{"title":"[Bookplate for Dufferin School John Frothingham Library]","altern":[],"creato":[],"origin":[],"publis":[],"date":"[not before 1894]","data":[],"sort":"1894","descri":"Printed in navy ink, a geometric border surrounds the text printed in three fonts. The coat of arms of Montreal is raised in red with accompanying banners. The shield is topped with a crown and features a red saltire with four charges between the arms: a rose, thistle, clover, and beaver. The bookplate includes a watermark.","format":"1 bookplate : relief printing ; 10 x 15.5 cm","subjea":"Schools ; Heraldry ; Libraries","place":"Montre\u0301al (Que\u0301bec)","person":"Dufferin School John Frothingham Library","genre":"Prints","formaa":"Still Image","type":"image\/jpeg","langua":"English","notes":"The Dufferin School opened in 1894. Students from the British and Canadian School and the Dorchester Street School were transferred to Dufferin when it opened. The library is credited to John Frothingham. John Frothingham (1788-1870) was an American-born businessman who established himself in Montreal in 1809. He prospered in business, both with his own firm of wholesale hardware and iron, but also in his support of Montreal businesses. He was associated with the Montreal Board of Trade, the St Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad, the Montreal Stock Exchange, the Canada Inland Steam Navigation Company, the British and Canadian School of Montreal, the Montreal Horticultural Society, and the City Bank of Montreal. As a prominent Presbyterian he endowed some of his wealth to the Protestant Board of School Commissioners for Montreal. The coat of arms is based on the first coat of arms of the city of Montreal. The four images within the quartered shield symbolize the main founders of Montreal: English (rose), Scottish (thistle), Irish (clover), and French (beaver). The Latin phrase on the coat of arms is Montreal's motto. It reads \"Concordia Salus\" which translates to \"salvation through harmony.\" ; A watermark reading \"RE LINEN BON\" runs down the right side of the bookplate.
References:
1) Gerald Tulchinsky, \u201cFROTHINGHAM, JOHN,\u201d in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 9, University of Toronto\/Universit\u00e9 Laval, 2003-, accessed January 25, 2016, .
2) MacLeod, Roderick and Mary Anne Poutanen. \"Proper Objects of This Institution\": Working Families, Children, and the British & Canadian School in Nineteenth-Century Montreal.\u201d Historical Studies in Education, Fall (2008).
3) Atherton, William Henry. \u201cDufferin School.\u201d Montreal 1535-1914 ... Volume 2 (Chicago, 1914): 312. \u201cCoat of arms, flag and symbols.\u201d Ville de Montreal. Accessed January 26, 2016: http:\/\/ville.montreal.qc.ca\/portal\/page?_pageid=5977,42249635&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL","booa":[],"access":"BP MUR CAN I J646B","digitc":"BP_MUR_CAN_I_J646B","sectio":"RBSC Bookplates","source":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Library. Rare Books and Special Collections. Thomas Murray Bookplates Collection. Morley Binder. BP MUR CAN I J646B","datea":"2016","publia":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","rights":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from Rare Books and Special Collections: http:\/\/rbsc.library.ubc.ca","licens":[],"book":"The John Frothingham Library No. Dufferin School This Library was founded by a resolution of the Protestant Board of School Com- missioners passed May 14th,1894, and is maintained by the income derived from the bequest made to this School, by the late John Frothingham, Esq. VII-I 7","transl":[],"catalo":[],"projec":[],"aip":[],"file":[],"doi":"1.0225927","dmcreated":"2016-03-01","dmmodified":"2020-05-01","dmrecord":"1044"}