of 34

 

86….79 1:07:13 6:43 86 Heather Hamann Ottawa F 50-59 29 of 34

 

88….95 1:15:18 7:32 88 Emma Hamilton Ottawa F 14+Unr 1 of 1

 

89….87 1:09:09 6:55 89 Reta Hamilton Munster F 60-69 9 of 12

 

92….91 1:11:26 7:09 92 Sara Howse Kemptville F 30-39 19 of 19

 

93….39 0:56:43 5:40 93 Marysa Irvine Richmond F 40-49 13 of 19

 

98….89 1:09:44 6:58 98 Elizabeth Keighley Nepean F 50-59 32 of 34

 

99….2 0:41:48 4:11 99 Hunter Kelly Ottawa F 20-29 1 of 9

 

102…41 0:56:53 5:41 102 Taylor Kelly Ottawa F 20-29 4 of 9

 

103…68 1:04:10 6:25 103 Michelle Keough Ottawa F 40-49 16 of 19

 

104…45 0:58:27 5:51 104 Dawn Kiddell Lancaster F 50-59 12 of 34

 

107…8 0:46:16 4:38 107 Ingrid Koenig Ottawa F 40-49 2 of 19

 

108…77 1:06:20 6:38 108 Colleen Kohlsmith Kanata F 60-69 6 of 12

 

111…40 0:56:45 5:40 111 Sandra Lang Ottawa F 50-59 11 of 34

 

115…11 0:48:30 4:51 115 Heather Lewis Ottawa F 50-59 1 of 34

 

118…24 0:53:02 5:18 118 Keitha Lynch Richmond F 40-49 6 of 19

 

120…6 0:45:12 4:31 120 Katie Macaskill Kanata F 15-19 1 of 2

 

122…5 0:44:35 4:27 122 Kim Macaskill Kanata F 40-49 1 of 19

 

124…94 1:14:24 7:26 124 Sally Macinnis Merrickville F 60-69 11 of

12

 

125…25 0:53:06 5:19 125 Sandy Macleod Ottawa F 40-49 7 of 19

 

128…97 1:17:34 7:45 128 Donna Magher Williamstown F 60-69 12

of 12

 

129…1 0:39:48 3:59 129 Maureen Mahoney Ottawa F 30-39 1 of 19

 

134…63 1:02:57 6:18 134 Martina McGinn Ottawa F 70+Ov 1 of 1

 

137…54 1:00:42 6:04 137 Fanie Michaud Saint-Hyacinthe F 20-29 5 of 9

 

139…90 1:11:15 7:07 139 Sharon Moore Kanata F 50-59 33 of 34

 

141…86 1:08:16 6:50 141 Eileen Mortimer Ottawa F 60-69 8 of 12

 

143…84 1:07:50 6:47 143 Gabrielle Nadeau Ottawa F 50-59 30 of 34

 

146…9 0:46:35 4:40 146 Eryn O'Neil Ottawa F 30-39 5 of 19

 

149…42 0:57:01 5:42 149 Jennifer Parker Orleans F 40-49 14 of 19

 

152…72 1:05:03 6:30 152 Elaine Petrie Nepean F 50-59 26 of 34

 

153…7 0:45:46 4:35 153 Deidre Pollard Bussey Ottawa F 30-39 4 of 19

 

154…76 1:06:12 6:37 154 Jackie Poole Ottawa F 60-69 5 of 12

 

155…26 0:53:17 5:20 155 Eniko Popescu Ottawa F 40-49 8 of 19

 

158…44 0:57:19 5:44 158 Jennifer Rice Ottawa F 30-39 13 of 19

 

161…55 1:00:44 6:04 161 Sandra Roberts Gatineau F 50-59 17 of 34

 

162…58 1:01:38 6:10 162 Genevieve Robidoux Howick F 20-29 6 of 9

 

163…85 1:07:52 6:47 163 Marie-Claude Robillard Ottawa F 15-19 2 of 2

 

166…29 0:54:40 5:28 166 Jenn Ross Merrickville F 40-49 9 of 19

 

171…64 1:03:08 6:19 171 Michelle Ryan Ottawa F 30-39 16 of 19

 

172…28 0:54:36 5:28 172 Catherine Sainte-Marie Ottawa F 30-39 9 of 19

 

173…17 0:51:48 5:11 173 Claire Samson Ottawa F 50-59 5 of 34

 

177…56 1:01:15 6:08 177 Julia Scouten Richmond F 30-39 14 of 19

 

179…34 0:54:52 5:29 179 Janet Shepherd Mallorytown F 50-59 10 of 34

 

182…71 1:05:00 6:30 182 Laurie Shusterman Ottawa F 50-59 25 of 34

 

186…96 1:17:33 7:45 186 Brenda Smith Williamstown F 50-59 34 of 34

 

188…62 1:02:49 6:17 188 Cindy Southgate Kanata F 50-59 19 of 34

 

190…82 1:07:32 6:45 190 Arlene Steadman Kanata F 60-69 7 of 12

 

192…83 1:07:48 6:47 192 Amanda Strass Nepean F 20-29 9 of 9

 

193…15 0:50:54 5:05 193 Karen Svab Osgoode F 30-39 6 of 19

 

194…27 0:54:06 5:25 194 Stephanie Tait Kingston F 30-39 8 of 19

 

197…78 1:07:10 6:43 197 Brenda Tirrell Stittsville F 50-59 28 of 34

 

198…49 0:59:49 5:59 198 Darene Toal-Sullivan Kanata F 50-59 14 of 34

 

200…66 1:03:32 6:21 200 Suzann Townend Carleton Place F 50-59 21 of 34

 

203…93 1:14:21 7:26 203 Lori Urquhart Merrickville F 40-49 19 of 19

 

205…16 0:51:41 5:10 205 Elysia Van Zeyl Ottawa F 30-39 7 of 19

 

206…33 0:54:50 5:29 206 Jennifer Vincent Ottawa F 30-39 10 of 19

 

207…57 1:01:17 6:08 207 Susan Wallace Richmond F 30-39 15 of

19

 

209…19 0:52:20 5:14 209 Elodie Watson Merrickville F 40-49 4 of 19

 

211…23 0:52:51 5:17 211 Gillian Williamson Ottawa F 50-59 8 of 34

 

217…81 1:07:23 6:44 217 Jing Zhang Ottawa F 40-49 18 of 19

 

219…80 1:07:16 6:44 219 Kelly Wojnarksi Ottawa F 30-39 18 of 19

 

222…22 0:52:48 5:17 222 Stephanie Sothcott Ottawa F 20-29 2 of 9

 

224…30 0:54:43 5:28 224 Emilie Braisin Ottawa F 40-49 10 of 19

 

226…12 0:49:46 4:59 226 Louise Hamelin Ottawa F 50-59 2 of 34

 

228…32 0:54:48 5:29 228 Judy Curry Ottawa F 50-59 9 of 34

 

229…31 0:54:46 5:29 229 Kimberlie Schonewille Ottawa F 40-49 11 of 19

 

232…75 1:06:06 6:37 232 Karen Beutel Nepean F 40-49 17 of 19

 

233…46 0:59:16 5:56 233 Anelise Alarcon Ottawa F 40-49 15 of 19

 

457…36 0:55:20 5:32 457 Lara Winnemore Stittsville F 40-49 12 of 19

 

10k MALE RACERS

 

1…..72 0:52:39 5:16 1 Jim Allard Ottawa M 60-69 6 of 10

 

3…..69 0:52:21 5:14 3 Wally Archibald Metcalfe M 50-59 30 of 52

 

6…..86 0:54:38 5:28 6 Yves Arseneault Gatineau M 50-59 40 of 52

 

7…..66 0:51:46 5:11 7 Adam Ashton Nepean M 15-19 2 of 2

 

8…..44 0:47:47 4:47 8 Peter Ashton Nepean M 50-59 18 of 52

 

9…..101 0:59:17 5:56 9 Thomas Atkins Ottawa M 50-59 46 of 52

 

10….50 0:48:51 4:53 10 Rick Balderson Nepean M 50-59 21 of 52

 

13….56 0:49:48 4:59 13 Derek Bergmann Richmond M 30-39 10 of

19

 

14….15 0:41:36 4:10 14 Pascal Bessette Ottawa M 30-39 6 of 19

 

15….34 0:45:59 4:36 15 Michael Best Kanata M 50-59 11 of 52

 

16….113 1:03:42 6:22 16 Tony Bettino Ottawa M 50-59 51 of 52

 

18….3 0:37:11 3:43 18 Michael Blois Ottawa M 40-49 1 of 24

 

19….19 0:42:34 4:15 19 George Bodoni Ottawa M 50-59 6 of 52

 

21….22 0:43:52 4:23 21 Richard Borsos Ottawa M 60-69 2 of 10

 

22….47 0:48:03 4:48 22 Andrew Bouchier Ottawa M 50-59 19 of 52

 

24….33 0:45:43 4:34 24 Chris Bright Orleans M 40-49 6 of 24

 

26….7 0:39:19 3:56 26 Phil Brunet Ottawa M 30-39 3 of 19

 

29….106 0:59:46 5:59 29 Roch C0urcy Gatineau M 30-39 17 of 19

 

31….40 0:46:50 4:41 31 Clark Carvish Nepean M 50-59 15 of 52

 

32….54 0:49:39 4:58 32 Ben-Zion Caspi Ottawa M 60-69 4 of 10

 

33….91 0:55:47 5:35 33 Mike Champagne Ottawa M 50-59 43 of 52

 

34….111 1:02:44 6:16 34 Doug Arnold Richmond M 70-79 5 of 7

 

35….67 0:52:06 5:13 35 Mike Christie Nepean M 50-59 28 of 52

 

36….36 0:46:11 4:37 36 Sean Clancy Orleans M 50-59 13 of 52

 

38….18 0:42:27 4:15 38 Randy Cocek Nepean M 40-49 4 of 24

 

40….21 0:43:51 4:23 40 Gary Cooper Ottawa M 20-29 3 of 4

 

41….58 0:50:05 5:01 41 Robert Criger Ottawa M 50-59 24 of 52

 

43….4 0:37:26 3:45 43 David Dawson Ottawa M 30-39 2 of 19

 

44….35 0:46:09 4:37 44 Francois Deleseleuc Ottawa M 50-59 12 of

52

 

46….80 0:53:04 5:18 46 Kel Doig Ottawa M 50-59 38 of 52

 

48….37 0:46:18 4:38 48 Paul Doucette Kanata M 40-49 7 of 24

 

52….52 0:49:00 4:54 52 Bob Ebsary Rockland M 50-59 22 of 52

 

54….99 0:58:45 5:52 54 Joe Elliott Ottawa M 30-39 14 of 19

 

55….29 0:45:01 4:30 55 Costas Farassoglou Ottawa M 30-39 8 of

19

 

56….31 0:45:15 4:32 56 Savvas Farassoglou Ottawa M 30-39 9 of

19

 

57….92 0:55:58 5:36 57 Daniel Farrell Stittsville M 50-59 44 of 52

 

58….88 0:54:55 5:29 58 John Farrell Ottawa M 50-59 41 of 52

 

61….114 1:04:20 6:26 61 Chris Foran Kemptville M 40-49 23 of 24

 

63….103 0:59:27 5:57 63 Christopher Froggatt Perth M 40-49 21 of

24

 

64….104 0:59:28 5:57 64 Tom Froggatt Toronto M 50-59 47 of 52

 

71….64 0:51:13 5:07 71 Christian Giguère Ottawa M 50-59 26 of 52

 

72….43 0:47:15 4:44 72 Mike Giles Ottawa M 50-59 17 of 52

 

74….13 0:41:10 4:07 74 Patrick Girard Ottawa M 30-39 5 of 19

 

78….57 0:50:03 5:00 78 Ian Govan Kanata M 60-69 5 of 10

 

80….95 0:57:15 5:43 80 Dana Green Richmond M 60-69 9 of 10

 

82….63 0:50:58 5:06 82 Owen Gregory Ottawa M 40-49 14 of 24

 

83….117 1:07:14 6:43 83 Phil Gregory Ottawa M 70-79 7 of 7

 

84….83 0:53:22 5:20 84 Mike Halliwushka Stittsville M 60-69 8 of 10

 

85….116 1:07:12 6:43 85 Fern Hamann Carleton Place M 50-59 52

of 52

 

87….119 1:15:17 7:32 87 David Hamilton Ottawa M 40-49 24 of 24

 

90….89 0:55:08 5:31 90 Ron Hoffe Ottawa M 50-59 42 of 52

 

91….115 1:04:28 6:27 91 Bill Horne Ottawa M 70-79 6 of 7

 

94….96 0:57:25 5:44 94 Ian James Ottawa M 40-49 19 of 24

 

95….118 1:07:17 6:44 95 Jesse Jarjour Ottawa M 30-39 19 of 19

 

96….45 0:47:51 4:47 96 Chris Jermyn Ottawa M 70-79 1 of 7

 

100…112 1:02:53 6:17 100 Mark Kelly Stittsville M 50-59 50 of 52

 

101…5 0:38:16 3:50 101 Patrick Kelly Ottawa M 50-59 2 of 52

 

105…82 0:53:14 5:19 105 Barry Kinny Stittsville M 40-49 16 of 24

 

106…41 0:47:00 4:42 106 Peter Klein Metcalfe M 40-49 9 of 24

 

109…62 0:50:46 5:05 109 Sriram Krishnamurthy Kanata M 30-39

12 of 19

 

110…42 0:47:05 4:43 110 Greg Lamb Ottawa M 50-59 16 of 52

 

113…48 0:48:46 4:53 113 Brian Letourneau Ottawa M 50-59 20 of

52

 

114…110 1:01:31 6:09 114 Kam Leung Kanata M 50-59 49 of 52

 

116…59 0:50:12 5:01 116 Wade Long Kanata M 40-49 13 of 24

 

117…32 0:45:32 4:33 117 Trevor Lowe Ottawa M 40-49 5 of 24

 

119…25 0:44:43 4:28 119 Jonathan Macaskill Kanata M 15-19 1 of

2

 

119…81 0:53:05 5:19 199 Dan Todd Richmond M 50-59 39 of 52

 

121…17 0:42:17 4:14 121 Ken Macaskill Kanata M 40-49 3 of 24

 

123…105 0:59:29 5:57 123 Alex Macdonald Ottawa M 30-39 16 of

19

 

126…20 0:43:35 4:22 126 Allan Macphee Ottawa M 50-59 7 of 52

 

130…107 0:59:58 6:00 130 Kevin Matthews Ottawa M 40-49 22 of

24

 

131…53 0:49:32 4:57 131 Mike McCluskie Ottawa M 50-59 23 of 52

 

133…84 0:53:35 5:22 133 Doug McGinn Ottawa M 70-79 3 of 7

 

135…60 0:50:21 5:02 135 Derek McKellar Richmond M 50-59 25 of

52

 

136…102 0:59:24 5:56 136 Paul McNamee Brockville M 60-69 10

of 10

 

138…77 0:52:56 5:18 138 Peter Minnelli Ottawa M 60-69 7 of 10

 

140…68 0:52:08 5:13 140 Steve Moritsugu Ottawa M 50-59 29 of

52

 

142…73 0:52:43 5:16 142 David Morton Ottawa M 50-59 33 of 52

 

144…109 1:01:09 6:07 144 Curtis Nickel Kingston M 30-39 18 of 19

 

145…14 0:41:26 4:09 145 Brian O'Higgins Ottawa M 60-69 1 of 10

 

147…70 0:52:30 5:15 147 Peter Oulton Ottawa M 50-59 31 of 52

 

148…90 0:55:40 5:34 148 Christopher Parise Rockland M 20-29 4

of 4

 

150…94 0:56:35 5:39 150 Mark Pawlikowski Stittsville M 40-49 18

of 24

 

156…61 0:50:37 5:04 156 Jacques Racine Richmond M 30-39 11

of 19

 

157…49 0:48:47 4:53 157 Christophe Rene Gatineau M 40-49 10

of 24

 

159…108 1:00:09 6:01 159 Ralph Richardson Stittsville M 50-59 48

of 52

 

160…93 0:56:13 5:37 160 Brian Roberts Gatineau M 50-59 45 of 52

 

164…26 0:44:49 4:29 164 Kerry Rollins Nepean M 30-39 7 of 19

 

165…10 0:39:52 3:59 165 Graham Ross Merrickville M 50-59 3 of

52

 

168…55 0:49:43 4:58 168 Marc Roy Ottawa M 40-49 12 of 24

 

170…85 0:54:21 5:26 170 John Ruttle Ottawa M 40-49 17 of 24

 

174…76 0:52:54 5:17 174 Terry Sancartier Gatineau M 40-49 15 of

24

 

175…97 0:57:26 5:45 175 Alex Sauriol Ottawa M 40-49 20 of 24

 

176…9 0:39:41 3:58 176 Omar Sayarh Gatineau M 30-39 4 of 19

 

178…16 0:41:59 4:12 178 Danny Sheehan Carleton Place M 50-59

5 of 52

 

180…6 0:39:04 3:54 180 Jeff Shepherd Mallorytown M 20-29 1 of 4

 

181…78 0:52:58 5:18 181 Tracy Shouldice Carp M 50-59 36 of 52

 

183…30 0:45:05 4:31 183 Judd Sjolund Nepean M 14+Un 1 of 1

 

184…23 0:44:09 4:25 184 Jeff Slavin Ottawa M 50-59 8 of 52

 

185…51 0:48:52 4:53 185 David Sloan Kanata M 40-49 11 of 24

 

189…38 0:46:28 4:39 189 Mike Southgate Kanata M 50-59 14 of 52

 

191…39 0:46:37 4:40 191 Joel Stelpstra Ottawa M 40-49 8 of 24

 

195…74 0:52:50 5:17 195 Dale Taylor Ottawa M 50-59 34 of 52

 

196…100 0:59:05 5:54 196 Rob Thomas Ottawa M 30-39 15 of 19

 

202…11 0:39:54 3:59 202 Paul Turner Ottawa M 50-59 4 of 52

 

204…65 0:51:28 5:09 204 Marco Valenti Carp M 50-59 27 of 52

 

208…75 0:52:53 5:17 208 Mike Watford Kanata M 50-59 35 of 52

 

210…1 0:36:05 3:36 210 Ralph Werner Ottawa M 50-59 1 of 52

 

212…2 0:37:05 3:42 212 Corey Wilson Nepean M 30-39 1 of 19

 

213…79 0:53:01 5:18 213 Hugh Wright Kanata M 50-59 37 of 52

 

216…24 0:44:36 4:28 216 Ian Young Ottawa M 60-69 3 of 10

 

218…98 0:57:32 5:45 218 Mike Pedley Stittsville M 30-39 13 of 19

 

223…71 0:52:38 5:16 223 Vincent Andy Fong Ottawa M 50-59 32

of 52

 

225…46 0:47:54 4:47 225 Tony Dunbar Ottawa M 70-79 2 of 7

 

227…87 0:54:41 5:28 227 Tosh Hayashi Ottawa M 70-79 4 of 7

 

230…12 0:41:06 4:07 230 Pat McNeely Ottawa M 40-49 2 of 24

 

231…8 0:39:31 3:57 231 Jeff English Ottawa M 20-29 2 of 4

 

234…27 0:44:50 4:29 234 Dan Vandervoort Ottawa M 50-59 9 of 52

 

466…28 0:44:55 4:30 466 Todd Keuleman Ottawa M 50-59 10 of 52

  

.

8464

For the half-marathon (21.1 km) results, here are the local (Ottawa & area) participants -- sorted by cities and first name -- in the September 18, 2011, Canada Army Run held in Ottawa, Ontario. There were 6,397 runners in the 21.1 km race, an increase of about 900 runners compared to 2010. Thank-you to Sportstats.

 

Click here and enter the bib numbers (see below) for the full individual race results.

  

Lists of local half-marathon race participants:

 

Part A. Ottawa, A-L (Click here.)

Part B. Ottawa, M-Z (Click here.)

Part C. Other Communities (Acton to Magog) (see below.)

Part D. Other Communities (Maitland to Woodlawn) (Click here.)

 

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

 

Part C. (bib no., name, Alexandria - Magog)

 

