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                  McKERROW (MacKerrow), PETER EVANDER, historian and community leader; baptized 19 Feb. 1841 in Antigua (Antigua Barbuda), son of
                  JONES, PETER EDMUND (Kahkewaquonaby), physician, Mississauga Ojibwa chief, Indian agent, and newspaperman; b. 30 Oct. 1843 in
                  other minor crimes. A member of his mother’s family, Peter Byers*, was hanged for theft in 1815, and the year after Godfrey was born his father was
                   
                  the land was unproductive and where they underwent an extremely difficult period of resettlement. A tall, handsome young man, McGregor replaced Peter
                   
                   D. Carter – won the support of “some of the best Indians,” “the white settlers near the Reserve,” and the parish priest, the Reverend Peter Duffy. The chief also came to enjoy the support of most
                  . 21 March 1820 in Harbour Grace, Nfld, eldest son of Peter Rogerson and Amelia Palmer; m
                   
                  leaders such as Peter Evander McKerrow and the mothers of the children, Bruce encountered a type of reverse
                   
                  . George Young’s ancestors, United Empire Loyalists, were the first white settlers in Prince Edward County, Upper Canada. Much of his early life was spent on his stepfather’s farm, his father having died
                  . on the Mattawamkeag River (Maine), son of Peter Bear and a Saint-François Abenaki woman; perhaps m
                   
                  he came to know the interior of Canada between Hudson Bay and Alaska better than any other white, and he developed an extraordinary reputation for travelling alone in all seasons, living off the land
                  ORONHYATEKHA (meaning “burning cloud,” baptized Peter Martin), physician, office holder, administrator of a
                  , had been a friend since their school-days together at Mount Radford. Peter O’Reilly, the gold commissioner
                  broken and her hair turned white by her ordeal. On a lecture tour of Canadian churches, Dr
                  ): 3–8. The most useful sources for Fannin’s life are Peter Corley-Smith, White bears and other curiosities
                  -Claire in Fort Benton, Mont., and the Académie Saint-Joseph in Sprague, Wash. In 1887 it was Olympia’s turn to ask for a hospital, to be dedicated to St Peter. In the spring of 1888 Mother Joseph du
                  regulation of cutting practices, classification of provincial lands (including the establishment of forest reserves), and a greater limit on tree size for governing the harvesting of white pine. The report
                  .” In later years Bompas became increasingly absorbed in his biblical translation work, scarcely caring for personal appearances or social conventions. He alienated many white residents of Dawson, the
                  . 13 June 1901 in Toronto. The Hardy and Sturgis families were among the first white settlers of Brant County. Russell Hardy was a
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