in which he attacked Buade de Frontenac. When the witnesses were interrogated
commandant of Fort Frontenac, Callière sent Clérin and Joannès de Chacornacle to straighten out the situation
Frontenac [Buade*] to the representative from the five Iroquois tribes, and countersigned the report on it
two commanding officers at the battle of the Plains of Abraham and dedicated on 8 Sept. 1828, the column is a few steps from where the Château Frontenac now stands
1701 he was appointed by the Compagnie de la Colonie for a five-year term as fur-trader at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), indicating early, and perhaps substantial, experience in the trade. Evidently
Buade de Frontenac against the Iroquois.
Fleury Deschambault received his classical education and began his theology at Quebec. He was
accepted this tolerably well, however, and was on close terms with his colleague. In 1696 he had to cease exercising his office temporarily, in order to accompany Frontenac
Greenshields*, who owned the Frontenac Gas Company, Forget created in November of the same year the Quebec Railway, Light, Heat and Power Company. Often referred to as the Quebec merger or Le Merger
, 50 (1958): 211–18. His own drawing of the house he built on Amherst Island appears in Illustrated historical atlas of the counties of Frontenac
Frontenac County Registry Office (Kingston, Ont.), abstract of town lot 4. Daily News (Kingston), 19 Feb . 1861 – 7 Feb. 1868. Mitchell & Co.’s Canada classified
supporting him. In 1674, the governor, Buade* de Frontenac, persuaded him to give up trading in order to devote his time to
. C.), teacher, Methodist and United Church missionary and minister, and author; b. 30 July 1869 in Frontenac County, Ont., son of Barnabas Courtland Freeman and Sarah Lake; m
, Bochart* de Champigny, and Buade de Frontenac unanimously praised his integrity
colonial regular troops, and the following year he was appointed commandant at Trois-Rivières. In 1692, in a memorandum to Governor Frontenac
. At 22 he was the king’s storekeeper at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), and he then served at Fort La
Buade de Frontenac at Cataracoui in the summer of 1673, Garakontié was the first to speak for them. He died of an illness in the winter of 1677–78, at an advanced age and was buried in European
Youngstown, N.Y.) and Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.). The king reserved their trade for his own account, and the profits had declined so rapidly that the minister suspected abuses by Pierre Pépin, dit
Buade de Frontenac and the Conseil Souverain took sides against the vicars general and the seminary, in February–March 1675.
He was
seigneuries by Talon* and Frontenac [Buade*]. He thus acquired status
. . . .” In addition, in 1673 Governor Buade de Frontenac granted him as a noble fief the La