1635….Cathy Maclean….Alexandria

2914….Rebecca Howes….Alexandria

4811….Sue Duval….Alexandria

3610….Terry Koronewski….Alexandria

2518….Marc Pominville….Alfred

830….Andrea Bird….Almonte

7446….Bob Mosher….Almonte

6179….Curtis Azulay….Almonte

1756….Dale Joynt….Almonte

6704….Daphne Lainson….Almonte

7476….Diana Laing….Almonte

6206….Elaine Azulay….Almonte

6845….Jason Lainson….Almonte

3490….Jenny Sheffield….Almonte

5988….Karen Stillman….Almonte

7525….Linda Berkloo….Almonte

2558….Mark Blaskie….Almonte

2710….Michelle Kay….Almonte

4631….Patricia Fuller….Almonte

493….Sandy Solowjew….Almonte

3080….Sherry Burke….Almonte

290….Simon Shearman….Almonte

4773….Sonja Schmidt….Almonte

3177….Tara Deitner….Almonte

3775….Amanda Lushman….Arnprior

6685….Connie Palubiskie….Arnprior

3553….Emily Sheffield….Arnprior

2151….Jane Rae Dowd….Arnprior

208….Jean-Francois Mahe….Arnprior

2242….Jesse Knockleby….Arnprior

4357….Karen Elliott….Arnprior

4399….Kevin Greening….Arnprior

5635….Lori Birmingham….Arnprior

850….Melissa Needham….Arnprior

870….Mike Poirier….Arnprior

4649….Peter How….Arnprior

3065….Sharon Priestman….Arnprior

5905….Tara Beselaere….Arnprior

979….Trish Heffernan….Arnprior

4889….Walt Lushman….Arnprior

7415….Avril Van Aert….Ashton

1905….Earendil Underwood….Ashton

2520….Marc O'ray….Ashton

2566….Mark Peterkins….Ashton

7165….Nicholas Saray….Ashton

1222….Peter Cottreau….Ashton

4680….Rob Walker….Ashton

5541….Julie Mccarthy….Athens

7231….Rod Clow….Athens

3632….Terri Gray….Athens

3923….Chantal Lacasse….Aylmer

1794….Darren Maccallum….Aylmer

1888….Douglas Mclean….Aylmer

5098….Erin Kingdom….Aylmer

52….John Lemieux….Aylmer

2325….Judith Lambert….Aylmer

4360….Karine Martin….Aylmer

707….Luc Lacombe….Aylmer

2759….Natalie Brun Del Re….Aylmer

257….Paul Lamoureux….Aylmer

3156….Susie Paquette….Aylmer

6471….Tijana Tanasijevic-Pavlica….Aylmer

2009….Genevieve Boudreault….Aymer

1628….Catherine Brunet….Barry's Bay

1428….Alison Seely….Beachburg

4890….Wanda Gagnon….Beachburg

7534….Lynn Lebeau….Bourget

6016….Pierre Lacasse….Bourget

7205….Raymond Lalande….Bourget

3814….Anita Jardine….Brockville

177….Corey Mcsween….Brockville

5054….Dianne Dillon-Samson….Brockville

4563….Michael Mcmahon….Brockville

852….Murray Regush….Brockville

2921….Rhonda Mcnish….Brockville

5838….Sandra Ryan….Brockville

7677….Steve Plotz….Brockville

3236….Trevor Macfarlane….Brockville

2137….James Lavallie….Bryson

6684….Connie Matthews….Calabogie

6020….Alex Mcdermott….Cantley

3799….Andr E East….Cantley

16273….Camille Flipot….Cantley

3493….Carol Jr Groulx….Cantley

1642….Charles Francoeur….Cantley

1714….Claude Desrochers….Cantley

6171….Claude Rochon….Cantley

1814….David Blais….Cantley

4160….Glen Newton….Cantley

600….Guy Beaulieu….Cantley

6270….Joanie Benoit-Desrochers….Cantley

2334….Julie Gauthier….Cantley

4485….Marc-Andre Paris-Cloutier….Cantley

3619….Marie-Claude C T….cantley

2544….Marie-Eve Morel….Cantley

2561….Mark Avon….Cantley

7196….Pierre-Yves Authier….Cantley

16263….Sylvie Rioux….Cantley

3117….Stephen Bygott….Cardinal

3783….Amelia Kiteley….Carleton Place

3816….Ann Cowan….Carleton Place

7626….Bill Bowers….Carleton Place

5251….Boyd Lemna….Carleton Place

949….Bruce Rafuse….Carleton Place

3734….Chris Loder….Carleton Place

5317….Christine Lemna….Carleton Place

6204….Doug Bowers….Carleton Place

6209….Emma Bowers….Carleton Place

1950….Eric Gervais….Carleton Place

4248….Jen Debenham….Carleton Place

6857….Jenni Kerteston….Carleton Place

2230….Jennifer Andress….Carleton Place

6860….Jennifer Derksen….Carleton Place

2309….Jordan Nesbit….Carleton Place

5671….Mariko Kulka….Carleton Place

5686….Mary Anne Melvin….Carleton Place

853….Natasha Foster….Carleton Place

667….Rob Illingworth….Carleton Place

5847….Sarah Gray….Carleton Place

4803….Steve Macmillan….Carleton Place

5906….Taylore Bryce….Carleton Place

5911….Terri Storey….Carleton Place

7611….Travis James….Carleton Place

3235….Trent Bowers….Carleton Place

3347….Chantal Gingras-Gareau….Carlsbad Springs

3749….Alain Drainville….Carp

1491….Andy Millette….Carp

5225….Angus Palmer….Carp

5092….Anna Li….Carp

3843….Barry Bunny Bruce….Carp

3876….Cal Goodger….Carp

1612….Carol O'malley….Carp

1615….Carole Stonebridge….Carp

3986….Constance Lazurko….Carp

1811….David Robinson….Carp

3435….Dayle Mulligan….Carp

4105….Emily Palmer….Carp

1937….Eric Janveaux….Carp

952….Gerard Rumleskie….Carp

3489….Kathy Fischer….Carp

5614….Leah Timmermann….Carp

2472….Lisa Bond….Carp

7052….Lyne Michaud….Carp

4508….Martha Palmer….Carp

878….Murray Stonebridge….Carp

7150….Nancy Wawia Robb….Carp

6561….Andr Paris….Casselman

6609….Bob Sweetlove….Casselman

1708….Cindy Bouchard….Casselman

6698….Danielle Carri Re-Paris….Casselman

4052….Dennis Langlois….Casselman

4094….Elisabeth Zagrodnik….Casselman

4147….Genevieve Laplante….Casselman

4158….Gillian Castonguay….Casselman

2476….Liz Perras….Casselman

4518….Martin Girard….Casselman

3399….Mary Sweetlove….Casselman

5716….Michel Racine….Casselman

2928….Richard Kosnaskie….Casselman

281….Robert Ridler….Casselman

1488….Andy Best….Chalk River

3834….Ashley Jones….Chalk River

5332….Cory Mackeigan….Chalk River

1873….Dominic Irvin….Chalk River

5495….Jeremy Farrell….Chalk River

6915….Judy Bragg….Chalk River

6298….Kathy Greenfield….Chalk River

6384….Kim Mirault….Chalk River

6378….Michelle Kolbrich….Chalk River

2774….Nicolas Bergeron….Chalk River

5797….Rebecca Olstad….Chalk River

7622….Angela Nuelle….Chelsea

3828….Annie Jean….Chelsea

3957….Christina Hawley….Chelsea

1199….Christine Tardiff-Mullen….Chelsea

1718….Claude Marchand….Chelsea

16251….Debbie Johnston….Chelsea

5369….Denise Veinotte….Chelsea

1964….Fiona Duguid….Chelsea

2095….Hugo Lemieux….Chelsea

767….Ian Hunter….Chelsea

2212….Jeff Bardsley….Chelsea

6282….Josee Pennober….Chelsea

6922….Julie Dupuis….Chelsea

5591….Kimberly Sogge….Chelsea

2475….Lise Marshall….Chelsea

2496….Lydia Wilson….Chelsea

235….Marc Gaudet….Chelsea

4574….Michelle Findlater….Chelsea

4588….Murielle Brazeau….Chelsea

1088….Natasha Stobert….Chelsea

4627….Pascal Labine….Chelsea

1083….Patty Chevalier Samm….Chelsea

7204….Ray Folkins….Chelsea

4668….Raymond Brunet….Chelsea

619….Richard Gilker….Chelsea

4688….Rod Oickle….Chelsea

4697….Ron Sloan….Chelsea

5955….Zacharie Marshall….Chelsea

6646….Cathleen Bourret….Chesterville

6100….Aaron Moysey….Clarence Creek

2373….Katie Whitall….Clarence Creek

5700….Melanie Saumure-Massie….Clarence Creek

1594….Bruce Oattes….Cobden

3479….Carole Buxcey….Cobden

3689….Connie Olmstead….Cobden

3982….Connie Weber….Cobden

4065….Dianne Johnston….Cobden

2156….Janet Oattes….Cobden

6331….Linda Roy….Cobden

4576….Mike Buske….Cobden

1431….Allan Savage….Cornwall

6056….Andrea Bailey-Tait….Cornwall

3643….Carl Brida….Cornwall

3644….Cathy Bourgon….Cornwall

6690….Craig Henry….Cornwall

6796….Genevi Ve Lajoie….Cornwall

5979….Jane Mclaren….Cornwall

884….Jenna Martineau….Cornwall

6066….Joanne Filliol….Cornwall

2291….John St. Marseille….Cornwall

6908….Josee Gagne….Cornwall

6293….Karrie Anderson….Cornwall

6047….Kathleen Hay….Cornwall

6325….Laurie Parisien….Cornwall

5636….Lori Neil….Cornwall

967….Mathieu Bruyere….Cornwall

7095….Matthew Smith….Cornwall

2686….Michael Perras….Cornwall

6385….Miriam Lalonde….Cornwall

2923….Richard Pilon….Cornwall

1036….Terry Quenneville….Cornwall

3187….Thomas Leroux….Cornwall

3293….Yvonne Commodore….Cornwall

6630….Carl Vaillancourt….Crysler

2916….Remi Lafrance….Crysler

6144….Brigitte Roy-Bray….Cumberland

6623….Bruce Bell….Cumberland

6692….Craig Mchugh….Cumberland

1840….Dean Menard….Cumberland

661….Greg Morris….Cumberland

6811….Hailey Bell….Cumberland

6827….Jacinthe Choquet….Cumberland

4216….Jason Birch….Cumberland

4426….Laura Lemon….Cumberland

3474….Leslie Anne Patry….Cumberland

3429….Melissa Wren….Cumberland

5727….Monique Gamache….Cumberland

7144….Monique Garneau….Cumberland

666….Natalie Tate….Cumberland

6524….Susan Mogensen….Cumberland

1864….Diane Edwards….Dalkeith

1471….Andrew Edgerton….Deep River

6130….Barb Gallagher….Deep River

4373….Katie Ptasnik….Deep River

5592….Kirstie Smith….Deep River

2747….Murray Wright….Deep River

4619….Norman Spinks….Deep River

5788….Rachid Bourouh….Deep River

5865….Sheldon Cole….Deep River

5895….Susan Lesperance….Deep River

1565….Brenna Wyman….Dunrobin

5291….Cathy Paveley….Dunrobin

4043….Deborah Dalton Kischel….Dunrobin

7474….Debra Gassewitz….Dunrobin

3337….Joanne Montgomery….Dunrobin

4449….Linda Dillon….Dunrobin

3545….Lois Jacobs….Dunrobin

2582….Marnie Armstrong….Dunrobin

2822….Paul Lefebvre….Dunrobin

2979….Robert Armstrong….Dunrobin

3000….Russ Davies….Dunrobin

122….Russel Long….Dunrobin

3127….Steve Schreiner….Dunrobin

3272….Wayne Carroll….Dunrobin

3845….Ben Prince….Edwards

2145….Jan Cameron….Edwards

7558….Natalie Acres….Edwards

2915….Reg Francoeur….Edwards

7612….Troy Acres….Edwards

5790….Randell Jubenville….Eganville

7328….Tara Sosnowski….Elizabethtown

942….Andrew Lovett….Embrun

987….Andy Dalcourt….Embrun

6648….Celin Alexiuk….Embrun

3927….Charles Chase….Embrun

3934….Cheryl Desroches….Embrun

1844….Denis Beaudoin….Embrun

107….Eric Deschamps….Embrun

5402….Eric Lapointe….Embrun

2070….Guy Gingras….Embrun

1255….Josee Lovett….Embrun

7532….Lucie Charbonneau….Embrun

2514….Marc Courneyea….Embrun

731….Martine Quinn….Embrun

6398….Pascal Boily….Embrun

264….Pierre Boulay….Embrun

568….Rachelle Quinn….Embrun

77….Richard Quinn….Embrun

2972….Robert Butler….Embrun

4772….Sonia Desnoyers….Embrun

3105….Stephane Gregoire….Embrun

5899….Sylvie Beauchamp….Embrun

7195….Pierre Denis….Emburn

4225….Jay Buhr….Finch

6230….Glenda O'rourke….Fitzroy Harbour

5651….Mandy Inglis….Fitzroy Harbour

2647….Melanie Francoeur-Sauriol….Fort-Coulonge

3362….Denise Roy….Fournier

3565….Bill Sheppard….Gananoque

4363….Karrie King….Gananoque

2777….Nicole Houghtaling….Gananoque

6027….Pierre Doucette….Gananoque

4997….Steacy Kavaner….Gananoque

3267….Walter Gamblin….Gananoque

1393….Adam Gagnon….Gatineau

494….Alain Bergeron….Gatineau

1402….Alain D'entremont….Gatineau

1401….Alain Gilbert….Gatineau

3748….Alain Guimond….Gatineau

1403….Alain Huot….Gatineau

1232….Alain Rollin….Gatineau

315….Alexander Aguilar….Gatineau

3759….Alexander Esau….Gatineau

929….Alexander Schwab….Gatineau

532….Alexandra Dube….Gatineau

1420….Alexandra Lafond….Gatineau

5190….Alexandra Mecteau….Gatineau

3761….Alexandra Miglietta….Gatineau

6544….Alexandre Farley….Gatineau

7619….Alexandre Larocque….Gatineau

5191….Alexandre Paquin….Gatineau

3598….Allan Wilson….Gatineau

3769….Allanna Turcotte….Gatineau

3773….Alyssa Biage….Gatineau

3784….Amelie Arsenault….Gatineau

837….Andr Mollema….Gatineau

16296….Andre Brissette….Gatineau

6117….Andre Chartrand….Gatineau

1456….Andre Mayer….Gatineau

1467….Andrea Duncan….Gatineau

1464….Andrea Kevan….Gatineau

5219….Andree Laflamme….Gatineau

5220….Andree Legare….Gatineau

1489….Andy Handouyahia….Gatineau

1493….Anelise Alarcon-Moreno….Gatineau

5112….Anik Benoit….Gatineau

1045….Anik Lacasse….Gatineau

7439….Ann Sullivan….Gatineau

3824….Anne Ouellet….Gatineau

6582….Annick Lafontaine….Gatineau

4998….Annick Nault….Gatineau

3827….Annie Bayeur….Gatineau

5963….Annie Boivin….Gatineau

713….Annie Cloutier….Gatineau

3514….Annie Paradis….Gatineau

1508….Anthony Chartier….Gatineau

3840….Anthony Robertson….Gatineau

6586….Anthony Rose….Gatineau

488….Antoine Langlois….Gatineau

6125….Arthur Bunny Stec….Gatineau

1519….Ashoka Patel….Gatineau

1521….Audrey Soucy….Gatineau

3842….Barry Wood….Gatineau

1538….Beno T Paquin….Gatineau

1534….Benoit Carbonneau….Gatineau

571….Benoit Gagnon….Gatineau

1177….Benoit Genest….Gatineau

604….Benoit Gu Rette….Gatineau

1539….Benoit-Marcel Lalancette….Gatineau

3642….Bernard Audy….Gatineau

6134….Bernard Desilets….Gatineau

160….Bernard Labine….Gatineau

3849….Bianca Leblond….Gatineau

886….Blair Mehan….Gatineau

6141….Brent Weatherall….Gatineau

6620….Brian Sharpe….Gatineau

3492….Bruno Lafreniere….Gatineau

6628….Candida Cianci….Gatineau

6629….Carie Lalonde….Gatineau

3890….Caroline Auger….Gatineau

3893….Caroline Cauvin….Gatineau

6638….Caroline Périard….Gatineau

3908….Cathy Mitchell….Gatineau

3917….Chantal Henri….Gatineau

6652….Chantal Larocque….Gatineau

3924….Chantal Paquet….Gatineau

4989….Chantal Potvin….Gatineau

3645….Chantal Reid….Gatineau

1638….Chantal Roy….Gatineau

1124….Charles Vigneault….Gatineau

1666….Chris Chabassol….Gatineau

3939….Chris Coveny….Gatineau

5308….Chris F. Courtemanche….Gatineau

1682….Christine Moreau….Gatineau

1689….Christine Vasseur….Gatineau

5115….Christopher Saunders….Gatineau

1710….Cinthia Lepine….Gatineau

1716….Claude Mathieu….Gatineau

912….Claude Tremblay….Gatineau

5331….Corinne Ginnish….Gatineau

1240….Dan Mayer….Gatineau

7466….Daniel Campeau….Gatineau

1775….Daniel Lacroix….Gatineau

6701….Danika Lavallee….Gatineau

1787….Dany Archambault….Gatineau

4013….Dany Fortin….Gatineau

1797….Dave Perron….Gatineau

6715….David Georgieff….Gatineau

5351….David Little….Gatineau

7469….David Roberts….Gatineau

1243….David Sewell….Gatineau

3635….Debbie Joanisse….Gatineau

6731….Debra Ferderber….Gatineau

1848….Denis Laflamme….Gatineau

4049….Denis Vallieres….Gatineau

5370….Dennis Dumoulin….Gatineau

7477….Diane Biage….Gatineau

4064….Diane Cholette….Gatineau

4061….Diane Massie….Gatineau

6744….Diane Ouellette….Gatineau

4068….Dominic Morin….Gatineau

4954….Dominique Babin….Gatineau

4071….Dominique Bernier….Gatineau

4070….Dominique Periard….Gatineau

1878….Donald Desbiens….Gatineau

4073….Donald Rousseau….Gatineau

4091….Elaine Laroche….Gatineau

5958….Elena Chamina….Gatineau

5391….Elise St-Antoine….Gatineau

6767….Elizabeth Sousa….Gatineau

1943….Eric Fournier….Gatineau

5403….Eric Jolin….Gatineau

5401….Eric Mineault….Gatineau

6211….Erica Pashley….Gatineau

5411….Etienne Marcoux….Gatineau

1960….Fabien Lefebvre….Gatineau

6779….Fannie Bisson….Gatineau

6217….France Gelinas….Gatineau

5413….France Patrice….Gatineau

1966….France Patry….Gatineau

4130….France Periard….Gatineau

4129….France Sansregret….Gatineau

1971….Francine Mineault….Gatineau

1977….Francois Belletete….Gatineau

1974….Francois Dionne….Gatineau

27….Francois Toulouse….Gatineau

6785….Francoise Bessette….Gatineau

1995….Frederic Gagnon….Gatineau

2019….G Rald Turmel….Gatineau

6792….Gabrielle Drouin….Gatineau

4144….Gaetan Dumont….Gatineau

1998….Gaetan Lafrance….Gatineau

5044….Genevieve Sabourin….Gatineau

318….Ghislain St-Laurent….Gatineau

2023….Gilles Moreau….Gatineau

939….Gilles Th Riault….Gatineau

2032….Gilles-Philippe Pronovost….Gatineau

197….Glenn Yeo….Gatineau

557….Guillaume Desjardins….Gatineau

2069….Guy Desjardins….Gatineau

2066….Guy Noury….Gatineau

2067….Guy Picard….Gatineau

6809….Guylaine Proulx….Gatineau

3711….H L Ne Belleau….Gatineau

2086….Helene Dore….Gatineau

3740….Helene Tremblay-Allen….Gatineau

1359….Isabelle Deslandes….Gatineau

6825….Isabelle L Ger….Gatineau

3561….Isabelle Phaneuf….Gatineau

30….J Leblond….Gatineau

6831….Jacob Roberts….Gatineau

2122….Jacynthe Desgagne….Gatineau

1001….James Buell….Gatineau

2141….James Douglas Macdonald….Gatineau

395….Jason Fox….Gatineau

2188….Jean Francois Laplante….Gatineau

5094….Jean Guenette….Gatineau

4227….Jean Lemire….Gatineau

2198….Jean-Fran Ois Tremblay….Gatineau

4230….Jean-Francois Cyr….Gatineau

2194….Jean-Francois Gagne….Gatineau

2192….Jean-Francois Rioux….Gatineau

4231….Jean-Francois Seguin….Gatineau

2199….Jean-Guy Leclerc….Gatineau

2200….Jean-Michel Potvin….Gatineau

4237….Jean-Sebastien Blackburn….Gatineau

104….Jeffrey Muller….Gatineau

5492….Jennifer Labonte….Gatineau

4254….Jennifer Mitton….Gatineau

2234….Jeohanie Vezina….Gatineau

4277….Jessica Lavoie….Gatineau

4305….Jo Lle Labrie….Gatineau

5508….Joanne Bastille….Gatineau

7508….Joanne Dunn….Gatineau

2256….Joanne Sibbald….Gatineau

5515….Joel Primeau….Gatineau

4303….Joelle Pare….Gatineau

846….Johanne Branchaud….Gatineau

6277….John Carmosino….Gatineau

4324….Jonathan Lafontaine….Gatineau

1153….Jos E Lafontaine….Gatineau

5526….Jose Saramago….Gatineau

2312….Josee Patry….Gatineau

5529….Josette Kodsi….Gatineau

4333….Joyce Richards….Gatineau

5533….Judy Milks….Gatineau

5048….Julie Fortin….Gatineau

768….Julie Piche….Gatineau

4973….Julie-Anne Macdonald….Gatineau

4353….Karen Letain….Gatineau

5561….Karine Bouchard….Gatineau

2354….Karine Lacombe….Gatineau

4359….Karine Lafond….Gatineau

6942….Karine Lamarre….Gatineau

2356….Katarzyna Korta….Gatineau

3660….Kate Smith….Gatineau

4396….Kenna Turcotte….Gatineau

6970….Kent Hugh….Gatineau

6978….Kevin Quesnel….Gatineau

4417….Kristina Martin….Gatineau

916….Laurent Bellard….Gatineau

2453….Lee Petrin….Gatineau

3425….Leisa Mcgillivray….Gatineau

2454….Lenny Sabourin….Gatineau

4438….Leonie Maciag….Gatineau

5626….Lisa Monette….Gatineau

7040….Lo C Le Bihan….Gatineau

5637….Lorri Thompson….Gatineau

5110….Louis Bisson….Gatineau

6340….Louis Dupont….Gatineau

5639….Louis Lariviere….Gatineau

1109….Louis Simon….Gatineau

16260….Louis-Philippe D. Lefebvre….Gatineau

3522….Lucie Lalonde….Gatineau

4473….Lydia Ouellette….Gatineau

5645….Lynda Beaudoin….Gatineau

2501….Lyne Cholette….Gatineau

5037….Lynn Melancon….Gatineau

1327….M Lanie Lauzon….Gatineau

4542….M Lanie Menard….Gatineau

7108….M Lanie Vivier….Gatineau

5709….M Lissa Lafrance….Gatineau

1073….Magali Couture….Gatineau

2509….Magali Peries….Gatineau

1133….Manon Lachance….Gatineau

7060….Marc Allaire….Gatineau

4481….Marc Bastien….Gatineau

24….Marc Lacerte….Gatineau

7062….Marc Martin….Gatineau

2527….Marc Molgat….Gatineau

2522….Marc Pilloud….Gatineau

2525….Marc Tremblay….Gatineau

2530….Marcel Crepeau….Gatineau

4492….Marian Jordan….Gatineau

5664….Marie-Claude Beaumont….Gatineau

2543….Marie-Claude Tardif….Gatineau

5666….Marie-Eve Ferron….Gatineau

2549….Marie-France Harvey….Gatineau

2548….Marie-France Rault….Gatineau

2550….Marie-France Turcotte….Gatineau

6356….Marie-Jos E Durand….Gatineau

6358….Marie-Philippe Leblanc….Gatineau

7539….Mariko Hara….Gatineau

6360….Mario Ouellet….Gatineau

3607….Mark Ellison….Gatineau

2562….Mark Laviolette….Gatineau

103….Mark Schindel….Gatineau

2565….Mark Stocksley….Gatineau

2574….Mark Tessier….Gatineau

4509….Marthe Beland….Gatineau

2595….Martin Auger….Gatineau

4515….Martin Brosseau….Gatineau

2589….Martin Dompierre….Gatineau

2586….Martin Dompierre….Gatineau

7655….Martin Gros-Jean….Gatineau

2587….Martin Labine….Gatineau

1094….Martin Yshikawa….Gatineau

7085….Martine Dupuis….Gatineau

3487….Martine Pellerin….Gatineau

2607….Maryse Champagne….Gatineau

4526….Maryse Mercier….Gatineau

7657….Maryse Orban….Gatineau

2610….Mateo Farfan….Gatineau

4527….Mathieu Desrosiers….Gatineau

4528….Mathieu Gervais-Parent….Gatineau

5689….Mathieu Primeau….Gatineau

2637….Maxim Leduc….Gatineau

2643….Melanie Desmarais….Gatineau

2642….Melanie Gauthier….Gatineau

4539….Melanie Laurin….Gatineau

6372….Melissa Roy….Gatineau

6373….Mercedes Soza….Gatineau

4553….Mia Overduin….Gatineau

2698….Michel Biage….Gatineau

2696….Michel Boivin….Gatineau

586….Michel Brown….Gatineau

2699….Michel Dompierre….Gatineau

247….Michel Emond….Gatineau

7124….Michel Lapointe….Gatineau

4565….Michel Pelletier….Gatineau

2695….Michel Pinault….Gatineau

7548….Michele Hort….Gatineau

5718….Michele Le Blanc-Blanchard….Gatineau

3665….Michelle Aubie….Gatineau

2709….Michelle Payne….Gatineau

678….Miguel Gagnon….Gatineau

2715….Mika Raja….Gatineau

2716….Mikael Barrette….Gatineau

953….Mikaly Gagnon….Gatineau

7552….Mireille Ethier….Gatineau

7554….Monik Beauchemin….Gatineau

7151….Nancy Jane Russell….Gatineau

4596….Nancy Sylvain….Gatineau

1187….Natacha Mustaikis….Gatineau

5738….Nathalie Blais….Gatineau

5133….Nathalie Brunet….Gatineau

7562….Nathalie Leduc….Gatineau

16282….Nathalie Morin….Gatineau

1105….Nell Van Walsum….Gatineau

5748….Nicholas Goulet-Chevrier….Gatineau

5746….Nicholas Watters….Gatineau

4….Nicolas Chalifoux….Gatineau

5749….Nicolas Vachon….Gatineau

5754….Nicole Lefebvre….Gatineau

76….Noel Paine….Gatineau

4621….Olivier Thomann….Gatineau

2791….Pascal Pilon….Gatineau

4917….Pascal Turcotte….Gatineau

4630….Patrice Chen….Gatineau

7178….Patricia Le Bihan….Gatineau

2800….Patrick Brunette….Gatineau

549….Patrick Falardeau….Gatineau

2819….Paul Beland….Gatineau

1348….Paul Gould….Gatineau

2838….Paul Raymond….Gatineau

2824….Paul Shea….Gatineau

5770….Paul Vincelette….Gatineau

5774….Paul-Emile Roy….Gatineau

7190….Peter Balogh….Gatineau

2875….Philippe Daoust….Gatineau

2874….Philippe Fournier….Gatineau

7194….Philippe Jr Ngassam….Gatineau

2876….Philippe Lajeunesse….Gatineau

3368….Pier Enright….Gatineau

2883….Pierre Archambault….Gatineau

2886….Pierre Marchand….Gatineau

2889….Pierre Roman….Gatineau

2885….Pierre Theriault….Gatineau

4992….Raphael Brissette….Gatineau

7390….Raymond Desjardins….Gatineau

6000….Raymonde D'amour….Gatineau

854….Raynald C T….Gatineau

4669….Rebecca Lebouthillier….Gatineau

5136….Rejean Lacroix….Gatineau

7576….Remi Vezina….Gatineau

270….Remy Larocque….Gatineau

2919….Ren Hatem….Gatineau

5802….Rene Cote….Gatineau

2926….Richard Blais….Gatineau

2924….Richard Masse….Gatineau

2922….Richard Sabourin….Gatineau

4685….Robin Grenier….Gatineau

2992….Roger Archambault….Gatineau

6421….Roger Couture….Gatineau

4692….Roger Lupien….Gatineau

4706….Ryan Wong….Gatineau

5033….Sandra Roberts….Gatineau

7672….Sasha Pellerin….Gatineau

3052….Sebastien Blanc….Gatineau

3056….Serge Dussault….Gatineau

4736….Serge Gouin….Gatineau

4735….Serge Guindon….Gatineau

4750….Shawn Maloney….Gatineau

3073….Shawn Robertson….Gatineau

6443….Sherry Hamilton….Gatineau

3089….Simon Jomphe Tremblay….Gatineau

7283….Simon Larouche….Gatineau

3090….Simon Page….Gatineau

3094….Solajo Couturier….Gatineau

7597….Sonia Alexander….Gatineau

5166….Sonia B Land….Gatineau

6447….Sophie Deslauriers….Gatineau

1097….St Phane Siegrist….Gatineau

3454….St Phanie Dicaire….Gatineau

5880….Stephane Blanchard….Gatineau

4783….Stephane Sirard….Gatineau

4791….Stephanie Racine….Gatineau

3131….Steve Faulkner….Gatineau

3157….Susi-Paula Gaudencio….Gatineau

301….Suzanne Lacombe….Gatineau

1108….Suzanne Ramsay….Gatineau

1270….Sylvain Marier….Gatineau

5897….Sylvain Mignault….Gatineau

937….Sylvain S N Chal….Gatineau

5902….Tanya Tobin….Gatineau

579….Tayeb Mesbah….Gatineau

7338….Thomas Cort….Gatineau

3197….Tim Scapillato….Gatineau

4853….Toyi Soglo….Gatineau

3229….Tracy Holmes….Gatineau

2120….Valerie Jacques….Gatineau

1367….Valerie Parent….Gatineau

5930….Vanessa Fulford….Gatineau

5959….Veronique Simoneau….Gatineau

716….Veronique Tremblay….Gatineau

5934….Vicky Charron-Bourdon….Gatineau

7367….Vincent Bolduc….Gatineau

4887….Virginie Beauchamp….Gatineau

5982….Virginie Corneau….Gatineau

3468….Wayne Saunders….Gatineau

5947….William Dansereau-Courtemanche….Gatineau

3285….Yan Michaud….Gatineau

3286….Yannick Lacharite….Gatineau

4898….Yvan Laforest….Gatineau

1143….Yves Phaneuf….Gatineau

3291….Yves Saint-Germain….Gatineau

4902….Zahida Assari….Gatineau

1149….Zo Couture….Gatineau

6108….Alyssa Staff….Gloucester

1448….Amy O'reilly….Gloucester

5236….Barb Sweazey….Gloucester

3848….Bg Arun….Gloucester

5104….Catherine Clifford….Gloucester

7410….Chantal Dupuis….Gloucester

1688….Christine Pratley-Moore….Gloucester

1715….Claude Brault….Gloucester

3983….Connie Chan….Gloucester

1736….Costas Farassoglou….Gloucester

4016….Dave Dowling….Gloucester

1297….David Sinclair….Gloucester

4117….Erin Sarsfield….Gloucester

2031….Gilles Philion….Gloucester

5446….Ian Proulx….Gloucester

7495….Irene Pestov….Gloucester

338….Jean-Claude Blais….Gloucester

1279….Jeannie Leblanc….Gloucester

4249….Jenn Johnson….Gloucester

5962….John Girard….Gloucester

2585….Martin Lanctot….Gloucester

5742….Neil George….Gloucester

6391….Nicole Garlough….Gloucester

2931….Richard F Proulx….Gloucester

7226….Roberta Battisti-Valle….Gloucester

598….Ryan Luck….Gloucester

7240….Samuel Valle….Gloucester

3036….Savvas Farassoglou….Gloucester

3048….Sean Mcnair….Gloucester

3188….Thomas Mcmurray….Gloucester

584….Tom Fottinger….Gloucester

3237….Trevor Duff….Gloucester

3238….Trevor Johnson….Gloucester

4871….Una Beaudry….Gloucester

3618….Virginia Mofford….Gloucester

3262….Vladimir Pestov….Gloucester

6012….Barbra Draper….Gracefield

1144….An Vo….Greely

3801….Andrew Downes….Greely

5010….Angele Vanderlaan….Greely

1189….Anthony Wielemaker….Greely

1623….Casey Goheen….Greely

1704….Cindy Cecillon….Greely

1799….Dave Erling….Greely

183….David Harding….Greely

5057….Debbie Mcleod….Greely

4168….Greg Loos….Greely

2211….Jeff Oliver….Greely

907….Jennifer Frechette….Greely

2280….John Baranyi….Greely

2296….Jon Hamilton….Greely

2314….Joseph Basile….Greely

2379….Keith Decoste….Greely

6305….Kelly Schuller….Greely

6031….Lana Pieroway….Greely

7026….Linda Corke….Greely

4524….Maryrose Rodger….Greely

5762….Patricia Brander….Greely

2832….Paul Mcnamee….Greely

7188….Paula Christiansen….Greely

2903….Randall Holmes….Greely

7218….Ricky Grisel….Greely

2998….Rose Ling….Greely

3039….Scott Mcleod….Greely

4777….Sophie Dumoulin….Greely

3341….Emilie Gaudreau….Hammond

1963….Fernand Seguin….Hammond

999….Sarah Waddell….Hammond

4435….Leisha Moulton….Hawkesbury

849….Lorne Thomas….Hawkesbury

3239….Trevor Beaudoin….Hawkesbury

157….Ariane Brunet….Hull

1774….Daniel St-Pierre….Hull

6328….Lemy Nguyen….Hull

6934….Karen Keeler….Iroquois

6961….Keira Cameron….Iroquois

5535….Judy-Lynn Jordan….Jasper

4639….Patty Garven….Jasper

643….Adrian Salt….Kanata

5182….Agnes Vargha….Kanata

5042….Aim E Riggs-Willey….Kanata

5056….Al Doyle….Kanata

6540….Alan Doody….Kanata

151….Alex Downey….Kanata

3754….Alex Glasgow….Kanata

6102….Alex Holland….Kanata

936….Alexei Novikov….Kanata

1432….Allen Piddington….Kanata

1435….Allison Penner….Kanata

3483….Alyson Maynard….Kanata

6111….Amanda Lemieux….Kanata

5207….Amber Mccallen….Kanata

3788….Amy Ash-Haley….Kanata

1450….Amy Fraser….Kanata

6113….Amy Lidster….Kanata

3304….Amy Maheu….Kanata

3807….Angela Hussey….Kanata

1496….Anita Cadieux….Kanata

5228….Anjara Boicel….Kanata

5230….Ann Empey….Kanata

6120….Anne Jones….Kanata

1503….Anne Murphy….Kanata

1509….Anthony Near….Kanata

6127….Ashley Lawery….Kanata

5237….Barbara Williams….Kanata

3841….Barrie Friel….Kanata

3621….Ben Schmidt….Kanata

92….Bernie Armour….Kanata

6603….Bill Gilchrist….Kanata

3850….Bill Potts….Kanata

6606….Billy Seaman….Kanata

427….Brandon Greening….Kanata

1558….Brandon Shirley….Kanata

6138….Brenda Smith….Kanata

5263….Brian Fraser….Kanata

5063….Brian Smith….Kanata

1598….Bryan Allsopp….Kanata

6633….Carleen Hicks….Kanata

3550….Carmen Davidson….Kanata

4944….Caron Fitzpatrick….Kanata

7629….Catherine Jervis….Kanata

5290….Cathi Yabsley….Kanata

1631….Cathy Anderson….Kanata

4963….Cecilia Jorgenson….Kanata

1636….Chandan Banerjee….Kanata

3931….Cherie Koshman….Kanata

1656….Chris Brown….Kanata

3941….Chris Howard….Kanata

6660….Chris Mccallum….Kanata

1661….Chris Ward….Kanata

491….Christine Mccartney….Kanata

1686….Christine Pollex….Kanata

1690….Christopher Arksey….Kanata

1707….Cindy Molaski….Kanata

6677….Cindy Seaman….Kanata

3574….Claire Poulin….Kanata

6682….Colleen Gilchrist….Kanata

7419….Colleen Kilty….Kanata

1741….Craig Gauthier….Kanata

811….Dan Kelly….Kanata

1795….Darryl Higgins….Kanata

569….David Bohn….Kanata

1815….David Evans….Kanata

4033….David Lafreniere….Kanata

1817….David Muldoon….Kanata

1828….David Ogden….Kanata

6186….David Pamic….Kanata

1818….David Sim….Kanata

1333….Deby Knowlton….Kanata

6735….Derek Andersen….Kanata

4055….Derek Holmstead….Kanata

6748….Don Lonie….Kanata

4072….Don Whiting….Kanata

5379….Donna Gow….Kanata

4078….Doug Glasgow….Kanata

1892….Douglas Rosenthal….Kanata

4089….Edward Valdes….Kanata

1929….Emily Fairbairn….Kanata

1941….Eric Shilts….Kanata

5407….Erika Aruja….Kanata

1080….Erin Waterfall….Kanata

1353….Eva Klassen….Kanata

1997….Gabriele Castelnuovo….Kanata

2021….Gi Wu….Kanata

6804….Greg Dow….Kanata

2072….Guy Turgeon….Kanata

5438….Gwendoline Malo….Kanata

6814….Harvey Chatterton….Kanata

2083….Heather Loeffelholz….Kanata

2094….Hugh Wright….Kanata

2098….Ian Govan….Kanata

6823….Ian Marrs….Kanata

2114….Isabelle Jean….Kanata

4200….James Beuerman….Kanata

6836….James Fairlie….Kanata

1202….Jan Donak….Kanata

5068….Janet Smith….Kanata

6250….Janice Tughan….Kanata

2162….Jared Semenchuk….Kanata

2165….Jasmyne Labonte….Kanata

2191….Jeanette Steffler….Kanata

4242….Jeff Joslin….Kanata

4240….Jeff Mill….Kanata

863….Jeff Zhao….Kanata

7505….Jeffery Tomkins….Kanata

4257….Jennifer Donohue….Kanata

6261….Jennifer Kemp….Kanata

5489….Jennifer Rose….Kanata

1178….Jennifer Upson….Kanata

670….Jim Lambley….Kanata

6885….Joan Mcfaul….Kanata

904….Jody Gelowitz….Kanata

5514….Joel Mcdonnell….Kanata

2277….John Buitenga….Kanata

2275….John Mahoney….Kanata

5521….John Pool….Kanata

6912….Joshua Tolmie….Kanata

6925….Julie Mcguire….Kanata

6933….Karen Hanna….Kanata

4358….Karen Piddington….Kanata

1364….Karen Ramsay….Kanata

126….Karen Zerr….Kanata

5563….Katelan Smith….Kanata

2364….Kathleen Bowser….Kanata

3703….Kathleen Westbury….Kanata

4375….Katrina Damiano….Kanata

722….Keith Aguinaga….Kanata

2377….Keith Fenerty….Kanata

3690….Kelly Abb Davis….Kanata

6968….Kenneth Klassen….Kanata

2392….Kerry Kennedy….Kanata

2415….Kim Robertson….Kanata

629….Kimberley Bohn….Kanata

6986….Kindell Tolmie….Kanata

2428….Krista Levesque….Kanata

6993….Kyla Daw….Kanata

771….Lanny Underhill….Kanata

7007….Laura Mcguire….Kanata

4430….Laurie Davis….Kanata

5987….Leanne Pelley….Kanata

3442….Lee-Anne Clare….Kanata

4445….Linda Yeung….Kanata

3634….Lisa Hogan….Kanata

2473….Lisa Mayhew….Kanata

5630….Liz Braddon….Kanata

7042….Loretta Masaro….Kanata

6342….Louise Macdonald….Kanata

5016….Luisa De Amicis….Kanata

2492….Luke Senecal….Kanata

5649….Man Nguyen….Kanata

7541….Marjorie Coakwell….Kanata

7079….Mark Calder….Kanata

2577….Mark Crozier….Kanata

7080….Mark Davis….Kanata

341….Mark Jorgenson….Kanata

2560….Mark Nesbitt….Kanata

2578….Mark Young….Kanata

4516….Martin Devillers….Kanata

2590….Martin Pierre….Kanata

7084….Martine Dumas….Kanata

7089….Mary Anne Jackson-Hughes….Kanata

2600….Mary Campbell….Kanata

7542….Mary Jane Beasley….Kanata

7544….Megan Mooibroek….Kanata

2682….Michael Beaudette….Kanata

7123….Michel Fleury….Kanata

7126….Michelle Calder….Kanata

2712….Michelle Seguin….Kanata

492….Mike Garwood….Kanata

6518….Mike Watford….Kanata

4581….Mikkyal Koshman….Kanata

5724….Mona Noor….Kanata

4585….Monica Landon….Kanata

2741….Monica Van Dam….Kanata

7148….Nancy Mcguire….Kanata

1369….Natasha Riddiford….Kanata

913….Neil Marshall….Kanata

732….Neil Maxwell….Kanata

5753….Nicole Myslivecek….Kanata

4623….Paddy Leahy….Kanata

7382….Pamela Ford….Kanata

4643….Paul Kellar….Kanata

7571….Pauline Joly….Kanata

2849….Paulo Ekkebus….Kanata

6404….Penelope Hawtrey….Kanata

2852….Penelope Van Dusen….Kanata

1130….Phil Blanchfield….Kanata

6407….Philip Harris….Kanata

2871….Philip Rushworth….Kanata

4653….Philip Tughan….Kanata

6080….Pierrette Mccartney….Kanata

955….Raymond Wong….Kanata

7207….Rebecca Campbell….Kanata

4670….Renata Hogan-Sullivan….Kanata

673….Rick Wynen….Kanata

2963….Rob Mcaulay….Kanata

543….Robb Langille….Kanata

5812….Robert Chanter….Kanata

2984….Robert Shaw….Kanata

7579….Robin Beardsley….Kanata

4687….Robyn Ruscher….Kanata

1048….Ron Pumphrey….Kanata

5821….Rosa Pool….Kanata

6422….Rose Mcniven….Kanata

5833….Samantha Rivest….Kanata

3564….Sarah Currie….Kanata

4721….Sarah Green….Kanata

3032….Sarah Muldoon….Kanata

7408….Sasha Richards….Kanata

4733….Scott Hodgins….Kanata

7258….Sean Fallon….Kanata

5856….Shannon Holt….Kanata

7264….Shannon Moore….Kanata

7265….Sharon Fine….Kanata

4760….Shelly Nesbitt….Kanata

5867….Shelly Williams….Kanata

7277….Sheri Cayouette….Kanata

3086….Silvesta Ng….Kanata

4787….Stephanie Borowyk….Kanata

3114….Stephen Cadieux….Kanata

3116….Stephen Molaski….Kanata

4808….Steven Blaskie….Kanata

3144….Steven Graham….Kanata

3146….Stuart Swanson….Kanata

7417….Susan Brimmell….Kanata

7316….Susan Korporal….Kanata

4813….Susan Pagnutti….Kanata

3402….T Koss….Kanata

3413….Tanis Roadhouse….Kanata

4828….Tanya Hancock-Chen….Kanata

7330….Terri Scott….Kanata

3409….Theresa Marshall….Kanata

1227….Tom Auger….Kanata

7353….Tracey Dunfield….Kanata

4858….Tracy Beeman….Kanata

5928….Valerie Desjarlais….Kanata

306….Vincent Andy Fong….Kanata

6485….Walter Boogaard….Kanata

1165….Wei Zhou….Kanata

5031….William Jorgenson….Kanata

5040….Yvonne Relf….Kanata

310….Zhihong Hong….Kanata

1570….Brett Verdon….Kars

7636….Erin Shannon….Kars

5487….Jennifer Wright….Kars

4267….Jenny Fisher….Kars

2847….Paula Lund….Kars

2993….Roger Vansickle….Kars

1525….Barbara Bacon….Kemptville

5269….Bruce Pelton….Kemptville

5272….Carole Perkins….Kemptville

4942….Chris Foran….Kemptville

3951….Chris Wanless….Kemptville

6169….Cindy Chandler….Kemptville

1732….Connie Duclos….Kemptville

7463….Corleen Asbreuk….Kemptville

6709….Darrin Macmullin….Kemptville

6712….Dave Springer….Kemptville

6185….David Tessier….Kemptville

1838….Dawn Murray….Kemptville

7471….Deborah Dickson….Kemptville

6205….Ed Chandler….Kemptville

16274….Emily Conway….Kemptville

5123….Fiona Tracey….Kemptville

4163….Glenna Burke….Kemptville

5436….Greg Walsh….Kemptville

2117….Jacob Banks….Kemptville

808….James Pede….Kemptville

6258….Jennifer Crawford….Kemptville

6891….Joanne Desormeaux….Kemptville

6959….Katy Gale….Kemptville

2434….Kristen Giffen….Kemptville

4525….Marysa Irvine….Kemptville

2982….Robert Grandy….Kemptville

855….Roxanne Harrington….Kemptville

489….Sean Campbell….Kemptville

6442….Sheri Steeves….Kemptville

6084….Stephanie Rose….Kemptville

3141….Steven De Ville….Kemptville

3366….Teena Dacey….Kemptville

7357….Tricia Mcrae….Kemptville

7437….Angie Buckland….Kinburn

7473….Deborah Turcotte….Kinburn

4196….Jackie Stadnyk….Kinburn

703….Ron Stadnyk….Kinburn

5832….Salli Dambrowitz….Kinburn

5642….Lucie Dufour….La Peche

2794….Patrice Vaillancourt….La Peche

6481….Vanessa Lessard….La Peche

6695….Dan Keaney….Lanark

6728….Debbie Keaney….Lanark

119….Scott Shaver….Lanark

4128….France Bertrand….L'Ange-Gardien

2594….Martin Joanisse….L'Ange-Gardien

4587….Monique Dube….L'Ange-Gardien

4776….Sophie Gauvreau….L'Ange-Gardien

3104….Stephane Gosselin….L'Ange-Gardien

1460….Andre Gravelle….Lansdowne

5264….Brian Wachko….Limoges

1687….Christine Kennedy….Limoges

5532….Judy Gagne….Limoges

16261….Marc Bellemare….Limoges

5793….Raphael Millaire….Limoges

5853….Serge Froment….Limoges

814….Shanna Delorme….Limoges

6460….Sylvia Wachko….Limoges

6463….Tammy Barnes….Limoges

4833….Tara-Lynn Stevenson….Limoges

3199….Tim Arsenault….Limoges

7435….Angela Quinn….Lombardy

4775….Sophie Caron….L'Orignal

7094….Matthew Dyer….Luskville

7166….Nicholas Sturgeon….Luskville

6619….Brian Carpenter….Maberly

7486….Fred Barrett….Maberly

2757….Nancy Villemure….Maberly

6454….Susan Marble….Maberly

4432….Laurie Thompson….Madoc

4192….Isabelle Tanguay….Magog

For the half-marathon (21.1 km) results, here are the local (Ottawa & area) participants -- sorted by cities and first name -- in the September 18, 2011, Canada Army Run held in Ottawa, Ontario. There were 6,397 runners in the 21.1 km race, an increase of about 900 runners compared to 2010.

 

Click here and enter the bib numbers (see below) for the full individual race results. Thank-you to Sportstats.

 

* Also, click here for race photos by Brightroom™, Inc.

 

.

Lists of local half-marathon race participants:

 

Part A. Ottawa, A-L (Click here.)

Part B. Ottawa, M-Z (Click here.)

Part C. Other Communities (Alexandria to Magog) (Click here.)

Part D. Other Communities (Maitland to Woodlawn) (see below)

 

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

 

Part D. (bib no., name, Maitland - Woodlawn)

 

