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                  BORDEN, Sir FREDERICK WILLIAM, physician, businessman
                  TORRINGTON, FREDERICK (Frederic) HERBERT, musician; b
                  ALEXANDER, WILLIAM, soldier; b. 18 Sept. 1880 in London, England; executed 18 Oct. 1917 near Houdain
                  British garrisons at Halifax and Esquimalt, B.C., but this was a step that the minister of militia and defence, Sir Frederick William
                  private and public institutions, including William King*’s school in the black settlement of Buxton, near Chatham. From there he went to the
                  the minister of militia and defence, Sir Frederick William Borden, and the general officer
                   
                  taken into the business in London. In March 1889 George White and Sons was formed, with Arthur William, James Henry Baker (Harry), Hubert John, and Frederick John formally joining their father as
                  . 11 Oct. 1911 in Canning, N.S., Elizabeth Borden, daughter of Sir Frederick William Borden
                  enabled Owen, in partnership with William Welsh, to carry on much of Peake’s business under the name of Welsh and Owen; the partnership was sealed by the marriage in 1861 of Lemuel to Lois Welsh, William’s
                  . In 1871 he founded in Montreal, with William Warren Hastings Kerr, Louis-Amable Jetté, John Adams Perkins, and Henri-Félix Rainville, La Revue critique de législation et de jurisprudence du
                  granddaughter of James Gage, the minister of militia and defence, Frederick William Borden, accepted the offer
                  Walker*. Cox’s insurance agencies and mortgage loan companies were eventually managed by his three sons (Edward William, Frederick George, and Herbert Coplin) and his son-in-law Alfred Ernest
                  it out. He departed for West Africa in September 1873 with the local rank of major-general and with 35 specially selected officers, a number of them, such as William Francis
                   T. King, a merchant and lumberman from Calais, Maine, he leased “sawmills, machines, water power and water privilege” on the Lepreau River from William Kilby Reynolds, “the finest and fastest mill in
                  OSLER, Sir WILLIAM, physician, educator, medical philosopher, and historian; b
                  assistant on the Credit Valley Railway. Another, William Mackenzie*, cut ties and built several of the timber bridges on the colonization
                  he would be replaced by Sir Frederick William Borden, but his government fell before the
                  .” McBride spurned the flattering offer but less than two years later, in June 1912, the king’s birthday honours list named him a
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