University of Prince Edward Island explained
University of Prince Edward Island |
Native Name: | Université de l'Île-du-Prince-Édouard |
Motto: | Fides, Scientia, Beneficium |
Mottoeng: | Faith, Knowledge, Service |
Endowment: | $40 million (2019) |
Faculty: | 246 permanent and 28 term faculty |
Former Names: | Prince of Wales College (1860); Saint Dunstan's University (1855) |
Students: | 5,533[1] |
Undergrad: | 4,983 |
Postgrad: | 550 |
Address: | 550 University Avenue
C1A 4P3 |
Campus: | Mixed rural/urban |
Colours: | Rust, green, and gold[2] |
Mascot: | Pride the Panther |
Sporting Affiliations: | ACU
- U Sports; AUCC; AUS; CBIE
|
The University of Prince Edward Island (UPEI) is a public university in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada, and the only university in the province. Founded in 1969, the enabling legislation is the University Act, R.S.P.E.I 2000.[3]
History
The university traces its roots back to 1804, when Lt. Governor Edmund Fanning and the Legislative Council of Prince Edward Island called for the establishment of Kent College. By 1820, the first Kent College building, known as "the National School", or James Breading's School was erected. Later succeeded by Central Academy, which received a Royal Charter in 1834.
The Colleges were renamed for the Prince of Wales in honour of the future King Edward VII in 1860.[4] The University of Prince Edward Island also traces its roots back to its two earlier predecessor organizations, St. Dunstan's University and Prince of Wales College, founded in 1855 and 1860 respectively.[5] The two institutions were merged in 1969 by the government of Alex Campbell as part of a campaign to integrate the Island's Roman Catholic and Protestant communities, which had previously maintained the two separate institutions of higher learning. Holland College was later created to fill the void left by the merger of Prince of Wales College into the university.The University of Prince Edward Island is a non-denominational university established in 1969 by the amalgamation of Prince of Wales College (PWC) founded in 1834, and St. Dunstan's University (SDU) founded in 1855.[5] The first student to enrol was Elizabeth Rollins Epperly, who would later become president.[6] Its predecessor institutions ceased to operate although St. Dunstan's still retains its charter and the lands that were home to Prince of Wales became the campus for Holland College. UPEI is located on the former St. Dunstan's campus.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, UPEI received a $500,000 grant from the Public Health Agency of Canada's Immunization Partnership Fund to develop and implement the Island Vaccine Education Program, intended to increase uptake of COVID-19 vaccines among vulnerable families.[7]
Legacy
On 8 May 2004 Canada Post issued 'University of Prince Edward Island, 1804-2004' as part of the Canadian Universities series. The stamp was based on a design by Denis L'Allier and on a photograph by Guy Lavigueur. The 49¢ stamps are perforated 13.5 and were printed by Canadian Bank Note Company, Limited.[4]
Campus
UPEI's campus, located at the corner of Belvedere and University Avenues in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island's capital city, is built on 134 acres (54 hectares) of land. The Confederation Trail runs alongside its eastern boundary.
Original SDU buildings in the central quadrangle have been renovated to retain integrity of their exterior aesthetic design while meeting modern standards. Main Building, built in 1854, and Dalton Hall, built between 1917 and 1919, are on the registry of Historic Places of Canada.[8] [9]
The War Memorial Hall (more generally known as Memorial Hall) is a landmark building on the campus of UPEI. Built as a men's residence building in 1946, Memorial Hall honours alumni who had enlisted and died in the First World War, and in the Second World War.[10]
Over the past three decades, UPEI has experienced significant growth with many new buildings integrated into the campus, including Central Utility Building (1973), Duffy Science Centre (1967), Blanchard Hall (1973), Bernardine Hall (1968), Robertson Library (1975), Atlantic Veterinary College (1986), Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre (1990), Wanda Wyatt Dining Hall (1990), Food Technology Centre, K.C. Irving Chemistry Centre (1997), W.A. Murphy Student Centre (2002), MacLauchlan Arena (2004), Bill and Denise Andrew Hall residence facility (2006), expansions to the Atlantic Veterinary College (2007 and 2009), Regis and Joan Duffy Research Centre (2007), a research and development laboratory which is home to the National Research Council of Canada, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, and other partners, and Don and Marion McDougall Hall (2008). The most recent addition is the Health Sciences Building, home to the School of Nursing and Applied Human Sciences programs.[11]
In October 2004, the UPEI administration undertook an official campus plan to improve the aesthetics of modern buildings constructed since the amalgamation which do not enhance the original SDU design, and to take overall campus aesthetics into account for future developments on and adjacent to the campus.
