File:Architectural drawing of the west entrance of the University of British Columbia Library, December 1928 (AL+CA 820).jpg

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English: Architectural drawing of the west entrance of the University of British Columbia Library, December 1928   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
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Title
English: Architectural drawing of the west entrance of the University of British Columbia Library, December 1928
Description
English:

Caption on image: West Front, The Library, University of British Columbia. John Ridington, Dec. '28


Filed in British Columbia--University of British Columbia

John Ridington was born in West Ham, London, England on April 1868, the son of William Richard Ridington, a building contractor, and his wife Cecilia James Eleanor. He was the eighth of nine children. Four of his sisters died in infancy before his own birth. The three who survived all married. They were Jane Ennor (Mrs. Alexander H. Guest), 1852-1942; Elizabeth Symons (Mrs. Joseph Henry Williams), 1856-1941; and Rosina Symons (Mrs. John Ellis Griffith), 1862- 1939). The ninth child and John Ridington's only brother was William Richards Ridington, 1870-1944. The details of John Ridington's education are not known. In later life he claimed to have been a student a the London School of Art and at the University of London; he also received training for a career in teaching. William Richards Ridington emigrated to Canada in the spring of 1889 bringing his wife, two sons. The three sisters remained in England. On April 25th they sailed from Liverpool aboard the S.S. Parisian, arriving at Quebec City on May 5th. Then the travelled by train to Birtle, Manitoba, where he took up farming, and opened a carpenter's shop in Foxwarren. John Ridington was employed as a school teacher in rural schools of northwestern Manitoba, first in the summer of 1889 at Burdette, later at Rookhurst. In January 1896 John Ridington became the publisher and editor of the Carberry News. On November 6th of the same year he married Maggie Dykes Charleston. When fire destroyed the press early in 1901, he sold his interest in the paper and moved to Winnipeg where he became "special reporter, dramatic and art critic, and editorial writer" for the Manitoba Free Press, under the editorship of J.W. Defoe, with whom Ridington developed a life long friendship. In 1907 Ridington changed careers again, and joined the firm of William Pearson Co. as a real estate salesman. In 1910 or 1911 he moved to Vancouver, and became sales manager for Canada Western Trust Co. He invested in land development but lost everything in the depression of 1913. He was destitute to the point of borrowing money from neighbours, and the only work he could find was teaching a course in English literature for the Vancouver Night Schools. His daughter Margaret Dorothy Ridington died on March 28, 1912. In later years when reporting the details of his life to biographical directories Ridington eliminated these unhappy years from the record, stating that he moved from Winnipeg to Vancouver in 1914. By August 1914 he had found employment as the "acting librarian" of the new University of British Columbia. From May to August 1916 he attended the summer school at the New York State Library, Albany. UBC President Frank Wesbrook nevertheless continued to search for an experienced librarian to replace Ridington. In June 1922 Wesbrook's successor, Leonard Klinck, finally changed Ridington's title from Acting Librarian and Cataloguer to Librarian. Ridington's wife Maggie died on April 26, 1927. He married for a second time on August 8, 1929. Muriel Patience Fallows, the daughter of William W. Fallows and his wife Patience Seale. John and Muriel Ridington's son John Fallows Ridington was born on May 29, 1930. John Ridington retired as University Librarian on April 31, 1940, at the age of 72. In the following years he occupied himself by acting as Secretary to the Western Gate Lodge of the Masonic Order, and by writing the occasional column for the Vancouver News Herald. He died on April 20, 1945. The University of British Columbia opened in 1915 in temporary quarters at 10th Ave. and Laurel St., the Fairview Shacks. The Library, with a staff of four, was located in two rooms in the newly built tuberculosis wing of the Vancouver General Hospital. In 1925, the University moved into new buildings on the Point Grey campus. The Library moved to the central portion of the present Main Library building with shelving for 135,000 volumes and study space for 350 students. The UBC Library is now the second largest research library in Canada and includes 21 branches and divisions at UBC and at other locations.

  • Subjects (LCTGM): Architectual drawings
  • Subjects (LCSH): University of British Columbia. Library--Drawings; Academic libraries--Designs and plans
Depicted place Vancouver
Date Taken on 1 December 1928
institution QS:P195,Q219563
Current location
Accession number
Source
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.
Order Number
InfoField
AWC0720

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