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sick and wounded in the Lake Champlain region, probably built up a practice quite quickly. In September 1766, after Feltz left for France, he became surgeon-in-chief at the Hôpital Général and served
 
. Gérard Morisset, Évolution d’une piéce d’argenterie (Collection Champlain, Québec, 1943), 8–9. Marius Barbeau, “Indian trade silver,” RSCT, 3rd ser., XXXIV (1940), sect
 
1705, and Pointe-aux-Trembles (Neuville) in 1716. Two former missions were taken over again: Lachine in 1701, and Champlain in 1702. The mission at La Montagne was moved to Sault-au-Récollet in 1701
facsimile reprint of the (Œuvres de Champlain that year. In June 1869 Leggo patented a new method for reproducing photographs, known as granulated
 
-forging business at Taunton with his father but reputedly ran away before his apprenticeship was completed. He subsequently worked in various ironworks around Lake George and Lake Champlain in New York
 
Jérémie*, Jacques Aubuchon’s widow. He had then settled at Quebec, where he was in 1690. He owned a house there, on Rue de la Fontaine Champlain, adjoining Louis
 
. During the Seven Years’ War, Langis and his older brother Alexis were employed scouting, taking prisoners, and gathering information on the enemy’s strategy in the Lake Champlain–Lac Saint-Sacrement (Lake
 
Rigaud* de Vaudreuil as garrison adjutant of New France and took his place on the council of war. At this time he was also given a seigneury on Lake Champlain. This was an eventful year for in October
 
Paris; m. Marie-Marguerite Chorel de Saint-Romain, dit d’Orvilliers, at Champlain on 27 Jan. 1695; buried 29 July 1709 at Montreal
 
of Lake Champlain. During that period he supplied material for the first three naval vessels to be built at Quebec, the flutes Canada and Caribou and the frigate Castor. He
 
Dosquet in the chapel of the episcopal palace. The following year he succeeded Joseph Dufrost de La Gemerais as parish priest of Champlain. In October 1735 he became priest of the parish of
 
Noyan, and left the post the following year with the cross of Saint-Louis. He was granted in 1735 a seigneury on Lake Champlain which he did not develop and therefore forfeited six years later. Finally
 
. N.-E. Dionne, La Nouvelle-France, de Cartier à Champlain, 1540–1603 (Québec, 1891), 124f. Revisions based on
 
Canada from Champlain to Laurier 1608–1908 (3v., New York and Toronto, 1908), I, 270–1. G. M. Wrong, The rise and fall of New France (2v., Toronto, 1928), II, 503–10.
 
. With the coming of war in 1755 Perrault assigned the men of Deschambault to serve chiefly as bateau crews to convey troops and war materials to Lake Champlain. Military supplies were kept under armed
 
 April, 26 June 1820; 1 March 1821; 5 Dec. 1822; 22 Jan. 1824. F.-J. Audet, Les députés de Saint-Maurice (1808–1838) et de Champlain
 
. In the early spring of 1645, while it was still necessary to drag their canoes on ice on the St. Lawrence, Pieskaret led a war-party to the Richelieu River and Lake Champlain, where they made
. Polette was married three times: on 20 Feb. 1830, at Champlain, to his cousin Henriette, daughter of Jean-Baptiste Dubuc, a well-known merchant of Quebec and Batiscan; in 1834, at Quebec, to Anne
 
Champlain and Lake Ontario. During the winter of 1755–56, Cressé was sent with a work party to Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.) where he began building two ships, a schooner of ten guns (probably the
 
also, with Daniel Robertson of Montreal, the subject of a petition to Carleton from Samuel MacKay, deputy surveyor for the navy. MacKay had claimed for the navy 200 trees in the Lake Champlain area, cut
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