Organization
The current President is Dr. Gregory Keefe, who was installed December 13, 2021. The current chancellor is Catherine Callbeck, who was installed on September 29, 2018.[12]
Academics
UPEI's seven faculties (arts, business, education, nursing, science, sustainable design engineering and veterinary medicine) and two schools (Mathematical & Computational Sciences and Climate Change & Adaptation) offer a wide range of programs and degrees to undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students. Co-op programs have been established in Business Administration, Computer Science, Physics, and Dietetics. The University is presently developing a Faculty of Medicine, in association with the Memorial University of Newfoundland.[13]
Master's and Doctoral degree programs were first introduced through the Atlantic Veterinary College and, beginning in 1999, a Master of Science degree was offered through the Faculty of Science. In that same year the first students were admitted to the university's new Master of Education program. As of 2010, in addition to the MEd graduate program, the Faculty of Education offered a PhD in Educational Studies. The university also now offers a Master of Arts in Island Studies. Recently the Faculty of Business Administration began offering an Executive Master of Business Administration degree. Since 1998, The Centre for Conflict Resolution Studies has been offering courses leading to a Certificate in Conflict Resolution Studies. The Master of Applied Health Services Research (MAHSR) program is coordinated by the Atlantic Research Training Centre (ARTC).
The Faculty of Education offers one-year (12 months) post-degree bachelor's degrees with specializations in international, adult, and indigenous education, French immersion and human resources development, a Master of Education (MEd) in leadership in learning, and a PhD in Educational Studies.
The Department of Applied Human Sciences has an accredited dietitian program. The university is accredited by a professional organization such as the Dietitians of Canada and the university's graduates may subsequently become registered dieticians.
The Faculty Development Office provides professional development courses applicable to many sectors and industries, including development programs for administrative assistants and new managers; collaboration, conflict, and communication training; and, financial management courses.[14]
Rankings
Mac Undergrad: | 8 |
Mac Rep: | 37 |
In Maclean's 2023 Guide to Canadian Universities, UPEI was ranked eighth in the publication's category for "primarily undergraduate" Canadian universities.
Research
UPEI manages over $17 million in annual research expenditures.[15] The on-campus biosciences and health research facility is used by researchers from UPEI, National Research Council (Canada), and Agriculture and Agri-Foods Canada.[11]
UPEI houses the L.M. Montgomery Institute, founded in 1993, which promotes scholarly inquiry into the life, works, culture, and influence of the Canadian writer, L.M. Montgomery. The collection consists of novels, manuscripts, texts, letters, photographs, sound recordings and other Montgomery artifacts and ephemera.[16]
UPEI joined with Dalhousie University and Memorial University of Newfoundland to form the Ocean Frontier Institute, a collaborative research initiative aimed at harnessing the vast potential of the world's oceans.
Student life
Athletics
See main article: UPEI Panthers. The UPEI Panthers have nine teams playing in the Atlantic University Sport (AUS) and the Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS), including men's and women's ice hockey, soccer, basketball, as well as women's field hockey and rugby union and co-ed swimming.
The UPEI campus provides its students with many athletics amenities typically found on university campuses. The CARI Complex is a public recreation facility located on the campus and includes two hockey rinks (the MacLauchlan Arena as well as a practice rink) as well as two 25-metre swimming pools (a shallow recreational wading pool, and an eight-lane competitive pool with diving boards).[17] [18] In 2009 UPEI inaugurated the UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place[19] which was built in part to host the 2009 Canada Games. It consists of a "class 2" eight-lane 400-metre running track and rugby field that has spectator seating for 1,335.
