

A grant to McMaster University’s Let’s Talk Science! partnership supported students from at four Hamilton elementary schools to care for and hatch Atlantic salmon eggs in their classrooms over the winter, and then to re-introduce the fish into the Lake Ontario watershed. Once a keystone species, these fish were eradicated from the lake in the late 1800s. This program enables children to learn about the vital role they can play in protecting the environment.
Dedicated, compassionate and even-tempered are some of the qualities Agnes Robinson uses to describe her husband, Dr. Harry Robinson. The pair met at the Hamilton General Hospital where she was a physiotherapist working with polio patients. He was a young intern who had graduated from Queen's University in 1930 and went on to complete post-graduate studies in New York and London, England before establishing a practice at 908 King Street E. in Hamilton. Over his 50 year career, Agnes recalls many a phone call in the middle of the night and Dr. Robinson would be off to deliver a baby or make a house call.
"He was always interested in helping the less fortunate and his generosity endeared him to people." An avid rose gardener, Dr. Robinson sported a fresh rose in his lapel each morning. Daughter Lynda Cahill remembers her father as a quiet man, loved by all and with a tremendous bedside manner. "He was 91 when he died and 500 people attended his funeral. We heard many wonderful stories about him that we never knew," she added.
Dr. Robinson, a Hamilton native who cared for the health and well-being of so many of its residents until he retired at 80, remembered the Foundation with a gift in his will.
Excerpt from 1995-1996 Annual Report