Allison Beresford Connell  2025 avis de deces  NecroCanada

Allison Beresford Connell 2025

Parcourez la nécrologie de Allison Beresford Connell 2025 résidant dans la province Nouveau-Brunswick pour le détail des funérailles

Allison’s Obituary
Allison Beresford Connell
June 3rd 1931 February 20th 2025
Dr. Allison Beresford Connell of 139 Connell Street, Woodstock, NB. Canada was born to Allison Beresford Connell and Katharine Mabon Connell (Née Jarvis) in Sioux Lookout, Ontario On June 3rd 1931.
Sioux Lookout was then a small CNR Railway town in north west Ontario. It is located on a clay enclave some 20 kms in length left by the retreating glaciers amongst the countless chains of lakes scattered across the Precambrian landscape of the Canadian Shield. Allison, as a boy, ran in smoked moose skin moccasins on snow shoes through crystal clear cold winters. He Infused the smells of the boreal forest, its sounds, its storms, great rocky outcrops, the colours and textures of blue sky summers where the never ending high northwest winds blow down Lac Seul. There, the snapping of canvas, distant rumble of rapids or breaking of waves stirred the dreams of his campsite slumbers throughout those early years.
The North claimed him like a jealous lover to whom he willingly submitted, such was her beauty. Again and again throughout his life he returned to her boreal bosom to once more drink its waters, breathe its air, paddle over her lakes or ramble on her rugged ridges. This would be the formation, basis, education and compass of Allison’s future life and work.
At the age of ten, his father and mother moved the family, now complete with a younger sister and two much younger brothers, to Woodstock, N.B. where the family’s roots reached back to the loyalist incursion. As he had never seen sidewalks he soon learned the ways of a bustling town with both CPR and CNR trains, two sawmills, a woollen mill, a wood working factory an Island Park and a creek lined with leaky canoes under the shade of willows and elms.
Allison learned to play the piano and love Chopin under the guidance of Mrs True a few doors away. He completed High School at the LP Fisher Memorial High School under a modified British curriculum in 1948. There he became attracted to Latin and went on to further his studies in languages and complete a Bachelor of Arts with a major in French Literature at Mount Allison University in 1952.
Encouraged to extend his studies he was accepted at the University of Paris. He pursued his doctorate on the works of translator and literary figure Valery Larbeau. Subsequently deepening his engagement with French literature and its civilization. His second great love.
The highly urbane world of postwar France with its vibrant café life, bookshops, theatres, cinéma venues, art galleries all riddled through with political activism comprising an intellectual life where everything and anything was discussed with candour and vigour drew Allison in like a moth to a lamp.
The multi-cultural cafés of Boulevard St. Michel were in constant ferment; Vietnamiens, Malians, Senegalese, Mauritians students from the entire French Colonial world were all there searching for new political possibilities for their homelands. Allison captivated, rapidly mastered the language in all its nuances and was introduced, through his fellow students and colleagues, to those special little restaurants, theatres, the history of the city, its pitfalls and quartiers with their ever so subtle cultural effervesences. Voila! a francophile…and for the rest of his life he was caught in a tug of war between the love of our north and the many faces of French culture. This foundation would later stimulate his environmental activities in Canada.
In the spring of 1956 he obtained his Doctorate from the University of Paris and returned to instruct French at Mount Allison University for a year. The following semester he took a position as Assistant professor of French Literature at United College (later to become the University of Winnipeg) where he remained until 1964.
Offered a position as a Professor in the Department of Romance languages at the University of Alberta in Edmonton in the fall of 1964, he accepted. At U of A Edmonton he was able to spread his wings with the ample budgets the department commanded. He and his colleagues established if not the best French library in Canada one of the best. Consequently students from France began arriving in Edmonton to access this resource.