Residence
UPEI accommodates 434 students in three residences, Bill and Denise Andrew Hall, Blanchard Hall, and Bernardine Hall. Bill and Denise Andrew Hall has two-room suites with single bedrooms.[20] In Blanchard Hall, each suite has two single bedrooms with a kitchenette and a living room.[21] Bernardine Hall (known as "Bernie" to the students) offers suites with two double bedrooms and a shared bathroom. Although the hall is co-ed, one floor is female-only.[22]
UPEI/SDU/PWC notable people
List of presidents
In 2015 each of the first five presidents were recognized as Founders of the University.[23]
Being a long-standing university and college in the Maritime province of Prince Edward Island (called the Cradle of Confederation) UPEI/SDU/PWC have been in a position to provide education to a long list of people who have gone to notable achievements. The most well known graduate (of Prince of Wales College) is Lucy Maude Montgomery, author of "Anne of Green Gables" and other books. The most distinguished Saint Dunstan's graduate may be James Charles McGuigan, Cardinal-Priest of Santa Maria del Popolo in Rome.
Religion
Medical
- Heather G. Morrison - Rhodes Scholar, Oxford University, Medical Doctor, Chief Public Health Officer of PEI.[24]
- Sir Andrew Macphail - Physician; Writer for Chicago Times; Enlisted in Canadian Army in WW I at age 50 as ambulance driver. Knighted in 1918 for literary and military work.
- John Joseph Alban Gillis - Surgeon, Senior House Doctor at Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal; MLA in British Columbia Legislative Assembly; Mayor of Merritt, British Columbia
- William Henry Sutherland - Physician at Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, for the Canadian Pacific Railway, and the Hotel Vancouver; Mayor of Revelstoke, British Columbia
- James Walter MacNeill - Physician; First superintendent of Saskatchewan Hospital; Early developer for advanced treatments of the mentally ill
- Owen Trainor - Physician; Member of Parliament for Winnipeg Manitoba South; Died during first term in House of Commons
- Augustine A. MacDonald - Physician & Member of Legislative Assembly; Awarded Order of Canada in 1968 for providing medical care to the people of rural Prince Edward Island for more than sixty years
Business
- Frank Zakem - LLD, B.A., B.Ed., B.Com., OPEI. businessman, politician, educator, author
- Brenton St. John - Businessman, fish factory director, farm commodity exporter; Speaker of PEI Legislative Assembly
- Henry Callbeck - Ship Builder, Businessman, Sheriff of Queens County, Governor of Prince of Wales College
- Don McDougall (baseball) - President of Labatt Brewing Company; principal in establishment of Toronto Blue Jays
Prince Edward Island Lieutenant Governor (Viceregal)
Prince Edward Island Premier
Prince Edward Island Members Legislative Assembly
- Prosper Arsenault - Educator; Politician, Speaker of the PEI Legislative Assembly
- Cletus Dunn - MLA, Civil Servant
- Cynthia Dunsford - MLA, Squash Coach, Writer/Performer of CBC Radio comedy show "Parkdale Doris."
- Paul Connolly - Educator, Politician; Member National Parole Board in 2002, serving for seven years.
- Jamie Ballem - MLA, Businessman; founded Island Green Power Company to promote the development of wind power on the island
- Herb Dickieson - MLA, Physician, also grad Dalhousie University School of Medicine; Chief of Medical Staff at Charlottetown Community Hospital
- Doug Currie - MLA; Head Coach and Director of Hockey Operations for the University of Prince Edward Island.
