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                  41 to 60 (of 395)
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                  . Father Millet was captured in 1689 by the Onondagas, during the siege of Fort Frontenac. He was handed over to the Oneidas and taken to their chief town. Gouentagrandi went out to greet him as he neared
                   
                  , lieutenant and later captain of Governor Frontenac’s [see Buade] guards; b
                   
                  and Company of London [see Samuel Gerrard*], acting as agents for the owners of the Frontenac (a paddle-wheel vessel then
                   
                  Le Febvre* de La Barre, when the latter was going to Fort Frontenac (Cataracoui) on his way to punish the Senecas. He took part in the negotiations at Anse de La Famine (Mexico Bay
                  supposed that it was she, because the archives mention her name in close association with the discoverer’s, and because she was the only spinster of her rank to live at Fort Frontenac
                   
                  several fur trade convoys back to Montreal, and Buade* de Frontenac often praised his work. In the early 1700s
                   
                  Buade* de Frontenac over an English ship which he had captured on his way back from France. On 29 Oct. 1703 he became a member of the transformed and enlarged Conseil Supérieur. He inherited the
                   
                  . Buade de Frontenac named him commandant of the south side of the river, from Rivière du Loup to Montreal. On 5 May 1673 he was appointed governor of Acadia, to replace
                   
                  governor, Frontenac [Buade*]. Bishop Laval asked him to refrain rigorously from dealing with this question. On 8
                   
                   Montagne and Lorette mission Indians in Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition against the Iroquois. In 1714, with
                   
                  only on 16 Nov. 1705. Buade* de Frontenac had for him “a particular esteem and friendship
                   
                  . In 1688 Saint-Pierre became an ensign, and for the rest of his life was prominent in military affairs. After 1690 most of his career was spent in the western country. He was at Fort Frontenac in 1689
                   
                  appointed sergeant in the Canadian forces, in which rank he accompanied governor Frontenac [see
                   
                   October (16 October, N.S.) to deliver an ultimatum to Buade* de Frontenac to surrender. Savage was “carried
                  the south bank of the St Lawrence, opposite Montreal. Shortly before their arrival, Governor Frontenac
                   
                  river Saint John by Buade de Frontenac. It is doubtful
                  Buade* de Frontenac leased to the two men the post he had founded at Cataracoui, which was strategically located for trade with the Iroquois and some of the western tribes. The following year, however
                   
                  detachment in Louis Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition to Lake Ontario in 1673, when Fort Cataracoui (Frontenac) was built
                   
                  de Buade*, Comte de Frontenac’s old regiment. He was
                   
                  first appears in the documents of New France as an employee of Buade* de Frontenac. Benjamin Sulte wrongly calls him a
                  41 to 60 (of 395)
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