3710….Dawn Kennedy….Maitland

5778….Penny Duffy….Maitland

974….Scott Clucas….Maitland

1622….Carrie Allan….Mallorytown

2769….Nicholas Thompson….Mallorytown

2905….Randy Frith….Mallorytown

1455….Andre Houde….Manotick

162….Brad Ysseldyk….Manotick

6642….Cat Oakley….Manotick

627….Dennis Blinn….Manotick

4075….Donna Bekkers-Boyd….Manotick

5378….Donna Johnston….Manotick

5390….Elisa Kurylowicz….Manotick

1933….Emily Donaldson….Manotick

6781….Fiona Valliere….Manotick

192….Fred Hasle….Manotick

2073….Guy Beaudoin….Manotick

2351….Karen Donaldson….Manotick

2349….Karen Peck….Manotick

7070….Marie Norris….Manotick

751….Mark Seaman….Manotick

2591….Martin Brochu….Manotick

3153….Susan Ibach….Manotick

3981….Colleen Macdonald….Martintown

813….Heather Purdy….Martintown

6555….Alysun Lillico….Masham

6865….Jennifer Selwyn….Masham

5135….Pierre Sauv….Masham

2278….John Hetherington….Mcdonald's Corners

2259….Jodi Brennan….Merrickville

2427….Krista Jensen….Merrickville

3837….Barb Beiersdorfer….Metcalfe

6691….Craig Killin….Metcalfe

6741….Diane Coupal….Metcalfe

6782….Fran Gaudet….Metcalfe

4955….Kazimierz Krzyzanowski….Metcalfe

714….Peter Klein….Metcalfe

136….Scott Robertson….Metcalfe

4765….Silver Buckler….Metcalfe

4824….Tamara Williams….Metcalfe

5916….Timothy Wyman….Metcalfe

3606….Doug Wilson….Morrisburg

2113….Isabella Jordan….Morrisburg

826….Kasey Bennett….Morrisburg

4723….Sarah Myers….Morrisburg

1324….Shari Keyes….Morrisburg

5059….Adam Sulis….Mountain

125….Raymond Sherrer….Mountain

6535….Ada Gorrie….Munster

6394….Norman Watt….Munster

490….Warren Hulme….Munster

6064….Angela Walsh….Navan

3579….Carole Charlebois….Navan

5479….Jean-Charles Renaud….Navan

533….Jo Lle Levac….Navan

6954….Kathy Goff….Navan

4395….Kendra Barton….Navan

5595….Krista Corneil….Navan

2634….Maureen Edwards….Navan

2720….Mike Rozon….Navan

3135….Steve Call….Navan

3255….Vicki Rozon….Navan

6070….Aaron Doering….Nepean

6071….Abrinna Doering….Nepean

6545….Alexei Pogrebtsov….Nepean

5196….Alison Canavan….Nepean

6559….Amy Fan….Nepean

3455….Andrea Charron….Nepean

696….Andrew Johnston….Nepean

7394….Bernadette Bernard….Nepean

7444….Beverly Fortier….Nepean

6148….Camellia Asbreuk….Nepean

7449….Cameron Palmer….Nepean

1604….Cameron Passmore….Nepean

74….Carly Teckles….Nepean

3543….Caroline Bachynski….Nepean

3557….Carolyn Perkins….Nepean

6157….Catherine Martens….Nepean

611….Chantelle Woods….Nepean

5299….Chelsey Garde….Nepean

1648….Cheryl Laite-Whitman….Nepean

900….Chris Fitzgerald….Nepean

5305….Chris Loschmann….Nepean

3938….Chris Raymond….Nepean

6674….Christopher Hill….Nepean

1313….Claudio Sicoli….Nepean

6681….Colleen Bird….Nepean

5106….Corrina Morehouse….Nepean

1742….Craig Lynch….Nepean

1750….Csaba Tarro….Nepean

3381….Cynthia Field-Rose….Nepean

1760….Dan Atwood….Nepean

5983….Dan Lacasse….Nepean

6181….Dan Whitman….Nepean

841….Darryl Sitland….Nepean

5349….Dave Spence….Nepean

1833….David Daze….Nepean

1824….David Harvie….Nepean

6718….David Reid….Nepean

4029….David Summerbell….Nepean

1849….Denis Therrien….Nepean

6742….Diane Ferguson….Nepean

1865….Diane Mensah….Nepean

6752….Donna Mckibbon….Nepean

6754….Doug Simpson….Nepean

5388….Elaine Robertson….Nepean

6208….Elizabeth Keighley….Nepean

4102….Ellen Dickson….Nepean

4950….Erik Youngson….Nepean

959….Face Wallace….Nepean

6086….Fallon Carrier….Nepean

4132….Francine Lapointe….Nepean

82….Gary Guymer….Nepean

1008….Gary Miles….Nepean

3367….Gary Thomas….Nepean

3485….George Heron….Nepean

5006….Gerry Blathwayt….Nepean

505….Gerry Lanigan….Nepean

5432….Gloria Schwartz….Nepean

2058….Greg Billyard….Nepean

4174….Heather Miller….Nepean

4176….Helen Jazzar….Nepean

2091….Henry Hum….Nepean

3655….Hieu Nguyen….Nepean

4183….Ian Taylor….Nepean

7497….Isabelle Gendron….Nepean

6829….Jack Kwan….Nepean

4199….Jaleel Moidu….Nepean

2143….Jamie Macdonald….Nepean

2158….Janice Janczyn….Nepean

3406….Janice Richard….Nepean

6844….Jason Feist….Nepean

4239….Jeff Pakeman….Nepean

2215….Jeff Slavin….Nepean

5494….Jennifer Ann Sweet….Nepean

3460….Jennifer Mcdonell….Nepean

4266….Jennifer Wills….Nepean

4952….Jennilee Gavina….Nepean

6077….Joanne Doucet….Nepean

6062….Jo-Anne Janigan….Nepean

2263….Joe Tegano….Nepean

4307….John Farrell….Nepean

5517….John Gardam….Nepean

1216….John Hall….Nepean

4315….John Neima….Nepean

4327….Jordan Harju….Nepean

877….Joseph Emas….Nepean

6009….Judy Tubman-Reid….Nepean

6287….Julia Coe….Nepean

6917….Juliane Hua….Nepean

7513….Julie Brunette-Guay….Nepean

6927….Julie White….Nepean

2343….Kanako Inuyama….Nepean

5552….Karen Beutel….Nepean

4354….Karen Mullen….Nepean

5560….Karin Hay….Nepean

5079….Karleen Heer….Nepean

6507….Katherine Wadge….Nepean

6952….Kathryn Hill….Nepean

6957….Katie Squires….Nepean

4389….Kelly Bell….Nepean

5058….Kelly Macgregor….Nepean

5579….Kelly Miersma….Nepean

7517….Kendra Pammett….Nepean

6310….Kenneth Hennessey….Nepean

16252….Kevin Helleman….Nepean

2431….Kristel Gauthier….Nepean

5600….Kudzayi Dondo….Nepean

5604….Laura Bogaert….Nepean

7004….Laura Clark….Nepean

1256….Laura Mclellan….Nepean

943….Leslie Doering….Nepean

1363….Lillian Hayward….Nepean

3465….Linda Billyard….Nepean

5155….Linda Koenders….Nepean

6337….Lisa Marie Bambrick….Nepean

7651….Louise Beasley….Nepean

234….Marc Rancourt….Nepean

6351….Margaret-Ann Kellett….Nepean

7066….Maria Marcantonio….Nepean

2540….Marie Noreau….Nepean

5679….Mark White….Nepean

823….Martin Jobin….Nepean

5685….Mary Gardam….Nepean

2616….Matt Peake….Nepean

2626….Matthew Henry….Nepean

2625….Matthew Mcclare….Nepean

3720….Maureen Corrigan….Nepean

2635….Maurenia Bunny Lynds….Nepean

2648….Melanie Nason-Green….Nepean

775….Melanie White….Nepean

4558….Michael Aranoff….Nepean

2677….Michael Mitchell….Nepean

2718….Mike Daniel….Nepean

1025….Mike Horne….Nepean

4575….Mike Jazzar….Nepean

2721….Mike Maclean….Nepean

5085….Miranda Dulmage….Nepean

6386….Mirna Ramirez-Hennessey….Nepean

1004….Monika Morrison….Nepean

5745….Ngoni Dondo….Nepean

2770….Nick Titcombe….Nepean

7564….Nina Marello….Nepean

4617….Ning Huang….Nepean

7567….Pat Charman….Nepean

583….Patrick Murnaghan….Nepean

2803….Patrick Owens….Nepean

5768….Patrick Walsh….Nepean

7181….Patti-Lynn Dougan….Nepean

7182….Paul Bush….Nepean

5775….Pauline St-Pierre….Nepean

4648….Pete Veurtjes….Nepean

7191….Peter Bayne….Nepean

2864….Peter Foley….Nepean

2860….Peter Page….Nepean

2896….Rachael Ingham….Nepean

2897….Rachel Ettinger….Nepean

6042….Renee Leahy….Nepean

5803….Rhonda Scharf….Nepean

7217….Richard Thomas….Nepean

2935….Rita Petrocco….Nepean

2967….Rob Gauthier….Nepean

277….Rob Muir….Nepean

5049….Roslyn Dacey….Nepean

3001….Russ Mullen….Nepean

3007….Ryan Charbonneau….Nepean

704….Ryan Ellement….Nepean

7235….Ryan Holmes….Nepean

7236….Ryan Squires….Nepean

3018….Samuel Galante….Nepean

3034….Sarah Jayne Blair….Nepean

4726….Sarah Matthews….Nepean

6520….Shakila Khan….Nepean

3509….Shannon Matheson….Nepean

7674….Sharon Karidis….Nepean

6438….Shaun Burridge….Nepean

4749….Shaun Hassanali….Nepean

3074….Shawn Delay….Nepean

6081….Shelley Doering….Nepean

1268….Sheyla Dussault….Nepean

7296….Stephanie Dunne….Nepean

4798….Stephen Fryer….Nepean

5889….Stephen Lee….Nepean

3154….Susan Ross….Nepean

3169….Tamara Evers-Tate….Nepean

4996….Tania Falls….Nepean

6095….Tannia Shamas….Nepean

4827….Tanya Mykytyshyn….Nepean

7610….Terry Guay….Nepean

3191….Tiffanie Tri….Nepean

1272….Tim Sandwell….Nepean

7343….Tina Ryan….Nepean

925….Tony Blake….Nepean

5921….Tracey Aker….Nepean

7355….Tracy Murray….Nepean

4868….Tuan Nguyen….Nepean

6475….Tyson Mcwha….Nepean

7361….Vance White….Nepean

7614….Wayne Charman….Nepean

3281….Wesley Kotala….Nepean

4044….Debra Hughes….North Gower

6202….Donna Duffett….North Gower

4972….Joanne Mcfall Smith….North Gower

5568….Kathleen Kerr….North Gower

6962….Keith Colwell….North Gower

7523….Linda Stewart….North Gower

861….Natalie Smith….North Gower

6444….Sherry Camm….North Gower

3686….Adam Menzies….Orleans

6539….Alain Brule….Orleans

5183….Alan Howard….Orleans

150….Alan-John Sigouin….Orleans

3757….Alexander Templeton….Orleans

6543….Alexandra Gaudes….Orleans

1260….Alfred Jacque….Orleans

5194….Alice Debroy….Orleans

3770….Allen Cameron….Orleans

1462….Andr Normandin….Orleans

1463….Andrea Kinack….Orleans

1486….Andrew Duggan….Orleans

6567….Andrew Rose….Orleans

3811….Angie Ermel….Orleans

3380….Anita Taylor….Orleans

3394….Anke Berndt….Orleans

5043….Anne Mccarthy….Orleans

1506….Annie Lefebvre….Orleans

6597….Barry Lightowlers….Orleans

718….Benoit Lecuyer….Orleans

1535….Benoit Lefebvre….Orleans

5249….Bob Barker….Orleans

688….Brent Kelly….Orleans

796….Brent Smyth….Orleans

3416….Brian Wiens….Orleans

1592….Bruce Barteaux….Orleans

6626….Camille Poirier….Orleans

764….Carmen Saumure….Orleans

1614….Carole Gagnon….Orleans

6636….Carole Gaudes….Orleans

6006….Casey Martin….Orleans

1626….Catherine Goulet….Orleans

3912….Cedric Aspirault….Orleans

7452….Chantale Raby….Orleans

3457….Charles Momy….Orleans

1643….Charles Reddick….Orleans

721….Charles Sincennes….Orleans

3672….Chris Morrison….Orleans

3956….Christina Walker….Orleans

5319….Christine Baird….Orleans

5316….Christine Langeder….Orleans

3959….Christine Nault….Orleans

1685….Christine Piche….Orleans

1702….Christopher Hannah….Orleans

3969….Christopher Shelley….Orleans

1723….Coco Comtois….Orleans

3647….Colleen Boicey….Orleans

1733….Connie Copeland….Orleans

3475….Cynthia Taylor….Orleans

7464….D Michelle Watters….Orleans

7632….Daniel Gagnon….Orleans

3577….Daniel Morency….Orleans

1778….Daniel Thompson….Orleans

5342….Danielle Dunleavy….Orleans

5116….Danielle Poisson….Orleans

429….Dave Harding….Orleans

4017….Dave Lowe….Orleans

1807….Dave Trumpower….Orleans

1810….David Benay….Orleans

645….David Cameron….Orleans

686….David Leeder….Orleans

733….David Tischhauser….Orleans

6720….David Young….Orleans

3484….Deborah Baldwin….Orleans

4053….Dennis Lloyd….Orleans

4057….Diana Mactier….Orleans

6743….Diane Gauthier….Orleans

3519….Diane Levesque….Orleans

1871….Dominic Lessard….Orleans

5376….Dominique Bedard….Orleans

963….Don Lavictoire….Orleans

5385….Duran Felix….Orleans

6758….Eann Hodges….Orleans

6759….Edith Chartrand….Orleans

4109….Eric Carriere….Orleans

5121….Eric Christensen….Orleans

5404….Eric Jules Chiasson….Orleans

5410….Erin Marissen….Orleans

3372….Ernie Yip….Orleans

4125….Faye Magne….Orleans

6218….Francois Trudel….Orleans

6787….Frank Barrett….Orleans

6788….Fred Saikaly….Orleans

193….Fred Whichelo….Orleans

5421….Garrett Thoms….Orleans

6224….Gary Housch….Orleans

4149….Genevieve Laferriere….Orleans

2027….Gilles Beauchesne….Orleans

6228….Ginette Jolin….Orleans

6067….Glenda Davies….Orleans

2057….Greg Beliveau….Orleans

6234….Heather Mcintosh….Orleans

2089….Helene Fortier….Orleans

200….Henrick Lafleche….Orleans

1247….Hinesh Chauhan….Orleans

4186….Irene Roy….Orleans

5450….Iris Felix….Orleans

2139….James Carere….Orleans

1019….James Waite….Orleans

748….Jean Lavictoire….Orleans

4226….Jean Magne….Orleans

2190….Jean-Denis Caron….Orleans

6254….Jean-Marc Vinette….Orleans

7406….Jean-Noel Gilbert….Orleans

613….Jean-Pierre Contant….Orleans

94….Jeff Danforth….Orleans

7413….Jennifer Caldbick….Orleans

3733….Jennifer Chauhan….Orleans

938….Jennifer Schenkel….Orleans

7642….Jennifer Schmidt….Orleans

4259….Jennifer Van Meer….Orleans

4284….Jim Paquette….Orleans

4291….Jim Turner….Orleans

6883….Jo Nuttall….Orleans

5165….Joanne Henry….Orleans

6894….Jo-Anne Matheson….Orleans

6278….John Harper….Orleans

2283….John Madower….Orleans

4308….John Tennant….Orleans

2300….Jonathan Cyr….Orleans

224….Jonathan Favre….Orleans

4322….Jonathan Theriault….Orleans

4326….Jordan Devine….Orleans

5525….Jordan Thoms….Orleans

5528….Josee Deleseleuc….Orleans

6909….Josee Pothier….Orleans

3614….Judy Thomson….Orleans

5542….Julie Albert….Orleans

2340….Justin Kyle Evan Orr….Orleans

6936….Karen Minna….Orleans

3342….Katherine Cummins….Orleans

723….Kathleen Danforth….Orleans

3464….Kathy Wiens….Orleans

4376….Katrina Tusikov….Orleans

4391….Kelly Hudson….Orleans

228….Ken Lindsay….Orleans

720….Kevin Beaudette….Orleans

615….Kevin Piccott….Orleans

2404….Kevin Smallshaw….Orleans

3567….Kristina Perrier….Orleans

5599….Krystle Hedderson….Orleans

6317….Lance Valcour….Orleans

7009….Laura Regnier….Orleans

2450….Leah Reinberger….Orleans

7381….Linda Leblanc….Orleans

2465….Lindsay Gwyer….Orleans

5624….Line Paquette….Orleans

3391….Lissa Allaire….Orleans

6338….Liz Benoit….Orleans

7041….Lois Simms-Baldwin….Orleans

2485….Louise Hamelin….Orleans

4467….Louise Soloski….Orleans

3398….Lucie Mainguy….Orleans

819….Lyne Orser….Orleans

724….Lynn Galarneau….Orleans

2503….Lynn Lowe….Orleans

5702….M Lanie Mertens….Orleans

4478….Magda Lebouthillier….Orleans

783….Malcolm Parsons….Orleans

6349….Marc Vunak….Orleans

3588….Marc-Andre Blanke….Orleans

2547….Marie-France Senecal….Orleans

6355….Marie-Helene Gagnon….Orleans

1300….Marie-Josee Homsy….Orleans

1157….Marie-Josee Legault….Orleans

1203….Marieve Lavigne….Orleans

2573….Mark Curtis….Orleans

1085….Marshall Clark….Orleans

2583….Martha Rangel….Orleans

2609….Mat Valcour….Orleans

2628….Matthew Gaudet….Orleans

2624….Matthew Upton….Orleans

2622….Matthew Walthert….Orleans

631….Max Lebreton….Orleans

977….Melanie Trumpower….Orleans

7115….Michael Brown….Orleans

2680….Michael Pambrun….Orleans

5717….Michel Pearson….Orleans

5099….Michelle Cote….Orleans

7131….Michelle Momy….Orleans

1347….Michelle Ward….Orleans

2733….Mike Mccormick….Orleans

5145….Miranda Guiney….Orleans

835….Moira Carriere….Orleans

7665….Nadine Paradis….Orleans

3496….Nadine Tischhauser….Orleans

3674….Nancy Camacho….Orleans

7149….Nancy Neilson….Orleans

4592….Nancy Perron….Orleans

3403….Nancy Roberge….Orleans

7161….Nathalie Gougeon….Orleans

7163….Nathan Lightowlers….Orleans

2776….Nicole Gagnon….Orleans

3578….Patricia Mallouk….Orleans

2808….Patrick Flanagan….Orleans

657….Paul Holmes….Orleans

991….Paul Menard….Orleans

2823….Paul Smith….Orleans

2845….Paul Stewart….Orleans

706….Peter Belair….Orleans

2863….Peter Mclaughlin….Orleans

2866….Phil Cousineau….Orleans

2894….Prasanth Tella….Orleans

7198….Priya Chopra….Orleans

7201….Rachel Taylor….Orleans

4666….Raine Kampman….Orleans

2900….Raleigh Young….Orleans

1164….Ralph Hodgins….Orleans

2907….Ray Dupuis….Orleans

919….Richard Loewen….Orleans

2930….Richard Raymond….Orleans

2986….Robert Glen Stanley….Orleans

655….Robert Sauve….Orleans

2981….Robert Simard….Orleans

4698….Rory Mcintosh….Orleans

3439….Russ Kajganich….Orleans

981….Russ Stewart….Orleans

5154….Sandra Cook….Orleans

1204….Sandra Craig-Browne….Orleans

1228….Sandy Clark….Orleans

3688….Sandy Moger….Orleans

7253….Scot Bryant….Orleans

625….Serge Arseneault….Orleans

812….Shawnda Parsons….Orleans

872….Shayne Chamberlain….Orleans

3076….Shelagh Haynes….Orleans

7675….Sheri Vermette….Orleans

5873….Solange Berube….Orleans

4795….St Phanie Seguin….Orleans

1190….Stacey Grenier….Orleans

769….Stan Baldwin….Orleans

3102….Stephan Lemaire….Orleans

112….Stephane Montpetit….Orleans

7295….Stephanie Ducharme….Orleans

296….Stephen Lowe….Orleans

3124….Stephenie Cadieux….Orleans

4802….Steve Greenwood….Orleans

1281….Steve Lamontagne….Orleans

5961….Steven Lemay….Orleans

4814….Susan Cadieux….Orleans

6453….Susan Harper….Orleans

5034….Susan Poisson….Orleans

525….Suzanne Parent….Orleans

3498….Tanja Scharf….Orleans

1039….Tara Redmond….Orleans

3677….Teresa Janz….Orleans

624….Terry Brown….Orleans

1151….Terry Flynn….Orleans

7336….Theresa Momy….Orleans

5914….Tim Caines….Orleans

3212….Todd Reinberger….Orleans

5138….Todd Sloan….Orleans

3219….Tom Stocco….Orleans

7352….Tony Paoletti….Orleans

4859….Trevor Comeau….Orleans

7679….Trevor Gillis….Orleans

3241….Trevor Kirkland….Orleans

3243….Troy Therien….Orleans

4878….Vanessa Dunleavy….Orleans

5931….Vassil Andreev….Orleans

3256….Victor Manuel Padilla….Orleans

5941….Vivian Andreeva….Orleans

4994….Vivianne Gaudet….Orleans

3266….Walter Friesen….Orleans

3265….Walter Robinson….Orleans

7371….William Baldwin….Orleans

1275….Yvon Gagnier….Orleans

1532….Ben Moores….Osgoode

6151….Carla Richer….Osgoode

5118….Denise Hudson….Osgoode

4208….Jane Foster….Osgoode

4355….Karen Moores….Osgoode

6980….Kevin Wylie….Osgoode

4408….Kimberly Lavoie….Osgoode

7145….Nancy Bleses….Osgoode

1671….Christian Hackbusch….Oxford Mills

4340….Julie Shephard….Oxford Mills

5553….Karen Lever….Oxford Mills

4404….Kim Field….Oxford Mills

4434….Leia Richards….Oxford Mills

2909….Raymond Richards….Oxford Mills

3497….Shaun Dunne….Oxford Mills

1561….Brenda Duhaime….Pakenham

1809….Davey Mohan….Pakenham

7492….Helen Blair….Pakenham

2177….Jason Duhaime….Pakenham

5195….Alison Bear….Pembroke

5244….Bev Kidd….Pembroke

1549….Bojan Joksimovic….Pembroke

1633….Cathy Kyte….Pembroke

5326….Claude Tessier….Pembroke

368….Cory Gaudet….Pembroke

1802….Dave Leblanc….Pembroke

4031….David Coker….Pembroke

6198….Dominic Chenard….Pembroke

5380….Donna Biggs….Pembroke

1919….Elisabelle St-Hilaire….Pembroke

1922….Elizabeth Radley-Walters….Pembroke

5414….France Guy-Tessier….Pembroke

6794….Garry Hartlin….Pembroke

2002….Garry Smith….Pembroke

4157….Gilles Perreault….Pembroke

201….Henry Searle….Pembroke

2107….Ian Schoonbaert….Pembroke

4204….Jamie Coe….Pembroke

2159….Janice Clouthier….Pembroke

2169….Jason Vallis….Pembroke

1250….Jenna Woito….Pembroke

6869….Jennifer Tu….Pembroke

1383….Jessica Edmonds….Pembroke

4283….Jillian Marquardt….Pembroke

5147….John Menzies….Pembroke

2304….Jonathan Therrien….Pembroke

5539….Julie Smith….Pembroke

6297….Kathy Kennedy….Pembroke

2408….Kevin Colwill….Pembroke

4403….Kim Drake….Pembroke

6313….Kimberlee Chenard….Pembroke

2430….Krista Johnson….Pembroke

1221….Leanne Van Bavel….Pembroke

423….Luc Fleurant….Pembroke

4494….Marie-Christine Bois….Pembroke

2571….Mark Panfili….Pembroke

2604….Maryann Hebner….Pembroke

5691….Matt Haycock….Pembroke

5697….Meghan Pattinson….Pembroke

2645….Melanie Perreault….Pembroke

2653….Melissa Mantifel….Pembroke

2755….Nancy Dubois….Pembroke

5731….Nancy Neville….Pembroke

7162….Nathan Andre….Pembroke

4624….Pamela Sampson….Pembroke

2809….Patrick Tighe….Pembroke

1265….Rae Ann Woito….Pembroke

370….Robert Mckay….Pembroke

7230….Rocky Peplinski….Pembroke

3011….Ryan Wade….Pembroke

4708….Sabine Mersmann….Pembroke

5846….Sarah Trautrim….Pembroke

4747….Sharon Singleton….Pembroke

3075….Sheila Ryan….Pembroke

4826….Tammy Blackmore….Pembroke

7325….Tammy Peplinski….Pembroke

3228….Tracy Lyle….Pembroke

4863….Tricia Robinson….Pembroke

5927….Tyler Follett….Pembroke

7363….Vay Tu….Pembroke

5222….Andrew Hanlon….Perth

5257….Brenda Kirkwood….Perth

4177….Hilary Mcnamee….Perth

5572….Kathy Litalien….Perth

4390….Kelly Cormier….Perth

7598….Kim Spence….Perth

7545….Melba Mooney….Perth

4661….R Martin….Perth

5808….Rita Jackson….Perth

772….Sue Matte….Perth

144….Aaron Luhning….Petawawa

3742….Aaron Prosper….Petawawa

1396….Adam Davis….Petawawa

5199….Ally Duncan….Petawawa

3780….Amanda Dalton….Petawawa

367….Andrew Chan….Petawawa

873….Andrew Charchuk….Petawawa

1476….Andrew Slate….Petawawa

3320….Angela Wintonyk….Petawawa

1514….Ariel Fox….Petawawa

7442….Ashley Harrison….Petawawa

1528….Barry Malboeuf….Petawawa

3844….Becky Whelan….Petawawa

1533….Ben Irvine….Petawawa

3855….Blair Bolivar….Petawawa

595….Brodie Doyle….Petawawa

3873….Brooke Wallace….Petawawa

1593….Bruce Bell….Petawawa

6146….Bryan Willox….Petawawa

6655….Charmaine Chubb….Petawawa

1662….Chris Middleton….Petawawa

797….Christine Mackechnie….Petawawa

3973….Cindy Hamel….Petawawa

1720….Clement Paradis….Petawawa

1744….Craig Higgins….Petawawa

6523….Dana Beattie….Petawawa

1770….Danick Tremblay….Petawawa

5339….Daniel Brissette….Petawawa

883….Darryl Cathcart….Petawawa

914….Dave Trainor….Petawawa

4026….David Beatty….Petawawa

1241….David Grebstad….Petawawa

350….David Wilson….Petawawa

5368….Denis Tasse….Petawawa

573….Dennene Huntley….Petawawa

1856….Derek Church….Petawawa

1900….Dustin Newman….Petawawa

5400….Eric Brisebois….Petawawa

5405….Erika Sykora….Petawawa

1956….Errol Kokbas….Petawawa

369….Eve Boyce….Petawawa

6216….Fedora Lombardo….Petawawa

1994….Frederic Jacques Riva….Petawawa

28….George Mintah….Petawawa

7638….Greg Beattie….Petawawa

363….Heather Reibin….Petawawa

5444….Iain Clark….Petawawa

2115….Isabelle Colwell-Plasse….Petawawa

6828….Jack Durnford….Petawawa

6243….Jacqualine Black….Petawawa

2126….James Leslie….Petawawa

3560….Jaret Held….Petawawa

6849….Jeanette Carter….Petawawa

210….Jean-Philippe Carbonneau….Petawawa

4245….Jeffrey Code….Petawawa

6864….Jennifer Robinson….Petawawa

2235….Jeremie Saumure-Kyer….Petawawa

2248….Jessica Mcrobbie….Petawawa

4286….Jim Vienneau….Petawawa

5507….Joann Tyrie….Petawawa

4297….Joanne Mallet….Petawawa

1253….Joe Milligan….Petawawa

2295….John Lougheed….Petawawa

364….John Michael Natynczyk….Petawawa

138….Jonathan Barteaux….Petawawa

4328….Joseph Ring….Petawawa

2316….Joshua Wintonyk….Petawawa

6289….Julie Smith….Petawawa

2342….Kaitlyn Chute….Petawawa

6291….Kara Lang….Petawawa

6964….Kelley Massicotte….Petawawa

6307….Kelly Brissette….Petawawa

2385….Kelsey Robertson….Petawawa

5582….Kendra Johnsen….Petawawa

2400….Kevin Donak….Petawawa

2402….Kevin Martel….Petawawa

2423….Kori Klein….Petawawa

7006….Laura Gauley….Petawawa

4977….Leah Macarthur….Petawawa

7028….Lindi Andrews….Petawawa

2462….Lindsay Miller….Petawawa

6336….Lisa Ouellette….Petawawa

2535….Maria Wiseman….Petawawa

4531….Matthew Clarke….Petawawa

2644….Melanie Gravel….Petawawa

4547….Melissa Vienneau….Petawawa

3437….Melissa Walcott….Petawawa

5712….Michael Burgess….Petawawa

2658….Michael Miller….Petawawa

2674….Michael Norquay….Petawawa

2693….Micheal Laplante….Petawawa

2708….Michelle Armitage….Petawawa

5720….Michelle Brisebois….Petawawa

7133….Mike Gauley….Petawawa

2724….Mike Plaunt….Petawawa

7553….Monica Hewitt….Petawawa

424….Nancy Brown….Petawawa

736….Neil Wooden….Petawawa

2775….Nicolas Pilon….Petawawa

921….Nicole Mctimoney….Petawawa

6400….Patricia Beh….Petawawa

2817….Patrik Schiess….Petawawa

34121….Paulette Vass….Petawawa

2869….Phil Colwell-Plasse….Petawawa

267….Randall Binnie….Petawawa

7574….Ray Smith….Petawawa

7209….Rebecca Lynde….Petawawa

4677….Richard Tarrant….Petawawa

365….Robin French….Petawawa

3017….Samantha Moreau….Petawawa

7238….Samantha Ryder….Petawawa

5839….Sandra Faught….Petawawa

4730….Sarah Beare….Petawawa

3047….Sean Trenholm….Petawawa

4971….Selena Neily….Petawawa

6435….Serge Decoeur….Petawawa

4737….Sergio Tomasi….Petawawa

7591….Shannon Clark….Petawawa

3077….Sheldon Rice….Petawawa

3085….Shona Humphrey….Petawawa

3321….Stephanie Abdon….Petawawa

5021….Steve Tasnadi….Petawawa

16265….Stuart Hartnell….Petawawa

3158….Suzanne Leclerc….Petawawa

3179….Taryn Johal….Petawawa

16258….Thomas Demandt….Petawawa

5913….Tiffeny Holdom….Petawawa

1273….Tracey Whitman….Petawawa

5020….Tracy Gorman….Petawawa

798….Trevor Brennan….Petawawa

5001….Vickie Ouellette….Petawawa

5950….William Ingrey….Petawawa

7374….Ysabel Poirier….Petawawa

7376….Yvonne Andrews….Petawawa

1193….Debbie Elie….Plantagenet

1978….Francois Barbarie….Plantagenet

7577….Robert Lapointe….Plantagenet

1128….S Bastien Elie….Plantagenet

7384….Tony Larabie….Plantagenet

6585….Anouk Arbour….Pontiac

1557….Bradley Sloan….Prescott

3961….Christine Houston….Prescott

6167….Christine Sloan….Prescott

1138….Claudine Dirksen-Fenard….Prescott

4059….Diana Lee Deschamps….Prescott

6256….Jennifer Murdock….Prescott

4342….Julie Rogers….Prescott

5594….Krista Salmon….Prescott

1318….Mark Dirksen….Prescott

7516….Katherine Armitage….Quyon

5737….Nathalie Gervais….Quyon

3818….Anna Daber….Renfrew

5297….Charlene Nolan….Renfrew

4905….Daryl Fieibg….Renfrew

11218….Deborah Fiebig….Renfrew

5041….Hughie Nolan….Renfrew

4347….Kaitlyn Arbuthnot….Renfrew

6976….Kevin Johnston….Renfrew

16293….Bill Williams….Richmond

6613….Brenda Thomas….Richmond

3310….Chris Douglas….Richmond

1038….Dan Todd….Richmond

5117….Deena Desson….Richmond

5394….Elizabeth Mcintyre….Richmond

6533….Erick Muis….Richmond

5473….Jason Irwin….Richmond

6285….Joyce Irwin….Richmond

2912….Rebecca Reid….Richmond

6002….Robin Annas….Richmond

6028….Ruth Saunders….Richmond

3050….Sean Lewis….Richmond

4909….Wendy Steele Wendy….Richmond

5355….David Stevens….Rideau Ferry

2630….Matthew Mayo….Rockcliffe

6101….Adam Joiner….Rockland

4958….Angie Del….Rockland

1541….Bernard Boivin….Rockland

3857….Bob Beaudry….Rockland

7448….Brandon Sharman….Rockland

6614….Brennan Cornell….Rockland

167….Carl Lacroix….Rockland

4009….Daniel Juneau….Rockland

4048….Denis Jette….Rockland

694….Devon Cass….Rockland

1968….Frances Patry….Rockland

2025….Gilles Brisebois….Rockland

2064….Guillaume Houle….Rockland

2085….Helene Matko….Rockland

7498….Jacinthe Loiselle….Rockland

5504….Joan Cleary….Rockland

4301….Jodie Davis….Rockland

6279….John Serviss….Rockland

5540….Julie Macdonald….Rockland

4460….Livia Wright….Rockland

7531….Louise Morel….Rockland

3343….M Lissa Lavictoire….Rockland

6347….Manon Salicco….Rockland

2517….Marc Patry….Rockland

2555….Mario Chartrand….Rockland

1071….Mike Dennehy….Rockland

7557….Nancy Crabbe….Rockland

4595….Nancy Violette-Fehr….Rockland

5741….Nathalie Joly….Rockland

2884….Pierre Dromaguet….Rockland

2973….Robert Brisebois….Rockland

5827….Roylana Larochelle….Rockland

7590….Selva Trebert-Sharman….Rockland

4916….Shane Lebeau….Rockland

4762….Sherry Beaudry….Rockland

652….Stephen Sunquist….Rockland

3184….Terry Wright….Rockland

3289….Yves Lefebvre….Rockland

1485….Andrew Goodwin….Russell

7383….Bailey Gilarowski….Russell

4930….Benjamin Stapper….Russell

1617….Caroline Maheux….Russell

4931….Christina Stapper….Russell

840….Daniel Bedard….Russell

1791….Daren Koch….Russell

6189….Dawn Mullin….Russell

186….Dominique Phaneuf….Russell

2240….Jesse Hall….Russell

6345….Lynda Kalapati….Russell

2588….Martin Herde….Russell

7561….Nathalie Smith….Russell

5743….Neil Franklin….Russell

142….Nick Saucier….Russell

7234….Ryan Baker….Russell

4932….Sarah Tessier….Russell

3338….Shawn Hoag….Russell

3125….Steve Mcfaul….Russell

5281….Carrie Needham….Smiths Falls

4416….Kristian Belot….Smiths Falls

4463….Lori James….Smiths Falls

7157….Natalie Lindsay….Smiths Falls

5149….Tammy Mulrooney….Smiths Falls

7341….Tim Kavaner….Spencerville

1162….Caroline Pollock….St. Albert

387….Geoff Rainey….St. Albert

439….Jenny Lacoursiere….St. Albert

4270….Jerry Scheidl….St. Albert

6516….Jon Mccully….St. Albert

2409….Kevin Barry….St. Albert

1371….Leah Posluns….St. Albert

7661….Michael Wallis….St. Albert

7153….Natacha Gour….St. Albert

3309….Scott Carlyle….St. Albert

16278….Scott Simpson….St. Albert

7326….Tara Coble….St. Albert

1399….Adrienne Scott….Stittsville

148….Alain Bellemare….Stittsville

5192….Alexandre Beaulieu….Stittsville

3378….Alison Carroll-Dawe….Stittsville

5198….Allison Sutherland….Stittsville

1439….Allyson Field….Stittsville

881….Brendan Alexander….Stittsville

127….Brian Lafleur….Stittsville

1625….Catherine Pomeroy….Stittsville

6643….Catherine Postma….Stittsville

6644….Catherine Robinson….Stittsville

1629….Cathie Radley….Stittsville

7398….Cathy Chalmers….Stittsville

5292….Cathy Chorniawy….Stittsville

1335….Cathy O'neil….Stittsville

5298….Chelsea Lambe….Stittsville

4957….Chris Banks….Stittsville

1652….Chris Leger….Stittsville

7458….Christine Stacey….Stittsville

1691….Christopher Thompson….Stittsville

7405….Claire Collis….Stittsville

3984….Conor Higgins….Stittsville

1757….Dale Costello….Stittsville

3351….Daniel Mossman….Stittsville

3626….David Tweedie….Stittsville

108….David Williams….Stittsville

5363….Debi Maniloff….Stittsville

3551….Denise Morin….Stittsville

6773….Eric Kahler….Stittsville

5419….Fred Odendaal….Stittsville

5422….Gary Bunny Banks….Stittsville

932….Gerry Larkin….Stittsville

7488….Ginger Plante….Stittsville

6808….Gregory Rusch….Stittsville

1140….Heather Caughey….Stittsville

2080….Heather Gilmour….Stittsville

4182….Ian Dunn….Stittsville

4959….Jackie Forman….Stittsville

2123….Jake Griffin….Stittsville

4202….James Moore….Stittsville

2144….Jamie Carriveau….Stittsville

3656….Janet Van Bakel….Stittsville

687….Jason Bergen….Stittsville

4220….Jason Rodger….Stittsville

1171….Jeanette Dionne….Stittsville

7641….Jeff Fritzsche….Stittsville

6257….Jennifer Holmes….Stittsville

5501….Jim Lambe….Stittsville

4300….Jodi Joy….Stittsville

4302….Joe Macmillan….Stittsville

1254….Jon Andrews….Stittsville

4335….Joycelyn Litke….Stittsville

5543….Julie Tapp….Stittsville

6940….Karen Whillans….Stittsville

4378….Keith Farrier….Stittsville

4397….Kent Macdonald….Stittsville

6972….Keri Fraser….Stittsville

4400….Kevin Higgins….Stittsville

4407….Kimberley Hetherington….Stittsville

4411….Krista Jackson….Stittsville

5608….Laura O'neil….Stittsville

1365….Laurel Andrews….Stittsville

4428….Lauri Lynch….Stittsville

2469….Lionel Dubois….Stittsville

526….Lisa Steele….Stittsville

1104….Lise Chabot….Stittsville

4461….Liz Williams….Stittsville

2482….Lorraine Chapman….Stittsville

2486….Louise Chayer Ayers….Stittsville

7068….Marie Bonang….Stittsville

2559….Mark Berezny….Stittsville

2569….Mark Rhodenizer….Stittsville

2606….Mary-Ellen Macphee….Stittsville

1200….Matthew Dionne….Stittsville

7106….Melanie Goodfellow….Stittsville

7113….Mercedes King….Stittsville

1292….Mesfin Mirotchie….Stittsville

7125….Michel Morin….Stittsville

3365….Michelle Hay….Stittsville

5721….Michelle Mcbride….Stittsville

2732….Mike Mcdonald….Stittsville

969….Nicholas Alexander….Stittsville

4636….Patrick Marsden….Stittsville

2856….Peter Hanschke….Stittsville

2857….Peter Schoch….Stittsville

654….Pierre Bergeron….Stittsville

622….Ralph Richardson….Stittsville

570….Ren Lessard….Stittsville

4679….Riley Dunn….Stittsville

7225….Robert Postma….Stittsville

4694….Ron Hoffe….Stittsville

4724….Sarah Higgins….Stittsville

4728….Sarah Mcwhinnie….Stittsville

7254….Scott Fenton….Stittsville

3419….Scott Miller….Stittsville

6432….Scott Rogers….Stittsville

16254….Sean Young….Stittsville

5857….Shari-Lynn Lawson….Stittsville

3071….Shawn Bedard….Stittsville

765….Shelley Baran….Stittsville

5868….Sheri Beaulieu….Stittsville

4766….Simon Hetherington….Stittsville

3119….Stephen Hunt….Stittsville

3193….Tim Radley….Stittsville

4849….Tom Endicott….Stittsville

923….Walter Hawes….Stittsville

7369….Wendy Fraser….Stittsville

7615….Wendy Hill….Stittsville

308….William Dymond….Stittsville

4707….Ryan Journeaux….Stoney Creek

7251….Sarah Boettcher….Stoney Creek

25….Antoine Gladu-Daoust….Thurso

2213….Jeff Avon….Val-des-Monts

319….Julie Lacroix….Val-des-Monts

6319….Laura Bradley….Val-des-Monts

3511….Meaghan Henry….Val-des-Monts

2700….Michel Saint-Denis….Val-des-Monts

6389….Nathalie Tremblay….Val-des-Monts

2927….Richard Blanchette….Val-des-Monts

4780….Stephan Dirnberger….Val-des-Monts

6461….Sylvie Lemay….Val-des-Monts

6072….Andrea Evans….Vanier

642….Kirk Duguid….Vanier

2801….Patrick Lebrun….Vanier

6591….Ashley Cowan….Vankleek Hill

1882….Dorcas Taylor….Vankleek Hill

6021….Arlene Dupuis….Vars

6678….Ciona Macsween….Vars

5375….Dominic Parisien….Vars

294….Stephane Perras….Vars

7609….Terrance Henry….Venosta

920….Christine Moyneur-Marleau….Wakefield

1219….Glenn Peters….Wakefield

6322….Laura Stafford….Wakefield

6339….Lois Gouthro….Wendover

7105….Melanie Carriere….Wendover

4060….Diane Graham-Lynn….Westport

4488….Margaret Thake….Westport

6596….Barbara Sandilands….Williamstown

5246….Bill Chambre….Williamstown

6203….Donna Magher….Williamstown

5809….Robbie Duval….Williamstown

5356….Dawn Erickson….Winchester

3653….Gillian Erickson….Winchester

820….Lindsay Holmes….Winchester

7224….Robert Lewis….Winchester

5093….Colin Geddis….Woodlawn

4113….Erica Harris….Woodlawn

6063….Jocelyne Barsalou….Woodlawn

1131….Kelly Geddis….Woodlawn

4447….Linda Hobbs….Woodlawn

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Nürburgring

 

Location

 

Nürburg, Germany

Coordinates: 50°20′08″N 6°56′51″E

Time zone GMT +1 (DST: +2)

FIA Grade 1

Major events FIA Formula One

German Grand Prix

European Grand Prix

Luxembourg Grand Prix

Superbike World Championship, DTM, 24 Hours Nürburgring, 1000km Nürburgring, VLN

GP-Strecke (2002–present)

Surface Asphalt

Length 5.148 km (3.199 mi)

Turns 16

Lap record 1:29.468 (Germany Michael Schumacher, Ferrari F2004, 2004, Formula One)

GP-Strecke (1984–2001)

Surface Asphalt

Length 4.556 km (2.831 mi)

Turns 12

Lap record 1:18.354 (Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya, Williams FW23, 2001, Formula One)

Nordschleife (1983–present)

Surface Asphalt/concrete

Length 20.81 km (12.93 mi)

Turns 154

Lap record 6:11.13 (West Germany Stefan Bellof, Porsche 956, 1983, WEC)

Combined circuit (1984–present)

Surface Asphalt/concrete

Length 25.947 km (16.123 mi)

Turns 170

Lap record 8:10.921 (France Kévin Estre, McLaren MP4-12C GT3, 2014 24 Hours Nürburgring, FIA GT3)

Nordschleife (1927–1982)

Surface Asphalt/Concrete

Length 22.8 km (14.2 mi)

Turns 160

Lap record 7:06.4 (Switzerland Clay Regazzoni, Ferrari 312T, 1975, Formula One)

Südschleife (1927–1973)

Surface Asphalt

Length 7.747 km (4.814 mi)

Turns 27

Lap record 2:44.0 (Belgium Jacky Ickx, Ferrari Dino 166, 1968, Formula Two)

Gesamtstrecke (1927–1982)

Surface Asphalt

Length 28.265 km (17.563 mi)

Turns 187

Lap record 15:06.1 (Monaco Louis Chiron, Bugatti Type 35C, 1929, Grand Prix)

Website www.nuerburgring.de

Tower of the Nürburg castle

 

Nürburgring is a 150,000-capacity motorsports complex located in the town of Nürburg, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It features a Grand Prix race track built in 1984, and a much longer old "North loop" track which was built in the 1920s around the village and medieval castle of Nürburg in the Eifel mountains. The north loop is 20.8 km (12.9 mi) long and has more than 300 metres (1,000 feet) of elevation change from its lowest to highest points. Jackie Stewart nicknamed the old track "The Green Hell".

 

Originally, the track featured four configurations: the 28.265 km (17.563 mi)-long Gesamtstrecke ("Whole Course"), which in turn consisted of the 22.810 km (14.173 mi) Nordschleife ("North Loop"), and the 7.747 km (4.814 mi) Südschleife ("South Loop"). There also was a 2.281 km (1.417 mi) warm-up loop called Zielschleife ("Finish Loop") or Betonschleife ("Concrete Loop"), around the pit area.[1]

 

Between 1982 and 1983 the start/finish area was demolished to create a new GP-Strecke, and this is used for all major and international racing events. However, the shortened Nordschleife is still in use for racing, testing and public access.

 

History

1925–1939: The beginning of the "Nürburg-Ring"

 

In the early 1920s, ADAC Eifelrennen races were held on public roads in the Eifel mountains. This was soon recognised as impractical and dangerous. The construction of a dedicated race track was proposed, following the examples of Italy's Monza and Targa Florio courses, and Berlin's AVUS, yet with a different character. The layout of the circuit in the mountains was similar to the Targa Florio event, one of the most important motor races at that time. The original Nürburgring was to be a showcase for German automotive engineering and racing talent. Construction of the track, designed by the Eichler Architekturbüro from Ravensburg (led by architect Gustav Eichler), began in September 1925.

 

The track was completed in spring of 1927, and the ADAC Eifelrennen races were continued there. The first races to take place on 18 June 1927 showed motorcycles and sidecars. The first motorcycle race was won by Toni Ulmen on an English 350 cc Velocette. The cars followed a day later, and Rudolf Caracciola was the winner of the over 5000 cc class in a Mercedes Compressor. In addition, the track was opened to the public in the evenings and on weekends, as a one-way toll road.[citation needed] The whole track consisted of 174 bends (prior to 1971 changes), and averaged 8 to 9 metres (26 to 30 ft) in width. The fastest time ever around the full Gesamtstrecke was by Louis Chiron, at an average speed of 112.31 km/h (72 mph) in his Bugatti.

 

In 1929 the full Nürburgring was used for the last time in major racing events, as future Grands Prix would be held only on the Nordschleife. Motorcycles and minor races primarily used the shorter and safer Südschleife. Memorable pre-war races at the circuit featured the talents of early Ringmeister (Ringmasters) such as Rudolf Caracciola, Tazio Nuvolari and Bernd Rosemeyer.

1947–1970: The Green Hell

Nürburgring circuit map, taken at the 1964 German Grand Prix; the legend advises "No driving in the Eifel (mountains) without a lap on the Nürburgring".

The Nordschleife from 1927–1967, with small changes also until 1982

 

After World War II, racing resumed in 1947 and in 1951, the Nordschleife of the Nürburgring again became the main venue for the German Grand Prix as part of the Formula One World Championship (with the exception of 1959, when it was held on the AVUS in Berlin). A new group of Ringmeister arose to dominate the race – Alberto Ascari, Juan Manuel Fangio, Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, John Surtees, Jackie Stewart and Jacky Ickx.

 

On 5 August 1961, during practice for the 1961 German Grand Prix, Phil Hill became the first person to complete a lap of the Nordschleife in under 9 minutes, with a lap of 8 minutes 55.2 seconds (153.4 km/h or 95.3 mph) in the Ferrari 156 "Sharknose" Formula One car. Over half a century later, the highest-performing road cars have difficulty breaking 8 minutes without a professional race driver or one very familiar with the track. Also, several rounds of the German motorcycle Grand Prix were held, mostly on the 7.7 km (4.8 mi) Südschleife, but the Hockenheimring and the Solitudering were the main sites for Grand Prix motorcycle racing.

 

In 1953, the ADAC 1000 km Nürburgring race was introduced, an Endurance race and Sports car racing event that counted towards the World Sportscar Championship for decades. The 24 Hours Nürburgring for touring car racing was added in 1970.

 

By the late 1960s, the Nordschleife and many other tracks were becoming increasingly dangerous for the latest generation of F1 cars. In 1967, a chicane was added before the start/finish straight, called Hohenrain, in order to reduce speeds at the pit lane entry. This made the track 25 m (82 ft) longer. Even this change, however, was not enough to keep Stewart from nicknaming it "The Green Hell" following his victory in the 1968 German Grand Prix amid a driving rainstorm and thick fog. In 1970, after the fatal crash of Piers Courage at Zandvoort, the F1 drivers decided at the French Grand Prix to boycott the Nürburgring unless major changes were made, as they did at Spa the year before. The changes were not possible on short notice, and the German GP was moved to the Hockenheimring, which had already been modified.

1971–1983: Changes

Relative location of the Nürburgring. (around Nürburg, not to scale).

 

In accordance with the demands of the F1 drivers the Nordschleife was reconstructed by taking out some bumps, smoothing out some sudden jumps (particularly at Brünnchen), and installing Armco safety barriers. The track was made straighter, following the race line, which reduced the number of corners. The German GP could be hosted at the Nürburgring again, and was for another six years from 1971 to 1976.

 

In 1973 the entrance into the dangerous and bumpy Kallenhard corner was made slower by adding another left-hand corner after the fast Metzgesfeld sweeping corner. Safety was improved again later on, e.g. by removing the jumps on the long main straight and widening it, and taking away the bushes right next to the track at the main straight, which made that section of the Nürburgring dangerously narrow. A second series of three more F1 races was held until 1976. However, primarily due to its length of over 22 kilometres (14 mi), and the lack of space due to its situation on the sides of the mountains, increasing demands by the F1 drivers and the FIA's CSI commission were too expensive or impossible to meet. For instance, by the 1970s the German Grand Prix required five times the marshals and medical staff as a typical F1 race, something the German organizers were unwilling to provide. Additionally, even with the 1971 modifications it was still possible for cars to become airborne off the track. The Nürburgring was also unsuitable for the burgeoning television market; its vast expanse made it almost impossible to effectively cover a race there. As a result, early in the season it was decided that the 1976 race would be the last to be held on the old circuit.

 

Niki Lauda, the reigning world champion and only person ever to lap the full 22,835-metre (14.189 mi) Nordschleife in under 7 minutes (6:58.6, 1975), proposed to the other drivers that they boycott the circuit in 1976. Lauda was not only concerned about the safety arrangements and the lack of marshals around the circuit, but did not like the prospect of running the race in another rainstorm. Usually when that happened, some parts of the circuit were wet and other parts were dry, which is what the conditions of the circuit were for that race. The other drivers voted against the idea and the race went ahead. Lauda crashed in his Ferrari coming out of the left-hand kink before Bergwerk, for causes that were never established. He was badly burned as his car was still loaded with fuel in lap 2. Lauda was saved by the combined actions of fellow drivers Arturo Merzario, Guy Edwards, Brett Lunger, and Harald Ertl, rather than by the ill-equipped track marshals.

 

The crash also showed that the track's distances were too long for regular fire engines and ambulances, even though the "ONS-Staffel" was equipped with a Porsche 911 rescue car, marked (R). The old Nürburgring never hosted another F1 race again, as the German Grand Prix was moved to the Hockenheimring for 1977. The German motorcycle Grand Prix was held for the last time on the old Nürburgring in 1980, also permanently moving to Hockenheim.

 

By its very nature, the Nordschleife was impossible to make safe in its old configuration. It soon became apparent that it would have to be completely overhauled if there was any prospect of Formula One returning there. With this in mind, in 1981 work began on a 4.5 km (2.8 mi)-long new circuit, which was built on and around the old pit area.

 

At the same time, a bypass shortened the Nordschleife to 20,832 m (12.944 mi), and with an additional small pit lane, this version was used for races in 1983, e.g. the 1000km Nürburgring endurance race, while construction work was going on nearby. In training for that race, the late Stefan Bellof set the all-time lap record for the 20.8 km (12.9 mi) Nordschleife in his Porsche 956, which is still unbeaten at 6:11.13, or over 200 km/h (120 mph) on average (partially because no major racing has taken place there since 1984).

 

Meanwhile, more run-off areas were added at corners like Aremberg and Brünnchen, where originally there were just embankments protected by Armco barriers. The track surface was made safer in some spots where there had been nasty bumps and jumps. Racing line markers were added to the corners all around the track as well. Also, bushes and hedges at the edges of corners were taken out and replaced with Armco and grass.

 

The former Südschleife had not been modified in 1970/71 and was abandoned a few years later in favour of the improved Nordschleife. It is now mostly gone (in part due to the construction of the new circuit) or converted to a normal public road, but since 2005 a vintage car event has been hosted on the old track layout, including part of the parking area.[2]

1984: The new Grand Prix track

Complete distance of 2002 in comparison with the track of 1927.

Aerial photograph of GP-Strecke

 

The new track was completed in 1984 and named GP-Strecke (German: Großer Preis-Strecke: literally, "Grand Prix Course"). It was built to meet the highest safety standards. However, it was considered in character a mere shadow of its older sibling. Some fans, who had to sit much farther away from the track, called it Eifelring, Ersatzring, Grünering or similar nicknames, believing it did not deserve to be called Nürburgring. Like many circuits of the time, it offered few overtaking opportunities.

 

Prior to the 2013 German Grand Prix both Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton said they like the track. Webber described the layout as "an old school track" before adding, "It’s a beautiful little circuit for us to still drive on so I think all the guys enjoy driving here." While Hamilton said "It’s a fantastic circuit, one of the classics and it hasn’t lost that feel of an old classic circuit."[3]

 

To celebrate its opening, an exhibition race was held, on 12 May, featuring an array of notable drivers. Driving identical Mercedes 190E 2.3–16's, the line-up was Elio de Angelis, Jack Brabham (Formula 1 World Champion 1959, 1960, 1966), Phil Hill (1961), Denis Hulme (1967), James Hunt (1976), Alan Jones (1980), Jacques Laffite, Niki Lauda (1975, 1977)*, Stirling Moss, Alain Prost*, Carlos Reutemann, Keke Rosberg (1982), Jody Scheckter (1979), Ayrton Senna*, John Surtees (1964) and John Watson. Senna won ahead of Lauda, Reutemann, Rosberg, Watson, Hulme and Jody Scheckter, being the only one to resist Lauda's overwhelming performance who – having missed the qualifying – had to start from the last row and overtook all the others except Senna.[4][5]

 

The asterisk ( * ) in the previous paragraph indicate that titles which were not yet won at the time of the race are not mentioned here, so there were nine former and two future Formula 1 World Champions competing, in a field of 20 cars with 16 Formula 1 drivers; the other four were local drivers: Klaus Ludwig, Manfred Schurti, Udo Schütz and Hans Herrmann.

 

Besides other major international events, the Nürburgring has seen the brief return of Formula One racing, as the 1984 European Grand Prix was held at the track, followed by the 1985 German Grand Prix. As F1 did not stay, other events were the highlights at the new Nürburgring, including the 1000km Nürburgring, DTM, motorcycles, and newer types of events, like truck racing, vintage car racing at the AvD "Oldtimer Grand Prix", and even the "Rock am Ring" concerts.

 

Following the success and first world championship of Michael Schumacher, a second German F1 race was held at the Nürburgring between 1995 and 2006, called the European Grand Prix, or in 1997 and 1998, the Luxembourg Grand Prix.

 

For 2002, the track was changed, by replacing the former "Castrol-chicane" at the end of the start/finish straight with a sharp right-hander (nicknamed "Haug-Hook"), in order to create an overtaking opportunity. Also, a slow Omega-shaped section was inserted, on the site of the former kart track. This extended the GP track from 4,500 to 5,200 m (2.80 to 3.23 mi), while at the same time, the Hockenheimring was shortened from 6,800 to 4,500 m (4.23 to 2.80 mi).

 

Both the Nürburgring and the Hockenheimring events have been losing money due to high and rising Formula One license fees charged by Bernie Ecclestone and low attendance due to high ticket prices[citation needed]; starting with the 2007 Formula One season, Hockenheim and Nürburgring will alternate for hosting of the German GP.

Rain clouds gather over the Ring during the 2011 German Grand Prix.

 

In Formula One, Ralf Schumacher collided with his teammate Giancarlo Fisichella and his brother at the start of the 1997 race which was won by Jacques Villeneuve. In 1999, in changing conditions, Johnny Herbert managed to score the only win for the team of former Ringmeister Jackie Stewart. One of the highlights of the 2005 season was Kimi Räikkönen's spectacular exit while in the last lap of the race, when his suspension gave way after being rattled lap after lap by a flat-spotted tire that was not changed due to the short-lived 'one set of tires' rule.

 

Prior to the 2007 European Grand Prix, the Audi S (turns 8 and 9) was renamed Michael Schumacher S after Michael Schumacher. Schumacher had retired from Formula One the year before, but returned in 2010, and in 2011 became the second Formula One driver to drive through a turn named after them (after Ayrton Senna driving his "S for Senna" at Autódromo José Carlos Pace).

Alternation with Hockenheim

See also: Hockenheimring

 

In 2007, the FIA announced that Hockenheimring and Nürburgring would alternate with the German Grand Prix with Nürburgring hosting in 2007. Due to name-licensing problems, it was held as the European Grand Prix that year. However, in 2008 the European Grand Prix was held at Valencia Street Circuit, Eastern Spain.