- Valerie Docherty - MLA
- Paula Biggar - MLA
- Alan Buchanan - MLA, Educational Administrator; Communication Officer with Island Telecom and later Aliant,
- Kevin MacAdam - MLA, Political Advisor
- James Warburton - MLA, Mayor of Charlottetown, Physician
- Jim Larkin - MLA; Executive with Tourism Industry Association of Canada
- George Dewar - MLA; Physician in private practice and earlier with Royal Canadian Medical Corps in WW II; member Order of Canada
- Betty Jean Brown - MLA, Nurse Practitioner; Owner of family fur farm
- David McKenna - Optometrist, businessman and politician, MLA in Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island
Canada national government
- Mark MacGuigan - Attorney General of Canada; Secretary of State for External Affairs in the cabinet of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau
- Jacques Hebert - Quebec Senator to Parliament; Author Deux innocents en Chine rouge (with Pierre Trudeau)
- Mike Duffy - PEI Senator to Parliament of Canada; TV news show host; covered fall of Saigon, Vietnam
- Percy Downe - PEI Senator to Parliament of Canada; Chief of Staff for Prime Minister Jean Chrétien
- Lorne Bonnell - PEI Senator to Parliament of Canada; Physician
- John McLean - PEI Senator to Parliament of Canada; earlier Member of Parliament; MLA; Director of several businesses, i.e., Maritime Life Insurance Co. and The Guardian newspaper
- Melvin McQuaid - PEI Member of Parliament of Canada; PEI Supreme Court Judge
- Alfred Lefurgey - PEI Member of Parliament of Canada; also grad Harvard Law
- Thomas Joseph Kickham - PEI Senator to Parliament of Canada
- James McIsaac - PEI Member of Parliament of Canada; also grad Université Laval
- Angus Alexander McLean - PEI Member of Parliament of Canada; also grad Harvard Law
- Peter Adolphus McIntyre - PEI Member of Parliament; 7th Lieutenant Governor (Viceregal) of PEI
- Joe McGuire - PEI Member of Parliament of Canada
- Shawn Murphy - PEI Member of Parliament; Attorney, Queen's Counsel
- George Henderson; PEI Member of Parliament; Shellfish Technician; Farmer, Electrical Engineer and Businessman
- Chester McLure - PEI Member of Parliament; Fox Farmer; Honorary Lieutenant-Colonel in 1930 for the 2nd Medium Light Artillery
- Montague Aldous - Dominion Topographical Surveyor of the Northwest Territories 1877; also grad of Bowdoin College, Maine
- Thomas McMillan - political scientist and former politician, Member of Parliament; Minister of the Environment
Provincial/local governments of Canada
- David Laird - 1st Lieutenant Governor of Northwest Territories, Canada; Indian Commissioner of the Northwest Territories, Manitoba, and Keewatin
- Bob MacQuarrie - Ontario MLA
- George Washington McPhee - Saskatchewan Member of Parliament of Canada; Attorney, King's Counsel
- Robert Deschamps - Member National Assembly of Quebec; Parti Québécois member and supporter of sovereignty of Quebec
- F.H. Auld - Agricultural Scientist, Saskatchewan Deputy Minister of Agriculture, 1916–46
- Harold Lloyd Henderson - Presbyterian minister, Mayor Portage la Prairie, Manitoba; also grad McGill University
- John Salmon Lamont - PWC and Princeton University, Reeve of Assinibola, Manitoba
- John K. McInnis - Mayor of Regina, Saskatchewan
- Maurice DeLory - MLA in Nova Scotia House of Assembly; Surgeon
- Alexander Campbell - represented St. John's in the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly, 1928–32; also grad Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the University of Vienna.
Arts and letters
Education
Philanthropist
Prince Edward Island law/legal
Other Canada law/legal
U.S. government
Prince Edward Island local government
Military
Athletics
-
- Al MacAdam - NHL Hockey Player, Stanley Cup Champion 1974, NHL All-Star 1976 & 1977
- Bill MacMillan - NHL Hockey Player, Bronze Medal 1976 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France
- Joel Ward - NHL Hockey Player, Team Canada 2014 IIHF World Championship in Minsk, Belarus
- Dave Cameron - NHL Coach (2016 Ass't Coach Calgary Flames) and Player (Colorado Rockies and New Jersey Devils)
- Darwin McCutcheon - Hockey player; five years professional in American Hockey League and Int'l Hockey League. Played one game in NHL for Toronto Maple Leafs
- Gerry Fleming - NHL hockey player for the Montreal Canadiens and American Hockey League for the Fredericton Canadiens
- Jim Foley - CFL Football Player, Grey Cup Champion 1973 & 1976, CFL's Rookie of the Year Award in 1971 and later won 1975 Most Outstanding Canadian Award
- Vernon Pahl - CFL Football Player, Grey Cup Champion 1984 & 1988
- Erin Carmody - Curler, MVP 2010 Scotties Tournament of Hearts
- Paul Craig - NASL Soccer Player, FC Edmonton
- Kara Grant - Modern Pentathlon: Athens Olympics 2004 and Beijing Olympics 2008; Bronze Medalist at Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2002
- Anja Weisser - German Women's Ice Hockey Team, 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Russia
- Park Ye-eun - Korean Women's Ice Hockey Team, 2018 Olympics in Pyeongchang, Korea.
