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                  1 to 20 (of 89)
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                  YOUNG, EGERTON RYERSON, teacher, Methodist missionary, lecturer, and author; b
                   
                   April 1856 Robert McCulloch, and they had two daughters; d. 2 Aug. 1908 in Tuscola, Mich. Margaret Dickie was the daughter of a
                   
                  McKECHNIE, ROBERT, manufacturer, politician, and office holder; b. 16 June 1835 in Glasgow, only surviving
                   
                  . The commission, appointed in August 1887, consisted of members from government and opposition parties, including Sir Robert
                  1866 Helen Young, sister of Robert Young, and they had
                   
                  . When he was still very young, Augustin Lavallée showed great talent for music and an aptitude for delicate workmanship. During the rebellion of 1837 he was with his father at the battle of Saint-Charles
                  GRAY, HENRY ROBERT, pharmacist, politician, inventor, and businessman; b. 30 Dec. 1838 in Boston, England, son of Robert Gray
                  Alpinist. As a young man he worked with his father and brother in producing engravings for several publications. From 1859 to 1861, more-over, he exhibited his landscapes at the Royal Academy of Arts
                  -made man, in the English manner,” according to Robert Rumilly*, Grenier was
                   
                  MURRAY, ROBERT, editor and author; b
                  , N.Y. Erastus Wiman’s father died in September 1834, leaving his wife to care for their only living child. Young Wiman received some
                  . 10 Feb. 1828 in County Armagh (Northern Ireland), son of Robert McCausland, a labourer, and Mary Jackson; m
                   
                  brothers, however, joined the exodus to New England and another brother settled in Saskatchewan. An able young journalist, in 1889 MacDougall was hired to
                   15 in the Royal Belfast Academical Institution, where the young man studied from 1839 to 1841. Kirkwood developed a special interest in linguistics and returned to the institution in 1844–45 to study
                  HUTCHINSON, JENNIE PHELAN (MacMichael), reformer and suffragist; daughter of Robert Hutchinson; m. 20 June
                  the contemporary centres of French Canadian patriotism. Moreover, he entered the Séminaire de Saint-Hyacinthe at a time when the first young men, often from classical colleges, were hastening to the
                   
                  WARDEN, ROBERT HARVEY, Presbyterian minister and editor; b
                  Maskepetoon*, a great Cree chief and noted advocate of peace. He was given the name John by a missionary, probably Robert Terrill Rundle
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