Panorama main entrance of Nürburgring

Fatal accidents

Main article: List of Nürburgring fatal accidents

 

While it is unusual for deaths to occur during sanctioned races, there are many accidents and several deaths each year during public sessions. It is common for the track to be closed several times a day for cleanup, repair, and medical intervention. While track management does not publish any official figures, several regular visitors to the track have used police reports to estimate the number of fatalities at somewhere between 3 and 12 in a full year.[6] Jeremy Clarkson noted in Top Gear in 2004 that "over the years this track has claimed over 200 lives".[7]

Nordschleife racing today

 

Several touring car series still compete on the Nordschleife, using either only the simple 20.8 km (12.9 mi) version with its separate small pit lane, or a combined 24.4 km (15.2 mi)-long track that uses a part of the original modern F1 track (without the Mercedes Arena section, which is often used for support pits) plus its huge pit facilities. Entry-level competition requires a regularity test (GLP) for street-legal cars. Two racing series (RCN/CHC and VLN) compete on 15 Saturdays each year, for several hours.

 

The annual highlight is the 24 Hours Nürburgring weekend, held usually in mid-May, featuring 220 cars – from small 100 hp (75 kW) cars to 700 hp (520 kW) Turbo Porsches or 500 hp (370 kW) factory race cars built by BMW, Opel, Audi, Mercedes-Benz, over 700 drivers (amateurs and professionals), and up to 290,000 spectators.

Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 racing at the Nürburgring Nordschleife VLN Race 8, 2010

 

In 2015 the World Touring Car Championship is scheduled to host the FIA WTCC Race of Germany at the Nordschleife as a support category to the 24h.

 

Automotive media outlets and manufacturers use the Nordschleife as a standard to publish their lap times achieved with production vehicles.

 

BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld made history on 28 April 2007 as the first driver in over 30 years to tackle the Nürburgring Nordschleife track in a contemporary Formula One car.[8] Heidfeld’s three demonstration laps round the German circuit in an F1.06 were the highlight of festivities celebrating BMW’s contribution to motorsport. About 45,000 spectators showed up for the main event, the third four-hour VLN race of the season, and the subsequent show by Heidfeld. Conceived largely as a photo opportunity, the lap times were not as fast as the car was capable of, BMW instead choosing to run the chassis at a particularly high ride height to allow for the Nordschleife's abrupt gradient changes and to limit maximum speeds accordingly. Former F1 driver Hans-Joachim Stuck was injured during the race when he crashed his BMW Z4.

 

As part of the festivities before the 2013 Nürburgring 24 Hour race, Michael Schumacher and other Mercedes-Benz drivers took part in a promotional event which saw Schumacher complete a demonstration lap of the Nordschleife at the wheel of a 2011 Mercedes W02.[9] As with Heidfeld's lap, and also partly due to F1's strict in-season testing bans, the lap left many motorsport fans underwhelmed.[10]

Nordschleife public access

 

Since its opening in 1927, the track has been used by the public for the so-called "Touristenfahrten," i.e. anyone with a road-legal car or motorcycle, as well as tour buses, motor homes, or cars with trailers. It is opened mainly on Sundays, but also many Saturdays and weekday evenings. The track may be closed for weeks during the winter months, depending on weather conditions and maintenance work. Passing on the right is prohibited, and some sections have speed limits.

Nordschleife is often open to the public. Three Caterhams are entering Brünnchen, a spectator vantage point.

Porsche GT3 RS approaching Adenauer Forst, a blind chicane on the Nordschleife.

Crashed BMW Z3 M coupé on the recovery truck

 

This Nürburgring is a popular attraction for many driving enthusiasts and riders from all over the world, partly because of its history and the challenge it provides. The lack of oncoming traffic and intersections sets it apart from regular roads, and the absence of a blanket speed limit is a further attraction.

 

Normal ticket buyers on these tourist days cannot quite complete a full lap of the 20.8 km (12.9 mi) Nordschleife, which bypasses the modern GP-Strecke, as they are required to slow down and pass through a 200-metre (220 yd) "pit lane" section where the toll gates are installed. On busier days, a mobile ticket barrier is installed on the main straight in order to reduce the length of queues at the fixed barriers. This is open to all ticket holders. On rare occasions, it is possible to drive both the Nordschleife and the Grand Prix circuit combined.

 

Drivers interested in lap times often time themselves from the first bridge after the barriers to the last gantry (aka Bridge-to-Gantry or BTG time) before the exit.[11] However, the track's general conditions state that any form of racing, including speed record attempts, is forbidden.[12] The driver's insurance coverage may consequently be voided, leaving the driver fully liable for damage. Normal, non-racing, non-timed driving accidents might be covered by driver's insurance, but it is increasingly common for UK insurers especially to insert exclusion clauses that mean drivers and riders on the Nürburgring only have third-party coverage[13] or are not covered at all.[14]

 

Drivers who have crashed into the barriers, suffered mechanical failure or been otherwise required to be towed off track during Touristenfahrten sessions are referred to as having joined the 'Bongard Club'. This nickname is derived from the name of the company which operates the large yellow recovery flatbed trucks which ferry those unfortunate drivers and their vehicles to the nearest exit.[15] Due to the high volume of traffic, there is an emphasis on quickly clearing and repairing any compromised safety measures so the track can be immediately re-opened for use.

 

Additionally, those found responsible for damage to the track and safety barriers on track are required to pay for those repairs, along with the time and cost associated with personnel and equipment to address those damages, making any accident or breakdown a potentially expensive incident. Because it is technically operated as a public toll road, failing to report an accident or instance where track surfaces are affected is considered unlawfully leaving the scene of an accident.[16] This is all part of the rules and regulations which aim to ensure a safe experience for all visitors to the track.

Commercial aspects

 

One of the original purposes of the Nordschleife was as a test track for auto manufacturers, and its demanding layout had been traditionally used as a proving ground. Weekdays are often booked for so-called Industriefahrten for auto makers and the media. With the advent of the Internet, awareness of the Nordschleife has risen in Germany and abroad, in addition to publicity in print media. In 1999, Porsche reported that their new 996 GT3 had lapped the Nürburgring in under eight minutes, and in subsequent years, manufacturers from overseas also showed up to test cars. Some high-performance models are promoted with videotaped laps published on the web, and the claimed lap times are generating discussion. Few of these supercars are actually entered in racing where the claims could be backed up.

 

The TV Series Top Gear has also used the Nordschleife for its challenges, often involving Sabine Schmitz. In addition, during series 17 (summer 2011) of Top Gear, James May was very critical of the ride quality of cars whose development processes included testing on the Nordschleife, saying that cars which were tested at Nordschleife got ruined.

 

Other pastimes are hosted at the Nürburgring, such as the Rock am Ring, Germany's biggest rock festival, attracting close to 100,000 rock fans each year since 1985. Since 1978, the Nordschleife is also the venue of a major running event (Nürburgring-Lauf/Run am Ring). In 2003, a major cycling event (Rad am Ring) was added and it became the multi-sports event Rad & Run am Ring.

 

In 2009, new commercial areas opened, including a hotel and shopping mall. In the summer of 2009, ETF Ride Systems opened a new interactive dark ride application called "Motor Mania" at the racetrack, in collaboration with Lagotronics B.V.[17] The roller coaster "ring°racer" was scheduled to open in 2011 but never started its operations due to technical failures.

 

In 2012, the track was preparing to file for bankruptcy as a result of nearly $500 million in debts and the inability to secure financing.[18] On 1 August 2012, the government of Rheinland-Pfalz guaranteed $312 million to allow the track to meet its debt obligations.[19]

 

In 2013, the Nürburgring was for sale for US$165 million (€127.3 million).[20] The sale process was by sealed-bid auction with an expected completion date of "Late Summer". This meant there was to be a new owner in 2013, unencumbered by the debts of the previous operation, with the circuit expected to return to profitability.[21]

 

On March 11, 2014 it was reported that the Nürburgring was sold for 77 million euros ($106.8 million). Düsseldorf-based Capricorn Development was the buyer. The company was to take full ownership of the Nürburgring on January 1, 2015.[22] But in October 2014, Russian billionaire, the chairman of Moscow-based Pharmstandard, Viktor Kharitonin, bought a majority stake in the Nürburgring.[23]

 

In May 2015, the Nürburgring was set to hold the first Grüne Hölle Rock festival as a replacement for the Rock am Ring festival,[24] but it fell through. Grüne Hölle Rock has changed their name to Rock im Revier and will be held in the Schalke area.[25]

Lansdowne House was a large detached villa that was built at the junction of Christchurch Rd and Holdenhurst Rd, overlooking The Lansdowne, in the mid 1860s.

It was demolished in 1891 and replaced by what was originally to be called the Palace Hotel but actually opened as the Metropole Hotel in 1893.

 

On 23rd May 1943 a beautiful summer Sunday's peace was shattered when German Luffwaffe bombers flew in low over Hengistbury Head to unleash their deadly cargo across the town.

Bournemouth had suffered regular air raids during the war, the first air raid came in July 1940 with the last occuring in April 1944, but this raid would prove to be the worst with around twenty five bombs dropped that saw 22 buildings destroyed, over 3,000 damaged, nearly 40 of which had to be demolished. The number of deaths on that day has always been subject to debate and seems to vary depending on the source but is probably somewhere between 131 and 208 in total.

 

The most notable buildings destroyed were the Central Hotel on Richmond Hill with the neighbouring Punshon Memorial Church severely damaged and later demolished, Beales department store on Old Christchurch Rd and the Metropole Hotel. The bomb blew apart the Holdenhurst Rd side of the building with bodies reportedly thrown clear of the wreckage. As to the specific number killed when the Metropole was hit i have been unable to determine a reliable figure but the loss of life must have been significant.

 

The ruins of the hotel stood overlooking The Lansdowne in the years after the war, although the Metropole Bars did reopen on the Holdenhurst Rd side, until work began on the construction of Royal London House, the hotel's replacement, in 1955.

Royal London House opened in 1958 and housed offices on its upper floors with shops at street level. Today it is probably best known for the KFC restaurant that occupies the corner retail unit..

 

Over 2,200 bombs fell on Bournemouth during World War 2 killing up to 350 civilians and servicemen with nearly 14,000 buildings affected with 75 destroyed, 171 demolished as beyond repair, 675 badly damaged but repairable, over 9,000 slightly damaged and over 3,000 suffering broken glass.

 

Thousands of Allied troops, including at least 10,000 Canadians, were billeted in Bournemouth during the war with many of the town's hotels requisitioned.

The American GIs were particularly popular with local children as they always seemed to have a plentiful supply of chocolate and cigarettes.

Thousands of evacuees were also sent to Bournemouth, the middle section of both piers were removed to prevent them being used by invading forces, the shoreline was protected by barbed wire and there were around 5,000 members of the local home guard.

The War Memorial Homes for disabled ex servicemen, on Castle Lane West, were built as Bournemouth's memorial to World War Two.

  

FURTHER READING........

 

Bournemouth Goes To War by John Cresswell - a chapter included in 'Bournemouth 1810 - 2010 From Smugglers To Surfers' ISBN 978-1-904-34976-1

 

'Victory - A 60th Anniversary Souvenir' by the Daily Echo ISBN 0-9546280-2-0

 

'A Bed By The Sea - A History of Bournemouth's Hotels' by Jackie Edwards ISBN 9781897887806

 

'Their Past Your Future 1945 - 2005' a Jan Marsh / Bournemouth Libraries booklet.

 

The Bournemouth War Memorial Homes website www.bournemouthwarmemorial.co.uk/home.html

 

BBC People's War Archive. www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/44/a2307944.s...

   

Mémoire2cité c est aussi la musique @ Cadeau la REVUE DETAIILLE DES BEST OF 12 INCH GOLD DISCO FUNK COMPILATION 90S www.discogs.com/label/433949-Best-Of-12-Inch-Gold

A1 Booker Newberry III– Love Town

Producer – Bobby Eli

Producer – Bobby Eli

A2 Band AKA– Joy

A3 Aretha Franklin– Get It Right

Producer – Luther Vandross

Producer – Luther Vandross

A4 Jeffrey Osborne– Stay With Me Tonight

Producer – George Duke

Producer – George Duke

B1 Kenny G (2)– Hi, How Ya Doin'

Producer – Wayne Brathwaite

Producer – Wayne Brathwaite

B2 Terri Wells– I'll Be Around

Producer – Nick Martinelli

Producer – Nick Martinelli

B3 The O'Jays– Extraordinary Girl

Producer – Gamble & Huff

Producer – Gamble & Huff

B4 Atlantic Starr– Silver Shadow The Whispers– And The Beat Goes On 6:43

A2 Bobby Thurston– Check Out The Groove 7:29

A3 One Way Featuring Al Hudson– Music 7:14

A4 Linx– You're Lying 6:36

B1 Brothers Johnson– Stomp 6:22

B2 Earth, Wind & Fire– Star 4:26

B3 Herbie Hancock– You Bet Your Love 8:10

B4 Dynasty– I Don't Wanna Be A Freak (But I Can't Help Myself) 7:14 Earth, Wind & Fire– Let's Groove 6:51

A2 Evelyn King– I'm In Love 5:56

A3 Quincy Jones– Ai No Corrida 6:27

A4 Rodney Franklin– The Groove 3:33

B1 Tom Browne– Funkin' For Jamaica (N.Y.) 4:42

B2 Yarbrough & Peoples– Don't Stop The Music 7:53

B3 Frantique– Strut Your Funky Stuff 5:48

B4 Leon Haywood– Don't Push It, Don't Force It

The Whispers– It's A Love Thing

Written-By – D. Meyers*, W. Shelby*

Written-By – D. Meyers*, W. Shelby*

5:06

A2 Aretha Franklin– Jump To It 6:33

A3 Shalamar– I Can Make You Feel Good 4:20

A4 The O'Jays– Put Our Heads Together 7:01

B1 Earth, Wind & Fire– I've Had Enough 4:34

B2 Evelyn King– Love Come Down 6:09

B3 Oliver Cheatham– Get Down Saturday Night 7:33

B4 Manhattans– Crazy

 

A1 Gwen Guthrie– (They Long To Be) Close To You 7:14

A2 Terri Wells– You Make It Heaven 5:30

A3 Billy Griffin– Serious 5:00

A4 Jeffrey Osborne– On The Wings Of Love 4:01

B1 Earth, Wind & Fire– After The Love Has Gone 4:31

B2 Atlantic Starr– Secret Lovers 5:28

B3 Champaign– How 'Bout Us 4:34

B4 The S.O.S. Band– Weekend Girl

Mai Tai History

–Loose Ends Hanging On A String (Contemplating)

–52nd Street Tell Me (How It Feels)

–Ca$hflow Mine All Mine

–Gwen Guthrie Ain't Nothin' Goin' On But The Rent

–Total Contrast Takes A Little Time

–René & Angela I'll Be Good

–Aurra You And Me Tonight

A1 Band AKA– Grace 6:23

A2 Second Image– Can't Keep Holding On 4:30

A3 Billy Griffin– Hold Me Tighter In The Rain 5:30

A4 Shakatak– Night Birds 6:19

B1 Sharon Brown– I Specialize In Love 7:15

B2 Vicky D*– This Beat Is Mine 5:53

B3 Howard Johnson– So Fine 5:28

B4 The Jones Girls– Nights Over Egypt 4:38

Earth, Wind & Fire With The Emotions– Boogie Wonderland 8:21

A2 G.Q.*– Disco Nights (Rock Freak) 5:51

A3 Al Hudson & The Partners– You Can Do It 7:03

A4 Herbie Hancock– I Thought It Was You 8:56

B1 Crusaders*– Street Life 7:49

B2 Phyllis Hyman– You Know How To Love Me 7:34

B3 Isley Brothers*– It's A Disco Night (Rock Don't Stop) 8:54

B4 Quincy Jones– Stuff Like That

 

Masquer crédits

A1 Isley Jasper Isley– Caravan Of Love

Written-By – C. Jasper*, E. Isley*, M. Isley*

Written-By – C. Jasper*, E. Isley*, M. Isley*

5:43

A2 Heatwave– Always And Forever

Written-By – R. Temperton*

Written-By – R. Temperton*

6:14

A3 M'tume*– Juicy Fruit

Written-By – M'tume*

Written-By – M'tume*

7:03

A4 Marvin Gaye– (Sexual) Healing

Written-By – D. Ritz*, M. Gaye*, O. Brown*

Written-By – D. Ritz*, M. Gaye*, O. Brown*

4:50

B1 Billy Paul– Let's Make A Baby

Written-By – Gamble/Huff*

Written-By – Gamble/Huff*

7:11

B2 Carl Anderson– Buttercup

Written-By – S. Wonder*

Written-By – S. Wonder*

4:19

B3 Nicole* With Timmy Thomas– New York Eyes

Written-By – Timmy Thomas

Written-By – Timmy Thomas

5:38

B4 S.O.S. Band*– Just Be Good To Me

Written-By – T. Lewis/J. Harris III*

Shannon– Let The Music Play 6:03

A2 Man Parrish– Hip Hop, Be Bop (Don't Stop) 5:36

A3 Full Force– Alice I Want You Just For Me 6:09

A4 Whodini– Haunted House Of Rock 7:42

B1 Hot Streak– Body Work 8:23

B2 Break Machine– Street Dance 6:28

B3 Bar-Kays– Sexomatic 6:24

B4 Herbie Hancock– Rockit

McFadden & Whitehead– Ain't No Stoppin' Us Now 10:45

A2 Anita Ward– Ring My Bell 8:08

A3 Jackie Moore– This Time Baby 7:09

A4 The Real Thing– Can You Feel The Force 7:35

B1 The Jacksons– Shake Your Body (Down To The Ground) 8:40

B2 Light Of The World– Time 10:59

B3 The Players Association– Turn The Music Up 6:25

B4 Positive Force– We Got The Funk

Evelyn Thomas– High Energy 7:49

A2 Eartha Kitt– Where Is My Man 6:25

A3 Divine– You Think You're A Man 7:58

A4 Barbara Pennington– On A Crowded Street 9:52

B1 Amii Stewart– Light My Fire (1985 Remix) 7:36

B2 Miquel Brown– So Many Men, So Little Time 8:12

B3 Boys Town Gang– Can't Take My Eyes Off You 9:48

B4 Village People– Y.M.C.A.

A1 Galaxy (4) Featuring Phil Fearon– Dancing Tight 6:12

A2 Glenn Jones– I Am Somebody 6:22

A3 Evelyn King– Your Personal Touch 5:47

A4 Loose Ends– Emergency (Dial 999) 6:47

B1 Cheryl Lynn– Encore 5:20

B2 Jones Girls*– You Can't Have My Love 4:24

B3 Windjammer– Tossing And Turning 6:40

B4 Alicia Myers– You Get The Best From Me (Say Say Say)

Real To Reel– Love Me Like This 6:41

A2 Marvin Gaye– My Love Is Waiting 5:12

A3 Keni Burke– Risin' To The Top (Give All You Got) 5:14

A4 Astrud Gilberto– Girl From Ipanema 5:20

B1 Gene Chandler– Does She Have A Friend For Me 3:34

B2 Heatwave– Mind Blowing Decisions 4:17

B3 Lowrell*– Mellow, Mellow Right On 10:43

B4 Sylvia*– Pillow Talk

Crown Heights Affair– You Gave Me Love 5:55

A2 Coffe*– Casanova 6:10

A3 Stephanie Mills– I Never Knew Love Like This Before 5:27

A4 Carl Carlton– She's A Bad Mama Jama (She's Built, She's Stacked) 5:48

B1 Gap Band*– Burn Rubber On Me 5:33

B2 Kool & The Gang– Celebration 5:00

B3 Freeez– Southern Freeez 5:40

B4 Central Line– Walking Into Sunshine

Earth, Wind & Fire Featuring The Emotions Boogie Wonderland 8:21

–GQ Disco Nights (Rock Freak) 5:51

–Al Hudson & The Partners You Can Do It 7:03

–Herbie Hancock I Thought It Was You 8:56

–The Crusaders Street Life 7:49

–Phyllis Hyman You Know How To Love Me 7:34

–The Isley Brothers It's A Disco Night (Rock Don't Stop) 8:54

–Quincy Jones Stuff Like That

The Whispers And The Beat Goes On 6:43

–Bobby Thurston Check Out The Groove 7:29

–One Way Featuring Al Hudson Music 7:14

–Linx You're Lying 6:36

–Brothers Johnson Stomp 6:22

–Earth, Wind & Fire Star 4:26

–Herbie Hancock You Bet Your Love 8:10

–Dynasty I Don't Wanna Be A Freak (But I Can't Help Myself)

 

–Earth, Wind & Fire Let's Groove 6:51

–Evelyn King I'm In Love 5:56

–Quincy Jones Ai No Corrida 6:27

–Rodney Franklin The Groove 3:33

–Tom Browne Funkin' For Jamaica (N.Y.) 4:42

–Yarbrough & Peoples Don't Stop The Music 7:53

–Frantique Strut Your Funky Stuff 5:48

–Leon Haywood Don't Push It, Don't Force It

 

–The Whispers It's A Love Thing 5:06

–Aretha Franklin Jump To It 6:33

–Shalamar I Can Make You Feel Good 4:20

–The O'Jays Put Our Heads Together 7:01

–Earth, Wind & Fire I've Had Enough 4:34

–Evelyn King Love Come Down 6:09

–Oliver Cheatham Get Down Saturday Night 7:33

–Manhattans Crazy

 

–Booker Newberry III Love Town

–Band AKA Joy

–Aretha Franklin Get It Right

–Jeffrey Osborne Stay With Me Tonight

–Kenny G (2) Hi, How Ya Doin'

–Terri Wells I'll Be Around

–The O'Jays Extraordinary Girl

–Atlantic Starr Silver Shadow

1 Gwen Guthrie– (They Long To Be) Close To You 7:14

2 Terri Wells– You Make It Heaven 5:30

3 Billy Griffin– Serious 5:00

4 Jeffrey Osborne– On The Wings Of Love 4:01

5 Earth, Wind And Fire*– After The Love Has Gone 4:31

6 Atlantic Starr– Secret Lovers 5:28

7 Champaign– How 'Bout Us 4:34

8 S.O.S. Band*– Weekend Girl

Mai Tai History

–Loose Ends Hanging On A String (Contemplating)

–52nd Street Tell Me (How It Feels)

–Ca$hflow Mine All Mine

–Gwen Guthrie Ain't Nothin' Goin' On But The Rent

–Total Contrast Takes A Little Time

–René & Angela I'll Be Good

–Aurra You And Me Tonight

Band Aka Grace 6:23

–Second Image Can't Keep Holding On 4:30

–Billy Griffin Hold Me Tighter In The Rain 5:30

–Shakatak Night Birds 6:19

–Sharon Brown I Specialize In Love 7:15

–Vicky D* This Beat Is Mine 5:53

–Howard Johnson So Fine 5:28

–The Jones Girls Nights Over Egypt

Isley Jasper Isley Caravan Of Love 5:43

–Heatwave Always And Forever 6:14

–M'tume* Juicy Fruit 7:03

–Marvin Gaye (Sexual) Healing 4:50

–Billy Paul Let's Make A Baby 7:11

–Carl Anderson Buttercup 4:19

–Nicole* With Timmy Thomas New York Eyes 5:38

–S.O.S. Band* Just Be Good To Me 8:56

Primis Player Placeholder

 

–Shannon Let The Music Play 6:03

–Man Parrish Hip Hop, Be Bop (Don't Stop) 5:36

–Full Force Alice I Want You Just For Me 6:09

–Whodini Haunted House Of Rock 7:42

–Hot Streak Body Work 8:23

–Break Machine Street Dance 6:28

–Bar-Kays Sexomatic 6:24

–Herbie Hancock Rockit

McFadden & Whitehead– Ain't No Stoppin' Us Now (Special Disco Version) 10:45

2 Anita Ward– Ring My Bell (12" Version) 8:08

3 Jackie Moore– This Time Baby (Special Disco Version) 7:09

4 Real Thing*– Can You Feel The Force 7:35

5 Jacksons*– Shake Your Body (Down To The Ground) (Special Disco Remix) 8:40

6 Light Of The World– Time (Remix) 10:59

7 The Players Association– Turn The Music Up! 6:25

8 Positive Force– We Got The Funk

Evelyn Thomas– High Energy

Producer, Written-By – Ian Levine and Fiachra Trench

Producer, Written-By – Ian Levine and Fiachra Trench

7:49

2 Eartha Kitt– Where Is My Man

Engineer – Bill Scheniman

Producer – Jacques Morali

Producer [Executive] – Henri Belolo

Engineer – Bill Scheniman

Producer – Jacques Morali

Producer [Executive] – Henri Belolo

6:25

3 Divine– You Think You're A Man

Directed By – Matt Aitken, Mike Stock, Pete Ware

Producer – Barry Evangeli, Pete Waterman

Directed By – Matt Aitken, Mike Stock, Pete Ware

Producer – Barry Evangeli, Pete Waterman

7:58

4 Barbara Pennington– On A Crowded Street

Engineer [Mix] – Graham Dickson

Mixed By [An M&M Mix] – John Morales & Sergio Munzibai

Producer – Ian Levine and Fiachra Trench

Engineer [Mix] – Graham Dickson

Mixed By [An M&M Mix] – John Morales & Sergio Munzibai

Producer – Ian Levine and Fiachra Trench

9:52

5 Amii Stewart– Light My Fire (1985 Remix)

Producer [Original Productions], Remix – Barry Leng

Remix – Alan Coulthard

Producer [Original Productions], Remix – Barry Leng

Remix – Alan Coulthard

7:36

6 Miquel Brown– So Many Men, So Little Time

Composed By, Producer – Ian Levine

Composed By, Producer – Ian Levine

8:12

7 Boys Town Gang– Can't Take My Eyes Off You

Producer – Bill Motley

Producer [Executive] – Will Smith (4)

Producer – Bill Motley

Producer [Executive] – Will Smith (4)

9:48

8 Village People– Y.M.C.A.

Mixed By – Michael Hutchinson

Producer – Jacques Morali

Galaxy (4) Featuring Phil Fearon Dancing Tight 6:12

–Glenn Jones I Am Somebody 6:22

–Evelyn 'Champagne' King* Your Personal Touch 5:47

–Loose Ends Emergency (Dial 999) 6:47

–Cheryl Lynn Encore 5:20

–Jones Girls* You Can't Have My Love 4:24

–Windjammer Tossing And Turning 6:40

–Alicia Myers You Get The Best From Me (Say Say Say)

Real To Reel– Love Me Like This

Written-By – Dominic Leslie*, Leon F. Sylvers III*, Leroy Hall

Written-By – Dominic Leslie*, Leon F. Sylvers III*, Leroy Hall

6:41

2 Marvin Gaye– My Love Is Waiting

Written-By – Gordon Banks

Written-By – Gordon Banks

5:12

3 Keni Burke– Risin' To The Top (Give It All You Got)

Written-By – A. Felder*, D. Gant*, K. Burke*

Written-By – A. Felder*, D. Gant*, K. Burke*

5:14

4 Astrud Gilberto– Girl From Ipanema

Written-By – Jobim*, De Moraes*

Written-By – Jobim*, De Moraes*

5:20

5 Gene Chandler– Does She Have A Friend For Me

Written-By – Stone*, Gibbons*

Written-By – Stone*, Gibbons*

3:34

6 Heatwave– Mind Blowing Decisions

Written-By – J. Wilder*

Written-By – J. Wilder*

4:17

7 Lowrell*– Mellow, Mellow Right On

Written-By – F. Simon*, G. Redmond*, J. Simon*, L. Brownlee*

Written-By – F. Simon*, G. Redmond*, J. Simon*, L. Brownlee*

10:43

8 Sylvia*– Pillow Talk

Written-By – Robinson*

Crown Heights Affair– You Gave Me Love

Written-By – Ida Reid

Written-By – Ida Reid

5:55

2 Coffee– Casanova

Written-By – J. Armstead*, M. Middlebrook*

Written-By – J. Armstead*, M. Middlebrook*

6:10

3 Stephanie Mills– I Never Knew Love Like This Before

Written-By – Mtumé*, Lucas*

Written-By – Mtumé*, Lucas*

5:27

4 Carl Carlton– She's A Bad Mama Jama (She's Built, She's Stacked)

Written-By – Leon Haywood

Written-By – Leon Haywood

5:48

5 Gap Band*– Burn Rubber On Me

Written-By – C. Wilson*, L. Simmons*, R. Taylor*

Written-By – C. Wilson*, L. Simmons*, R. Taylor*

5:33

6 Kool & The Gang– Celebration

Written-By – Kool & The Gang, Ronald Bell

Written-By – Kool & The Gang, Ronald Bell

5:00

7 Freeez– Southern Freez

Written-By – Stennett*, Rocca*, Maas*

Written-By – Stennett*, Rocca*, Maas*

5:40

8 Central Line– Walking Into Sunshine

Written-By – Linton Beckles, Lipson Francis, Roy Carter

Jocelyn Brown– Somebody Else's Guy 6:28

2 Sister Sledge– Thinking Of You 4:23

3 Change– Change Of Heart 7:02

4 Fonda Rae– Tuch Me 9:09

5 The Intruders– Who Do You Love? 6:10

6 Paul Hardcastle– You're The One For Me / Daybreak / A.M. (Medley) 6:31

7 Steve Arrington– Feel So Real 6:53

8 Princess– Say I'm Your No. 1 6:16

Sister Sledge– He's The Greatest Dancer

Written-By – Bernard Edwards & Nile Rodgers

Written-By – Bernard Edwards & Nile Rodgers

6:01

2 Edwin Starr– Contact

Written-By – Edwin Starr

Written-By – Edwin Starr

7:12

3 Gloria Gaynor– I Will Survive

Written-By – Dino Fekaris, Freddie Perren

Written-By – Dino Fekaris, Freddie Perren

8:00

4 Kool & The Gang– Ladies Night

Written-By – George M. Brown*, Kool & The Gang

Written-By – George M. Brown*, Kool & The Gang

6:22

5 Gene Chandler– Get Down

Written-By – J. Thompson*

Written-By – J. Thompson*

8:16

6 Chic– Good Times

Written-By – Bernard Edwards & Nile Rodgers

Written-By – Bernard Edwards & Nile Rodgers

7:39

7 Narada Michael Walden– I Shoulda Loved Ya

Written-By – Willis*, Walden*, Stevens*

Written-By – Willis*, Walden*, Stevens*

6:31

8 Change– Searching

Written-By – M. Malavasi*, P. Slade*

1 Womack & Womack– Love Wars

Written-By – C. Womack/L. Womack*

Written-By – C. Womack/L. Womack*

8:13

2 Change– You Are My Melody

Written-By – T. Lewis/J. Harris III*

Written-By – T. Lewis/J. Harris III*

6:23

3 Steve Arrington– Dancin' In The Key Of Life

Written-By – I. Arrington*, S. Arrington*

Written-By – I. Arrington*, S. Arrington*

6:04

4 Jocelyn Brown– I Wish You Would

Written-By – J. Brown*, N. Bennett*

Written-By – J. Brown*, N. Bennett*

5:30

5 Patrice Rushen– Forget Me Nots

Written-By – F. Washington*, P. Rushen*, T. McFadden*

Written-By – F. Washington*, P. Rushen*, T. McFadden*

7:13

6 Cool Notes*– In Your Car

Written-By – S. McIntosh*

Written-By – S. McIntosh*

6:03

7 Paul Hardcastle– Rainforest

Written-By – P. Hardcastle*

Written-By – P. Hardcastle*

5:12

8 Princess– After The Love Has Gone (Bad Mix)

Written-By – Stock/Aitken/Waterman*

Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes*– Don't Leave Me This Way

Written-By – Gilbert*, Gamble*, Huff*

Written-By – Gilbert*, Gamble*, Huff*

6:09

2 Odyssey (2)– Native New Yorker

Written-By – D. Randall*, S. Linzer*

Written-By – D. Randall*, S. Linzer*

5:33

3 Real Thing*– You To Me Are Everything (The Decade Re-Mix 76/86)

Written-By – K. Gold*, M. Denne*

Written-By – K. Gold*, M. Denne*

9:51

4 Heatwave– The Groove Line

Written-By – R. Temperton*

Written-By – R. Temperton*

4:18

5 The Ritchie Family– The Best Disco In Town

Written-By – H. Belolo*, J. Morali*, P. Hurtt*, R. Rome*

Written-By – H. Belolo*, J. Morali*, P. Hurtt*, R. Rome*

6:35

6 Shalamar– Take That To The Bank

Written-By – K. Spencer*, L. Sylvers*

Written-By – K. Spencer*, L. Sylvers*

6:52

7 Evelyn 'Champagne' King*– Shame

Written-By – Fitch*, Cross*

Written-By – Fitch*, Cross*

6:31

8 Crown Heights Affair– Galaxy Of Love

Written-By – F. Nerangis*, V. Britton*

Written-By – F. Nerangis*, V. Britton*

5:55

Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five– The Message

Written-By – Chase*, Fletcher*, Glover*, Robinson*

Written-By – Chase*, Fletcher*, Glover*, Robinson*

7:12

2 Pointer Sisters– Automatic

Written-By – Walsh*, Goldenberg*

Written-By – Walsh*, Goldenberg*

4:46

3 Third World– Try Jah Love

Written-By – A. McCully*, S. Wonder*

Written-By – A. McCully*, S. Wonder*

9:18

4 Shalamar– A Night To Remember

Written-By – C. Sylvers*, D. Myers*, N. Beard*

Written-By – C. Sylvers*, D. Myers*, N. Beard*

5:08

5 Odyssey (2)– Inside Out

Written-By – J. Rae*

Written-By – J. Rae*

6:21

6 Rockers Revenge Featuring Donnie Calvin– Walking On Sunshine

Vocals – Donnie Calvin

Written-By – E. Grant*

Vocals – Donnie Calvin

Written-By – E. Grant*

9:34

7 Imagination– Just An Illusion

Written-By – Ingram*, John*, Jolley*, Swain*

Written-By – Ingram*, John*, Jolley*, Swain*

6:36

8 Kool & The Gang– Get Down On It

Written-By – J. Taylor*, Kool & The Gang, R. Bell*

Cameo– Word Up! 6:00

2 Cool Notes*– Spend The Night 5:55

3 Kool & The Gang– Fresh 4:23

4 Alyson Williams– Sleep Talk 7:56

5 Joyce Sims– All And All (Parts 1&2) 10:23

6 Luther Vandross– Never Too Much 5:44

7 The Pasadenas– Tribute (Right On) (The Q Street Mix) 5:14

8 Midnight Star– Midas Touch 6:35

 

www.discogs.com/label/433949-Best-Of-12-Inch-Gold Voir moins

More than 100 dedicated DMPS employees from a variety of departments were honored at a special luncheon on Wednesday at the Wakonda Club in Des Moines. Chief of Human Resources Dr. Anne Sullivan offered congratulations, and Superintendent Dr. Tom Ahart presented retirees with a golden apple for their service.

 

Students Aviva Adams-Wilk (Cowles Montessori School), Shakira Stiefvater (Callanan Middle School) and Courtnei Caldwell (Hoover High School) talked about the special teachers in their lives and the impact school has had on them.

 

Congratulations to our retiring employees!

 

Anderson, Rhonda

Andresen, Kimberly

Andrews, Kathleen

Balkema, James

Banks, Leane

Barnes, Steve

Bass, Cynthia

Behling, Denise

Bennett, Ronald

Berry, Mary

Blackford, Cynthia

Boal, Anne

Brandt, Marsha

Brier, Sandra

Brocksmith, Karen

Brones, Laura

Caligiuri, Mari

Callaghan-Mitchell, Barbara

Carlson, Philip

Carter, Shelley

Charron, Karen

Clausen, Katherine

Cockrell, Stephen

Collins, Melinda

Colton, Patricia

Cooley, Terance

Cooper, Janyce

Crandell, Kathleen

Cropp, Billie Jo

Cross, Karen

Culver, Peggy

Cusmano, Patricia

Dahm, Leslie

Day, Barbara

Decker, Mary

Dickerson, Donna

Dinsdale, Linda

Dunivan, Sandra

Durham, Dawn

Edwards, Pamela

Faust, Gloria

Fogle, Deborah

Forsgren, Thomas

Fritch, Marcia

Gaylord-Crispin, Marjorie

Gier, Kay

Graham, Kay

Grandanette, Joseph

Greiner-Glas, Susan

Hansen, Kathryn

Hanson, Steven

Harrington, Diane

Heideman, Julie

Henline, Thomas

Hetzel, Jannan

Hilger, Mary

Holmgren, Ronald

Holmgren, Teresa

Horn, Sarah

Hoyt, Lynne

Huston, Steven

James, Ethel

Jasso, Michael

Jefferson, Lucy

Johnson, Camille

Johnson, John

Johnston, Michael

Jones, Sarah (Jackie)

Jones, Karen

Jones, Melinda

Kerman, Lonny

Khalastchi, Barbara

King, Bonnie

Kitterman, Darrell

Kleinschrodt, Juli

Kulzer, Howard

Lehman, Kathleen

Leonetti, Juli

Lewis, Mary

Logsdon, Michael

Loux, Donna

Lowe, Julia

Lynch, Gene

Lynch, Nancy

Maass, Karen

Markle, Todd

Mattila, Lin

Mcdonald, Susan

Metge, Maria

Miller, Diann

Morain, Diane

Murillo, Janet

Murphy, Kathleen

Nemmers, Linda

Nemmers, Theodore

Neswold, Vicki

Nichols-Wood, Barbara

Nigro, Roberta

Nizzi, Jerry

O’lear, Laura

Parrish, Terry

Paul, Kathleen

Paulsen, Mary

Pearson, Genevieve

Reynolds, Kathy

Riordan, Therese

Robinson, Barbara

Rodriguez, Linda

Root, Valerie

Rosin, Julie

Schwering, Jeanette

Sircy, Katherine

Skinner, Peggy

Smith, Thomas

Smith, Birdie Mae

Smith, Jean

Smith, J Kirby

Stancel, Kenneth

Stark, Lee

Stetson, Deborah

Stinson, Donna

Stone-Flomo, Cassandra

Swanson, Carol

Swanson, Thomas

Sweet, David

Tebo, Janette

Thompson, Shari

Trullinger, Christy

Tursi, Madelyn

Van De Pol, Carol

Virden, Mark

Walag, John Michael

West, Sheila

Westover, Mary

Wilkinson, Rena

Williams, Patti

Wilson, Wanda

Winslow, Joanne

More than 100 dedicated DMPS employees from a variety of departments were honored at a special luncheon on Wednesday at the Wakonda Club in Des Moines. Chief of Human Resources Dr. Anne Sullivan offered congratulations, and Superintendent Dr. Tom Ahart presented retirees with a golden apple for their service.

 

Students Aviva Adams-Wilk (Cowles Montessori School), Shakira Stiefvater (Callanan Middle School) and Courtnei Caldwell (Hoover High School) talked about the special teachers in their lives and the impact school has had on them.

 

Congratulations to our retiring employees!

 

Anderson, Rhonda

Andresen, Kimberly

Andrews, Kathleen

Balkema, James

Banks, Leane

Barnes, Steve

Bass, Cynthia

Behling, Denise

Bennett, Ronald

Berry, Mary

Blackford, Cynthia

Boal, Anne

Brandt, Marsha

Brier, Sandra

Brocksmith, Karen

Brones, Laura

Caligiuri, Mari

Callaghan-Mitchell, Barbara

Carlson, Philip

Carter, Shelley

Charron, Karen

Clausen, Katherine

Cockrell, Stephen

Collins, Melinda

Colton, Patricia

Cooley, Terance

Cooper, Janyce

Crandell, Kathleen

Cropp, Billie Jo

Cross, Karen

Culver, Peggy

Cusmano, Patricia

Dahm, Leslie

Day, Barbara

Decker, Mary

Dickerson, Donna

Dinsdale, Linda

Dunivan, Sandra

Durham, Dawn

Edwards, Pamela

Faust, Gloria

Fogle, Deborah

Forsgren, Thomas

Fritch, Marcia

Gaylord-Crispin, Marjorie

Gier, Kay

Graham, Kay

Grandanette, Joseph

Greiner-Glas, Susan

Hansen, Kathryn

Hanson, Steven

Harrington, Diane

Heideman, Julie

Henline, Thomas

Hetzel, Jannan

Hilger, Mary

Holmgren, Ronald

Holmgren, Teresa

Horn, Sarah

Hoyt, Lynne

Huston, Steven

James, Ethel

Jasso, Michael

Jefferson, Lucy

Johnson, Camille

Johnson, John

Johnston, Michael

Jones, Sarah (Jackie)

Jones, Karen

Jones, Melinda

Kerman, Lonny

Khalastchi, Barbara

King, Bonnie

Kitterman, Darrell

Kleinschrodt, Juli

Kulzer, Howard

Lehman, Kathleen

Leonetti, Juli

Lewis, Mary

Logsdon, Michael

Loux, Donna

Lowe, Julia

Lynch, Gene

Lynch, Nancy

Maass, Karen

Markle, Todd

Mattila, Lin

Mcdonald, Susan

Metge, Maria

Miller, Diann

Morain, Diane

Murillo, Janet

Murphy, Kathleen

Nemmers, Linda

Nemmers, Theodore

Neswold, Vicki

Nichols-Wood, Barbara

Nigro, Roberta

Nizzi, Jerry

O’lear, Laura

Parrish, Terry

Paul, Kathleen

Paulsen, Mary

Pearson, Genevieve

Reynolds, Kathy

Riordan, Therese

Robinson, Barbara

Rodriguez, Linda

Root, Valerie

Rosin, Julie

Schwering, Jeanette

Sircy, Katherine

Skinner, Peggy

Smith, Thomas

Smith, Birdie Mae

Smith, Jean

Smith, J Kirby

Stancel, Kenneth

Stark, Lee

Stetson, Deborah

Stinson, Donna

Stone-Flomo, Cassandra

Swanson, Carol

Swanson, Thomas

Sweet, David

Tebo, Janette

Thompson, Shari

Trullinger, Christy

Tursi, Madelyn

Van De Pol, Carol

Virden, Mark

Walag, John Michael

West, Sheila

Westover, Mary

Wilkinson, Rena

Williams, Patti

Wilson, Wanda

Winslow, Joanne

The Hatton Gallery is Newcastle University's art gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. It is based in the university's Fine Art Building.