- Katie Baker - Captain Canada National Field Hockey Team; Pan American Games 2007 in Brazil; Commonwealth Games 2010 in Delhi, India.
- Cory Vitarelli - Lacrosse player for Rochester Knighthawks in National Lacrosse League. Three time Champion's Cup now known as (National Lacrosse League Cup) winner.
- Ryan Anstey - soccer player Toronto Lynx USL First Division, Crown Attorney in Alberta
- Jared Gomes - hockey player; Bridgeport Sound Tigers, American Hockey League
- Justin Donati - hockey player; Brampton Beast, ECHL; Toronto St. Michael's Majors, Ontario Hockey League
- Calvin Tyler Scott - professional basketball player in the National Basketball League of Canada for the Island Storm
- Mitch Murphy - Standardbred Canada Board of Directors (horse racing); MLA
- Mathew Maione - professional hockey player for Dinamo Riga in the Kontinental Hockey League, Russia
- Mark Guggenberger - professional ice hockey goaltender with the Perth Thunder of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL)
Honorary degrees
Following is a partial list of Past Honorary Degree Recipients from UPEI:[25]
- Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh - Honorary Doctor of Laws, 2007; third son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh
- Ted Kennedy - Honorary Doctor of Laws from Saint Dunstan's University and SDU Class of 1964 Commencement Speaker
- Angèle Arsenault - Honorary Doctor of Laws from UPEI; actress and singer; Ordre de la Pléiade de l'Association des parlementaires de langue française
- Hisako, Princess Takamado - Member of Imperial House of Japan
- Anne Murray - Singer: four time Grammy Award winner most famously for the 1970 song Snowbird (song), former H.S. teacher on PEI
- Adrienne Clarkson - 26th Governor-General of Canada
- David Suzuki - Climate change activist; Ph.D. from University of Chicago in zoology
- Colonel George Stanley - Professor Emeritus Royal Military College; Knight of Justice of the Order of St. John; Lt. Governor of New Brunswick
- Edward D. Ives - Folklorist of Maine and Canada's Maritime Provinces; Professor of Folklore at University of Maine; Ph.D. from Indiana University
- Philip Oland - of the founding family of and CEO of Moosehead Breweries, Saint John, New Brunswick; Retired Brigadier Canadian Forces; Philanthropist
- Alan Lund - Dancer and choreographer of television, movies, and theatre; Officer of the Order of Canada
- Gordon Pinsent - Screenwriter, Actor: Wind at My Back, Red Green Show, Old Man and the Sea voice
- Lester B. Pearson - Prime Minister of Canada; Awarded in 1967 at Prince of Wales College
- Pierre Burton - Journalist, historian and author; Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal honoree
- Beverley McLachlin - 17th Chief Justice of Canada; Judge on the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal
- Doug Hall - Lecturer, author, TV and radio host and chemical engineer by education. Master Marketing Inventor at Procter & Gamble Stompin' Tom Connors - Canadian country and folksinger/writer. Ranked 13th on The Greatest Canadian list, the highest of any artist
- Art Linkletter - Canadian-born American radio & television personality, "Kids Say the Darndest Things"
Notable UPEI faculty and administration
- Angus Bernard MacEachern - Founded St. Andrew's College; 1st Bishop of Charlottetown (incl Magdalen Islands); studied theology in Spain.
