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                  CLARKE, CHARLES, businessman, journalist, politician, office holder, author, and militia officer; b
                  interest in botanical research had been kindled by his mentor, William Smith Clark. Both Clark and Penhallow followed the trail blazed by the “new school of botanical science” which, as Penhallow explained
                  WALLACE, NATHANIEL CLARKE, teacher, businessman, politician, and Orangeman; b
                  Canadian News Company Limited) in association with William Walter Copp* and Henry James Clark of Copp, Clark and Company and with several
                  BELL, JOHN WILLIAM, teacher, farmer, and politician; b
                  CALDWELL, WILLIAM CLYDE (originally William Caldwell), businessman and politician; b
                   
                  Bethia Clarke; d. 14 Sept. 1905 in Amherst
                  . The turning-point in McClintock’s life came in February 1848, when he was made second lieutenant on the Enterprise, in Sir James Clark
                  McDOUGALL, WILLIAM, lawyer, newspaper owner, journalist, politician, and office holder; b
                  RENNIE, WILLIAM, agriculturist, seed merchant, farm superintendent, and author; b
                   
                  Columbia’s Cariboo district. At Victoria in April he joined a party bound for Williams Creek, the centre of the gold-rush, where he stayed until December 1863. He subsequently engaged in other mining ventures
                  . 1906), daughter of William Lyon Mackenzie*, and they had four sons and three
                  Clarke Pray’s tragedy Poetus Cæcinna in October 1851. Nickinson
                   Jr attended the Saint John Grammar School for three years and in 1863 he was apprenticed to pharmacist William
                  of Rifles (Queen’s Own Rifles of Toronto) [see William Smith Durie*] and was present at the skirmish in Ridgeway during the
                  ” ([Toronto, 191-?]); and A sketch of the history of the parish of Woodstock ([Woodstock, Ont., 1902?]). He is also the co-author, with William Clark, of “History of the Church of England in Ontario
                  Clarke* at Fort Carlton. Clarke immediately wrote to Lieutenant Governor Alexander Morris* claiming that the Métis had established a
                  Brown*’s new Canada Farmer, edited by William Fletcher Clarke, and held the position for
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