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Walsh, Thomas Joseph
Personne · 1899-1983

Thomas Joseph Walsh, S.J. was born in Sherbrooke, Quebec on March 13, 1899. After attending Loyal College in Montreal and serving as an officer in the Canadian Officers Training Corps, he joined the Jesuit novitiate in Guelph, Ontario in 1923 with the “desire to serve the aboriginal people of Northern Ontario.” He proceeded to complete his education between Guelph and Mount Saint Michael’s in Spokane, Washington; he was then assigned to the residential school in Spanish, Ontario from 1927 to 1929 where he taught classes and studied Ojibwe. He finished his studies at Immaculée-Conception in Montreal and was ordained a priest in August of 1932, followed by studies at St. Beuno’s College in Wales.

In 1935, Father Walsh returned to the residential school in Spanish as minister and disciplinarian, but left to take up nine years of teaching at Loyola College. For the next 22 years, beginning in 1945, Father Walsh served as national director of the Sacred Heart Program—a 15-minute radio program of religious instruction and music. His resulting friendship with various radio broadcasters allowed Father Walsh to fundraise and sponsor a series of broadcasted lectures and concerts, and in 1956, a televised component of the Sacred Heart Program was taken up. In 1967 Walsh retired from his director duties and took up parish work, mostly centred around Toronto, and then later—from 1976 to 1981—in the archdiocese of Montreal. In 1981, he retired to the Jesuit Infirmary in Pickering, Ontario, and died two years later.

Vandermoor, Nicholas
Personne · 1894-1969

Nicholas Vandermoor was born in Overschei, Netherlands on July 24, 1894. Brother Vandermoor’s family emigrated to Saskatchewan, Canada in 1910; upon his parents’ death, Vandermoor moved to Vancouver Island where he worked as a caretaker and farmer at a residential school for Indigenous children run by the Sisters of St. Anne. From here, Vandermoor entered the Jesuit novitiate in November of 1925; shortly after saying his vows as a Brother, Vandermoor was assigned to the Spanish Residential School as farm supervisor. He would stay in Spanish for the remaining 42 years of his life.

With a focus on “industry,” the Spanish Residential School opened an auto mechanics course which Brother Vandermoor—a licensed auto mechanic—took charge of. When the Spanish Residential School closed in 1958, Brother Vandermoor remained at Spanish as a mechanic and custodian, caring for the remaining Jesuit properties. In 1966 and 1967, he served as assistant to the Superior at Spanish, and from 1967 until a collision took his life in 1969, he served as assistant to the pastor at Spanish.