 

The Hatton Gallery briefly closed in February 2016 for a £3.8 million redevelopment and reopened in 2017.

 

History

The Hatton Gallery was founded in 1925, by the King Edward VII School of Art, Armstrong College, Durham University (Newcastle University's Department of Fine Art), in honour of Richard George Hatton, a professor at the School of Art.

 

Richard Hamilton's seminal Man, Machine and Motion was first exhibited at the Hatton in 1955 before travelling to the ICA, so the Hatton can claim to have been the birthplace of Pop Art.

 

In 1997, the university authorities voted to close down the gallery, but a widespread public campaign against the closure, leading to a £250,000 donation by Dame Catherine Cookson, ensured the survival of the gallery.

 

As part of the Great North Museum project, the gallery's future is secure. Unlike the university's other collections, the Hatton Gallery was not transferred into the Hancock, but remained in the Fine Art Building.

 

The Hatton Gallery closed on 27 February 2016 for a £3.8 million redevelopment and reopened in October 2017 with the exhibition Pioneers of Pop.

 

Exhibitions

The permanent collection comprises over 3,500 works, from the 14th century onward – including paintings, sculptures, prints and drawings – and starring the Merzbarn, the only surviving Merz construction by Kurt Schwitters, which was rescued from a barn near Elterwater in 1965 and is now permanently installed in the gallery.

 

Other important artists represented in the collection include Francis Bacon, Victor Pasmore, William Roberts and Paolo di Giovanni, Palma Giovane, Richard Hamilton, Panayiotis Kalorkoti, Thomas Bewick, Eduardo Paolozzi, Camillo Procaccini, Patrick Heron and Richard Ansdell. Watercolours by Wyndham Lewis, Thomas Harrison Hair and Robert Jobling are also held.

 

Important exhibitions held in the gallery in recent years include No Socks: Kurt Schwitters and the Merzbarn (1999) and William Roberts (2004).

 

Newcastle University (legally the University of Newcastle upon Tyne) is a public research university based in Newcastle upon Tyne, North East England. It has overseas campuses in Singapore and Malaysia. The university is a red brick university and a member of the Russell Group, an association of research-intensive UK universities.

 

The university finds its roots in the School of Medicine and Surgery (later the College of Medicine), established in 1834, and the College of Physical Science (later renamed Armstrong College), founded in 1871. These two colleges came to form the larger division of the federal University of Durham, with the Durham Colleges forming the other. The Newcastle colleges merged to form King's College in 1937. In 1963, following an Act of Parliament, King's College became the University of Newcastle upon Tyne.

 

The university subdivides into three faculties: the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences; the Faculty of Medical Sciences; and the Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering. The university offers around 175 full-time undergraduate degree programmes in a wide range of subject areas spanning arts, sciences, engineering and medicine, together with approximately 340 postgraduate taught and research programmes across a range of disciplines.[6] The annual income of the institution for 2022–23 was £592.4 million of which £119.3 million was from research grants and contracts, with an expenditure of £558 million.

 

History

Durham University § Colleges in Newcastle

The establishment of a university in Newcastle upon Tyne was first proposed in 1831 by Thomas Greenhow in a lecture to the Literary and Philosophical Society. In 1832 a group of local medics – physicians George Fife (teaching materia medica and therapeutics) and Samuel Knott (teaching theory and practice of medicine), and surgeons John Fife (teaching surgery), Alexander Fraser (teaching anatomy and physiology) and Henry Glassford Potter (teaching chemistry) – started offering medical lectures in Bell's Court to supplement the apprenticeship system (a fourth surgeon, Duncan McAllum, is mentioned by some sources among the founders, but was not included in the prospectus). The first session started on 1 October 1832 with eight or nine students, including John Snow, then apprenticed to a local surgeon-apothecary, the opening lecture being delivered by John Fife. In 1834 the lectures and practical demonstrations moved to the Hall of the Company of Barber Surgeons to accommodate the growing number of students, and the School of Medicine and Surgery was formally established on 1 October 1834.

 

On 25 June 1851, following a dispute among the teaching staff, the school was formally dissolved and the lecturers split into two rival institutions. The majority formed the Newcastle College of Medicine, and the others established themselves as the Newcastle upon Tyne College of Medicine and Practical Science with competing lecture courses. In July 1851 the majority college was recognised by the Society of Apothecaries and in October by the Royal College of Surgeons of England and in January 1852 was approved by the University of London to submit its students for London medical degree examinations. Later in 1852, the majority college was formally linked to the University of Durham, becoming the "Newcastle-upon-Tyne College of Medicine in connection with the University of Durham". The college awarded its first 'Licence in Medicine' (LicMed) under the auspices of the University of Durham in 1856, with external examiners from Oxford and London, becoming the first medical examining body on the United Kingdom to institute practical examinations alongside written and viva voce examinations. The two colleges amalgamated in 1857, with the first session of the unified college opening on 3 October that year. In 1861 the degree of Master of Surgery was introduced, allowing for the double qualification of Licence of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery, along with the degrees of Bachelor of Medicine and Doctor of Medicine, both of which required residence in Durham. In 1870 the college was brought into closer connection with the university, becoming the "Durham University College of Medicine" with the Reader in Medicine becoming the Professor of Medicine, the college gaining a representative on the university's senate, and residence at the college henceforth counting as residence in the university towards degrees in medicine and surgery, removing the need for students to spend a period of residence in Durham before they could receive the higher degrees.

 

Attempts to realise a place for the teaching of sciences in the city were finally met with the foundation of the College of Physical Science in 1871. The college offered instruction in mathematics, physics, chemistry and geology to meet the growing needs of the mining industry, becoming the "Durham College of Physical Science" in 1883 and then renamed after William George Armstrong as Armstrong College in 1904. Both of these institutions were part of the University of Durham, which became a federal university under the Durham University Act 1908 with two divisions in Durham and Newcastle. By 1908, the Newcastle division was teaching a full range of subjects in the Faculties of Medicine, Arts, and Science, which also included agriculture and engineering.

 

Throughout the early 20th century, the medical and science colleges outpaced the growth of their Durham counterparts. Following tensions between the two Newcastle colleges in the early 1930s, a Royal Commission in 1934 recommended the merger of the two colleges to form "King's College, Durham"; that was effected by the Durham University Act 1937. Further growth of both division of the federal university led to tensions within the structure and a feeling that it was too large to manage as a single body. On 1 August 1963 the Universities of Durham and Newcastle upon Tyne Act 1963 separated the two thus creating the "University of Newcastle upon Tyne". As the successor of King's College, Durham, the university at its founding in 1963, adopted the coat of arms originally granted to the Council of King's College in 1937.

 

Above the portico of the Students' Union building are bas-relief carvings of the arms and mottoes of the University of Durham, Armstrong College and Durham University College of Medicine, the predecessor parts of Newcastle University. While a Latin motto, mens agitat molem (mind moves matter) appears in the Students' Union building, the university itself does not have an official motto.

 

Campus and location

The university occupies a campus site close to Haymarket in central Newcastle upon Tyne. It is located to the northwest of the city centre between the open spaces of Leazes Park and the Town Moor; the university medical school and Royal Victoria Infirmary are adjacent to the west.

 

The Armstrong building is the oldest building on the campus and is the site of the original Armstrong College. The building was constructed in three stages; the north east wing was completed first at a cost of £18,000 and opened by Princess Louise on 5 November 1888. The south-east wing, which includes the Jubilee Tower, and south-west wings were opened in 1894. The Jubilee Tower was built with surplus funds raised from an Exhibition to mark Queen Victoria's Jubilee in 1887. The north-west front, forming the main entrance, was completed in 1906 and features two stone figures to represent science and the arts. Much of the later construction work was financed by Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell, the metallurgist and former Lord Mayor of Newcastle, after whom the main tower is named. In 1906 it was opened by King Edward VII.

 

The building contains the King's Hall, which serves as the university's chief hall for ceremonial purposes where Congregation ceremonies are held. It can contain 500 seats. King Edward VII gave permission to call the Great Hall, King's Hall. During the First World War, the building was requisitioned by the War Office to create the first Northern General Hospital, a facility for the Royal Army Medical Corps to treat military casualties. Graduation photographs are often taken in the University Quadrangle, next to the Armstrong building. In 1949 the Quadrangle was turned into a formal garden in memory of members of Newcastle University who gave their lives in the two World Wars. In 2017, a statue of Martin Luther King Jr. was erected in the inner courtyard of the Armstrong Building, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of his honorary degree from the university.

 

The Bruce Building is a former brewery, constructed between 1896 and 1900 on the site of the Hotspur Hotel, and designed by the architect Joseph Oswald as the new premises of Newcastle Breweries Limited. The university occupied the building from the 1950s, but, having been empty for some time, the building was refurbished in 2016 to become residential and office space.

 

The Devonshire Building, opened in 2004, incorporates in an energy efficient design. It uses photovoltaic cells to help to power motorised shades that control the temperature of the building and geothermal heating coils. Its architects won awards in the Hadrian awards and the RICS Building of the Year Award 2004. The university won a Green Gown award for its construction.

 

Plans for additions and improvements to the campus were made public in March 2008 and completed in 2010 at a cost of £200 million. They included a redevelopment of the south-east (Haymarket) façade with a five-storey King's Gate administration building as well as new student accommodation. Two additional buildings for the school of medicine were also built. September 2012 saw the completion of the new buildings and facilities for INTO Newcastle University on the university campus. The main building provides 18 new teaching rooms, a Learning Resource Centre, a lecture theatre, science lab, administrative and academic offices and restaurant.

 

The Philip Robinson Library is the main university library and is named after a bookseller in the city and benefactor to the library. The Walton Library specialises in services for the Faculty of Medical Sciences in the Medical School. It is named after Lord Walton of Detchant, former Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Professor of Neurology. The library has a relationship with the Northern region of the NHS allowing their staff to use the library for research and study. The Law Library specialises in resources relating to law, and the Marjorie Robinson Library Rooms offers additional study spaces and computers. Together, these house over one million books and 500,000 electronic resources. Some schools within the university, such as the School of Modern Languages, also have their own smaller libraries with smaller highly specialised collections.

 

In addition to the city centre campus there are buildings such as the Dove Marine Laboratory located on Cullercoats Bay, and Cockle Park Farm in Northumberland.

 

International

In September 2008, the university's first overseas branch was opened in Singapore, a Marine International campus called, NUMI Singapore. This later expanded beyond marine subjects and became Newcastle University Singapore, largely through becoming an Overseas University Partner of Singapore Institute of Technology.

 

In 2011, the university's Medical School opened an international branch campus in Iskandar Puteri, Johor, Malaysia, namely Newcastle University Medicine Malaysia.

 

Student accommodation

Newcastle University has many catered and non-catered halls of residence available to first-year students, located around the city of Newcastle. Popular Newcastle areas for private student houses and flats off campus include Jesmond, Heaton, Sandyford, Shieldfield, South Shields and Spital Tongues.

 

Henderson Hall was used as a hall of residence until a fire destroyed it in 2023.

 

St Mary's College in Fenham, one of the halls of residence, was formerly St Mary's College of Education, a teacher training college.

 

Organisation and governance

The current Chancellor is the British poet and artist Imtiaz Dharker. She assumed the position of Chancellor on 1 January 2020. The vice-chancellor is Chris Day, a hepatologist and former pro-vice-chancellor of the Faculty of Medical Sciences.

 

The university has an enrolment of some 16,000 undergraduate and 5,600 postgraduate students. Teaching and research are delivered in 19 academic schools, 13 research institutes and 38 research centres, spread across three Faculties: the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences; the Faculty of Medical Sciences; and the Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering. The university offers around 175 full-time undergraduate degree programmes in a wide range of subject areas spanning arts, sciences, engineering and medicine, together with approximately 340 postgraduate taught and research programmes across a range of disciplines.

 

It holds a series of public lectures called 'Insights' each year in the Curtis Auditorium in the Herschel Building. Many of the university's partnerships with companies, like Red Hat, are housed in the Herschel Annex.

 

Chancellors and vice-chancellors

For heads of the predecessor colleges, see Colleges of Durham University § Colleges in Newcastle.

Chancellors

Hugh Percy, 10th Duke of Northumberland (1963–1988)

Matthew White Ridley, 4th Viscount Ridley (1988–1999)

Chris Patten (1999–2009)

Liam Donaldson (2009–2019)

Imtiaz Dharker (2020–)

Vice-chancellors

Charles Bosanquet (1963–1968)

Henry Miller (1968–1976)

Ewan Stafford Page (1976–1978, acting)

Laurence Martin (1978–1990)

Duncan Murchison (1991, acting)

James Wright (1992–2000)

Christopher Edwards (2001–2007)

Chris Brink (2007–2016)

Chris Day (2017–present)

Civic responsibility

 

The university Quadrangle

The university describes itself as a civic university, with a role to play in society by bringing its research to bear on issues faced by communities (local, national or international).

 

In 2012, the university opened the Newcastle Institute for Social Renewal to address issues of social and economic change, representing the research-led academic schools across the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences[45] and the Business School.

 

Mark Shucksmith was Director of the Newcastle Institute for Social Renewal (NISR) at Newcastle University, where he is also Professor of Planning.

 

In 2006, the university was granted fair trade status and from January 2007 it became a smoke-free campus.

 

The university has also been actively involved with several of the region's museums for many years. The Great North Museum: Hancock originally opened in 1884 and is often a venue for the university's events programme.

 

Faculties and schools

Teaching schools within the university are based within three faculties. Each faculty is led by a Provost/Pro-vice-chancellor and a team of Deans with specific responsibilities.

 

Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences

School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape

School of Arts and Cultures

Newcastle University Business School

Combined Honours Centre

School of Education, Communication and Language Sciences

School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics

School of Geography, Politics and Sociology

School of History, Classics and Archaeology

Newcastle Law School

School of Modern Languages

Faculty of Medical Sciences

School of Biomedical Sciences

School of Dental Sciences

School of Medical Education

School of Pharmacy

School of Psychology

Centre for Bacterial Cell Biology (CBCB)

Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering

School of Computing

School of Engineering

School of Mathematics, Statistics and Physics

School of Natural and Environmental Sciences

Business School

 

Newcastle University Business School

As early as the 1900/1 academic year, there was teaching in economics (political economy, as it was then known) at Newcastle, making Economics the oldest department in the School. The Economics Department is currently headed by the Sir David Dale Chair. Among the eminent economists having served in the Department (both as holders of the Sir David Dale Chair) are Harry Mainwaring Hallsworth and Stanley Dennison.

 

Newcastle University Business School is a triple accredited business school, with accreditation by the three major accreditation bodies: AACSB, AMBA and EQUIS.

 

In 2002, Newcastle University Business School established the Business Accounting and Finance or 'Flying Start' degree in association with the ICAEW and PricewaterhouseCoopers. The course offers an accelerated route towards the ACA Chartered Accountancy qualification and is the Business School's Flagship programme.

 

In 2011 the business school opened their new building built on the former Scottish and Newcastle brewery site next to St James' Park. This building was officially opened on 19 March 2012 by Lord Burns.

 

The business school operated a central London campus from 2014 to 2021, in partnership with INTO University Partnerships until 2020.

 

Medical School

The BMC Medicine journal reported in 2008 that medical graduates from Oxford, Cambridge and Newcastle performed better in postgraduate tests than any other medical school in the UK.

 

In 2008 the Medical School announced that they were expanding their campus to Malaysia.

 

The Royal Victoria Infirmary has always had close links with the Faculty of Medical Sciences as a major teaching hospital.

 

School of Modern Languages

The School of Modern Languages consists of five sections: East Asian (which includes Japanese and Chinese); French; German; Spanish, Portuguese & Latin American Studies; and Translating & Interpreting Studies. Six languages are taught from beginner's level to full degree level ‒ Chinese, Japanese, French, German, Spanish and Portuguese ‒ and beginner's courses in Catalan, Dutch, Italian and Quechua are also available. Beyond the learning of the languages themselves, Newcastle also places a great deal of emphasis on study and experience of the cultures of the countries where the languages taught are spoken. The School of Modern Languages hosts North East England's only branches of two internationally important institutes: the Camões Institute, a language institute for Portuguese, and the Confucius Institute, a language and cultural institute for Chinese.

 

The teaching of modern foreign languages at Newcastle predates the creation of Newcastle University itself, as in 1911 Armstrong College in Newcastle installed Albert George Latham, its first professor of modern languages.

 

The School of Modern Languages at Newcastle is the lead institution in the North East Routes into Languages Consortium and, together with the Durham University, Northumbria University, the University of Sunderland, the Teesside University and a network of schools, undertakes work activities of discovery of languages for the 9 to 13 years pupils. This implies having festivals, Q&A sessions, language tasters, or quizzes organised, as well as a web learning work aiming at constructing a web portal to link language learners across the region.

 

Newcastle Law School

Newcastle Law School is the longest established law school in the north-east of England when law was taught at the university's predecessor college before it became independent from Durham University. It has a number of recognised international and national experts in a variety of areas of legal scholarship ranging from Common and Chancery law, to International and European law, as well as contextual, socio-legal and theoretical legal studies.

 

The Law School occupies four specially adapted late-Victorian town houses. The Staff Offices, the Alumni Lecture Theatre and seminar rooms as well as the Law Library are all located within the School buildings.

 

School of Computing

The School of Computing was ranked in the Times Higher Education world Top 100. Research areas include Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) and ubiquitous computing, secure and resilient systems, synthetic biology, scalable computing (high performance systems, data science, machine learning and data visualization), and advanced modelling. The school led the formation of the National Innovation Centre for Data. Innovative teaching in the School was recognised in 2017 with the award of a National Teaching Fellowship.

 

Cavitation tunnel

Newcastle University has the second largest cavitation tunnel in the UK. Founded in 1950, and based in the Marine Science and Technology Department, the Emerson Cavitation Tunnel is used as a test basin for propellers, water turbines, underwater coatings and interaction of propellers with ice. The Emerson Cavitation Tunnel was recently relocated to a new facility in Blyth.

 

Museums and galleries

The university is associated with a number of the region's museums and galleries, including the Great North Museum project, which is primarily based at the world-renowned Hancock Museum. The Great North Museum: Hancock also contains the collections from two of the university's former museums, the Shefton Museum and the Museum of Antiquities, both now closed. The university's Hatton Gallery is also a part of the Great North Museum project, and remains within the Fine Art Building.

 

Academic profile

Reputation and rankings

Rankings

National rankings

Complete (2024)30

Guardian (2024)67

Times / Sunday Times (2024)37

Global rankings

ARWU (2023)201–300

QS (2024)110

THE (2024)168=

 

Newcastle University's national league table performance over the past ten years

The university is a member of the Russell Group of the UK's research-intensive universities. It is ranked in the top 200 of most world rankings, and in the top 40 of most UK rankings. As of 2023, it is ranked 110th globally by QS, 292nd by Leiden, 139th by Times Higher Education and 201st–300th by the Academic Ranking of World Universities. Nationally, it is ranked joint 33rd by the Times/Sunday Times Good University Guide, 30th by the Complete University Guide[68] and joint 63rd by the Guardian.

 

Admissions

UCAS Admission Statistics 20222021202020192018

Application 33,73532,40034,55031,96533,785

Accepte 6,7556,2556,5806,4456,465

Applications/Accepted Ratio 5.05.25.35.05.2

Offer Rate (%78.178.080.279.280.0)

Average Entry Tariff—151148144152

Main scheme applications, International and UK

UK domiciled applicants

HESA Student Body Composition

In terms of average UCAS points of entrants, Newcastle ranked joint 19th in Britain in 2014. In 2015, the university gave offers of admission to 92.1% of its applicants, the highest amongst the Russell Group.

 

25.1% of Newcastle's undergraduates are privately educated, the thirteenth highest proportion amongst mainstream British universities. In the 2016–17 academic year, the university had a domicile breakdown of 74:5:21 of UK:EU:non-EU students respectively with a female to male ratio of 51:49.

 

Research

Newcastle is a member of the Russell Group of 24 research-intensive universities. In the 2021 Research Excellence Framework (REF), which assesses the quality of research in UK higher education institutions, Newcastle is ranked joint 33rd by GPA (along with the University of Strathclyde and the University of Sussex) and 15th for research power (the grade point average score of a university, multiplied by the full-time equivalent number of researchers submitted).

 

Student life

Newcastle University Students' Union (NUSU), known as the Union Society until a 2012 rebranding, includes student-run sports clubs and societies.

 

The Union building was built in 1924 following a generous gift from an anonymous donor, who is now believed to have been Sir Cecil Cochrane, a major benefactor to the university.[87] It is built in the neo-Jacobean style and was designed by the local architect Robert Burns Dick. It was opened on 22 October 1925 by the Rt. Hon. Lord Eustace Percy, who later served as Rector of King's College from 1937 to 1952. It is a Grade II listed building. In 2010 the university donated £8 million towards a redevelopment project for the Union Building.

 

The Students' Union is run by seven paid sabbatical officers, including a Welfare and Equality Officer, and ten part-time unpaid officer positions. The former leader of the Liberal Democrats Tim Farron was President of NUSU in 1991–1992. The Students' Union also employs around 300 people in ancillary roles including bar staff and entertainment organisers.

 

The Courier is a weekly student newspaper. Established in 1948, the current weekly readership is around 12,000, most of whom are students at the university. The Courier has won The Guardian's Student Publication of the Year award twice in a row, in 2012 and 2013. It is published every Monday during term time.

 

Newcastle Student Radio is a student radio station based in the university. It produces shows on music, news, talk and sport and aims to cater for a wide range of musical tastes.

 

NUTV, known as TCTV from 2010 to 2017, is student television channel, first established in 2007. It produces live and on-demand content with coverage of events, as well as student-made programmes and shows.

 

Student exchange

Newcastle University has signed over 100 agreements with foreign universities allowing for student exchange to take place reciprocally.

 

Sport

Newcastle is one of the leading universities for sport in the UK and is consistently ranked within the top 12 out of 152 higher education institutions in the British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS) rankings. More than 50 student-led sports clubs are supported through a team of professional staff and a network of indoor and outdoor sports facilities based over four sites. The university have a strong rugby history and were the winners of the Northumberland Senior Cup in 1965.

 

The university enjoys a friendly sporting rivalry with local universities. The Stan Calvert Cup was held between 1994 and 2018 by major sports teams from Newcastle and Northumbria University. The Boat Race of the North has also taken place between the rowing clubs of Newcastle and Durham University.

 

As of 2023, Newcastle University F.C. compete in men's senior football in the Northern League Division Two.

 

The university's Cochrane Park sports facility was a training venue for the teams playing football games at St James' Park for the 2012 London Olympics.

 

A

Ali Mohamed Shein, 7th President of Zanzibar

Richard Adams - fairtrade businessman

Kate Adie - journalist

Yasmin Ahmad - Malaysian film director, writer and scriptwriter

Prince Adewale Aladesanmi - Nigerian prince and businessman

Jane Alexander - Bishop

Theodosios Alexander (BSc Marine Engineering 1981) - Dean, Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology of Saint Louis University

William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong - industrialist; in 1871 founded College of Physical Science, an early part of the University

Roy Ascott - new media artist

Dennis Assanis - President, University of Delaware

Neil Astley - publisher, editor and writer

Rodney Atkinson - eurosceptic conservative academic

Rowan Atkinson - comedian and actor

Kane Avellano - Guinness World Record for youngest person to circumnavigate the world by motorcycle (solo and unsupported) at the age of 23 in 2017

B

Bruce Babbitt - U.S. politician; 16th Governor of Arizona (1978–1987); 47th United States Secretary of the Interior (1993–2001); Democrat

James Baddiley - biochemist, based at Newcastle University 1954–1983; the Baddiley-Clark building is named in part after him

Tunde Baiyewu - member of the Lighthouse Family

John C. A. Barrett - clergyman

G. W. S. Barrow - historian

Neil Bartlett - chemist, creation of the first noble gas compounds (BSc and PhD at King's College, University of Durham, later Newcastle University)

Sue Beardsmore - television presenter

Alan Beith - politician

Jean Benedetti - biographer, translator, director and dramatist

Phil Bennion - politician

Catherine Bertola - contemporary painter

Simon Best - Captain of the Ulster Rugby team; Prop for the Ireland Team

Andy Bird - CEO of Disney International

Rory Jonathan Courtenay Boyle, Viscount Dungarvan - heir apparent to the earldom of Cork

David Bradley - science writer

Mike Brearley - professional cricketer, formerly a lecturer in philosophy at the university (1968–1971)

Constance Briscoe - one of the first black women to sit as a judge in the UK; author of the best-selling autobiography Ugly; found guilty in May 2014 on three charges of attempting to pervert the course of justice; jailed for 16 months

Steve Brooks - entomologist; attained BSc in Zoology and MSc in Public Health Engineering from Newcastle University in 1976 and 1977 respectively

Thom Brooks - academic, columnist

Gavin Brown - academic

Vicki Bruce - psychologist

Basil Bunting - poet; Northern Arts Poetry Fellow at Newcastle University (1968–70); honorary DLitt in 1971

John Burgan - documentary filmmaker

Mark Burgess - computer scientist

Sir John Burn - Professor of Clinical Genetics at Newcastle University Medical School; Medical Director and Head of the Institute of Genetics; Newcastle Medical School alumnus

William Lawrence Burn - historian and lawyer, history chair at King's College, Newcastle (1944–66)

John Harrison Burnett - botanist, chair of Botany at King's College, Newcastle (1960–68)

C.

Richard Caddel - poet

Ann Cairns - President of International Markets for MasterCard

Deborah Cameron - linguist

Stuart Cameron - lecturer

John Ashton Cannon - historian; Professor of Modern History; Head of Department of History from 1976 until his appointment as Dean of the Faculty of Arts in 1979; Pro-Vice-Chancellor 1983–1986

Ian Carr - musician

Jimmy Cartmell - rugby player, Newcastle Falcons

Steve Chapman - Principal and Vice-Chancellor of Heriot-Watt University

Dion Chen - Hong Kong educator, principal of Ying Wa College and former principal of YMCA of Hong Kong Christian College

Hsing Chia-hui - author

Ashraf Choudhary - scientist

Chua Chor Teck - Managing Director of Keppel Group

Jennifer A. Clack - palaeontologist

George Clarke - architect

Carol Clewlow - novelist

Brian Clouston - landscape architect

Ed Coode - Olympic gold medallist

John Coulson - chemical engineering academic

Caroline Cox, Baroness Cox - cross-bench member of the British House of Lords

Nicola Curtin – Professor of Experimental Cancer Therapeutics

Pippa Crerar - Political Editor of the Daily Mirror

D

Fred D'Aguiar - author

Julia Darling - poet, playwright, novelist, MA in Creative Writing

Simin Davoudi - academic

Richard Dawson - civil engineering academic and member of the UK Committee on Climate Change

Tom Dening - medical academic and researcher

Katie Doherty - singer-songwriter

Nowell Donovan - vice-chancellor for academic affairs and Provost of Texas Christian University

Catherine Douglas - Ig Nobel Prize winner for Veterinary Medicine

Annabel Dover - artist, studied fine art 1994–1998

Alexander Downer - Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs (1996–2007)

Chloë Duckworth - archaeologist and presenter

Chris Duffield - Town Clerk and Chief Executive of the City of London Corporation

E

Michael Earl - academic

Tom English - drummer, Maxïmo Park

Princess Eugenie - member of the British royal family. Eugenie is a niece of King Charles III and a granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth II. She began studying at Newcastle University in September 2009, graduating in 2012 with a 2:1 degree in English Literature and History of Art.

F

U. A. Fanthorpe - poet

Frank Farmer - medical physicist; professor of medical physics at Newcastle University in 1966

Terry Farrell - architect

Tim Farron - former Liberal Democrat leader and MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale

Ian Fells - professor

Andy Fenby - rugby player

Bryan Ferry - singer, songwriter and musician, member of Roxy Music and solo artist; studied fine art

E. J. Field - neuroscientist, director of the university's Demyelinating Disease Unit

John Niemeyer Findlay - philosopher

John Fitzgerald - computer scientist

Vicky Forster - cancer researcher

Maximimlian (Max) Fosh- YouTuber and independent candidate in the 2021 London mayoral election.

Rose Frain - artist

G

Hugh Grosvenor, 7th Duke of Westminster - aristocrat, billionaire, businessman and landowner

Peter Gibbs - television weather presenter

Ken Goodall - rugby player

Peter Gooderham - British ambassador

Michael Goodfellow - Professor in Microbial Systematics

Robert Goodwill - politician

Richard Gordon - author

Teresa Graham - accountant

Thomas George Greenwell - National Conservative Member of Parliament

H

Sarah Hainsworth - Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Executive Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Aston University

Reginald Hall - endocrinologist, Professor of Medicine (1970–1980)

Alex Halliday - Professor of Geochemistry, University of Oxford

Richard Hamilton - artist

Vicki L. Hanson - computer scientist; honorary doctorate in 2017

Rupert Harden - professional rugby union player

Tim Head - artist

Patsy Healey - professor

Alastair Heathcote - rower

Dorothy Heathcote - academic

Adrian Henri - 'Mersey Scene' poet and painter

Stephen Hepburn - politician

Jack Heslop-Harrison - botanist

Tony Hey - computer scientist; honorary doctorate 2007

Stuart Hill - author

Jean Hillier - professor

Ken Hodcroft - Chairman of Hartlepool United; founder of Increased Oil Recovery

Robert Holden - landscape architect

Bill Hopkins - composer

David Horrobin - entrepreneur

Debbie Horsfield - writer of dramas, including Cutting It

John House - geographer

Paul Hudson - weather presenter

Philip Hunter - educationist

Ronald Hunt – Art Historian who was librarian at the Art Department

Anya Hurlbert - visual neuroscientis

I

Martin Ince - journalist and media adviser, founder of the QS World University Rankings

Charles Innes-Ker - Marquess of Bowmont and Cessford

Mark Isherwood - politician

Jonathan Israel - historian

J

Alan J. Jamieson - marine biologist

George Neil Jenkins - medical researcher

Caroline Johnson - Conservative Member of Parliament

Wilko Johnson - guitarist with 1970s British rhythm and blues band Dr. Feelgood

Rich Johnston - comic book writer and cartoonist

Anna Jones - businesswoman

Cliff Jones - computer scientist

Colin Jones - historian

David E. H. Jones - chemist

Francis R. Jones - poetry translator and Reader in Translation Studies

Phil Jones - climatologist

Michael Jopling, Baron Jopling - Member of the House of Lords and the Conservative Party

Wilfred Josephs - dentist and composer

K

Michael King Jr. - civil rights leader; honorary graduate. In November 1967, MLK made a 24-hour trip to the United Kingdom to receive an honorary Doctorate of Civil Law from Newcastle University, becoming the first African American the institution had recognised in this way.

Panayiotis Kalorkoti - artist; studied B.A. (Hons) in Fine Art (1976–80); Bartlett Fellow in the Visual Arts (1988)

Rashida Karmali - businesswoman

Jackie Kay - poet, novelist, Professor of Creative Writing

Paul Kennedy - historian of international relations and grand strategy

Mark Khangure - neuroradiologist

L

Joy Labinjo - artist

Henrike Lähnemann - German medievalist

Dave Leadbetter - politician

Lim Boon Heng - Singapore Minister

Lin Hsin Hsin - IT inventor, artist, poet and composer

Anne Longfield - children's campaigner, former Children's Commissioner for England

Keith Ludeman - businessman

M

Jack Mapanje - writer and poet

Milton Margai - first prime minister of Sierra Leone (medical degree from the Durham College of Medicine, later Newcastle University Medical School)

Laurence Martin - war studies writer

Murray Martin, documentary and docudrama filmmaker, co-founder of Amber Film & Photography Collective

Adrian Martineau – medical researcher and professor of respiratory Infection and immunity at Queen Mary University of London

Carl R. May - sociologist

Tom May - professional rugby union player, now with Northampton Saints, and capped by England

Kate McCann – journalist and television presenter

Ian G. McKeith – professor of Old Age Psychiatry

John Anthony McGuckin - Orthodox Christian scholar, priest, and poet

Wyl Menmuir - novelist

Zia Mian - physicist

Richard Middleton - musicologist

Mary Midgley - moral philosopher

G.C.J. Midgley - philosopher

Moein Moghimi - biochemist and nanoscientist

Hermann Moisl - linguist

Anthony Michaels-Moore - Operatic Baritone

Joanna Moncrieff - Critical Psychiatrist

Theodore Morison - Principal of Armstrong College, Newcastle upon Tyne (1919–24)

Andy Morrell - footballer

Frank Moulaert - professor

Mo Mowlam - former British Labour Party Member of Parliament, former Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, lecturer at Newcastle University

Chris Mullin - former British Labour Party Member of Parliament, author, visiting fellow

VA Mundella - College of Physical Science, 1884—1887; lecturer in physics at the College, 1891—1896: Professor of Physics at Northern Polytechnic Institute and Principal of Sunderland Technical College.

Richard Murphy - architect

N

Lisa Nandy - British Labour Party Member of Parliament, former Shadow Foreign Secretary

Karim Nayernia - biomedical scientist

Dianne Nelmes - TV producer

O

Sally O'Reilly - writer

Mo O'Toole - former British Labour Party Member of European Parliament

P

Ewan Page - founding director of the Newcastle University School of Computing and briefly acting vice-chancellor; later appointed vice-chancellor of the University of Reading

Rachel Pain - academic

Amanda Parker - Lord Lieutenant of Lancashire since 2023

Geoff Parling - Leicester Tigers rugby player

Chris Patten, Baron Patten of Barnes - British Conservative politician and Chancellor of the University (1999–2009)

Chris M Pattinson former Great Britain International Swimmer 1976-1984

Mick Paynter - Cornish poet and Grandbard

Robert A. Pearce - academic

Hugh Percy, 10th Duke of Northumberland - Chancellor of the University (1964–1988)

Jonathan Pile - Showbiz Editor, ZOO magazine

Ben Pimlott - political historian; PhD and lectureship at Newcastle University (1970–79)

Robin Plackett - statistician

Alan Plater - playwright and screenwriter

Ruth Plummer - Professor of Experimental Cancer Medicine at the Northern Institute for Cancer Research and Fellow of the UK's Academy of Medical Sciences.

Poh Kwee Ong - Deputy President of SembCorp Marine

John Porter - musician

Rob Powell - former London Broncos coach

Stuart Prebble - former chief executive of ITV

Oliver Proudlock - Made in Chelsea star; creator of Serge De Nîmes clothing line[

Mark Purnell - palaeontologist

Q

Pirzada Qasim - Pakistani scholar, Vice Chancellor of the University of Karachi

Joyce Quin, Baroness Quin - politician

R

Andy Raleigh - Rugby League player for Wakefield Trinity Wildcats

Brian Randell - computer scientist

Rupert Mitford, 6th Baron Redesdale - Liberal Democrat spokesman in the House of Lords for International Development

Alastair Reynolds - novelist, former research astronomer with the European Space Agency

Ben Rice - author

Lewis Fry Richardson - mathematician, studied at the Durham College of Science in Newcastle

Matthew White Ridley, 4th Viscount Ridley - Chancellor of the University 1988-1999

Colin Riordan - VC of Cardiff University, Professor of German Studies (1988–2006)

Susie Rodgers - British Paralympic swimmer

Nayef Al-Rodhan - philosopher, neuroscientist, geostrategist, and author

Neil Rollinson - poet

Johanna Ropner - Lord lieutenant of North Yorkshire

Sharon Rowlands - CEO of ReachLocal

Peter Rowlinson - Ig Nobel Prize winner for Veterinary Medicine

John Rushby - computer scientist

Camilla Rutherford - actress

S

Jonathan Sacks - former Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth

Ross Samson - Scottish rugby union footballer; studied history

Helen Scales - marine biologist, broadcaster, and writer

William Scammell - poet

Fred B. Schneider - computer scientist; honorary doctorate in 2003

Sean Scully - painter

Nigel Shadbolt - computer scientist

Tom Shakespeare - geneticist

Jo Shapcott - poet

James Shapiro - Canadian surgeon and scientist

Jack Shepherd - actor and playwright

Mark Shucksmith - professor

Chris Simms - crime thriller novel author

Graham William Smith - probation officer, widely regarded as the father of the national probation service

Iain Smith - Scottish politician

Paul Smith - singer, Maxïmo Park

John Snow - discoverer of cholera transmission through water; leader in the adoption of anaesthesia; one of the 8 students enrolled on the very first term of the Medical School

William Somerville - agriculturist, professor of agriculture and forestry at Durham College of Science (later Newcastle University)

Ed Stafford - explorer, walked the length of the Amazon River

Chris Steele-Perkins - photographer

Chris Stevenson - academic

Di Stewart - Sky Sports News reader

Diana Stöcker - German CDU Member of Parliament

Miodrag Stojković - genetics researcher

Miriam Stoppard - physician, author and agony aunt

Charlie van Straubenzee - businessman and investment executive

Peter Straughan - playwright and short story writer

T

Mathew Tait - rugby union footballer

Eric Thomas - academic

David Tibet - cult musician and poet

Archis Tiku - bassist, Maxïmo Park

James Tooley - professor

Elsie Tu - politician

Maurice Tucker - sedimentologist

Paul Tucker - member of Lighthouse Family

George Grey Turner - surgeon

Ronald F. Tylecote - archaeologist

V

Chris Vance - actor in Prison Break and All Saints

Géza Vermes - scholar

Geoff Vigar - lecturer

Hugh Vyvyan - rugby union player

W

Alick Walker - palaeontologist

Matthew Walker - Professor of Neuroscience and Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley

Tom Walker - Sunday Times foreign correspondent

Lord Walton of Detchant - physician; President of the GMC, BMA, RSM; Warden of Green College, Oxford (1983–1989)

Kevin Warwick - Professor of Cybernetics; former Lecturer in Electrical & Electronic Engineering

Duncan Watmore - footballer at Millwall F.C.

Mary Webb - artist

Charlie Webster - television sports presenter

Li Wei - Chair of Applied Linguistics at UCL Institute of Education, University College London

Joseph Joshua Weiss - Professor of Radiation Chemistry

Robert Westall - children's writer, twice winner of Carnegie Medal

Thomas Stanley Westoll - Fellow of the Royal Society

Gillian Whitehead - composer

William Whitfield - architect, later designed the Hadrian Building and the Northern Stage

Claire Williams - motorsport executive

Zoe Williams - sportswoman, worked on Gladiators

Donald I. Williamson - planktologist and carcinologist

Philip Williamson - former Chief Executive of Nationwide Building Society

John Willis - Royal Air Force officer and council member of the University

Lukas Wooller - keyboard player, Maxïmo Park

Graham Wylie - co-founder of the Sage Group; studied Computing Science & Statistics BSc and graduated in 1980; awarded an honorary doctorate in 2004

Y

Hisila Yami, Nepalese politician and former Minister of Physical Planning and Works (Government of Nepal

John Yorke - Controller of Continuing Drama; Head of Independent Drama at the BBC

Martha Young-Scholten - linguist

Paul Younger - hydrogeologist

An outdoor bronze sculpture of former British prime minister David Lloyd George by Glynn Williams stands in Parliament Square in London, United Kingdom.

 

This statue, which stands 8 feet (2.4 m) tall, was unveiled in October 2007 and was funded by the David Lloyd George Statue Appeal, a charitable trust supported in part by the Prince of Wales.

 

David Lloyd George, 1st Earl Lloyd-George of Dwyfor,[a] OM, KStJ, PC (17 January 1863 – 26 March 1945) was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1916 to 1922. A Liberal Party politician from Wales, he was known for leading the United Kingdom during the First World War, for social-reform policies (including the National Insurance Act 1911), for his role in the Paris Peace Conference, and for negotiating the establishment of the Irish Free State. He was the last Liberal Party prime minister; the party fell into third-party status shortly after the end of his premiership.

 

After becoming active in local politics, Lloyd George gained a reputation as an orator and a proponent of a Welsh blend of radical Liberal ideas, which included support for Welsh devolution, for the disestablishment of the Church of England in Wales, for equality for labourers and tenant farmers, and for reform of land ownership. In 1890 he narrowly won a by-election to become the Member of Parliament for Caernarvon Boroughs, in which seat he remained for 55 years. He served in Henry Campbell-Bannerman's cabinet from 1905. After H. H. Asquith succeeded to the premiership in 1908, Lloyd George replaced him as Chancellor of the Exchequer. To fund extensive welfare reforms he proposed taxes on land ownership and high incomes in the "People's Budget" (1909), which the Conservative-dominated House of Lords rejected. The resulting constitutional crisis was only resolved after two elections in 1910 and the passage of the Parliament Act 1911. His budget was enacted in 1910, and the National Insurance Act 1911 and other measures helped to establish the modern welfare state. In 1913, he was embroiled in the Marconi scandal, but he remained in office and promoted the disestablishment of the Church of England in Wales until 1914, when its implementation was suspended in response to the outbreak of the First World War.

 

As wartime chancellor, Lloyd George strengthened the country's finances and forged agreements with trade unions to maintain production. In 1915, Asquith formed a Liberal-led wartime coalition with the Conservatives and Labour. Lloyd George became Minister of Munitions and rapidly expanded production. Amongst other measures, he set up four large munitions factories as a countermeasure to the shell crisis of the previous year. The so-called 'National Filling Factory' in Renfrewshire was named 'Georgetown' in Lloyd George's honour. In 1916, he was appointed Secretary of State for War but was frustrated by his limited power and by clashes with the military establishment over strategy. Amid stalemate on the Western Front, confidence in Asquith's leadership as prime minister waned, and he resigned in December 1916. Lloyd George succeeded him as prime minister, supported by the Conservatives and some Liberals. He centralised authority by creating a smaller war cabinet, a new Cabinet Office and what he called his "Garden Suburb" of advisers. To combat food shortages he implemented the convoy system, established rationing, and stimulated farming. After supporting the disastrous French Nivelle Offensive in 1917, he had to reluctantly approve Field Marshal Haig's plans for the Battle of Passchendaele, which again resulted in huge casualties with little strategic benefit. Against the views of British military commanders, he was finally able to see the Allies brought under one command in March 1918. The war effort turned in their favour in August and was won in November. In the aftermath, and following the December 1918 "Coupon" election, he and the Conservatives maintained their coalition with popular support. Earlier that year his government had extended the franchise to all men and some women.

