DCB/DBC Mobile beta
+

Results per Page: Go
Modify search on Advanced Search page

Type of Result

      Region of Birth

          Region of Activities

              Occupations and Other Identifiers

                  1 to 20 (of 57)
                  1  2  3  
                  BROWN, JOHN GEORGE, known as Kootenai Brown
                  wound, he gave his friend Jaffray a directorship in the Globe Printing Company. In 1882, two years after Brown’s unexpected death and the appointment of his brother, John Gordon, as managing editor
                   
                  of 1812; m. first John F. Brown (d. in or before 1871); m. secondly 9 Jan. 1877 Alexander C. Bailey (d. 1886) in Halifax; m. there thirdly 4 Feb. 1911 George Washington
                   
                  ANGEL, JAMES, manufacturer and politician; b. 12 Jan. 1838 in Halifax, son of John Angel; m. 24 Feb
                   wins and 12 losses. In 1884 he played with the St Louis Browns of the American Association. He pitched in 17
                   Feb. 1861. Methodist minister John Maclean* later stated that Berens learned the
                  LINEHAM, JOHN, businessman and politician; b. 21 March 1857 in Mitchell, Upper Canada, son of Thomas Lineham
                  LABATT, JOHN, businessman; b. 11 Dec. 1838 in Westminster Township
                  ROBERTSON, JOHN ROSS, journalist, publisher, philanthropist, historian, and sportsman; b
                  HANNA, WILLIAM JOHN, teacher, lawyer, politician, and office holder; b
                  . 24 May 1835 in Galt (Cambridge), Upper Canada, son of John Young and Janet Bell; m. 11 Feb. 1858 Margaret McNaught in Brantford
                   
                  . 5 Feb. 1867 in Lower Woodstock, N.B., seventh of the nine children of John William Scott and Sarah A. Teeling; d. 22 June 1918 in Augusta, Maine
                  John M. Browning, chair of the finance committee of Vancouver City Council and also a land commissioner for the CPR and the representative of the directors financing the refinery. Headed by a
                  McLAUGHLIN, JOHN JAMES pharmacist and manufacturer; b
                  Suppliant at the Cross.” In 1874 another turning-point occurred when the Reverend John Semmens
                  Sheppard and moved to the nearby Toronto Opera House, a vaudeville and melodrama theatre on the circuit of Henry R. Jacobs of New York and his Montreal partner John Bolingbroke
                   Sept. 1835 in Paisley, Scotland, son of John Hart, a stationer and bookseller, and Jean Mason Semple; m. 16 Aug. 1872 Isabella Margaret
                   
                  . Frederick Brigden, with his two brothers and two sisters, grew up in an atmosphere that his brother William Henry later described as the “simple, unaffected, genuine religion” of Wesleyan Methodism. John
                  Oxford House (Man.), third child of John Isbister and Frances Sinclair; m. 1 Jan. 1859 Margaret Bear at “Nepowewin Station” (Nipawin, Sask.), and they had at least 16
                  About Duplicate Matches
                  1 to 20 (of 57)
                  1  2  3