Dec. 1858 in Pointe-Lévy (Lévis), Lower Canada, son of Léon Roy and Marguerite Lavoie; m. 26 May 1885 Lucienne Carrier in Lévis; they had no children; d. there 8 May 1913
caisse populaire; b. 5 Nov. 1854 in Lévis, Lower Canada, son of François Roy, dit
Nov. 1867 in Lévis, Que., Helen Anderson, half-sister of the Reverend Duncan Anderson, and they had four sons and five daughters; d. 26 June 1911 in Breakeyville
Notre-Dame-de-la-Victoire in Lévis. His stay there was marked by three developments in particular. Through his efforts the Marist Brothers were put in charge of the boys’ schools in the town of Lévis in
inclination and steered him into classical studies, which he took initially at the Collège de Lévis in 1866–69 and continued at the Petit Séminaire de Québec in 1869–75. Brousseau was remembered at the latter
Saint-Urbain, Que., son of John Redman, a blacksmith, and Laure Martineau; m. 31 Jan. 1911 Valérie Bourassa in Saint-Joseph-de-la-Pointe-de-Lévy, Que., and they had one daughter; d. 19
.
Adelstan de Martigny did his classical studies at the Collège de Lévis in 1881–85 and at the Collège Sainte-Marie in Montreal in 1885–86. He then entered the faculty of medicine at the Montreal branch of the
: 19–20; no.10: 25–26. Lucien Rioux, Gilles Vigneault (Paris, 1969), 82–83. Placide Vigneau, Un pied d’ancre; journal de Placide Vigneau . . . (Lévis, Qué., 1969).
Christian family who lived in Saint-Roch ward. In the autumn of 1855 his father enrolled him in the commercial program taught by the Brothers of the Christian Schools in the newly opened Collège de Lévis
du régiment de Maisonneuve, 1880–1980 (Montréal, 1980). Qué., Statuts, 1870, c.43. P.-G. Roy, La famille Rocbert de La Morandière (Lévis, Qué., 1905). Benjamin
Lévis run by D. Laîné et Compagnie [see Charles William Carrier*]. In 1867 he returned to Saint-Pierre-de-la-Rivière-Sud
New York and then in 1858 to Saint John, where Solomon eventually established a successful tobacco business. Joined a year later by brothers-in-law Henry Levy and Nathan
, Montreal, 1868–73; Quebec, 1830–68. P.-G. Roy, Fils de Québec (4 sér., Lévis, Qué., 1933
defence of their colleague George Irvine*, accused of fraudulent dealings in the sale of the Levis and Kennebec Railway, he joined their ranks in
Ottawa and London in an endeavour to obtain government investment in this project. One result of these efforts would be the construction of the Louise Basin and the Lorne Dry Dock in Lauzon (Lévis). In
). R. R. Gagan, A sensitive independence: Canadian Methodist women missionaries in Canada and the Orient, 1881–1925 (Montreal and Kingston, Ont., 1992). G. E. Levy, The
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