- Bernard Donald Macdonald - 2nd Bishop of Charlottetown; Supervisor of construction of Saint Dunstan's College
- Wade MacLauchlan - 32nd Premier of PEI, President UPEI; grad University of New Brunswick and Yale University with Masters of Law
- William E. Andrew - Chancellor UPEI
- Ronald James Baker - 1st president of UPEI; British Air Force WW II; Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal; grad University of British Columbia and School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London
- Lou Hooper - Professor of Music from 1975; jazz pianist in Harlem, Yew York, Michigan, and Canada. Played with Billie Holiday and Paul Robeson; Taught piano to Oscar Peterson, 1936–39
- Dave Nutbrown - Varsity basketball coach; conference all-star player at University of New Brunswick; recruit of New York Knicks
- Gustave Gingras - Chancellor of UPEI, 1974–82. Physician; Consultant to United Nations, World Health Organization, and Canadian Red Cross
- George Wastie Deblois - Merchant; MLA; Trustee of Prince of Wales College; Land agent for Samuel Cunard, founder of the Cunard Line of ships
- Richard Raiswell - Historian and Professor of Medieval and Renaissance History; commentator on Smithsonian Network's "Treasures Decoded;" Cricket enthusiast and writer about the sport
- Kenneth Ozmon - Professor and Dean of Arts; Officer of the Order of Canada; later 13th President of Mount Allison University
- Godfrey Baldacchino - UNESCO Co-chair in Island Studies and Sustainability at UPEI (in partnership with the University of Malta)
- Doris Anderson - Chancellor of UPEI, 1992-96: editor Chatelaine magazine; Member of Trilateral Commission; Companion of the Order of Canada; President of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women
- Paul Boutilier - Instructor of International Marketing; Member of the 1983 Stanley Cup champion New York Islanders and seven year NHL player
- David Bourque - Associate Professor of Music (Spring 2008 term); teacher of clarinet and bass clarinet; member of Toronto Symphony Orchestra; accompanist in several US films, e.g., Academy Award-winning Norman Jewison's film "Moonstruck"
- Reginald C. Stuart - History Professor at UPEI, 1968–88. Distinguished Chair in North American Studies at the Woodrow Wilson Institute Center for Scholars in Washington, DC, Jun-Jan, 2005
- Jamie Muir - Instructor of Education; Ph.D. in education from University of Virginia; also an MLA in Nova Scotia
- David Staines - Professor of English; Scholar in Medieval, Victorian, and Canadian literature; grad of Harvard University (M.A. and Ph.D.)
- Louis Groarke - Professor of Philosophy; Writings in Ethics, Logic, Political Philosophy, and Aesthetics
- Anne Simpson - Author and poet; author of seven books, four of which are in the Toronto Globe & Mails Top 100 Books of the Year, i.e., "Falling" (2008) and "Canterbury Beach" (2001) (Short term Writer-in-Residence)
- Vianne Timmons - Professor at UPEI; President of the University of Regina (Alberta)
- Edward MacDonald - Associate Professor of History, teaching about Canadian political history, Atlantic Canada and Prince Edward Island
- Colm Magner - Canadian actor, director and writer
- Richard Covey - Canadian composer and Assistant Professor of Theory/Composition
- Ian Dowbiggin - Professor in the Department of History and writer on the history of medicine. Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.
- Paul Boutilier - Instructor of International Marketing; Retired professional ice hockey defenceman who was a member of the 1983 Stanley Cup champion New York Islanders.
- Silver Donald Cameron - Writer-in-Residence; writing focuses on social justice, nature and the environment
- Sam Gindin - Intellectual and activist known for his expertise on the labour movement and the economics of the automobile industry
- Hilda Woolnough - Artist who exhibited in Europe, Asia, the Caribbean and North America; member of Royal Canadian Academy of Arts
- Robyn MacPhee - Virology technologist at the Atlantic Veterinary College, UPEI; Gold Medalist 2001 World Junior Curling Championships
- Marcia Anastasia Christoforides - Established the Sir James Dunn Animal Welfare Centre at UPEI with gift of 2.2 million dollars. Wife of Max Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook with honorific as Dowager Lady Beaverbrook.
