Marriage of Robert Williams and Marion Pauline, 1898

Agassiz Record, 28 Jan 1898 page 1

Here’s to you, Bob

The Purser of the “International” married at Victoria

The marriage of Mr Robt H Williams of Kaslo, formerly of Hereford, Eng, to Marion, the seventh daughter of Mr Frederick Pauline of Oak Bay, was solemnized in Christ Church cathedral last evening, Rev Cannon Beanlands officiating, says the Victoria Colonist of last Thursday.  The bride was attended by her younger sister, Miss Nettie Pauline and by Miss Rita Gardiner, the bride’s little nephew, Master Fred C Pauline, acting as page. After the ceremony the young couple repaired to the residence of Mr CF Gardiner of Labouchere street, where they received the hearty congratulations of their numerous friends and many presents.  Mr and Mrs Williams left for a tour of the Sound cities before taking up residence at Kaslo.

Kathleen Paulin, Victoria, 1961

Victoria Daily Colonist, 26 April 1961 page 15

Robin Wood Presents Prize at Sunday Tea

The executive of the Royal Schools of Music Association arranged a tea Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr and Mrs JL Kennaugh, 2840 Lincoln Road, when special guests were Mr Robin Wood, who has now returned to England, and Miss Carol Brown, winner of the association’s book prize in the Victoria Music Festival.

Following the welcome by president, Miss Elsie Friend, Mr Wood presented the prize to Miss Borwn, after which she played several selections.

Tea was served with Miss Helen Gibson presiding at the table.  Other guests were Mrs RT Andrews, Mrs FJ Ashford, Mrs JH Doughty, Mrs D Macdonald, Mrs JC Ratcliffe, Mrs M Jorre de St Jorre, and the Misses Mary Adamson, Carol Brown, Gladys Hewlings, Winnifred Jeffery, Elise le Gresley, Mary Munn, Kathleen Paulin, Marjorie Tabo, Margery Vaughan, JF Wilkinson, Carol Wootton and Messrs Erid Edwards and Michael Kennaugh.

Obituary – Charlotte Mary Pauline, 1952

Nanaimo Daily Times, 29 July 1952 page 2

Mrs Mary Pauline Taken by Death

Victoria – Charlotte Mary Pauline, 91, wife of Frederick Arthur Pauline, retired BC Agent-General to London, died here Monday.

Born near Aldershot, Eng., she was the daughter of Mr and Mrs George Mesher, who came here to live. She was married in Victoria in 1890.

She is survived by one son, four grandchildren and two great grandchildren, and three sisters.

Farewell to a Friend, Irving Cormack, 1997

Times Colonist, 28 August 1997

Farewell to a Friend

The Victoria Real Estate Board’s Classic Boat Festival lost a charter member on April 21, when Thomas Irvine Cormack passed away.  Irv “completed his watch” quietly in his sleep on board his beloved classic the MV Hulakai.

Irv was one of the founders of this festival in 1978 and its appropriate to honour his memory on this, its 20th anniversary.  For the past several years, Irv generously made Hulakai available as the festival committee boat.  His ready smile and warm hospitality will be sorely missed by everyone.

Irv Cormack was one of a kind.  All who knew him and respected and admired his forthrightness, honesty and devotion.  He loved the sea, his vessel and the West Coats.  The HUlakai was a familiar sight nesting at anchor in secluded bays from Seattle to Desolation Sound.

We will all keep a lookout on behalf of Irv as we cruise the Coast and will miss his friendly radio call from the Hulakai.

In honour of Irv, affectionately known as the “voice of the festival parade” the festival committee has introduced a new trophy this year: The Irv Cormack Memorial Award for the best power boat built prior to 1940.Irv Cormack

Benjamin Bantly Concert, 1935

Monrovia News, 9 December 1935

Local Orchestra will be heard Friday Night

A distinctive musical event occurs locally Friday night when the Community Symphony Orchestra will play the first performance anywhere in the world of a composition by Benedict Bantly, concertmaster of the orchestra, “Valse Grotesque”.  Mr Bantly wrote the composition a number of years ago for the piano solo and used it as such in concert appearances throughout Germany and England.

Recently he has rewritten the number as an orchestral composition, and in this arrangement the valse will be given its first hearing Friday night of this week.  The number is scored for a very rich instrumentation – the usual strings and the brasses and woodwinds plus bass clarinet and an extensive battery of percussion instruments including typani, side drum, bass drum, cymbals, triangle, tom-tom, Chinese gong and tambourine.  A number of Mr Bantly’s friends from his home community, Puente, are planning to attend the concert.

Other numbers on the program include the Largo from Dvorak’s “New World Sympathy”.  Tschaikowsky’s [sic] ever popular “Nutcracker Suite” and Bizet’s second suite from the incidental music to Daudet’s “L’Arlesienne”.  In the minuet movement of this suite.  Miss Margerete Weigel will play the famous flute solo.

An additional number which will move the great charm is a quartet by Mozart for flute, violin, viola and cello.  This number will be played by Messrs Fitzgerald, Bantly, Scott and Riley.

Benjamin Bantly Recital, 1926

Daily Santa Maria Times, 25 October 1926

Recital will be Attraction Wednesday

The recital at the Presbyterian church Wednesday evening will give the people of Santa Maria an opportunity to hear again a large number of their favorite local singers and musicians and also a recent accession to the musical circles of the community in the person of Mr Benedict Bantly.  Mr Bantly is a gifted musician who has had the best training and a long and varied experience in his profession.

As the family have become permanent residents of the community a few words introducing them to the people of Santa Maria will be of general interest. Mr Bantly is a native son, born in Lassen County, of naturalized German parents.  At an early age he became a resident of Victoria, BC, by the removal of the family to that city.  Here he passed through the high school and pursued musical studies from childhood, giving early evidence of unusual promise.  Victoria is an old and cultured city, offering many advantages to the student of music, of which the young enthusiast availed himself fully.  But the time came when he felt the need of larger opportunities, and soon after becoming of age he went to Germany, where he pursued his studies for four years, in the Royal Conservatory of Music in Leipsic.

This institution is one of the most famous music schools in Europe, founded in 1843 by the great Mendelsohn.  Here Mr Bantley studied the violin under Arthur Nikisch, a renowned orchestra conductor, at the time head of the school.  He studied the piano under equally good teachers.  It was his honor to be chosen for one of Europe’s greatest musical organizations, the famous Gewandhaus orchestra, where he played under Nikisch.

Upon his graduation, he returned to Victoria, and founded the Bantly School of Music, which he conducted for fifteen years, quite a number of his pupils having since attained high rank in their calling.  During this time he was organist in St Andrew’s Cathedral.

In 1922, desiring a change of climate, moved by the lure of California, the family broke the social ties and sacrificed their business interests, and came to Los Angeles.  The next year, at the solicitation of the Puente school board, Mr Bantly became head of the musical department.  His acceptance of this work in our own school occasioned universal regret, both in the Puente school and community.

While Mr Bantly was in Leipsic he met a young lady student of the same institution.  A romance developed and their marriage followed.  Mrs Bantly is an accomplished musician also, and collaborates with her husband, teaching voice and piano.

At the concert Wednesday evening Mr Bantly will play and Mrs Bantly will sing.  The recital promises to be of unusual interest.

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