As he put down roots in Edmonton, he and historian Stuart McKinnon began exploring fur trading routes established by the North West Company. These excursions led them to the Churchill River system, Reindeer lake and its vicinity and north into Neultin Lake on the boundary of the North West Territories and Manitoba. Allison established friends and contacts at Pelican Narrows from where he flew out to an Island that he established as base camp for several summers. There he prepared his courses for the following semester. It was during these sojourns that he read and became influenced by social ecologists Arnie Ness, Aldo Leopold, Murray Bookchin, E F Schumacher and others in the nascent green movement. His reconnection to the north and his roots there were now sealed.
In Edmonton living on the edge of a beautiful ravine which opened onto the North Saskatchewan River he had an idea. He and many neighbouring citizens gathered, and together cobbled a plan to bring the wild back to their urban North Saskatchewan shores, then lobbied the city government to have wood, ravine and shore preserved as a park. They were successful and to this day the extensive park along the River is much used by quail, ducks, geese and loved by the citizens of Edmonton. He became an early member of the Saskatchewan Environmental Society and supported their anti-uranium mining efforts. His engagement in the environmental movement was now a central part of his life.
In 1980 Allison resigned from the University of Alberta to return to Woodstock to assist his father at the family home. After so many years in the west where buildings of architectural interest are rare he turned his eye on the visual wealth of eighteenth and nineteenth century buildings in Woodstock. He and several colleagues subsequently published an informative and thoroughly engaging book “ A View of Woodstock – Historic Homes of the Nineteenth Century”.
Since his youth Allison carried on a lively correspondence with his Aunt Lucy Jarvis a co-founder of the University of New Brunswick Art Centre. Lucy, a lively animator of the arts, sensed in Allison an expansive young mind with sensitive, original reactions to landscape, music and poetry. She did her utmost to cultivate that relationship and kept the fire stoked with volleys of exchanges. So full of ideas those letters…they could be powerful, scathing and sublime across a few paragraphs. He reciprocated; the resulting dozens of letters formed the basis of a biography of Lucy’s life. They were assembled as the core of Roslyn Rosenfeld’s history of Lucy Jarvis’s painting career “Even Stones Have Life” , published in 2016.
Allison and others in Woodstock were instrumental in creating a trail around the Broadway side of the Meduxnekeaq River which joined the old railway bed of the CNR and allowed for extended access up the river. He was an active member in the Sustainable Energy Group, The Green Party of N.B. and participated in The Society of Friends in both Woodstock and Houlton Maine.
Allison rallied in a final effort to publish, with the unfailing support of Keith Helmuth and Chapel Street Editions, his last academic work “The Translations of Valery Larbaud – A Model of Literary Exploration”.
A gentle humanist Allison worked for a world in harmony with its labyrinthine ecosystems.
He died quietly on February 20, 2025 at The Carleton Manor with the sounds of Chopin in his ear.
The deceased is survived by his sister Lucy Jarvis Dyer of Fredericton N.B., brothers John Edward Connell, of Hobe Sound, Florida USA, Mark Dibblee Connell of Markhamville, N.B. cousins Katie FitzRandolf and William Jarvis, nieces Akoulina Katharine Connell, Rachel Renée Connell, Sophie Arabella Jeanne Connell and nephews Christoper Connell, Kenneth Connell and their many offspring.
Resting at the Scott Funeral Home, 815 Main Street, Woodstock, NB.
Funeral Arrangements are not completed at this time.
www.scottfh.com
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2025

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Décès pour la Ville Woodstock, Province Nouveau-Brunswick

avis deces Allison Beresford Connell 2025

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Nous offrons nos condoléances à tous ceux qui ont souffert de quelque manière que ce soit au cours de l'année écoulée. Cette période a été extrêmement difficile et nous espérons que 2025 apportera un répit bienvenu dans le deuil et la souffrance. Nos pensées sont avec vous alors que nous nous tournons vers ce que la nouvelle année apportera. Nous vous souhaitons paix et joie en 2025.Sincèrement,Dany, DOM, Luc, Mary et NecroCanada.com
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