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                  post, the Roman Catholic mission of Father Léon-Adélard Fafard*, and an Indian
                  St James’ Cathedral, and he later returned to become an assistant clergyman there. It was under his ministry, which stressed the practical application of Christ’s teachings, that Howland became an
                  for forgiveness. He died at Leroy, and was buried in the cemetery of the Roman Catholic church. Study of John Bruce sheds new light upon the varying
                  . Darby Bergin was the son of an Irish Catholic immigrant who had established himself as a merchant in York (Toronto) in 1820. Darby attended Upper Canada College and, probably in 1844, entered McGill
                  . 13 May 1850 Catherine Scollay Bigelow, and they had a son and two daughters; d. 8 Nov. 1893 in Boston. Francis Parkman was a
                  clothes of good quality and moderate price. He opened stores in St Catharines (about 1888), London (about 1892), and Windsor (about 1895); during this period he also established three agencies
                  -confederates to defeat him. He spent money so freely that Catholic archbishop Thomas Louis Connolly* of Halifax was convinced the election had
                  time, was thought something of a radical and is considered responsible, more than anyone else, for applying the revived Gothic mode, already popular for Anglican and Roman Catholic churches, to
                  . 17 June 1869 Catherine Dow in Montreal, and they had three sons and three daughters; d
                  in “The idea of confederation: 1754–1858,” The shield of Achilles: aspects of Canada in the Victorian age, ed. W. L. Morton (Toronto and Montreal, 1968), 200–2; The board of
                  *, a seigneur, and Marie-Rosalie Papineau; m. there 4 Feb. 1850 Catherine-Zéphirine Thompson, his third cousin, and they had a daughter
                  French-speaking opposition forces, a mixture of Catholic, secular, and anticlerical elements. As early as 1851 Dorion was recognized as a
                  Catholic, his wife was, and they were married according to Catholic rite in St Boniface. By the close of the 1860s, however, Schultz was distrusted and disliked by the older settlers, both English- and
                  educational rights of the Protestant minority in Lower Canada. The initiative led Catholic circles to ask for a similar guarantee for the Catholic minority in Upper Canada [see Robert
                  . first 23 Oct. 1867 in Barrie, Ont., Emma Catherine Lally (d
                  confirm on 11 Dec. 1857. The trip was another decisive step in the development of Catholicism in the west. Taché made a round of visits in France to inform Catholics about the work of the Society
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