- Sir Charles Dalton – Silver fox breeder; Owner of the Charlottetown Guardian newspaper; Donated and built Dalton Hall at SDU; Knight Commander in the Order of St. Gregory the Great
See also
Histories of the University
- Bruce, Marian. A Century of Excellence: Prince of Wales College, 1860–1969. Charlottetown: Prince of Wales Alumni Association/Island Studies Press, 2005.
- Bruce, Marian. Pets, Professors, and Politicians: The Founding and Early Years of the Atlantic Veterinary College. Charlottetown: Atlantic Veterinary College/Island Studies Press, 2004.
- MacEachern, Alan. Utopian U: The Founding of the University of Prince Edward Island, 1968–1970. Charlottetown: University of Prince Edward Island, 2005.
- Moase, Lorne Robert. "The Development of the University of Prince Edward Island, 1964-1972." M.Ed., University of New Brunswick, 1972.
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: 2022–2023 Full-Time plus Part-Time Enrolments. 2022-10-01. Association of Atlantic Universities. 2023-10-09.
- Web site: Visual identity and graphic standards guidelines . University of Prince Edward Island . issuu.com . May 20, 2022.
- Web site: University Act, R.S.P.E.I 2000 . Province of Prince Edward Island. September 10, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140910210644/http://www.gov.pe.ca/law/statutes/pdf/u-04.pdf .
- Web site: University of Prince Edward Island, 1804-2004 . postagestampguide.com. March 21, 2019.
- Encyclopedia: University of Prince Edward Island . The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- Web site: UPEI honours Dr. Elizabeth ‘Betsy’ Epperly through plaza dedication. University of Prince Edward Island. 20 September 2016.
- Web site: . 2022-10-12 . Immunization Partnership Fund . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20221104154209/https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/immunization-vaccine-priorities/immunization-partnership-fund.html . 2022-11-04 . 2022-11-04 . Government of Canada.
- Web site: Main Building - University of Prince Edward Island. Canada's Historic Places. Parks Canada. March 21, 2019.
- Web site: Dalton Hall - University of Prince Edward Island. Canada's Historic Places. Parks Canada. March 21, 2019.
- Web site: Memorial Hall. University of Prince Edward Island. March 21, 2019.
- Web site: UPEI. 2014-08-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20140826113921/http://www.aucc.ca/canadian-universities/our-universities/university-of-prince-edward-island-2/. 2014-08-26. dead.
- Web site: Chancellor. University of Prince Edward Island. March 21, 2019.
- News: Chang. Arturo. UPEI creating medical school 'co-degree' in partnership with Memorial University. 5 December 2021. CBC News. 8 October 2021.
- Web site: Faculty Development Office . University of Prince Edward Island . March 21, 2019.
- Web site: Research - About Us . University of Prince Edward Island . March 21, 2019.
- Web site: Welcome to the L. M. Montgomery Institute . University of PEI . March 21, 2019.
- Web site: Aquatics Facility Description. Capital Area Recreation Inc.. 2009-12-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20090625004706/http://www.caripei.ca/aquatics_description.cfm . 25 June 2009.
- Web site: Hosting History. Capital Area Recreation Inc.. 2009-12-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20091024170033/http://www.caripei.ca/files/CARI%20FlatSheet.pdf . 24 October 2009.
- Web site: UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place. University of Prince Edward Island. 2009-12-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20090820164504/http://www.upei.ca/alumni/upei-alumni-canada-games-place . 20 August 2009.
- Web site: Bill and Denise Andrew Hall . University of PEI - Residence Services . March 21, 2019.
- Web site: Blanchard Hall . University of PEI - Residence Services . March 21, 2019.
- Web site: Bernardine Hall . University of PEI - Residence Services . March 21, 2019.
- News: Phillips. Nicole. UPEI honours all past-presidents as Founders of the University. Marketing and Communications. University of Prince Edward Island.
- Web site: Morrison, Dr. Heather G. . Government of Prince Edward Island . March 21, 2019.
- Web site: Past Honorary Degree Recipients . University of PEI . March 21, 2019.