 

Lloyd George was a major player in the Paris Peace Conference of 1919, but the situation in Ireland worsened that year, erupting into the Irish War of Independence, which lasted until Lloyd George negotiated independence from the UK for the Irish Free State in 1921. At home, he initiated reforms to education and housing, but trade-union militancy rose to record levels, the economy became depressed in 1920 and unemployment rose; spending cuts followed in 1921–22, and in 1922 he became embroiled in a scandal over the sale of honours and the Chanak Crisis. The Carlton Club meeting resulted in backbench support for the Conservatives to end the coalition and to contest the next election alone. Lloyd George resigned as prime minister and never held office again, but continued as the leader of a Liberal faction. After an awkward reunion with Asquith's faction in 1923, Lloyd George led the Liberals from 1926 to 1931. He put forward innovative proposals for public works and other reforms in a series of coloured books, but made only modest gains in the 1929 election. After 1931, he was a mistrusted figure heading a small rump of breakaway Liberals who were opposed to the National Government. In 1940, he refused to serve in Winston Churchill's War Cabinet. He was elevated to the peerage in 1945, shortly before his death.

 

Early life

David George was born on 17 January 1863 in Chorlton-on-Medlock, Manchester, to Welsh parents William George and Elizabeth Lloyd George. William George had previously been married to Selina Huntley, who died in 1855 aged 36. William and Elizabeth's first child was a son, David, born in September 1860, who only lived 12 hours.

 

William George had been a teacher in both London and Liverpool. He also taught in the Unitarian-administered Hope Street Sunday Schools, where he met Unitarian minister James Martineau.  In March 1863, on account of his failing health, William George returned with his family to his native Pembrokeshire. He took up farming but died in June 1864 of pneumonia, aged 44. David was just over one year old.

 

William's widow, Elizabeth George, sold the farm and moved with her children to her native Llanystumdwy in Caernarfonshire, where she lived in a cottage known as Highgate with her brother Richard. Richard Lloyd was a shoemaker, a minister (first in the Scottish Baptists and then in the Church of Christ), and a strong Liberal. Richard Lloyd was a towering influence on his nephew until his death in 1917 and was the first to encourage his nephew to take up a career in law and enter politics. David adopted his uncle's surname to become "Lloyd George" Lloyd George was educated at the local Anglican school, Llanystumdwy National School, and later under tutors.

 

He was brought up with Welsh as his first language;[4] Roy Jenkins, another Welsh politician, notes that, "Lloyd George was Welsh, that his whole culture, his whole outlook, his language was Welsh." Though Lloyd George cited the influence of his childhood throughout his career, biographer John Grigg argues that his childhood was nowhere near as poverty-stricken as he liked to suggest.

 

Though brought up a devout evangelical, Lloyd George privately lost his religious faith as a young man. Biographer Don Cregier says he became "a Deist and perhaps an agnostic, though he remained a chapel-goer and connoisseur of good preaching all his life." He was nevertheless, according to Frank Owen, "one of the foremost fighting leaders of a fanatical Welsh Nonconformity" for a quarter of a century.

 

Legal practice and early politics

Lloyd George qualified as a solicitor in 1884 after being articled to a firm in Porthmadog and taking Honours in his final law examination. He set up his own practice in the back parlour of his uncle's house in 1885. Although many prime ministers have been barristers, Lloyd George is, as of 2024, the only solicitor to have held that office.

 

As a solicitor, Lloyd George was politically active from the start, campaigning for his uncle's Liberal Party in the 1885 election. He was attracted by Joseph Chamberlain's "unauthorised programme" of Radical reform.  After the election, Chamberlain split with Gladstone in opposition to Irish Home Rule, and Lloyd George moved to join the Liberal Unionists. Uncertain of which wing to follow, he moved a resolution in support of Chamberlain at a local Liberal club and travelled to Birmingham to attend the first meeting of Chamberlain's new National Radical Union, but arrived a week too early.  In 1907 Lloyd George would tell Herbert Lewis that he had thought Chamberlain's plan for a federal solution to the Home Rule Question correct in 1886 and still thought so, and that "If Henry Richmond, Osborne Morgan and the Welsh members had stood by Chamberlain on an agreement as regards the [Welsh] disestablishment, they would have carried Wales with them"

 

His legal practice quickly flourished; he established branch offices in surrounding towns and took his brother William into partnership in 1887. Lloyd George's legal and political triumph came in the Llanfrothen burial case, which established the right of Nonconformists to be buried according to denominational rites in parish burial grounds, as given by the Burial Laws Amendment Act 1880 but theretofore ignored by the Anglican clergy. On Lloyd George's advice, a Baptist burial party broke open a gate to a cemetery that had been locked against them by the vicar. The vicar sued them for trespass and although the jury returned a verdict for the party, the local judge misrecorded the jury's verdict and found in the vicar's favour. Suspecting bias, Lloyd George's clients won on appeal to the Divisional Court of Queen's Bench in London, where Lord Chief Justice Coleridge found in their favour. The case was hailed as a great victory throughout Wales and led to Lloyd George's adoption as the Liberal candidate for Carnarvon Boroughs on 27 December 1888.  The same year, he and other young Welsh Liberals founded a monthly paper, Udgorn Rhyddid (Bugle of Freedom).

 

In 1889, Lloyd George became an alderman on Carnarvonshire County Council (a new body which had been created by the Local Government Act 1888) and would remain so for the rest of his life.  Lloyd George would also serve the county as a Justice of the Peace (1910), chairman of Quarter Sessions (1929–38), and Deputy Lieutenant in 1921.

 

Marriage

Lloyd George married Margaret Owen, the daughter of a well-to-do local farming family, on 24 January 1888.

 

Early years as a member of Parliament (1890–1905)

Lloyd George's career as a member of parliament began when he was returned as a Liberal MP for Caernarfon Boroughs (now Caernarfon), narrowly winning the by-election on 10 April 1890, following the death of the Conservative member Edmund Swetenham. He would remain an MP for the same constituency until 1945, 55 years later. Lloyd George's early beginnings in Westminster may have proven difficult for him as a radical liberal and "a great outsider". Backbench members of the House of Commons were not paid at that time, so Lloyd George supported himself and his growing family by continuing to practise as a solicitor. He opened an office in London under the name of "Lloyd George and Co." and continued in partnership with William George in Criccieth. In 1897, he merged his growing London practice with that of Arthur Rhys Roberts (who was to become Official Solicitor) under the name of "Lloyd George, Roberts and Co."

 

Welsh affairs

Kenneth O. Morgan describes Lloyd George as a "lifelong Welsh nationalist" and suggests that between 1880 and 1914 he was "the symbol and tribune of the national reawakening of Wales", although he is also clear that from the early 1900s his main focus gradually shifted to UK-wide issues. He also became an associate of Tom Ellis, MP for Meirionydd, having previously told a Caernarfon friend in 1888 that he was a "Welsh Nationalist of the Ellis type".

 

Decentralisation and Welsh disestablishment

One of Lloyd George's first acts as an MP was to organise an informal grouping of Welsh Liberal members with a programme that included; disestablishing and disendowing the Church of England in Wales, temperance reform, and establishing Welsh home rule. He was keen on decentralisation and thus Welsh devolution, starting with the devolution of the Church in Wales saying in 1890: "I am deeply impressed with the fact that Wales has wants and inspirations of her own which have too long been ignored, but which must no longer be neglected. First and foremost amongst these stands the cause of Religious Liberty and Equality in Wales. If returned to Parliament by you, it shall be my earnest endeavour to labour for the triumph of this great cause. I believe in a liberal extension of the principle of Decentralization."

 

During the next decade, Lloyd George campaigned in Parliament largely on Welsh issues, in particular for disestablishment and disendowment of the Church of England. When Gladstone retired in 1894 after the defeat of the second Home Rule Bill, the Welsh Liberal members chose him to serve on a deputation to William Harcourt to press for specific assurances on Welsh issues. When those assurances were not provided, they resolved to take independent action if the government did not bring a bill for disestablishment. When a bill was not forthcoming, he and three other Welsh Liberals (D. A. Thomas, Herbert Lewis and Frank Edwards) refused the whip on 14 April 1894, but accepted Lord Rosebery's assurance and rejoined the official Liberals on 29 May.

 

Cymru Fydd and Welsh devolution

Historian Emyr Price referred to Lloyd George as "the first architect of Welsh devolution and its most famous advocate" as well as "the pioneering advocate of a powerful parliament for the Welsh people". Lloyd George himself stated in 1880 "Is it not high time that Wales should the powers to manage its own affairs" and in 1890, "Parliament is so overweighted that it cannot possibly devote the time and trouble necessary to legislate for the peculiar and domestic retirement of each and every separate province of Britain". These statements would later be used to advocate for a Welsh assembly in the 1979 Welsh devolution referendum. Lloyd George felt that disestablishment, land reform and other forms of Welsh devolution could only be achieved if Wales formed its own government within a federal imperial system. In 1895, in a failed Church in Wales Bill, Lloyd George added an amendment in a discreet attempt at forming a sort of Welsh home rule, a national council for appointment of the Welsh Church commissioners. Although not condemned by Tom Ellis MP, this was to the annoyance of J. Bryn Roberts MP and the Home Secretary H. H. Asquith MP.

 

He was also a co-leader of Cymru Fydd, a national Welsh party with liberal values with the goals of promoting a "stronger Welsh identity" and establishing a Welsh government. He hoped that Cymru Fydd would become a force like the Irish National Party. He abandoned this idea after being criticised in Welsh newspapers for bringing about the defeat of the Liberal Party in the 1895 election. In an AGM meeting in Newport on 16 January 1896 of the South Wales Liberal Federation, led by D. A. Thomas, a proposal was made to unite the North and South Liberal Federations with Cymru Fydd to form The Welsh National Federation. This was a proposal which the North Wales Liberal Federation had already agreed to. However, the South Wales Liberal Federation rejected this. According to Lloyd George, he was shouted down by "Newport Englishmen" in the meeting, although the South Wales Argus suggested the poor crowd behaviour came from Lloyd George's supporters. Following difficulty in uniting the Liberal federations along with Cymru Fydd in the South East and thus, difficulty in gaining support for Home Rule for Wales, Lloyd George shifted his focus to improving the socio-economic environment of Wales as part of the United Kingdom and the British Empire. Although Lloyd George considered himself a "Welshman first", he saw the opportunities for Wales within the UK.

 

Uniting Welsh Liberals

In 1898, Lloyd George created the Welsh National Liberal Council, a loose umbrella organisation covering the two federations, but with very little power. In time, it became known as the Liberal Party of Wales.

 

Support of Welsh institutions

Lloyd George had a connection to or promoted the establishment of the National Library of Wales, the National Museum of Wales and the Welsh Department of the Board of Education. He also showed considerable support for the University of Wales, that its establishment raised the status of Welsh people and that the university deserved greater funding by the UK government.

 

Opposition to the Boer War

Lloyd George had been impressed by his journey to Canada in 1899. Although sometimes wrongly supposed—both at the time and subsequently—to be a Little Englander, he was not an opponent of the British Empire per se, but in a speech at Birkenhead (21 November 1901) he stressed that it needed to be based on freedom, including for India, not "racial arrogance".  Consequently, he gained national fame by displaying vehement opposition to the Second Boer War.

 

Following Rosebery's lead, he based his attack firstly on what were supposed to be Britain's war aims—remedying the grievances of the italicno and in particular the claim that they were wrongly denied the right to vote, saying "I do not believe the war has any connection with the franchise. It is a question of 45% dividends" and that England (which did not then have universal male suffrage) was more in need of franchise reform than the Boer republics. A second attack came on the cost of the war, which, he argued, prevented overdue social reform in England, such as old-age pensions and workmen's cottages. As the fighting continued his attacks moved to its conduct by the generals, who, he said (basing his words on reports by William Burdett-Coutts in The Times), were not providing for the sick or wounded soldiers and were starving Boer women and children in concentration camps. But his major thrusts were reserved for the Chamberlains, accusing them of war profiteering through the family company Kynoch Ltd, of which Chamberlain's brother was chairman. The firm had won tenders to the War Office, though its prices were higher than some of its competitors. After speaking at a meeting in Birmingham Lloyd George had to be smuggled out disguised as a policeman, as his life was in danger from the mob. At this time the Liberal Party was badly split as H. H. Asquith, R. B. Haldane and others were supporters of the war and formed the Liberal Imperial League.

 

Opposition to the Education Act 1902

On 24 March Arthur Balfour, just about to take office as Prime Minister, introduced a bill which was to become the Education Act 1902. Lloyd George supported the bill's proposals to bring voluntary schools (i.e. religious schools—mainly Church of England, and some Roman Catholic schools in certain inner city areas) in England and Wales under the control of local school boards, who would conduct inspections and appoint two out of each school's six managers. However, other measures were more contentious: the majority-religious school managers would retain the power to employ or sack teachers on religious grounds and would receive money from the rates (local property taxes). This offended nonconformist opinion, then in a period of revival, as it seemed like a return to the hated church rates (which had been compulsory until 1868), and inspired a large grassroots campaign against the bill.

 

Within days of the bill's unveiling (27 March), Lloyd George denounced "priestcraft" in a speech to his constituents, and he began an active campaign of speaking against the bill, both in public in Wales (with a few speeches in England) and in the House of Commons. On 12 November, Balfour accepted an amendment (willingly, but a rare case of him doing so), ostensibly from Alfred Thomas, chairman of the Welsh Parliamentary Liberal Party, but in reality instigated by Lloyd George, transferring control of Welsh schools from appointed boards to the elected county councils. The Education Act became law on 20 December 1902.

 

Lloyd George now announced the real purpose of the amendment, described as a "booby trap" by his biographer John Grigg. The Welsh National Liberal Council soon adopted his proposal that county councils should refuse funding unless repairs were carried out to schools (many were in a poor state), and should also demand control of school governing bodies and a ban on religious tests for teachers; "no control, no cash" was Lloyd George's slogan. Lloyd George negotiated with A. G. Edwards, Anglican Bishop of St Asaph, and was prepared to settle on an "agreed religious syllabus" or even to allow Anglican teaching in schools, provided the county councils retained control of teacher appointments, but this compromise failed after opposition from other Anglican Welsh bishops. A well-attended meeting at Park Hall Cardiff (3 June 1903) passed a number of resolutions by acclamation: county council control of schools, withholding money from schools or even withholding rates from unsupportive county councils. The Liberals soon gained control of all thirteen Welsh County Councils. Lloyd George continued to speak in England against the bill, but the campaign there was less aggressively led, taking the form of passive resistance to rate paying. 

 

In August 1904 the government brought in the Education (Local Authority Default) Act giving the Board of Education power to take charge of schools, which Lloyd George immediately nicknamed the "Coercion of Wales Act". He addressed another convention in Cardiff on 6 October 1904, during which he proclaimed that the Welsh flag was "a dragon rampant, not a sheep recumbent". Under his leadership, the convention pledged not to maintain elementary schools, or to withdraw children from elementary schools altogether so that they could be taught privately by the nonconformist churches. In Travis Crosbie's words, public resistance to the Education Act had caused a "perfect impasse". There was no progress between Welsh counties and Westminster until 1905.

 

Having already gained national recognition for his anti-Boer War campaigns, Lloyd George's leadership of the attacks on the Education Act gave him a strong parliamentary reputation and marked him as a likely future cabinet member. The Act served to reunify the Liberals after their divisions over the Boer War and to increase Nonconformist influence in the party, which then included educational reform as policy in the 1906 election, which resulted in a Liberal landslide. All 34 Welsh seats returned a Liberal, except for one Labour seat in Merthyr Tydfil.

 

Other stances

Lloyd George also supported the Romantic Nationalist idea of Pan-Celtic unity and gave a speech at the 1904 Pan-Celtic Congress in Caernarfon.

 

During his second-ever speech in the House of Commons, Lloyd George criticised the grandeur of the monarchy.

 

Lloyd George wrote extensively for Liberal-supporting papers such as the Manchester Guardian and spoke on Liberal issues (particularly temperance—the "local option"—and national as opposed to denominational education) throughout England and Wales.

 

He served as the legal adviser of Theodor Herzl in his negotiations with the British government regarding the Uganda Scheme, proposed as an alternative homeland for the Jews due to Turkish refusal to grant a charter for Jewish settlement in Palestine.

 

President of the Board of Trade (1905–1908)

In 1905, Lloyd George entered the new Liberal Cabinet of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman as President of the Board of Trade.

 

The first priority on taking office was the repeal of the 1902 Education Act. Lloyd George took the lead along with Augustine Birrell, President of the Board of Education. Lloyd George appears to have been the dominant figure on the committee drawing up the bill in its later stages and insisted that the bill create a separate education committee for Wales. Birrell complained privately that the bill, introduced in the Commons on 9 April 1906, owed more to Lloyd George and that he himself had had little say in its contents.  The bill passed the House of Commons greatly amended but was completely mangled by the House of Lords. For the rest of the year Lloyd George made numerous public speeches attacking the House of Lords for mutilating the bill with wrecking amendments, in defiance of the Liberals' electoral mandate to reform the 1902 Act. Lloyd George was rebuked by King Edward VII for these speeches: the Prime Minister defended him to the King's secretary Francis Knollys, stating that his behaviour in Parliament was more constructive but that in speeches to the public "the combative spirit seems to get the better of him".  No compromise was possible and the bill was abandoned, allowing the 1902 Act to continue in effect. As a result of Lloyd George's lobbying, a separate department for Wales was created within the Board of Education.

 

Nonconformists were bitterly upset by the failure of the Liberal Party to reform the 1902 Education Act, its most important promise to them, and over time their support for the Liberal Party slowly fell away.

 

At the Board of Trade Lloyd George introduced legislation on many topics, from merchant shipping and the Port of London to companies and railway regulation. His main achievement was in stopping a proposed national strike of the railway unions by brokering an agreement between the unions and the railway companies. While almost all the companies refused to recognise the unions, Lloyd George persuaded the companies to recognise elected representatives of the workers who sat with the company representatives on conciliation boards—one for each company. If those boards failed to agree then an arbitrator would be called upon.

 

Chancellor of the Exchequer (1908–1915)

On Campbell-Bannerman's death, he succeeded Asquith, who had become prime minister, as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1908 to 1915.  While he continued some work from the Board of Trade—for example, legislation to establish the Port of London Authority and to pursue traditional Liberal programmes such as licensing law reforms—his first major trial in this role was over the 1909–1910 Naval Estimates. The Liberal manifesto at the 1906 general election included a commitment to reduce military expenditure. Lloyd George strongly supported this, writing to Reginald McKenna, First Lord of the Admiralty, of "the emphatic pledges given by all of us at the last general election to reduce the gigantic expenditure on armaments built up by the recklessness of our predecessors." He then proposed the programme be reduced from six to four dreadnoughts. This was adopted by the government, but there was a public storm when the Conservatives, with covert support from the First Sea Lord, Admiral Jackie Fisher, campaigned for more with the slogan "We want eight and we won't wait". This resulted in Lloyd George's defeat in Cabinet and the adoption of estimates including provision for eight dreadnoughts. During this period he was also a target of protest by the women's suffrage movement, for he professed personal support for extension of the suffrage but did not move for changes within the Parliament process.

 

People's Budget, 1909

In 1909, Lloyd George introduced his People's Budget, imposing a 20% tax on the unearned increase in the value of land, payable at the death of the owner or sale of the land, and 1⁄2 d. on undeveloped land and minerals, increased death duties, a rise in income tax, and the introduction of Supertax on income over £3,000. There were taxes also on luxuries, alcohol and tobacco, so that money could be made available for the new welfare programmes as well as new battleships. The nation's landowners (well represented in the House of Lords) were intensely angry at the new taxes, mostly at the proposed very high tax on land values, but also because the instrumental redistribution of wealth could be used to detract from an argument for protective tariffs.

 

The immediate consequences included the end of the Liberal League, and Rosebery breaking friendship with the Liberal Party, which in itself was for Lloyd George a triumph. He had won the case of social reform without losing the debate on Free Trade. Arthur Balfour denounced the budget as "vindictive, inequitable, based on no principles, and injurious to the productive capacity of the country."  Roy Jenkins described it as the most reverberating since Gladstone's in 1860.

 

In the House of Commons, Lloyd George gave a brilliant account of the budget, which was attacked by the Conservatives. On the stump, notably at his Limehouse speech in 1909, he denounced the Conservatives and the wealthy classes with all his very considerable oratorical power. Excoriating the House of Lords in another speech, Lloyd George said, "should 500 men, ordinary men, chosen accidentally from among the unemployed, override the judgement—the deliberate judgement—of millions of people who are engaged in the industry which makes the wealth of the country?". In a break with convention, the budget was defeated by the Conservative majority in the House of Lords. The elections of 1910 narrowly upheld the Liberal government. The 1909 budget was passed on 28 April 1910 by the Lords and received the Royal Assent on the 29th. Subsequently, the Parliament Act 1911 removed the House of Lords' power to block money bills, and with a few exceptions replaced their veto power over most bills with a power to delay them for up to two years.

 

Although old-age pensions had already been introduced by Asquith as Chancellor, Lloyd George was largely responsible for the introduction of state financial support for the sick and infirm (known colloquially as "going on the Lloyd George" for decades afterwards)—legislation referred to as the Liberal Reforms. Lloyd George also succeeded in putting through Parliament his National Insurance Act 1911, making provision for sickness and invalidism, and a system of unemployment insurance. He was helped in his endeavours by forty or so backbenchers who regularly pushed for new social measures, often voted with Labour MPs. These social reforms in Britain were the beginnings of a welfare state and fulfilled the aim of dampening down the demands of the growing working class for rather more radical solutions to their impoverishment.

 

Under his leadership, after 1909 the Liberals extended minimum wages to farmworkers.

 

Lloyd George was an opponent of warfare but he paid little attention to foreign affairs until the Agadir Crisis of 1911. After consulting Edward Grey (the foreign minister) and H. H. Asquith (the prime minister) he gave a stirring and patriotic speech at Mansion House on 21 July 1911. He stated:

 

But if a situation were to be forced upon us in which peace could only be preserved by the surrender of the great and beneficent position Britain has won by centuries of heroism and achievement, by allowing Britain to be treated where her interests were vitally affected as if she were of no account in the Cabinet of nations, then I say emphatically that peace at that price would be a humiliation intolerable for a great country like ours to endure. National honour is no party question. The security of our great international trade is no party question.

 

He was warning both France and Germany, but the public response cheered solidarity with France and hostility toward Germany. Berlin was outraged, blaming Lloyd George for doing "untold harm both with regard to German public opinion and the negotiations." Count Metternich, Germany's ambassador in London, said, "Mr Lloyd George's speech came upon us like a thunderbolt".

 

Marconi scandal 1913

In 1913, Lloyd George, along with Rufus Isaacs, the Attorney General, was involved in the Marconi scandal. Accused of speculating in Marconi shares on the inside information that they were about to be awarded a key government contract (which would have caused them to increase in value), he told the House of Commons that he had not speculated in the shares of "that company". He had in fact bought shares in the American Marconi Company.

 

Welsh Disestablishment

Lloyd George was instrumental in fulfilling a long-standing aspiration to disestablish the Anglican Church of Wales. As with Irish Home Rule, previous attempts to enact this had failed in the 1892–1895 Governments, and were now made possible by the removal of the Lords' veto in 1911, and as with Home Rule the initial bill (1912) was delayed for two years by the Lords, becoming law in 1914, only to be suspended for the duration of the war. After the Welsh Church (Temporalities) Act 1919 was passed, Welsh Disestablishment finally came into force in 1920. This Act also removed the right of the six Welsh Bishops in the new Church in Wales to sit in the House of Lords and removed (disendowed) certain pre-1662 property rights.

 

First World War

Lloyd George was as surprised as almost everyone else by the outbreak of the First World War. On 23 July 1914, almost a month after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and on the eve of the Austro-Hungarian ultimatum to Serbia, he made a speech advocating "economy" in the House of Commons, saying that Britain's relations with Germany were better than for many years.  On 27 July he told C. P. Scott of the Manchester Guardian that Britain would keep out of the impending war. With the Cabinet divided, and most ministers reluctant for Britain to get involved, he struck Asquith as "statesmanlike" at the Cabinet meeting on 1 August, favouring keeping Britain's options open. The next day he seemed likely to resign if Britain intervened, but he held back at Cabinet on Monday 3 August, moved by the news that Belgium would resist Germany's demand of passage for her army across her soil. He was seen as a key figure whose stance helped to persuade almost the entire Cabinet to support British intervention.  He was able to give the more pacifist members of the cabinet and the Liberal Party a principle—the rights of small nations—which meant they could support the war and maintain united political and popular support.

 

Lloyd George remained in office as Chancellor of the Exchequer for the first year of the Great War. The budget of 17 November 1914 had to allow for lower taxation receipts because of the reduction in world trade. The Crimean and Boer Wars had largely been paid for out of taxation, but Lloyd George raised debt financing of £321 million. Large (but deferred) increases in Supertax and income tax rates were accompanied by increases in excise duties, and the budget produced a tax increase of £63 million in a full year.  His last budget, on 4 May 1915, showed a growing concern for the effects of alcohol on the war effort, with large increases in duties, and a scheme of state control of alcohol sales in specified areas. The excise proposals were opposed by the Irish Nationalists and the Conservatives, and were abandoned.

 

Minister of Munitions

Lloyd George gained a heroic reputation with his energetic work as Minister of Munitions in 1915 and 1916, setting the stage for his move up to the height of power. After a long struggle with the War Office, he wrested responsibility for arms production away from the generals, making it a purely industrial department, with considerable expert assistance from Walter Runciman. The two men gained the respect of Liberal cabinet colleagues for improving administrative capabilities, and increasing outputs.

 

When the Shell Crisis of 1915 dismayed public opinion with the news that the Army was running short of artillery shells, demands rose for a strong leader to take charge of munitions. In the first coalition ministry, formed in May 1915, Lloyd George was made Minister of Munitions, heading a new department. In this position, he won great acclaim, which formed the basis for his political ascent. All historians agree that he boosted national morale and focussed attention on the urgent need for greater output, but many also say the increase in munitions output in 1915–16 was due largely to reforms already underway, though not yet effective before he had even arrived. The Ministry broke through the cumbersome bureaucracy of the War Office, resolved labour problems, rationalised the supply system and dramatically increased production. Within a year it became the largest buyer, seller and employer in Britain.

 

Lloyd George was not at all satisfied with the progress of the war. He wanted to "knock away the props", by attacking Germany's allies—from early in 1915 he argued for the sending of British troops to the Balkans to assist Serbia and bring Greece and other Balkan countries onto the side of the Allies (this was eventually done—the Salonika expedition—although not on the scale that Lloyd George had wanted, and mountain ranges made his suggestions of grand Balkan offensives impractical); in 1916, he wanted to send machine guns to Romania (insufficient amounts were available for this to be feasible). These suggestions began a period of poor relations with the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, General Robertson, who was "brusque to the point of rudeness" and "barely concealed his contempt for Lloyd George's military opinions", to which he was in the habit of retorting "I've 'eard different".

 

Lloyd George persuaded Kitchener, the Secretary of State for War, to raise a Welsh Division, and, despite Kitchener's threat of resignation, to recognise nonconformist chaplains in the Army.

 

Late in 1915, Lloyd George became a strong supporter of general conscription, an issue that divided Liberals, and helped the passage of several conscription acts from January 1916 onwards. In spring 1916 Alfred Milner hoped Lloyd George could be persuaded to bring down the coalition government by resigning, but this did not happen.

 

Secretary of State for War

In June 1916 Lloyd George succeeded Lord Kitchener (who died when the ship HMS Hampshire was sunk taking him on a mission to Russia) as Secretary of State for War, although he had little control over strategy, as General Robertson had been given direct right of access to the Cabinet so as to bypass Kitchener. He did succeed in securing the appointment of Sir Eric Geddes to take charge of military railways behind British lines in France, with the honorary rank of major-general. Lloyd George told a journalist, Roy W. Howard, in late September that "the fight must be to a finish—to a knockout", a rejection of President Woodrow Wilson's offer to mediate.

 

Lloyd George was increasingly frustrated at the limited gains of the Somme Offensive, criticising General Haig to Ferdinand Foch on a visit to the Western Front in September (British casualty ratios were worse than those of the French, who were more experienced and had more artillery), proposing sending Robertson on a mission to Russia (he refused to go), and demanding that more troops be sent to Salonika to help Romania. Robertson eventually threatened to resign.

 

Much of the press still argued that the professional leadership of Haig and Robertson was preferable to civilian interference that had led to disasters like Gallipoli and Kut. Lord Northcliffe, owner of The Times, stormed into Lloyd George's office and, finding him unavailable, told his secretary "You can tell him that I hear he has been interfering with Strategy and that if he goes on I will break him", and the same day (11 October) Lloyd George also received a warning letter from H. A. Gwynne, editor of the Morning Post. He was obliged to give his "word of honour" to Asquith that he had complete confidence in Haig and Robertson and thought them irreplaceable, but he wrote to Robertson wanting to know how their differences had been leaked to the press (affecting to believe that Robertson had not personally "authorised such a breach of confidence & discipline"). He asserted his right to express his opinions about strategy in November, by which time ministers had taken to holding meetings to which Robertson was not invited.

 

The weakness of Asquith as a planner and organiser was increasingly apparent to senior officials. After Asquith had refused, then agreed to, and then refused again Lloyd George's demand to be allowed to chair a small committee to manage the war, he resigned in December 1916. Grey was among leading Asquithians who had identified Lloyd George's intentions the previous month. Lloyd George became prime minister, with the nation demanding he take vigorous charge of the war.

 

Although during the political crisis Robertson had advised Lloyd George to "stick to it" and form a small War Council, Lloyd George had planned if necessary to appeal to the country. His Military Secretary Colonel Arthur Lee prepared a memo blaming Robertson and the General Staff for the loss of Serbia and Romania. Lloyd George was restricted by his promise to the Unionists to keep Haig as Commander-in-Chief and the press support for the generals, although Milner and Curzon were also sympathetic to campaigns to increase British power in the Middle East. After Germany's offer (12 December 1916) of a negotiated peace, Lloyd George rebuffed President Wilson's request for the belligerents to state their war aims by demanding terms tantamount to German defeat.

 

Prime Minister (1916–1922)

The fall of Asquith as prime minister split the Liberal Party into two factions: those who supported him and those who supported the coalition government. In his War Memoirs, Lloyd George compared himself with Asquith:

 

There are certain indispensable qualities essential to the Chief Minister of the Crown in a great war. ... Such a minister must have courage, composure, and judgment. All this Mr. Asquith possessed in a superlative degree. ... But a war minister must also have vision, imagination and initiative—he must show untiring assiduity, must exercise constant oversight and supervision of every sphere of war activity, must possess driving force to energize this activity, must be in continuous consultation with experts, official and unofficial, as to the best means of using the resources of the country in conjunction with the Allies for the achievement of victory. If to this can be added a flair for conducting a great fight, then you have an ideal War Minister.

 

After December 1916 Lloyd George relied on the support of Conservatives and of the press baron Lord Northcliffe (who owned both The Times and the Daily Mail). Besides the Prime Minister, the five-member War Cabinet contained three Conservatives (Lord President of the Council and Leader of the House of Lords Lord Curzon, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House of Commons Bonar Law, and Minister without Portfolio Lord Milner) and Arthur Henderson, unofficially representing Labour. Edward Carson was appointed First Lord of the Admiralty, as had been widely touted during the intrigues of the previous month, but excluded from the War Cabinet. Amongst the few Liberal frontbenchers to support Lloyd George were Christopher Addison (who had played an important role in drumming up some backbench Liberal support for Lloyd George), H. A. L. Fisher, Lord Rhondda and Sir Albert Stanley. Edwin Montagu and Churchill joined the government in the summer of 1917.

 

Lloyd George's Secretariat, popularly known as Downing Street's "Garden Suburb", assisted him in discharging his responsibilities within the constraints of the war cabinet system. Its function was to maintain contact with the numerous departments of government, to collect information, and to report on matters of special concern. Its leading members were George Adams and Philip Kerr, and the other secretaries included David Davies, Joseph Davies, Waldorf Astor and, later, Cecil Harmsworth.

 

Lloyd George wanted to make the destruction of the Ottoman Empire a major British war aim, and two days after taking office told Robertson that he wanted a major victory, preferably the capture of Jerusalem, to impress British public opinion.

 

At the Rome Conference (5–6 January 1917) Lloyd George was discreetly quiet about plans to take Jerusalem, an object which advanced British interests rather than doing much to win the war. Lloyd George proposed sending heavy guns to Italy with a view to defeating Austria-Hungary, possibly to be balanced by a transfer of Italian troops to Salonika but was unable to obtain the support of the French or Italians, and Robertson talked of resigning.

 

Nivelle affair

Lloyd George engaged almost constantly in intrigues calculated to reduce the power of the generals, including trying to subordinate British forces in France to the French General Nivelle. He backed Nivelle because he thought he had "proved himself to be a Man" by his successful counterattacks at Verdun, and because of his promises that he could break the German lines in 48 hours. Nivelle increasingly complained of Haig's dragging his feet rather than cooperating with their plans for the offensive.

 

The plan was to put British forces under Nivelle's direct command for the great 1917 offensive. The British would attack first, thereby tying down the German reserves. Then the French would strike and score an overwhelming victory in two days. It was announced at a War Cabinet meeting on 24 February, to which neither Robertson nor Lord Derby (Secretary of State for War) had been invited. Ministers felt that the French generals and staff had shown themselves more skilful than the British in 1916, whilst politically Britain had to give wholehearted support to what would probably be the last major French effort of the war. The Nivelle proposal was then given to Robertson and Haig without warning on 26–27 February at the Calais Conference (minutes from the War Cabinet meeting were not sent to the King until 28 February, so that he did not have a prior chance to object). Robertson in particular protested vehemently. Finally, a compromise was reached whereby Haig would be under Nivelle's orders but would retain operational control of British forces and keep a right of appeal to London "if he saw good reason". After further argument the status quo, that Haig was an ally of the French but was expected to defer to their wishes, was largely restored in mid-March.

 

The British attack at the Battle of Arras (9–14 April 1917) was partly successful but with much higher casualties than the Germans suffered. There had been many delays and the Germans, suspecting an attack, had shortened their lines to the strong Hindenburg Line. The French attack on the Aisne River in mid-April gained some tactically important high ground but failed to achieve the promised decisive breakthrough, pushing the French Army to the point of mutiny. While Haig gained prestige, Lloyd George lost credibility, and the affair further poisoned relations between himself and the "Brasshats".

 

U-boat war

Shipping

In early 1917 the Germans had resumed unrestricted submarine warfare in a bid to achieve victory on the Western Approaches. Lloyd George set up a Ministry of Shipping under Sir Joseph Maclay, a Glasgow shipowner who was not, until after he left office, a member of either House of Parliament, and housed in a wooden building in a specially drained lake in St James's Park, within a few minutes' walk from the Admiralty. The Junior Minister and House of Commons spokesman was Leo Chiozza Money, with whom Maclay did not get on, but on whose appointment Lloyd George insisted, feeling that their qualities would complement one another. The Civil Service staff was headed by the highly able John Anderson (then only thirty-four years old) and included Arthur Salter. A number of shipping magnates were persuaded, like Maclay himself, to work unpaid for the ministry (as had a number of industrialists for the Ministry of Munitions), who were also able to obtain ideas privately from junior naval officers who were reluctant to argue with their superiors in meetings. The ministers heading the Board of Trade, for Munitions (Addison) and for Agriculture and Food (Lord Rhondda), were also expected to co-operate with Maclay. 

 

In accordance with a pledge Lloyd George had given in December 1916 nearly 90% of Britain's merchant shipping tonnage was soon brought under state control (previously less than half had been controlled by the Admiralty), whilst remaining privately owned (similar measures were in force at the time for the railways). Merchant shipping was concentrated, largely on Chiozza Money's initiative, on the transatlantic route where it could more easily be protected, instead of being spread out all over the globe (this relied on imports coming first into North America). Maclay began the process of increasing ship construction, although he was hampered by shortages of steel and labour, and ships under construction in the United States were confiscated by the Americans when she entered the war. In May 1917 Eric Geddes, based at the Admiralty, was put in charge of shipbuilding, and in July he became First Lord of the Admiralty.  Later the German U-boats were defeated in 1918.

 

Convoys

Main article: Convoys in World War I

Lloyd George had raised the matter of convoys at the War Committee in November 1916, only to be told by the admirals present, including Jellicoe, that convoys presented too large a target, and that merchant ship masters lacked the discipline to keep station in a convoy.

 

In February 1917 Maurice Hankey, the secretary of the War Cabinet, wrote a memorandum for Lloyd George calling for the introduction of "scientifically organised convoys", almost certainly after being persuaded by Commander Reginald Henderson and the Shipping Ministry officials with whom he was in contact. After a breakfast meeting (13 February 1917) with Lloyd George, Sir Edward Carson (First Lord of the Admiralty) and Admirals Jellicoe and Duff agreed to "conduct experiments"; however, convoys were not in general use until August, by which time the rate of shipping losses was already in decline after peaking in April.

 

Lloyd George later claimed in his War Memoirs that the delay in introducing convoys was because the Admiralty mishandled an experimental convoy between Britain and Norway and because Jellicoe obtained, behind Maclay's back, an unrepresentative sample of merchant skippers claiming that they lacked the skill to "keep station" in convoy. In fact, Hankey's diary shows that Lloyd George's interest in the matter was intermittent, whilst Frances Stevenson's diaries contain no mention of the topic. He may well have been reluctant, especially at a time when his relations with the generals were so poor, for a showdown with Carson, a weak administrator who was as much the mouthpiece of the admirals as Derby was of the generals, but who had played a key role in the fall of Asquith and who led a significant bloc of Conservative and Irish Unionist MPs.

 

The new Commander of the Grand Fleet Admiral Beatty, whom Lloyd George visited at Invergordon on 15 April, was a supporter of convoys, as was the American Admiral Sims (the USA had just entered the war). The War Cabinet on 25 April authorised Lloyd George to look into the anti-submarine campaign, and on 30 April he visited the Admiralty. Duff had already recommended to Jellicoe that the Admiralty adopt convoys after a recent successful convoy from Gibraltar.

 

Most of the organisations Lloyd George created during the First World War were replicated with the outbreak of the Second World War. As Lord Beaverbrook wrote, "There were no road signs on the journey he had to undertake." The latter's personal efforts to promote convoys were less consistent than he (and Churchill in The World Crisis and Beaverbrook in Men and Power) later claimed; the idea that he, after a hard struggle, sat in the First Lord's chair (on his 30 April visit to the Admiralty) and imposed convoys on a hostile Board is a myth; however, in Grigg's view the credit goes largely to men and institutions which he set in place, and with a freer hand, and making fewer mistakes, than in his dealings with the generals, he and his appointees took decisions which can reasonably be said to have saved the country. "It was a close-run thing ... failure would have been catastrophic." 

 

Russian Revolution

Lloyd George welcomed the Fall of the Tsar, both in a private letter to his brother and in a message to the new Russian Prime Minister Prince Lvov, not least as the war could now be portrayed as a clash between liberal governments and the autocratic Central Powers. Like many observers, he had been taken by surprise by the exact timing of the revolution (it had not been predicted by Lord Milner or General Wilson on their visit to Russia a few weeks earlier) and hoped—albeit with some concerns—that Russia's war effort would be invigorated like that of France in the early 1790s.

 

Lloyd George gave a cautious welcome to the suggestion (19 March on the western calendar) by the Russian Foreign Minister Pavel Milyukov that the toppled Tsar and his family be given sanctuary in Britain (although Lloyd George would have preferred that they go to a neutral country). From the very start the King's adviser Stamfordham raised objections, and in April the British government withdrew its consent under Royal pressure. Eventually, the Russian Royal Family were moved to the Urals where they were executed in 1918. Lloyd George was often blamed for the refusal of asylum, and in his War Memoirs he did not mention King George V's role in the matter, which was not explicitly confirmed until Kenneth Rose's biography of the King was published in 1983.

 

Imperial War Cabinet

An Imperial War Cabinet, including representatives from Canada, Newfoundland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and India, met 14 times from 20 March 1917 to 2 May 1917 (a crisis period of the war) and twice in 1918.[99] The idea was not entirely without precedent as there had been Imperial Conferences in 1887, 1894, 1897, 1902, 1907 and 1911, whilst the Australian Prime Minister Billy Hughes had been invited to attend the Cabinet and War Committee on his visit to the UK in the spring of 1916. The South African Jan Smuts was appointed to the British War Cabinet in the early summer of 1917. 

 

Passchendaele

Lloyd George set up a War Policy Committee (himself, Curzon, Milner, Law and Smuts, with Maurice Hankey as secretary) to discuss strategy, which held 16 meetings over the next six weeks. At the very first meeting (11 June) Lloyd George proposed helping the Italians to capture Trieste, explicitly telling the War Policy Committee (21 June 1917) that he wanted Italian soldiers to be killed rather than British.

 

Haig believed that a Flanders Offensive had a good chance of clearing the Belgian coast, from which German submarines and destroyers were operating (a popular goal with politicians), and that victory at Ypres "might quite possibly lead to (German) collapse". Robertson was less optimistic, but preferred Britain to keep her focus on defeating Germany on the Western Front, and had told Haig that the politicians would not "dare" overrule both soldiers if they gave the same advice. Haig promised he had no "intention of entering into a tremendous offensive involving heavy losses" (20 June) whilst Robertson wanted to avoid "disproportionate loss" (23 June).

 

The Flanders Offensive was reluctantly sanctioned by the War Policy Committee on 18 July and the War Cabinet two days later, on condition it did not degenerate into a long drawn-out fight like the Somme. The War Cabinet promised to monitor progress and casualties and, if necessary call a halt, although in the event they made little effort to monitor progress until September. Frustrated at his inability to get his way, Lloyd George talked of resigning and taking his case to the public.

 

The Battle of Passchendaele began on 31 July, but soon became bogged down in unseasonably early wet weather, which turned much of the battlefield into a barely passable swamp in which men and animals sometimes drowned, whilst the mud and rain severely reduced the accuracy and effectiveness of artillery, the dominant weapon of the time. Lloyd George tried to enlist the King for diverting efforts against Austria-Hungary, telling Stamfordham (14 August) that the King and Prime Minister were "joint trustees of the nation" who had to avoid waste of manpower. A new Italian offensive began (18 August), but Robertson advised that it was "false strategy" to call off Passchendaele to send reinforcements to Italy, and despite being summoned to George Riddell's home in Sussex, where he was served apple pudding (his favourite dish), agreed only reluctantly. The Anglo-French leadership agreed in early September to send 100 heavy guns to Italy (50 of them French) rather than the 300 which Lloyd George wanted—Lloyd George talked of ordering a halt to Passchendaele, but in Hankey's words "funked it" (4 September). Had he not done so his government might have fallen, for as soon as the guns reached Italy Cadorna called off his offensive (21 September).

 

At a meeting at Boulogne on the 25th of September, Lloyd George broached with Painlevé the setting up of an Allied Supreme War Council then making Foch generalissimo. Law had written to Lloyd George that ministers must soon decide whether or not the offensive was to continue. Lloyd George and Robertson met Haig in France (26 September) to discuss the recent German peace feelers (which in the end were publicly repudiated by Chancellor Michaelis) and the progress of the offensive. Haig preferred to continue, encouraged by Plumer's recent successful attacks in dry weather at Menin Road (20 September) and Polygon Wood (26 September), and stating that the Germans were "very worn out". In October the wet weather returned for the final attack towards Passchendaele. At the final meeting of the War Policy Committee on 11 October 1917, Lloyd George authorised the offensive to continue, but warning of failure in three weeks' time. Hankey (21 October) claimed in his diary that Lloyd George had deliberately allowed Passchendaele to continue to discredit Haig and Robertson and make it easier for him to forbid similar offensives in 1918

 

Supreme War Council

Lloyd George played a critical role in the Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour's famous Declaration: "His Majesty's government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country."

 

The Italians suffered a disastrous defeat at Caporetto, requiring British and French reinforcements to be sent. Lloyd George said he "wanted to take advantage of Caporetto to gain "control of the War". The Supreme War Council was inaugurated at the Rapallo Conference (6–7 November 1917). Lloyd George then gave a controversial speech in Paris (12 November) at which he criticised the high casualties of recent Allied "victories" (a word which he used with an element of sarcasm). These events led to an angry Commons debate (19 November), which Lloyd George survived.

 

In reply to Robertson's 19 November memo, which warned (correctly) that the Germans would use the opportunity of Russia's departure from the war to attack in 1918 before the Americans were present in strength, Lloyd George wrote (wrongly) that the Germans would not attack and would fail if they did. That autumn he declared that he was willing "to risk his whole political reputation" to avoid a repetition of the Somme or Passchendaele.

 

In December 1917 Lloyd George remarked to C. P. Scott that: "If people really knew, the war would be stopped tomorrow. But of course, they don't know, and can't know."

 

Death

Lloyd George died of cancer at the age of 82 on 26 March 1945, with his wife Frances and his daughter Megan at his bedside. Four days later, on Good Friday, he was buried beside the river Dwyfor in Llanystumdwy. A boulder marks the grave; there is no inscription; however, a monument designed by the architect Sir Clough Williams-Ellis was subsequently erected around the grave, bearing an englyn (strict-metre stanza) engraved on slate in his memory composed by his nephew W. R. P. George. Nearby stands the Lloyd George Museum, also designed by Williams-Ellis and opened in 1963.

Lansdowne House was a large detached villa that was built at the junction of Christchurch Rd and Holdenhurst Rd, overlooking The Lansdowne, in the mid 1860s.

It was demolished in 1891 and replaced by what was originally to be called the Palace Hotel but actually opened as the Metropole Hotel in 1893.

 

On 23rd May 1943 a beautiful summer Sunday's peace was shattered when German Luffwaffe bombers flew in low over Hengistbury Head to unleash their deadly cargo across the town.

Bournemouth had suffered regular air raids during the war, the first air raid came in July 1940 with the last occuring in April 1944, but this raid would prove to be the worst with around twenty five bombs dropped that saw 22 buildings destroyed, over 3,000 damaged, nearly 40 of which had to be demolished. The number of deaths on that day has always been subject to debate and seems to vary depending on the source but is probably somewhere between 131 and 208 in total.

 

The most notable buildings destroyed were the Central Hotel on Richmond Hill with the neighbouring Punshon Memorial Church severely damaged and later demolished, Beales department store on Old Christchurch Rd and the Metropole Hotel. The bomb blew apart the Holdenhurst Rd side of the building with bodies reportedly thrown clear of the wreckage. As to the specific number killed when the Metropole was hit i have been unable to determine a reliable figure but the loss of life must have been significant.

 

The ruins of the hotel stood overlooking The Lansdowne in the years after the war, although the Metropole Bars did reopen on the Holdenhurst Rd side, until work began on the construction of Royal London House, the hotel's replacement, in 1955.

Royal London House opened in 1958 and housed offices on its upper floors with shops at street level. Today it is probably best known for the KFC restaurant that occupies the corner retail unit..

 

Over 2,200 bombs fell on Bournemouth during World War 2 killing up to 350 civilians and servicemen with nearly 14,000 buildings affected with 75 destroyed, 171 demolished as beyond repair, 675 badly damaged but repairable, over 9,000 slightly damaged and over 3,000 suffering broken glass.

 

Thousands of Allied troops, including at least 10,000 Canadians, were billeted in Bournemouth during the war with many of the town's hotels requisitioned.

The American GIs were particularly popular with local children as they always seemed to have a plentiful supply of chocolate and cigarettes.

Thousands of evacuees were also sent to Bournemouth, the middle section of both piers were removed to prevent them being used by invading forces, the shoreline was protected by barbed wire and there were around 5,000 members of the local home guard.

The War Memorial Homes for disabled ex servicemen, on Castle Lane West, were built as Bournemouth's memorial to World War Two.

  

FURTHER READING........

 

Bournemouth Goes To War by John Cresswell - a chapter included in 'Bournemouth 1810 - 2010 From Smugglers To Surfers' ISBN 978-1-904-34976-1

 

'Victory - A 60th Anniversary Souvenir' by the Daily Echo ISBN 0-9546280-2-0

 

'A Bed By The Sea - A History of Bournemouth's Hotels' by Jackie Edwards ISBN 9781897887806

 

'Their Past Your Future 1945 - 2005' a Jan Marsh / Bournemouth Libraries booklet.

 

The Bournemouth War Memorial Homes website www.bournemouthwarmemorial.co.uk/home.html

 

BBC People's War Archive. www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/44/a2307944.s...

   

Publicity image for the 2010 CLICK + DRAG on 10/9/10 at SANTOS PARTY HOUSE NYC, all publicity uses are permitted, with credit: CLICK + DRAG 3.2 photo and design, ROB ROTH

 

Models and Click + Drag 2010 performer NICHOLAS GORHAM. Costumes by GARO SPARO, Makeup by MARLA BELT.

 

SATURDAY OCTOBER 9, 2010

CLICK + DRAG 3.2/ AGE OF AQUARIUS

SANTOS PARTY HOUSE

96 LAFAYETTE STREET NYC

10 PM-4 AM

www.clicknyc.com

 

The pioneering "Cyber/Fetish/Gender-Hacking" party CLICK + DRAG, which ushered out the 20th Century in style and was reborn in 2008, announces its third annual Future-Spectacle for October 9. Two of Click's founding producers - director and visual artist ROB ROTH and nightlife impresario CHI CHI VALENTI of THE JACKIE FACTORY will stage this year's epic CLICK + DRAG 3.2/ AGE OF AQUARIUS at the suitably Aquarian venue SANTOS PARTY HOUSE. CLICK 3.2/ AGE OF AQUARIUS is a two floor, evening-length epic, preserving the night's strict dress code, elaborate installations and stage shows, and pansexual mix of fetishists, artists, gender-hackers and "Glam Nerds."

 

The Age of Aquarius - the Utopian "New Age" of unity and love - has either begun or is beginning, depending on which astrological sages one believes. Regardless, the Aquarian themes of humanism, peace, rebellion, idealism and philanthropy are already ascending, by way of computer networks and other new tools and in the growing acceptance of non-traditional religions and belief systems. As the brutal, materialistic Age of Pisces draws to an end, values shift towards spiritual rebirth and planetary harmony. To the CLICK + DRAG producers, the Aquarian ideal compliments the neo-tribalism of many Click participants and the mixing of masculine and feminine traits into countless unique new genders, a recurring theme of this spectacular "gathering of the tribes".

 

With this Utopian brew as inspiration, CLICK + DRAG 3.2 will feature multimedia works directed by ROB ROTH with light shows by SETH KIRBY and BROCK MONROE of the JOSHUA LIGHT SHOW and the contributions of dozens of creative collaborators. Highlights will include performances by neo-burlesque performance artist NARCISSISTER, RUMI OF THE FABULOUS COCKETTES!, vocal she-goddesses AMBER MARTIN and LADY RIZO, neue cabaret troupe THE PIXIE HARLOTS, and Method Go-Go icons including bodybuilder (and Click 3.2 cover girl) ROXANNE EDWARDS and costume cultist FALON. The evening also features costume design by longtime Click couturier GARO SPARO. DJs on two floors will include JOHNNY DYNELL (VANDAM), SEAN B (SPANK), ANGELO and JOHANNA CONSTANTINE (NYC) and TEXAS SAGE (SF) playing a futuristic soundtrack that runs the gamut from sixties psychedelia to electro house.

 

A STRICT CYBER/FETISH/TRIBAL DRESS CODE WILL BE COMPLETELY ENFORCED: WEAR AQUARIAN FLOURISHES, GLITTER BEARDS AND MERKINS, RESPLENDENT RAGS, PAGAN CHIC, WATERFALL HEADDRESSES, TURQUOISE PAINT, GODDESS OR TRANS-GODDESS, BODY-ADORNED or CYBER, FETISH, TRIBAL, GENDER-HACKING, FAERIE, GOTHIC OR BRILLIANT BLACK. ABSOLUTELY NO STREET CLOTHES OR MUNDANES - NO EXCEPTIONS.

 

Press contact CHI CHI VALENTI at THE JACKIE FACTORY NYC - events@jackiefactory.com or facebook.com/chichivalenti

Here, hundreds of researchers, businesses and progressive home- owners will be living and working side-by-side, along with great food, drink and entertainment venues. A collection of stunning public spaces for everyone, of all ages, to use.

Everyone here is united by one purpose: to help families, communities and cities around the world to live healthier, longer, smarter and easier lives. In short, to live better. In the process, our businesses will continue to grow, employ more local people and help ensure Newcastle excels.

 

Newcastle University (legally the University of Newcastle upon Tyne) is a public research university based in Newcastle upon Tyne, North East England. It has overseas campuses in Singapore and Malaysia. The university is a red brick university and a member of the Russell Group, an association of research-intensive UK universities.

 

The university finds its roots in the School of Medicine and Surgery (later the College of Medicine), established in 1834, and the College of Physical Science (later renamed Armstrong College), founded in 1871. These two colleges came to form the larger division of the federal University of Durham, with the Durham Colleges forming the other. The Newcastle colleges merged to form King's College in 1937. In 1963, following an Act of Parliament, King's College became the University of Newcastle upon Tyne.

 

The university subdivides into three faculties: the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences; the Faculty of Medical Sciences; and the Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering. The university offers around 175 full-time undergraduate degree programmes in a wide range of subject areas spanning arts, sciences, engineering and medicine, together with approximately 340 postgraduate taught and research programmes across a range of disciplines.[6] The annual income of the institution for 2022–23 was £592.4 million of which £119.3 million was from research grants and contracts, with an expenditure of £558 million.

 

History

Durham University § Colleges in Newcastle

The establishment of a university in Newcastle upon Tyne was first proposed in 1831 by Thomas Greenhow in a lecture to the Literary and Philosophical Society. In 1832 a group of local medics – physicians George Fife (teaching materia medica and therapeutics) and Samuel Knott (teaching theory and practice of medicine), and surgeons John Fife (teaching surgery), Alexander Fraser (teaching anatomy and physiology) and Henry Glassford Potter (teaching chemistry) – started offering medical lectures in Bell's Court to supplement the apprenticeship system (a fourth surgeon, Duncan McAllum, is mentioned by some sources among the founders, but was not included in the prospectus). The first session started on 1 October 1832 with eight or nine students, including John Snow, then apprenticed to a local surgeon-apothecary, the opening lecture being delivered by John Fife. In 1834 the lectures and practical demonstrations moved to the Hall of the Company of Barber Surgeons to accommodate the growing number of students, and the School of Medicine and Surgery was formally established on 1 October 1834.

 

On 25 June 1851, following a dispute among the teaching staff, the school was formally dissolved and the lecturers split into two rival institutions. The majority formed the Newcastle College of Medicine, and the others established themselves as the Newcastle upon Tyne College of Medicine and Practical Science with competing lecture courses. In July 1851 the majority college was recognised by the Society of Apothecaries and in October by the Royal College of Surgeons of England and in January 1852 was approved by the University of London to submit its students for London medical degree examinations. Later in 1852, the majority college was formally linked to the University of Durham, becoming the "Newcastle-upon-Tyne College of Medicine in connection with the University of Durham". The college awarded its first 'Licence in Medicine' (LicMed) under the auspices of the University of Durham in 1856, with external examiners from Oxford and London, becoming the first medical examining body on the United Kingdom to institute practical examinations alongside written and viva voce examinations. The two colleges amalgamated in 1857, with the first session of the unified college opening on 3 October that year. In 1861 the degree of Master of Surgery was introduced, allowing for the double qualification of Licence of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery, along with the degrees of Bachelor of Medicine and Doctor of Medicine, both of which required residence in Durham. In 1870 the college was brought into closer connection with the university, becoming the "Durham University College of Medicine" with the Reader in Medicine becoming the Professor of Medicine, the college gaining a representative on the university's senate, and residence at the college henceforth counting as residence in the university towards degrees in medicine and surgery, removing the need for students to spend a period of residence in Durham before they could receive the higher degrees.

 

Attempts to realise a place for the teaching of sciences in the city were finally met with the foundation of the College of Physical Science in 1871. The college offered instruction in mathematics, physics, chemistry and geology to meet the growing needs of the mining industry, becoming the "Durham College of Physical Science" in 1883 and then renamed after William George Armstrong as Armstrong College in 1904. Both of these institutions were part of the University of Durham, which became a federal university under the Durham University Act 1908 with two divisions in Durham and Newcastle. By 1908, the Newcastle division was teaching a full range of subjects in the Faculties of Medicine, Arts, and Science, which also included agriculture and engineering.

 

Throughout the early 20th century, the medical and science colleges outpaced the growth of their Durham counterparts. Following tensions between the two Newcastle colleges in the early 1930s, a Royal Commission in 1934 recommended the merger of the two colleges to form "King's College, Durham"; that was effected by the Durham University Act 1937. Further growth of both division of the federal university led to tensions within the structure and a feeling that it was too large to manage as a single body. On 1 August 1963 the Universities of Durham and Newcastle upon Tyne Act 1963 separated the two thus creating the "University of Newcastle upon Tyne". As the successor of King's College, Durham, the university at its founding in 1963, adopted the coat of arms originally granted to the Council of King's College in 1937.

 

Above the portico of the Students' Union building are bas-relief carvings of the arms and mottoes of the University of Durham, Armstrong College and Durham University College of Medicine, the predecessor parts of Newcastle University. While a Latin motto, mens agitat molem (mind moves matter) appears in the Students' Union building, the university itself does not have an official motto.

 

Campus and location

The university occupies a campus site close to Haymarket in central Newcastle upon Tyne. It is located to the northwest of the city centre between the open spaces of Leazes Park and the Town Moor; the university medical school and Royal Victoria Infirmary are adjacent to the west.

 

The Armstrong building is the oldest building on the campus and is the site of the original Armstrong College. The building was constructed in three stages; the north east wing was completed first at a cost of £18,000 and opened by Princess Louise on 5 November 1888. The south-east wing, which includes the Jubilee Tower, and south-west wings were opened in 1894. The Jubilee Tower was built with surplus funds raised from an Exhibition to mark Queen Victoria's Jubilee in 1887. The north-west front, forming the main entrance, was completed in 1906 and features two stone figures to represent science and the arts. Much of the later construction work was financed by Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell, the metallurgist and former Lord Mayor of Newcastle, after whom the main tower is named. In 1906 it was opened by King Edward VII.

 

The building contains the King's Hall, which serves as the university's chief hall for ceremonial purposes where Congregation ceremonies are held. It can contain 500 seats. King Edward VII gave permission to call the Great Hall, King's Hall. During the First World War, the building was requisitioned by the War Office to create the first Northern General Hospital, a facility for the Royal Army Medical Corps to treat military casualties. Graduation photographs are often taken in the University Quadrangle, next to the Armstrong building. In 1949 the Quadrangle was turned into a formal garden in memory of members of Newcastle University who gave their lives in the two World Wars. In 2017, a statue of Martin Luther King Jr. was erected in the inner courtyard of the Armstrong Building, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of his honorary degree from the university.

 

The Bruce Building is a former brewery, constructed between 1896 and 1900 on the site of the Hotspur Hotel, and designed by the architect Joseph Oswald as the new premises of Newcastle Breweries Limited. The university occupied the building from the 1950s, but, having been empty for some time, the building was refurbished in 2016 to become residential and office space.

 

The Devonshire Building, opened in 2004, incorporates in an energy efficient design. It uses photovoltaic cells to help to power motorised shades that control the temperature of the building and geothermal heating coils. Its architects won awards in the Hadrian awards and the RICS Building of the Year Award 2004. The university won a Green Gown award for its construction.

 

Plans for additions and improvements to the campus were made public in March 2008 and completed in 2010 at a cost of £200 million. They included a redevelopment of the south-east (Haymarket) façade with a five-storey King's Gate administration building as well as new student accommodation. Two additional buildings for the school of medicine were also built. September 2012 saw the completion of the new buildings and facilities for INTO Newcastle University on the university campus. The main building provides 18 new teaching rooms, a Learning Resource Centre, a lecture theatre, science lab, administrative and academic offices and restaurant.

 

The Philip Robinson Library is the main university library and is named after a bookseller in the city and benefactor to the library. The Walton Library specialises in services for the Faculty of Medical Sciences in the Medical School. It is named after Lord Walton of Detchant, former Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Professor of Neurology. The library has a relationship with the Northern region of the NHS allowing their staff to use the library for research and study. The Law Library specialises in resources relating to law, and the Marjorie Robinson Library Rooms offers additional study spaces and computers. Together, these house over one million books and 500,000 electronic resources. Some schools within the university, such as the School of Modern Languages, also have their own smaller libraries with smaller highly specialised collections.

 

In addition to the city centre campus there are buildings such as the Dove Marine Laboratory located on Cullercoats Bay, and Cockle Park Farm in Northumberland.

 

International

In September 2008, the university's first overseas branch was opened in Singapore, a Marine International campus called, NUMI Singapore. This later expanded beyond marine subjects and became Newcastle University Singapore, largely through becoming an Overseas University Partner of Singapore Institute of Technology.

 

In 2011, the university's Medical School opened an international branch campus in Iskandar Puteri, Johor, Malaysia, namely Newcastle University Medicine Malaysia.

 

Student accommodation

Newcastle University has many catered and non-catered halls of residence available to first-year students, located around the city of Newcastle. Popular Newcastle areas for private student houses and flats off campus include Jesmond, Heaton, Sandyford, Shieldfield, South Shields and Spital Tongues.

 

Henderson Hall was used as a hall of residence until a fire destroyed it in 2023.

 

St Mary's College in Fenham, one of the halls of residence, was formerly St Mary's College of Education, a teacher training college.

 

Organisation and governance

The current Chancellor is the British poet and artist Imtiaz Dharker. She assumed the position of Chancellor on 1 January 2020. The vice-chancellor is Chris Day, a hepatologist and former pro-vice-chancellor of the Faculty of Medical Sciences.

 

The university has an enrolment of some 16,000 undergraduate and 5,600 postgraduate students. Teaching and research are delivered in 19 academic schools, 13 research institutes and 38 research centres, spread across three Faculties: the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences; the Faculty of Medical Sciences; and the Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering. The university offers around 175 full-time undergraduate degree programmes in a wide range of subject areas spanning arts, sciences, engineering and medicine, together with approximately 340 postgraduate taught and research programmes across a range of disciplines.

 

It holds a series of public lectures called 'Insights' each year in the Curtis Auditorium in the Herschel Building. Many of the university's partnerships with companies, like Red Hat, are housed in the Herschel Annex.

 

Chancellors and vice-chancellors

For heads of the predecessor colleges, see Colleges of Durham University § Colleges in Newcastle.

Chancellors

Hugh Percy, 10th Duke of Northumberland (1963–1988)

Matthew White Ridley, 4th Viscount Ridley (1988–1999)

Chris Patten (1999–2009)

Liam Donaldson (2009–2019)

Imtiaz Dharker (2020–)

Vice-chancellors

Charles Bosanquet (1963–1968)

Henry Miller (1968–1976)

Ewan Stafford Page (1976–1978, acting)

Laurence Martin (1978–1990)

Duncan Murchison (1991, acting)

James Wright (1992–2000)

Christopher Edwards (2001–2007)

Chris Brink (2007–2016)

Chris Day (2017–present)

Civic responsibility

 

The university Quadrangle

The university describes itself as a civic university, with a role to play in society by bringing its research to bear on issues faced by communities (local, national or international).

 

In 2012, the university opened the Newcastle Institute for Social Renewal to address issues of social and economic change, representing the research-led academic schools across the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences[45] and the Business School.

 

Mark Shucksmith was Director of the Newcastle Institute for Social Renewal (NISR) at Newcastle University, where he is also Professor of Planning.

 

In 2006, the university was granted fair trade status and from January 2007 it became a smoke-free campus.

 

The university has also been actively involved with several of the region's museums for many years. The Great North Museum: Hancock originally opened in 1884 and is often a venue for the university's events programme.

 

Faculties and schools

Teaching schools within the university are based within three faculties. Each faculty is led by a Provost/Pro-vice-chancellor and a team of Deans with specific responsibilities.

 

Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences

School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape

School of Arts and Cultures

Newcastle University Business School

Combined Honours Centre

School of Education, Communication and Language Sciences

School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics

School of Geography, Politics and Sociology

School of History, Classics and Archaeology

Newcastle Law School

School of Modern Languages

Faculty of Medical Sciences

School of Biomedical Sciences

School of Dental Sciences

School of Medical Education

School of Pharmacy

School of Psychology

Centre for Bacterial Cell Biology (CBCB)

Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering

School of Computing

School of Engineering

School of Mathematics, Statistics and Physics

School of Natural and Environmental Sciences

Business School

 

Newcastle University Business School

As early as the 1900/1 academic year, there was teaching in economics (political economy, as it was then known) at Newcastle, making Economics the oldest department in the School. The Economics Department is currently headed by the Sir David Dale Chair. Among the eminent economists having served in the Department (both as holders of the Sir David Dale Chair) are Harry Mainwaring Hallsworth and Stanley Dennison.

 

Newcastle University Business School is a triple accredited business school, with accreditation by the three major accreditation bodies: AACSB, AMBA and EQUIS.

 

In 2002, Newcastle University Business School established the Business Accounting and Finance or 'Flying Start' degree in association with the ICAEW and PricewaterhouseCoopers. The course offers an accelerated route towards the ACA Chartered Accountancy qualification and is the Business School's Flagship programme.

 

In 2011 the business school opened their new building built on the former Scottish and Newcastle brewery site next to St James' Park. This building was officially opened on 19 March 2012 by Lord Burns.

 

The business school operated a central London campus from 2014 to 2021, in partnership with INTO University Partnerships until 2020.

 

Medical School

The BMC Medicine journal reported in 2008 that medical graduates from Oxford, Cambridge and Newcastle performed better in postgraduate tests than any other medical school in the UK.

 

In 2008 the Medical School announced that they were expanding their campus to Malaysia.

 

The Royal Victoria Infirmary has always had close links with the Faculty of Medical Sciences as a major teaching hospital.

 

School of Modern Languages

The School of Modern Languages consists of five sections: East Asian (which includes Japanese and Chinese); French; German; Spanish, Portuguese & Latin American Studies; and Translating & Interpreting Studies. Six languages are taught from beginner's level to full degree level ‒ Chinese, Japanese, French, German, Spanish and Portuguese ‒ and beginner's courses in Catalan, Dutch, Italian and Quechua are also available. Beyond the learning of the languages themselves, Newcastle also places a great deal of emphasis on study and experience of the cultures of the countries where the languages taught are spoken. The School of Modern Languages hosts North East England's only branches of two internationally important institutes: the Camões Institute, a language institute for Portuguese, and the Confucius Institute, a language and cultural institute for Chinese.

 

The teaching of modern foreign languages at Newcastle predates the creation of Newcastle University itself, as in 1911 Armstrong College in Newcastle installed Albert George Latham, its first professor of modern languages.

 

The School of Modern Languages at Newcastle is the lead institution in the North East Routes into Languages Consortium and, together with the Durham University, Northumbria University, the University of Sunderland, the Teesside University and a network of schools, undertakes work activities of discovery of languages for the 9 to 13 years pupils. This implies having festivals, Q&A sessions, language tasters, or quizzes organised, as well as a web learning work aiming at constructing a web portal to link language learners across the region.

 

Newcastle Law School

Newcastle Law School is the longest established law school in the north-east of England when law was taught at the university's predecessor college before it became independent from Durham University. It has a number of recognised international and national experts in a variety of areas of legal scholarship ranging from Common and Chancery law, to International and European law, as well as contextual, socio-legal and theoretical legal studies.

 

The Law School occupies four specially adapted late-Victorian town houses. The Staff Offices, the Alumni Lecture Theatre and seminar rooms as well as the Law Library are all located within the School buildings.

 

School of Computing

The School of Computing was ranked in the Times Higher Education world Top 100. Research areas include Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) and ubiquitous computing, secure and resilient systems, synthetic biology, scalable computing (high performance systems, data science, machine learning and data visualization), and advanced modelling. The school led the formation of the National Innovation Centre for Data. Innovative teaching in the School was recognised in 2017 with the award of a National Teaching Fellowship.

 

Cavitation tunnel

Newcastle University has the second largest cavitation tunnel in the UK. Founded in 1950, and based in the Marine Science and Technology Department, the Emerson Cavitation Tunnel is used as a test basin for propellers, water turbines, underwater coatings and interaction of propellers with ice. The Emerson Cavitation Tunnel was recently relocated to a new facility in Blyth.

 

Museums and galleries

The university is associated with a number of the region's museums and galleries, including the Great North Museum project, which is primarily based at the world-renowned Hancock Museum. The Great North Museum: Hancock also contains the collections from two of the university's former museums, the Shefton Museum and the Museum of Antiquities, both now closed. The university's Hatton Gallery is also a part of the Great North Museum project, and remains within the Fine Art Building.

 

Academic profile

Reputation and rankings

Rankings

National rankings

Complete (2024)30

Guardian (2024)67

Times / Sunday Times (2024)37

Global rankings

ARWU (2023)201–300

QS (2024)110

THE (2024)168=

 

Newcastle University's national league table performance over the past ten years

The university is a member of the Russell Group of the UK's research-intensive universities. It is ranked in the top 200 of most world rankings, and in the top 40 of most UK rankings. As of 2023, it is ranked 110th globally by QS, 292nd by Leiden, 139th by Times Higher Education and 201st–300th by the Academic Ranking of World Universities. Nationally, it is ranked joint 33rd by the Times/Sunday Times Good University Guide, 30th by the Complete University Guide[68] and joint 63rd by the Guardian.

 

Admissions

UCAS Admission Statistics 20222021202020192018

Application 33,73532,40034,55031,96533,785

Accepte 6,7556,2556,5806,4456,465

Applications/Accepted Ratio 5.05.25.35.05.2

Offer Rate (%78.178.080.279.280.0)

Average Entry Tariff—151148144152

Main scheme applications, International and UK

UK domiciled applicants

HESA Student Body Composition

In terms of average UCAS points of entrants, Newcastle ranked joint 19th in Britain in 2014. In 2015, the university gave offers of admission to 92.1% of its applicants, the highest amongst the Russell Group.

 

25.1% of Newcastle's undergraduates are privately educated, the thirteenth highest proportion amongst mainstream British universities. In the 2016–17 academic year, the university had a domicile breakdown of 74:5:21 of UK:EU:non-EU students respectively with a female to male ratio of 51:49.

 

Research

Newcastle is a member of the Russell Group of 24 research-intensive universities. In the 2021 Research Excellence Framework (REF), which assesses the quality of research in UK higher education institutions, Newcastle is ranked joint 33rd by GPA (along with the University of Strathclyde and the University of Sussex) and 15th for research power (the grade point average score of a university, multiplied by the full-time equivalent number of researchers submitted).

 

Student life

Newcastle University Students' Union (NUSU), known as the Union Society until a 2012 rebranding, includes student-run sports clubs and societies.

 

The Union building was built in 1924 following a generous gift from an anonymous donor, who is now believed to have been Sir Cecil Cochrane, a major benefactor to the university.[87] It is built in the neo-Jacobean style and was designed by the local architect Robert Burns Dick. It was opened on 22 October 1925 by the Rt. Hon. Lord Eustace Percy, who later served as Rector of King's College from 1937 to 1952. It is a Grade II listed building. In 2010 the university donated £8 million towards a redevelopment project for the Union Building.

 

The Students' Union is run by seven paid sabbatical officers, including a Welfare and Equality Officer, and ten part-time unpaid officer positions. The former leader of the Liberal Democrats Tim Farron was President of NUSU in 1991–1992. The Students' Union also employs around 300 people in ancillary roles including bar staff and entertainment organisers.

 

The Courier is a weekly student newspaper. Established in 1948, the current weekly readership is around 12,000, most of whom are students at the university. The Courier has won The Guardian's Student Publication of the Year award twice in a row, in 2012 and 2013. It is published every Monday during term time.

 

Newcastle Student Radio is a student radio station based in the university. It produces shows on music, news, talk and sport and aims to cater for a wide range of musical tastes.

 

NUTV, known as TCTV from 2010 to 2017, is student television channel, first established in 2007. It produces live and on-demand content with coverage of events, as well as student-made programmes and shows.

 

Student exchange

Newcastle University has signed over 100 agreements with foreign universities allowing for student exchange to take place reciprocally.

 

Sport

Newcastle is one of the leading universities for sport in the UK and is consistently ranked within the top 12 out of 152 higher education institutions in the British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS) rankings. More than 50 student-led sports clubs are supported through a team of professional staff and a network of indoor and outdoor sports facilities based over four sites. The university have a strong rugby history and were the winners of the Northumberland Senior Cup in 1965.

 

The university enjoys a friendly sporting rivalry with local universities. The Stan Calvert Cup was held between 1994 and 2018 by major sports teams from Newcastle and Northumbria University. The Boat Race of the North has also taken place between the rowing clubs of Newcastle and Durham University.

 

As of 2023, Newcastle University F.C. compete in men's senior football in the Northern League Division Two.

 

The university's Cochrane Park sports facility was a training venue for the teams playing football games at St James' Park for the 2012 London Olympics.

 

A

Ali Mohamed Shein, 7th President of Zanzibar

Richard Adams - fairtrade businessman

Kate Adie - journalist

Yasmin Ahmad - Malaysian film director, writer and scriptwriter

Prince Adewale Aladesanmi - Nigerian prince and businessman

Jane Alexander - Bishop

Theodosios Alexander (BSc Marine Engineering 1981) - Dean, Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology of Saint Louis University

William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong - industrialist; in 1871 founded College of Physical Science, an early part of the University

Roy Ascott - new media artist

Dennis Assanis - President, University of Delaware

Neil Astley - publisher, editor and writer

Rodney Atkinson - eurosceptic conservative academic

Rowan Atkinson - comedian and actor

Kane Avellano - Guinness World Record for youngest person to circumnavigate the world by motorcycle (solo and unsupported) at the age of 23 in 2017

B

Bruce Babbitt - U.S. politician; 16th Governor of Arizona (1978–1987); 47th United States Secretary of the Interior (1993–2001); Democrat

James Baddiley - biochemist, based at Newcastle University 1954–1983; the Baddiley-Clark building is named in part after him

Tunde Baiyewu - member of the Lighthouse Family

John C. A. Barrett - clergyman

G. W. S. Barrow - historian

Neil Bartlett - chemist, creation of the first noble gas compounds (BSc and PhD at King's College, University of Durham, later Newcastle University)

Sue Beardsmore - television presenter

Alan Beith - politician

Jean Benedetti - biographer, translator, director and dramatist

Phil Bennion - politician

Catherine Bertola - contemporary painter

Simon Best - Captain of the Ulster Rugby team; Prop for the Ireland Team

Andy Bird - CEO of Disney International

Rory Jonathan Courtenay Boyle, Viscount Dungarvan - heir apparent to the earldom of Cork

David Bradley - science writer

Mike Brearley - professional cricketer, formerly a lecturer in philosophy at the university (1968–1971)

Constance Briscoe - one of the first black women to sit as a judge in the UK; author of the best-selling autobiography Ugly; found guilty in May 2014 on three charges of attempting to pervert the course of justice; jailed for 16 months

Steve Brooks - entomologist; attained BSc in Zoology and MSc in Public Health Engineering from Newcastle University in 1976 and 1977 respectively

Thom Brooks - academic, columnist

Gavin Brown - academic

Vicki Bruce - psychologist

Basil Bunting - poet; Northern Arts Poetry Fellow at Newcastle University (1968–70); honorary DLitt in 1971

John Burgan - documentary filmmaker

Mark Burgess - computer scientist

Sir John Burn - Professor of Clinical Genetics at Newcastle University Medical School; Medical Director and Head of the Institute of Genetics; Newcastle Medical School alumnus

William Lawrence Burn - historian and lawyer, history chair at King's College, Newcastle (1944–66)

John Harrison Burnett - botanist, chair of Botany at King's College, Newcastle (1960–68)

C.

Richard Caddel - poet

Ann Cairns - President of International Markets for MasterCard

Deborah Cameron - linguist

Stuart Cameron - lecturer

John Ashton Cannon - historian; Professor of Modern History; Head of Department of History from 1976 until his appointment as Dean of the Faculty of Arts in 1979; Pro-Vice-Chancellor 1983–1986

Ian Carr - musician

Jimmy Cartmell - rugby player, Newcastle Falcons

Steve Chapman - Principal and Vice-Chancellor of Heriot-Watt University

Dion Chen - Hong Kong educator, principal of Ying Wa College and former principal of YMCA of Hong Kong Christian College

Hsing Chia-hui - author

Ashraf Choudhary - scientist

Chua Chor Teck - Managing Director of Keppel Group

Jennifer A. Clack - palaeontologist

George Clarke - architect

Carol Clewlow - novelist

Brian Clouston - landscape architect

Ed Coode - Olympic gold medallist

John Coulson - chemical engineering academic

Caroline Cox, Baroness Cox - cross-bench member of the British House of Lords

Nicola Curtin – Professor of Experimental Cancer Therapeutics

Pippa Crerar - Political Editor of the Daily Mirror

D

Fred D'Aguiar - author

Julia Darling - poet, playwright, novelist, MA in Creative Writing

Simin Davoudi - academic

Richard Dawson - civil engineering academic and member of the UK Committee on Climate Change

Tom Dening - medical academic and researcher

Katie Doherty - singer-songwriter

Nowell Donovan - vice-chancellor for academic affairs and Provost of Texas Christian University

Catherine Douglas - Ig Nobel Prize winner for Veterinary Medicine

Annabel Dover - artist, studied fine art 1994–1998

Alexander Downer - Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs (1996–2007)

Chloë Duckworth - archaeologist and presenter

Chris Duffield - Town Clerk and Chief Executive of the City of London Corporation

E

Michael Earl - academic

Tom English - drummer, Maxïmo Park

Princess Eugenie - member of the British royal family. Eugenie is a niece of King Charles III and a granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth II. She began studying at Newcastle University in September 2009, graduating in 2012 with a 2:1 degree in English Literature and History of Art.

F

U. A. Fanthorpe - poet

Frank Farmer - medical physicist; professor of medical physics at Newcastle University in 1966

Terry Farrell - architect

Tim Farron - former Liberal Democrat leader and MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale

Ian Fells - professor

Andy Fenby - rugby player

Bryan Ferry - singer, songwriter and musician, member of Roxy Music and solo artist; studied fine art

E. J. Field - neuroscientist, director of the university's Demyelinating Disease Unit

John Niemeyer Findlay - philosopher

John Fitzgerald - computer scientist

Vicky Forster - cancer researcher

Maximimlian (Max) Fosh- YouTuber and independent candidate in the 2021 London mayoral election.

Rose Frain - artist

G

Hugh Grosvenor, 7th Duke of Westminster - aristocrat, billionaire, businessman and landowner

Peter Gibbs - television weather presenter

Ken Goodall - rugby player

Peter Gooderham - British ambassador

Michael Goodfellow - Professor in Microbial Systematics

Robert Goodwill - politician

Richard Gordon - author

Teresa Graham - accountant

Thomas George Greenwell - National Conservative Member of Parliament

H

Sarah Hainsworth - Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Executive Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Aston University

Reginald Hall - endocrinologist, Professor of Medicine (1970–1980)

Alex Halliday - Professor of Geochemistry, University of Oxford

Richard Hamilton - artist

Vicki L. Hanson - computer scientist; honorary doctorate in 2017

Rupert Harden - professional rugby union player

Tim Head - artist

Patsy Healey - professor

Alastair Heathcote - rower

Dorothy Heathcote - academic

Adrian Henri - 'Mersey Scene' poet and painter

Stephen Hepburn - politician

Jack Heslop-Harrison - botanist

Tony Hey - computer scientist; honorary doctorate 2007

Stuart Hill - author

Jean Hillier - professor

Ken Hodcroft - Chairman of Hartlepool United; founder of Increased Oil Recovery

Robert Holden - landscape architect

Bill Hopkins - composer

David Horrobin - entrepreneur

Debbie Horsfield - writer of dramas, including Cutting It

John House - geographer

Paul Hudson - weather presenter

Philip Hunter - educationist

Ronald Hunt – Art Historian who was librarian at the Art Department

Anya Hurlbert - visual neuroscientis

I

Martin Ince - journalist and media adviser, founder of the QS World University Rankings

Charles Innes-Ker - Marquess of Bowmont and Cessford

Mark Isherwood - politician

Jonathan Israel - historian

J

Alan J. Jamieson - marine biologist

George Neil Jenkins - medical researcher

Caroline Johnson - Conservative Member of Parliament

Wilko Johnson - guitarist with 1970s British rhythm and blues band Dr. Feelgood

Rich Johnston - comic book writer and cartoonist

Anna Jones - businesswoman

Cliff Jones - computer scientist

Colin Jones - historian

David E. H. Jones - chemist

Francis R. Jones - poetry translator and Reader in Translation Studies

Phil Jones - climatologist

Michael Jopling, Baron Jopling - Member of the House of Lords and the Conservative Party

Wilfred Josephs - dentist and composer

K

Michael King Jr. - civil rights leader; honorary graduate. In November 1967, MLK made a 24-hour trip to the United Kingdom to receive an honorary Doctorate of Civil Law from Newcastle University, becoming the first African American the institution had recognised in this way.

Panayiotis Kalorkoti - artist; studied B.A. (Hons) in Fine Art (1976–80); Bartlett Fellow in the Visual Arts (1988)

Rashida Karmali - businesswoman

Jackie Kay - poet, novelist, Professor of Creative Writing

Paul Kennedy - historian of international relations and grand strategy

Mark Khangure - neuroradiologist

L

Joy Labinjo - artist

Henrike Lähnemann - German medievalist

Dave Leadbetter - politician

Lim Boon Heng - Singapore Minister

Lin Hsin Hsin - IT inventor, artist, poet and composer

Anne Longfield - children's campaigner, former Children's Commissioner for England

Keith Ludeman - businessman

M

Jack Mapanje - writer and poet

Milton Margai - first prime minister of Sierra Leone (medical degree from the Durham College of Medicine, later Newcastle University Medical School)

Laurence Martin - war studies writer

Murray Martin, documentary and docudrama filmmaker, co-founder of Amber Film & Photography Collective

Adrian Martineau – medical researcher and professor of respiratory Infection and immunity at Queen Mary University of London

Carl R. May - sociologist

Tom May - professional rugby union player, now with Northampton Saints, and capped by England

Kate McCann – journalist and television presenter

Ian G. McKeith – professor of Old Age Psychiatry

John Anthony McGuckin - Orthodox Christian scholar, priest, and poet

Wyl Menmuir - novelist

Zia Mian - physicist

Richard Middleton - musicologist

Mary Midgley - moral philosopher

G.C.J. Midgley - philosopher

Moein Moghimi - biochemist and nanoscientist

Hermann Moisl - linguist

Anthony Michaels-Moore - Operatic Baritone

Joanna Moncrieff - Critical Psychiatrist

Theodore Morison - Principal of Armstrong College, Newcastle upon Tyne (1919–24)

Andy Morrell - footballer

Frank Moulaert - professor

Mo Mowlam - former British Labour Party Member of Parliament, former Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, lecturer at Newcastle University

Chris Mullin - former British Labour Party Member of Parliament, author, visiting fellow

VA Mundella - College of Physical Science, 1884—1887; lecturer in physics at the College, 1891—1896: Professor of Physics at Northern Polytechnic Institute and Principal of Sunderland Technical College.

Richard Murphy - architect

N

Lisa Nandy - British Labour Party Member of Parliament, former Shadow Foreign Secretary

Karim Nayernia - biomedical scientist

Dianne Nelmes - TV producer

O

Sally O'Reilly - writer

Mo O'Toole - former British Labour Party Member of European Parliament

P

Ewan Page - founding director of the Newcastle University School of Computing and briefly acting vice-chancellor; later appointed vice-chancellor of the University of Reading

Rachel Pain - academic

Amanda Parker - Lord Lieutenant of Lancashire since 2023

Geoff Parling - Leicester Tigers rugby player

Chris Patten, Baron Patten of Barnes - British Conservative politician and Chancellor of the University (1999–2009)

Chris M Pattinson former Great Britain International Swimmer 1976-1984

Mick Paynter - Cornish poet and Grandbard

Robert A. Pearce - academic

Hugh Percy, 10th Duke of Northumberland - Chancellor of the University (1964–1988)

Jonathan Pile - Showbiz Editor, ZOO magazine

Ben Pimlott - political historian; PhD and lectureship at Newcastle University (1970–79)

Robin Plackett - statistician

Alan Plater - playwright and screenwriter

Ruth Plummer - Professor of Experimental Cancer Medicine at the Northern Institute for Cancer Research and Fellow of the UK's Academy of Medical Sciences.

Poh Kwee Ong - Deputy President of SembCorp Marine

John Porter - musician

Rob Powell - former London Broncos coach

Stuart Prebble - former chief executive of ITV

Oliver Proudlock - Made in Chelsea star; creator of Serge De Nîmes clothing line[

Mark Purnell - palaeontologist

Q

Pirzada Qasim - Pakistani scholar, Vice Chancellor of the University of Karachi

Joyce Quin, Baroness Quin - politician

R

Andy Raleigh - Rugby League player for Wakefield Trinity Wildcats

Brian Randell - computer scientist

Rupert Mitford, 6th Baron Redesdale - Liberal Democrat spokesman in the House of Lords for International Development

Alastair Reynolds - novelist, former research astronomer with the European Space Agency

Ben Rice - author

Lewis Fry Richardson - mathematician, studied at the Durham College of Science in Newcastle

Matthew White Ridley, 4th Viscount Ridley - Chancellor of the University 1988-1999

Colin Riordan - VC of Cardiff University, Professor of German Studies (1988–2006)

Susie Rodgers - British Paralympic swimmer

Nayef Al-Rodhan - philosopher, neuroscientist, geostrategist, and author

Neil Rollinson - poet

Johanna Ropner - Lord lieutenant of North Yorkshire

Sharon Rowlands - CEO of ReachLocal

Peter Rowlinson - Ig Nobel Prize winner for Veterinary Medicine

John Rushby - computer scientist

Camilla Rutherford - actress

S

Jonathan Sacks - former Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth

Ross Samson - Scottish rugby union footballer; studied history

Helen Scales - marine biologist, broadcaster, and writer

William Scammell - poet

Fred B. Schneider - computer scientist; honorary doctorate in 2003

Sean Scully - painter

Nigel Shadbolt - computer scientist

Tom Shakespeare - geneticist

Jo Shapcott - poet

James Shapiro - Canadian surgeon and scientist

Jack Shepherd - actor and playwright

Mark Shucksmith - professor

Chris Simms - crime thriller novel author

Graham William Smith - probation officer, widely regarded as the father of the national probation service

Iain Smith - Scottish politician

Paul Smith - singer, Maxïmo Park

John Snow - discoverer of cholera transmission through water; leader in the adoption of anaesthesia; one of the 8 students enrolled on the very first term of the Medical School

William Somerville - agriculturist, professor of agriculture and forestry at Durham College of Science (later Newcastle University)

Ed Stafford - explorer, walked the length of the Amazon River

Chris Steele-Perkins - photographer

Chris Stevenson - academic

Di Stewart - Sky Sports News reader

Diana Stöcker - German CDU Member of Parliament

Miodrag Stojković - genetics researcher

Miriam Stoppard - physician, author and agony aunt

Charlie van Straubenzee - businessman and investment executive

Peter Straughan - playwright and short story writer

T

Mathew Tait - rugby union footballer

Eric Thomas - academic

David Tibet - cult musician and poet

Archis Tiku - bassist, Maxïmo Park

James Tooley - professor

Elsie Tu - politician

Maurice Tucker - sedimentologist

Paul Tucker - member of Lighthouse Family

George Grey Turner - surgeon

Ronald F. Tylecote - archaeologist

V

Chris Vance - actor in Prison Break and All Saints

Géza Vermes - scholar

Geoff Vigar - lecturer

Hugh Vyvyan - rugby union player

W

Alick Walker - palaeontologist

Matthew Walker - Professor of Neuroscience and Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley

Tom Walker - Sunday Times foreign correspondent

Lord Walton of Detchant - physician; President of the GMC, BMA, RSM; Warden of Green College, Oxford (1983–1989)

Kevin Warwick - Professor of Cybernetics; former Lecturer in Electrical & Electronic Engineering

Duncan Watmore - footballer at Millwall F.C.

Mary Webb - artist

Charlie Webster - television sports presenter

Li Wei - Chair of Applied Linguistics at UCL Institute of Education, University College London

Joseph Joshua Weiss - Professor of Radiation Chemistry

Robert Westall - children's writer, twice winner of Carnegie Medal

Thomas Stanley Westoll - Fellow of the Royal Society

Gillian Whitehead - composer

William Whitfield - architect, later designed the Hadrian Building and the Northern Stage

Claire Williams - motorsport executive

Zoe Williams - sportswoman, worked on Gladiators

Donald I. Williamson - planktologist and carcinologist

Philip Williamson - former Chief Executive of Nationwide Building Society

John Willis - Royal Air Force officer and council member of the University

Lukas Wooller - keyboard player, Maxïmo Park

Graham Wylie - co-founder of the Sage Group; studied Computing Science & Statistics BSc and graduated in 1980; awarded an honorary doctorate in 2004

Y

Hisila Yami, Nepalese politician and former Minister of Physical Planning and Works (Government of Nepal

John Yorke - Controller of Continuing Drama; Head of Independent Drama at the BBC

Martha Young-Scholten - linguist

Paul Younger - hydrogeologist

This great song " If I Would Marry You " song by Tammi Terrell + Jimmy Radcliffe

and the great American soul singer, composer, arranger,

conductor and record producer. Sadly his life was cut short

in 1973 after an unsuccessful kidney operation.This man was

a great promising star ,read below his fabuluos credits in

his short life.

 

If I Would Marry You - Tammi Terrell + Jimmy Radcliffe

  

www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UpGTAfmsEw

  

Long After Tonight is All Over - Jimmy Radcliffe

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=56E2gHwdKvk

  

My Ship Is Coming In - Jimmy Radcliffe (1965)

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jnk6Fd12IQs

  

Jimmy Radcliffe Biography

  

James "Jimmy" Radcliffe (November 18, 1936 – July 27, 1973)[1] was an American soul singer,

 

composer, arranger, conductor and record producer.

  

Biography

 

James Radcliffe was born in New York City. He released such singles as "My Ship is Coming

 

In", a song composed by his writing partner Joey Brooks (later of "You Light Up My Life"

 

fame), was later covered by The Walker Brothers as a pop music hit, and also wrote several

 

songs featured in the children's TV show The Banana Splits. He will be probably best

 

remembered for his recording of "Long After Tonight Is All Over" on YouTube (written by Burt

 

Bacharach and Hal David) which became famous as one of the "3 before 8" songs that was

 

played at the Wigan Casino all-nighters, the Northern soul venue. The song was a minor hit

 

in the UK Singles Chart in 1965, reaching #40.[1] The popularity of "Long After Tonight Is

 

All Over" led to a promotional tour in support of the record, wherein Radcliffe was featured

 

in the British music press (Record Mirror, NME) and appeared on numerous radio and

 

televisions shows including Thank Your Lucky Stars; the ABC Lucky Stars Special Presents

 

Cilla Black with Cilla Black, The Riot Squad, The Hollies, The Swinging Blue Jeans, Del

 

Shannon and Paul Anka (January 23, 1965); and The Eamonn Andrews Show.

 

Radcliffe did not live long enough to see this recording achieve cult status. Long plagued

 

by a weight problem, he had a kidney removed in 1973 and developed further complications

 

with his remaining one. He died in hospital the same year on July 27 (two months before

 

Wigan Casino opened its doors on September 23), leaving a widow and two children.

 

During his tenure as one of New York City's most successful session vocalists, Radcliffe's

 

voice was the first to sing future hit songs like "This Diamond Ring" (Al Kooper, Bobby

 

Brass, Irwin Levine) and "Pretty Flamingo" (Mark Barkan), and contribute to the session

 

releases by The Definitive Rock Chorale's "Variation's on a Theme Called Hanky Panky"

 

produced by Ellie Greenwich and Mike Rashkow. Radcliffe's vocal abilities earned him the

 

distinction of being referred to as "The Soul of The Brill Building Sound". Burt Bacharach

 

and Hal David had him record songs for Gene Pitney, as would Ellie Greenwich and Tony

 

Powers. Gloria Shayne enlisted his help to get Burl Ives and Arthur Prysock covers. Jerry

 

Leiber and Mike Stoller, Scott English and Claus Ogerman were among his clients. To

 

supplement his income, he hired out as a backing vocalist, and recorded with Doris Troy, Dee

 

Dee Warwick, Cissy Houston, Melba Moore, Toni Wine, Jean Thomas and Barbara Jean English

 

doing sessions for groups such as The Drifters (Radcliffe, Dionne, And Dee Dee Warwick

 

provided backing vocals on The Drifters "Sweets for My Sweet" recording, 1961). Singer

 

Songwriter Sherman Edwards recorded the original vocal demos of his songs for the planned

 

musical "1776", but by late 1968 Edwards had also enlisted Jimmy Radcliffe ("Mama Look

 

Sharp", "Is Anybody There"), Bernie Knee ("Mama Look Sharp", "Is Anybody There"), Ann

 

Gilbert ("He Plays The Violin", "Yours, Yours, Yours") to record stylized demo versions that

 

might also impact the pop charts. "1776" went on to become a 1969 Tony Award winning

 

Broadway show that inspired a 1972 feature film. Another instance of Jimmy Radcliffe's

 

involvement with Broadway bound musicals were his vocal demos of the Bob James and Jack

 

O'Brien songs “Take My Hand” and “Stars Of Glory” for the now notorious 1972 theatrical

 

production of The Selling of the President, based upon the best-selling book by author Joe

 

McGinniss.

 

In August 1963, while preparing to work with the record producer, Bert Berns, on his third

 

release on Musicor Records, Radcliffe attended a session at Chess Studios, produced by

 

Berns, where three of his co-compositions were being recorded by Tammy Montgomery: "This

 

Time Tomorrow", "I Can’t Hold It In Any More" and "I’ve Got Nothing To Say But Goodbye".

 

"This Time Tomorrow" would be issued as the B-side of Montgomery's Chess/Checker single, "If

 

I Would Marry You." Radcliffe recorded with Montgomery a duet version of "If I Would Marry

 

You," more than three years before her name change to Tammi Terrell and pairing with Marvin

 

Gaye at Motown. The unreleased duet, and the other two unreleased songs from the sessions,

 

were released on Come on And See Me, a double collection of Terrell's recordings. One Bert

 

Berns, Carl Spencer and Jimmy Radcliffe collaboration that did make the pop charts in 1963

 

was the song "My Block", recorded by The Chiffons. "She's Got Everything" recorded by The

 

Essex, and produced by Henry Glover, as a follow-up to their million-seller "Easier Said

 

Than Done" also charted at #56 and inspired recordings by singers Maxine Brown, Sugar Pie

 

DeSanto and Barbara George. In 1964, after a meeting with Martin Luther King Jr, in a Harlem

 

supper club, Radcliffe was inspired and composed his ballad of freedom and equality "Stand

 

Up". Unreleased at the time, until the 2008 issue Where There Smoke There's Fire, the track

 

featured Radcliffe playing the vibes. Radcliffe was self-taught on the guitar, piano, bass,

 

vibes and drums, preferring to write using his Goya acoustic guitar because of its

 

portability.

 

Beginning in 1965, Radcliffe was the first African-American performing artist to write,

 

produce and sing commercial jingles for the advertising industry. By the time of his death,

 

he had worked on over two hundred television and radio commercials. Steve Karmen remembered

 

Radcliffe in the advertising industry: "Typically, Jim would be called to come to the studio

 

at a designated time, in most cases not even being told the name of the product he was to

 

sing about, then be given about five minutes to learn a song that he had never seen before

 

that moment, and was then expected to deliver the "soul" version of the commercial". A few

 

of Radcliffe's best known commercials are the 1969–70 Pontiac, "breakaway in a wide tracking

 

Pontiac", the 30-second commercial was expanded for general release to try to capitalize on

 

its popularity and was released as "Breakaway" by the Steve Karmen Big Band featuring Jimmy

 

Radcliffe; the soul version of McDonald's "You Deserve A Break Today" on YouTube (1971); and

 

the Clio Award-winning "Polaroid Gives It To You Now" (1971). The summer of 2011 has seen

 

the rise of two campaigns: the first, to make the Radcliffe-Diamond song "You're The Salt Of

 

The Earth Pal" the advertising "sound brand identity" theme for Salt Lake City's Tourism

 

Bureau in Utah and the second, to have Jimmy's "I'm Gonna Find a Cave" song accepted as the

 

international "Man caves" Anthem.

 

Radcliffe's recordings have appeared in films such as Radley Metzger's 1967's Carmen Baby,

 

Allen Funt's What Do You Say to a Naked Lady? (1970), Gerald Potterton's Tiki Tiki (1971)

 

wherein he was backed by Cissy Houston, Whitney Houston's mother on a gospel recording.

 

"Eve's Bayou" (1997), The Tenants starring Snoop Dogg and Dylan McDermott (2005), the 2006

 

romantic drama Something New starring Sanaa Lathan and Simon Baker and 2010's Soulboy a film

 

about Northern soul.

 

A part of Radcliffe's career often overlooked was his work as a songwriter, record producer

 

and live performing artist. During his 14 years as a Brill Building, Tin Pan Alley

 

songwriter, his songs were recorded by numerous recording artists in varying styles of

 

music. In the early 1960s, Radcliffe was recognized for his 'message songs' about growing,

 

striving and surviving the realities of living in Harlem. The poignant evocative

 

storytelling of songs like "Three Rooms With Running Water", "My Block", "Deep in the Heart

 

of Harlem" and "Stand Up" spoke about personal and social issues. By the later 1960s his

 

live performances, in Greenwich Village, Amiri Baraka's Sister Kimako Baraka's Club CASBAH,

 

and guest appearances on television including like "Inside Bedford Stuyvesant" with such

 

friends as Richie Havens and poet Saundra Sharp, included protest sonsuch as like "1969" on

 

YouTube and "Insults" dealing with institutionalized social injustice and racism combined

 

with songs about Love.

 

Selected writing credits

The Andrews Sisters, "All The Colors of the Rainbow", Great Performers LP Dot Records-

 

#25807, 1967

Ray Charles, "Show Me The Sunshine", Love Country Style LP ABC-#707, 1970

Robert Goulet, "If There's A Way", Columbia single #44100, 1967

Johnny Mathis, "If There's A Way" on YouTube, Sings The Music of Bacharach & Kaempfert LP

 

1970 Columbia-#G-30350

Aretha Franklin, "Pullin'", Spirit In The Dark LP Atlantic-#SD8265, 1970

Carolyn Franklin, "Right On", Chain Reaction LP RCA Records-#LSP-4317, 1970

Etta James, "I Can't Hold It in Anymore" on YouTube, Argo Single#5437 was the B-side to

 

"Pushover", 1963

Lou Rawls, "The Devil in Your Eyes" on YouTube, "Something Stirring In My Soul", Carryin' On

 

LP Capitol Records-#ST2632, 1966

Eric Burdon & The Animals, "It's Been A Long Time Comin'", Eric Is Here LP 1967 MGM

Clyde McPhatter, "Deep In The Heart Of Harlem", "Three Rooms With Running Water", "My

 

Block", "A Suburban Town", Coney Island Mercury LP-#20902 & SR-60902, 1964

Jackie Wilson, "Soulville" Higher And Higher LP Brunswick Records-#BL754130, 1967 "The

 

Fairest Of Them All" Brunswick single#55300, 1966

Matt Monro, "Fourth Blue Monday", Capitol single#P-2058, 1967

The Chiffons, "My Block", #67 (as The Four Pennies) on Rust Single#5071, 1963

Patti Page, "Pretty Boy Lonely", #98 Columbia single#4-42671, 1963

Marlena Shaw, "Nothing But Tears", Out of a Different Bag LP Cadet Records-#LPS-803, 1967

Clara Ward, "If You Wanna Change The World", "Soul And Inspiration" LP Capitol #ST-126 Prod.

 

David Axelrod, Arr. & Cond. H.B. Barnum, 1969

The Clovers, "Sweet Side of a Soulful Woman" Josie Single#997, 1968

Connie Francis, "Saturday Nigh Knight" on YouTube

Esther Phillips, "Try Me" on YouTube, Atlantic single#2570, 1966

Jimmy Witherspoon, "Never Knew This Kind of Hurt Before" on YouTube, HUHN! LP 1970 Bluesway

 

Records-#BLS-6040

Johnny Maestro, "Never Knew This Kind of Hurt Before" on YouTube, Buddah single #201, 1970

Nancy Wilson, "I'm Your Special Fool", Nancy LP Capitol Records-#ST-148, 1969

The Essex, "She's Got Everything", #58 Roulett single#4530 1963

Bert Kaempfert & His Orchestra, "But Not Today", A Man Could Get Killed, Decca DL-74750

 

(1966) and Strangers in the Night, Decca DL-74795 (1966)

Chet Baker, "But Not Today", Mariachi Brass – Double Shout World Pacific-#1852, 1967

Johnny Nash, "How Do I Say I Love You", Studio Time LP ABC Records-#ABCS-383, 1961

Tammy Montgomery (later Tammi Terrell), "This Time Tomorrow" Checker single#1072, 1964

The Hourglass (aka The Allman Bros), "Nothing But Tears", The Hour Glass LP Liberty

 

Records-#56002, 1967

The Banana Splits, "Adam Had'em", "I'm Gonna Find a Cave" "Don' Go Away Go-Go Girl" "The

 

Show Must Go On", "Soul", We're The Banana Splits LP Decca DL-75075, 1968

The Harlem Globetrotters (cartoon television series)

The Fourmost, "My Block", First And Foremost LP Parlophone PMC 1259, Produced by George

 

Martin, 1965

Tom Jones, "It's Been A Long Time Comin'", A-Tom-Ic Jones LP Decca Records-#SKL-4743, 1966

Helen Shapiro, "Forget About The Bad Things", Columbia single#DB7810, 1966

Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers, "Three Rooms With Running Water", Parolophone

 

single#R5259 (UK) Amy single#930 (US), 1965

Gene Pitney, "Lyda Sue, Wha'dya Do", Meets The Fair Ladies of Folkland LP Musicor-#MM2007,

 

1964

Billy Lee Riley, "I'm Gonna Find A Cave", Crescendo single#371, 1966

Bobby Lewis, "Intermission", Beltone single#B2035, 1963

Adam Wade, "It's Been A Long Time Comin'" Epic single#5-9771, 1965 and "A Man Alone" Epic

 

single#5-10112,

Gloria Lynne, "Speaking of Happiness", "Love Child" and "Livin' The Life of Love"

Lou Monte, "All for the Kids", RCA single#47-9405, 1967

Vaughn Meader, "The Elephant Song", MGM single#K-13169, 1963

Arthur Prysock, "Don't You Ever Feel Sorry", In A Mood LP 1966 Old Town Records-#2010

P. J. Proby, "I Love Therefore I Am", Liberty Records EP-#LEP2229, 1965

Julie London, "Treat Me Good", With Body And Soul LP 1967 Liberty Records-#3514

Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters, "The Truth Hurts (But Not As Much as You Lies)", Cry Baby And

 

11 Other Hits LP United Artists-#UAL3305, 1963 and Veep single#1252, 1967

Miki Dallon, "I'm Gonna Find A Cave", Strike single#306 (Spain) Picture Sleeve RCA

 

single#3-10163, 1966

The Sorrows, "I'm Gonna Find A Cave", Take A Heart CD, 2000

Gina Sicilia "Try Me", Allow Me To Confess CD Swing Nation, 2007

Girl Trouble, "Gonna Find A Cave", Sub Pop 200, 1988

Mr. T Experience, "Don't Go Away Go-Go Girl", Big Black Bugs Bleed Blue Blood CD

Kristina Train, "If You Want Me", Split Milk CD 2009 Blue Note

Rattlin Bone "Speaking Of Happiness" (2010)

 

Radcliffe's songs have appeared in films and television dating back to 1965's Anthony

 

Perkins thriller The Fool Killer, A Man Could Get Killed, which featured "Strangers in the

 

Night" and "But Not Today" on YouTube as the main themes, The Banana Splits Adventure Hour

 

(1968–70), The Harlem Globetrotters (1970–72), Se7en (1995), U Turn (1997), La Bande Du

 

Drugstore (2002) featuring "Try Me", Third Watch (1999–2005), Sleeper Cell (2005–06) and

 

LION (2016).[2]

 

As a record producer Radcliffe produced the original demo of the song "It's My Party".[3]

 

While acting as A&R director of Musicor Records he signed The Intruders who released the

 

single "But You Belong To Me" b/w "Jack Be Nimble" and pop group The Critters, producing the

 

latter's first release "Georgianna" b/w "I'm Gonna Give" in 1964 before they moved over to

 

Kapp Records. Also in 1964, Radcliffe produced a record for the soul group The Relatives

 

that featured the song "Hadn't Been For Baby", which he co-wrote with Billy Edd Wheeler.

 

Radcliffe was also label-mate Gene Pitney's recording manager. Having met years earlier,

 

before either had signed to Aaron Schroeder's publishing company, Radcliffe helped manage

 

which songs Pitney would record, and directed his recording sessions.

 

Radcliffe co-produced, with John Hammond, Pat Lundy's album Soul Aint Nothin' But The Blues

 

(1967) on Columbia Records and much of the material used on Carolyn Franklin, first three

 

albums for RCA Records. Radcliffe and Aretha Franklin co-produced the theme "Black Pride" on

 

YouTube, for the Jesse Jackson organized S.C.L.C. Black Expo in New York City in 1971.

 

Discography

 

Contemporary releases

 

Musicor Records

"Twist Calypso" (Phil Stern, Jimmy Radcliffe) / "Don't Look My Way" (Phil Stern, Jimmy

 

Radcliffe) Single# MU-1016, Produced by Aaron Schroeder and Wally Gold, 1962

"(There Goes) The Forgotten Man" (Hal David, Burt Bacharach) / "An Awful Lot of Cryin'"

 

(Buddy Kaye, Phil Springer) Single# MU1024, Side 'A' Produced by Aaron Schroeder and Wally

 

Gold, arranged & conducted by Burt Bacharach, Side 'B' Produced by Bert Berns. 1962

"Through a Long and Sleepless Night" (Mack Gordan, Alfred Newman) / "Moment of Weakness"

 

(Oramay Diamond, Jimmy Radcliffe) Single# MU-1033, Produced by Bert Berns. 1963

"Long After Tonight Is All Over" (Hal David, Burt Bacharach) / "What I Want I Can Never

 

Have" (Gloria Shayne) Single# MU1042, Produced by Bert Berns. Charted #40 UK Singles Chart

 

(Issued on Stateside Records #374)

 

Aurora Records

"My Ship Is Comin' In" (Joey Brooks) / "Goin' Where The Lovin' Is" (Joey Brooks, Aaron

 

Schroeder) Single# 154, Produced by Joey Brooks for Past, Present & Future Productions. 1965

 

Shout Records

"Lucky Old Sun" (Haven Gillespie, Beasley Smith) / "So Deep" (Bob Brass, Joey Brooks)

 

Single#202, Produced by Buddy Scott, Jimmy Radcliffe and Wally Gold for Past, Present &

 

Future Productions. Arranged & conducted by Bert Decoteaux. 1966

 

United Artists The Steve Karmen Big Band featuring Jimmy Radcliffe

"Breakaway" (Steve Karmen) / "Breakaway" Part 2 (Steve Karmen) Single# 50451 Produced &

 

arranged by Steve Karmen. 1968

 

RCA Records

"Funky Bottom Congregation" (Thommy Kaye) / "Lay A Little Lovin' On Me" (Buddy Scott, Jimmy

 

Radcliffe) Single# 74-0138, Produced, arranged and conducted by Jimmy Radcliffe for Super

 

Baby Cakes Productions. 1969

 

Selected discography of uncredited releases

 

Tollie Records

The B.R.A.T.T.S. (The Brotherhood for the R-establishment of American Top Ten Supremacy)

 

"Secret Weapon (The British Are Coming)" on YouTube (Arthur Korb) / "Jealous Kind of Woman"

 

(Carl Spencer) Single#9024, Produced by Wally Gold for Past, Present And Future Productions,

 

Arranged & conducted by Bob Halley. Vocals: Carl Spencer & Jimmy Radcliffe 1964

 

Musicor Records

Another great singer the Fabulous Patti Labelle from Philadelphia

 

Bought this autographed copy signed by Patti in her autobiography

titled " Don't Block the Blessings Hardcover – October 4, 1996

by Patti Labelle (Author)

 

Another great singer the Fabulous Patti Labelle from Philadelphia

 

Bought this autographed copy signed by Patti in her autobiography

titled " Don't Block the Blessings Hardcover – October 4, 1996

by Patti Labelle (Author)

  

Documentary on YouTube about her life and career.Patti is one of

the great singers and I highly recommend reading her autobiography.

She is one of classy ladies of soul and her dynamic and resilent

personality has kept her music and career in the spotlight with

many awards and acclaims.She is highly respected throughout the

music industry and loved by her fans throughout the world.

 

Brief documentary on Patti Labelle below on YouTube.

Check also on YouTube as I noted a few other documentaries

on her life and career.

  

www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJdhwMXVxJs

  

Patti LaBelle

  

Patti LaBelle (born Patricia Louise Holte; May 24, 1944)[1] is an American singer, actress, and

 

entrepreneur. LaBelle began her career in the early 1960s as lead singer and front woman of the

 

vocal group, Patti LaBelle and the Bluebelles. Following the group's name change to Labelle in

 

the early 1970s, they released the iconic disco song "Lady Marmalade" and the group later

 

became the first African-American vocal group to land the cover of Rolling Stone magazine.[1]

 

After the group split in 1976, LaBelle began a successful solo career, starting with her

 

critically acclaimed debut album, which included the career-defining song, "You Are My Friend".

 

LaBelle became a mainstream solo star in 1984 following the success of the singles, "If Only

 

You Knew", "New Attitude" and "Stir It Up", with the latter two crossing over to pop audiences

 

and becoming radio staples.[1]

 

Less than two years later, in 1986, LaBelle scored with the number-one album, Winner in You and

 

the number-one duet single, "On My Own", with Michael McDonald. LaBelle eventually won a 1992

 

Grammy for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance for her 1991 album, Burnin', followed by a second

 

Grammy win for the live album, Live! One Night Only. Her 1990s albums, Burnin', Gems (1994) and

 

Flame (1997), continued her popularity with young R&B audiences throughout the decade.

 

Following the release of two mildly receptive solo albums in the early new millennium, she

 

reunited with her Labelle band mates for the album, Back to Now, followed by a briefly well

 

received promotional tour.[1] LaBelle's success has extended as an actress with a notable role

 

in the film, A Soldier's Story, and in TV shows such as A Different World and American Horror

 

Story: Freak Show. In 1992, LaBelle starred in her own TV sitcom, Out All Night. A decade

 

later, LaBelle hosted her own lifestyle TV show, Living It Up with Patti LaBelle on TV One. In

 

2015, LaBelle took part in the dance competition, Dancing with the Stars.

 

In a career that has spanned fifty years, she has sold more than 50 million records worldwide.

 

LaBelle has been inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and the

 

Apollo Theater Hall of Fame. LaBelle was included in Rolling Stone on their list of 100

 

Greatest Singers.[2][3] LaBelle is commonly identified as the "Godmother of Soul".[4] LaBelle

 

is a dramatic soprano and is noted for her vocal power, range and emotive delivery.[5][6][7]

 

She also has a cake named "Patti LaBelle's Fancy Cake".

  

Early life and career[edit]

 

Patti LaBelle and the Bluebelles[edit]

 

LaBelle was born Patricia Louise Holte on May 24, 1944, in the Eastwick section of Southwest

 

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She was the second youngest child of Henry and Bertha Holte's three

 

children, and the next-to-youngest of five children overall. Her siblings were Thomas Hogan Jr.

 

(b. 1930), Vivian Hogan (1932-1975), Barbara (1942-1982) and Jacqueline "Jackie" (1945-1989).

 

[8] Her father was a railroad worker and club performer and her mother was a domestic. Despite

 

enjoying her childhood, LaBelle would later write in her memoirs, Don't Block the Blessings,

 

that her parents' marriage was abusive. Shortly after her parents' divorce, when Patti was

 

twelve, she was sexually molested by a family friend. Patti joined a local church choir at the

 

Beulah Baptist Church at ten and performed her first solo two years later. While she was

 

growing up, she listened to secular music styles such as R&B and jazz music as well. When she

 

was sixteen, she won a talent competition at her high school, John Bartram High School. This

 

success led to Patti forming her first singing group, the Ordettes, in 1960, with schoolmates

 

Jean Brown, Yvonne Hogen and Johnnie Dawson.[9] The group, with Patti as front woman, became a

 

local attraction until two of its members left to marry, while another was kicked out of the

 

group by her religious father.[10] In 1962, the Ordettes included three new members, Cindy

 

Birdsong, Sarah Dash and Nona Hendryx, the latter two girls having sung for another now defunct

 

vocal group.[10] That year, they auditioned for local record label owner Harold Robinson.

 

Robinson agreed to work with the group after Patti began singing the song "I Sold My Heart to

 

the Junkman". Initially Robinson was dismissive of Patti due to his feeling Patti was "too dark

 

and too plain".[10]

 

Shortly after signing them, he had them record as the Blue Belles and they were selected to

 

promote the recording of "I Sold My Heart to the Junkman", which had been recorded by The

 

Starlets, but was assigned as a Blue Belles single due to label conflict.[10] The Starlets'

 

manager sued Harold Robinson after the Blue Belles were seen performing a lip-synching version

 

of the song on American Bandstand.[10] After settling out of court, Robinson altered the

 

group's name to "Patti LaBelle and The Blue Belles".[10] Initially, a Billboard ad cited the

 

group as "Patti Bell and the Blue Bells".[11] In 1963, the group scored their first hit single

 

with the ballad "Down the Aisle" which became a crossover top 40 hit on the Billboard pop and

 

R&B charts after King Records issued it. Later in the year, they recorded their rendition of

 

the "You'll Never Walk Alone"; the single was later re-released on Cameo-Parkway Records where

 

the group scored a second hit on the pop charts with the song in 1964. Another charted single,

 

"Danny Boy", was released that same year. In 1965, after Cameo-Parkway folded, the group moved

 

to New York and signed with Atlantic Records where they recorded twelve singles for the label,

 

including the mildly charted singles "All or Nothing" and "Take Me for a Little While". The

 

group's Atlantic tenure included their rendition of "Over the Rainbow" and a version of the

 

song "Groovy Kind of Love". In 1967, Birdsong left the group to join The Supremes and by 1970

 

the group had been dropped from Atlantic Records as well as by their longtime manager Bernard

 

Montague.

 

That year, Vicki Wickham, producer of the UK music show Ready, Steady, Go, agreed to manage the

 

group after Dusty Springfield mentioned signing them. Wickham's first direction for the group

 

was for them to change their name to simply Labelle and advised the group to renew their act,

 

going for a more homegrown look and sound that reflected funk, rock and psychedelic soul. In

 

1971, the group opened for The Who in several stops on the group's U.S. tour.

  

Main article: Label

 

Labelle signed with the Warner Music imprint Track Records and released their self-titled debut

 

album in 1971. The record's psychedelic soul sound and its blending of rock and soul rhythms

 

was a departure from the group's early sound. That same year, they sang background vocals on

 

Laura Nyro's album, Gonna Take a Miracle. A year later, in 1972, the group released Moon

 

Shadow, which repeated the homegrown gritty sound of the previous album. In 1973, influenced by

 

glam rockers David Bowie and Elton John, Wickham had the group dressed in silver space suits

 

and luminescent makeup.[12]

 

After their third successive album, Pressure Cookin', failed to generate a hit, Labelle signed

 

with Epic Records in 1974, releasing their most successful album to date, with Nightbirds,

 

which blended soul, funk and rock music, thanks to the work of the album's producer, Allen

 

Toussaint. The single, "Lady Marmalade", would become their biggest-selling single, going

 

number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and selling over a million copies, as did Nightbirds, which

 

later earned a RIAA gold award, for sales of a million units. In October 1974, Labelle made pop

 

history by becoming the first rock and roll vocal group to perform at the Metropolitan Opera

 

House.[13] Riding high on the success of "Lady Marmalade" and the Nightbirds album, Labelle

 

made the cover of Rolling Stone in 1975.

 

Labelle released two more albums, Phoenix and Chameleon in 1975 and 1976, respectively. While

 

both albums continued the group's critical success, none of the singles issued on those albums

 

ever crossed over to the pop charts. By 1976, Patti, Nona and Sarah began arguing over the

 

group's musical direction. Personal difficulties came to a head during a show on December 16,

 

1976, in Baltimore, Maryland, where Hendryx went backstage and injured herself during a nervous

 

breakdown. Following the incident, LaBelle advised that the group separate.

 

Solo career[edit]

 

Early solo career (1977–1984)[edit]

 

Signing a solo contract with Epic Records in 1977, she recruited David Rubinson, producer of

 

Chameleon, to record her self-titled debut album, which was released that year. The album was

 

noted for the disco hits, "Joy to Have Your Love" and "Dan Swit Me" and the gospel ballad, "You

 

Are My Friend", the latter song becoming her first career-defining single despite its low entry

 

on the R&B chart. Three more albums were released in succession on Epic through 1980, with the

 

songs "Eyes in the Back of My Head", "Little Girls", "Music is My Way of Life", "Come What

 

May", "Release (The Tension)" and "I Don't Go Shopping" (the latter song co-written by Peter

 

Allen) being the most successful.

 

After four albums on Epic, LaBelle signed with Philadelphia International Records where she

 

recorded her career-defining version of "Over the Rainbow" on the album The Spirit's in It. In

 

1982, she was featured on the Grover Washington duet "The Best Is Yet to Come", and earned

 

accolades that year for starring in the Broadway musical Your Arms Too Short to Box with God.

 

"The Best Is Yet to Come" later earned LaBelle her first Grammy Award nomination. In 1983,

 

LaBelle released her breakthrough album I'm in Love Again which included her first top ten R&B

 

singles, with "Love, Need and Want You" and "If Only You Knew", the latter song also becoming

 

her first number-one single as a solo artist in early 1984. Later in 1984, she scored another

 

hit with Bobby Womack on the song "Love Has Finally Come at Last" and appeared as a club singer

 

in the film A Soldier's Story.

 

Crossover success (1984–2009)[edit]

     

LaBelle promoting AIDS awareness in the 1980s

In 1984, LaBelle recorded the songs "New Attitude" and "Stir It Up" for the soundtrack to the

 

Eddie Murphy film, Beverly Hills Cop. Following the release of the film, "New Attitude" was

 

released as a single in late 1984 and became LaBelle's first crossover solo hit, reaching

 

number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 and becoming a signature song. "Stir It Up" found similar

 

success on pop radio and as a staple in dance clubs. In 1985, LaBelle performed on the TV

 

special, Motown Returns to Apollo and also as part of the all-star benefit concert, Live Aid.

 

LaBelle's notoriety from performing on these two specials made her a pop star and led to having

 

her own television special later that same year. Also in the same year, a video of a

 

performance from her tour of that year was issued on VHS. During this period, LaBelle ended her

 

contractual obligations to Philadelphia International and signed with MCA Records.

 

In 1986, LaBelle released her best-selling solo album to date with Winner in You with the album

 

reaching number one on the pop charts. The album included the international number-one hit, "On

 

My Own" and the hit ballad "Oh People". The success of Winner in You would prove to be the peak

 

of her solo success, though she continued her acclaim with the 1989 release of Be Yourself,

 

which featured "Yo Mister" and the hit ballad "If You Asked Me To", which found bigger success

 

in a remake by singer Celine Dion. In the year of that album's release, LaBelle began a

 

successful stint in a recurring role on A Different World, the success of which spawned a brief

 

sitcom of her own, titled Out All Night, which only lasted a season. In 1991, she recorded a

 

hit duet version of the Babyface composition, "Superwoman" with Gladys Knight and Dionne

 

Warwick. The trio had previously appeared in the Sisters in the Name of Love TV special in

 

1987. The same year of the release of "Superwoman", LaBelle issued the solo album, Burnin',

 

which went gold, with three successive top five singles on the R&B charts. This success led to

 

LaBelle winning her first Grammy Award in the Best Female R&B Vocal Performance category in the

 

34th Annual Grammy Award Ceremony of 1992, sharing the win with singer Lisa Fischer, who won

 

for her hit ballad, "How Can I Ease the Pain", in a rare tie in the history of the Grammys.[14]

 

LaBelle's 1994 album, Gems, also went gold and featured the hit, "The Right Kinda Lover". Three

 

years after that, LaBelle released the album, Flame, which included the dance hit, "When You

 

Talk About Love". LaBelle released her best-selling memoirs, Don't Block the Blessings, in

 

1996, and released the first of five best-selling cookbooks in 1997. In 1998, she released the

 

live album, Live! One Night Only, later resulting in a second Grammy win the following

 

February. It remains her most recent Grammy win. In 2000, LaBelle released her final MCA album,

 

When a Woman Loves, before signing with Def Soul Classics to release the 2004 album, Timeless

 

Journey. Following the release of her 2005 covers album, Classic Moments, LaBelle engaged in a

 

rivalry with Antonio "L.A." Reid over the direction of her career, leading to her leaving the

 

label.[15]In the same year, the World Music Awards recognized her years in the music business

 

by awarding her the Legend Award. In 2006, she released her first gospel album, The Gospel

 

According to Patti LaBelle on the Bungalo label, the album later peaking at number one on

 

Billboard's gospel chart.[16] LaBelle also released the book, Patti's Pearls, during this

 

period. She returned to Def Jam in 2007 and released her second holiday album, Miss Patti's

 

Christmas. In 2008, LaBelle briefly reunited with Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash as Labelle on the

 

group's first new album in more than 30 years, Back to Now.

 

Later career (2010–present)[edit]

     

LaBelle singing at a Obama presidential campaign, 2008 event

On September 14, 2010, LaBelle made a return two decades after her last Broadway performance to

 

star in the award-winning musical Fela![18] about Afrobeat legend Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. LaBelle

 

replaced Tony Award-nominee Lillias White as Fela's mother, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, and

 

remained with the production through the end of its run on January 2, 2011.[19]

 

On May 23, 2011, LaBelle appeared on "Oprah's Farewell Spectacular, Part 1" the first show in a

 

series of three shows constituting the finale of The Oprah Winfrey Show, singing "Over the

 

Rainbow" with Josh Groban.[20] LaBelle was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the

 

BET Awards on June 26, 2011.[21] LaBelle and Aretha Franklin, among others, performed at the

 

"Women of Soul: In Performance at the White House" concert hosted by President Barack Obama at

 

the White House, recorded on March 6, 2014.[22]

 

On June 10, 2014, LaBelle returned to Broadway as the cast and creative team of the Tony

 

Award-nominated smash hit Broadway musical After Midnight, welcomed her as "Special Guest

 

Star".[23] In August 2014, it was announced that LaBelle would appear in a guest role on the

 

upcoming fourth season of the FX horror anthology television series American Horror Story,

 

subtitled Freak Show.[24]

 

On February 24, 2015, LaBelle was announced as one of the celebrities who would compete on the

 

20th season of Dancing with the Stars.[25] She partnered with professional dancer Artem

 

Chigvintsev.[26] The couple was eliminated on Week 6 and finished in eighth place.[27] LaBelle

 

has consistently toured the United States selling out shows in various markets. In 2012 and

 

2014 she appeared with Frankie Beverly & Maze on cross-country USA tours. In 2015 LaBelle made

 

a guest appearance on Fox's television series Empire as herself.[28]

 

She is scheduled to be a "key advisor" on the NBC series The Voice

Her first jazz album, Bel Hommage, was released in 2017

 

Personal life

 

LaBelle later accounted in her memoirs that she was sexually assaulted by Jackie Wilson while

 

at the Brooklyn Fox Theatre in the 1960s. Around 1964, LaBelle was engaged to Otis Williams,

 

founding member of The Temptations. In 1969, LaBelle married a longtime friend, Armstead

 

Edwards. After LaBelle started a solo career, Edwards became her manager until the couple

 

separated in the late 1990s. In 2000, the couple announced they had legally separated. Three

 

years later, their divorce was finalized. They have a son, Zuri Kye Edwards (born 1973), who is

 

now her current manager. Through Zuri, LaBelle is a grandmother of two. In addition to Zuri,

 

LaBelle has two people in her life who are like sons to her, Dodd and Stanley. LaBelle came to

 

know them after the death of their mother, Veaunita, a neighborhood acquaintance.

 

In 1975, her eldest sister Vivian Hogan Rogers died of lung cancer at 43. In 1982, she lost her

 

second-eldest sister, Barbara Holte Purifoy, to colon cancer at 40. In October 1978, she lost

 

her mother, Bertha, to diabetes.[31] In 1989, she lost her father Henry to emphysema brought on

 

by complications of Alzheimer's disease and her youngest sister, Jacqueline "Jackie" Holte

 

Padgett, to lung cancer. Like Vivian, Jackie was also only 43 when she died. LaBelle dedicated

 

her album, Burnin' and her rendition of "Wind Beneath My Wings" in her 1991/92 concert tour to

 

Padgett. After burying Padgett, LaBelle shot the music video to "If You Asked Me To". LaBelle

 

said because of her family dying early, she felt she wouldn't make it to 50 and said she felt

 

her life was born anew after reaching that age. In 1995, LaBelle was diagnosed with diabetes.

 

LaBelle has a home in the Philadelphia suburb of Wynnewood and also has condos in Los Angeles

 

and in the Bahamas.

   

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