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                  -Castin was making his report at the Château Saint-Louis, Buade* de Frontenac, good judge that he was, was sizing him up
                   
                  Frontenac appointed him “royal process-server and serjeant-at-law for the whole of Canada,” Adhémar was still living at Sorel, but he regularly
                  (Buade de Frontenac says “110
                   
                  to take up his second mandate as governor, Buade* de Frontenac sent him with all speed to Cataracoui (Fort
                   
                  , and on one occasion advanced money for the fortification of Detroit and Michilimackinac. In 1690, sent by Governor Frontenac
                   
                  de documents,” APQ Rapport, 1941–42, 192. “Estat des employs vaquans ausquels Monsieur le comte de Frontenac . . . a pourvu en l’année 1691 en attendant les commissions de sa majesté
                   
                  poor that Governor Buade de Frontenac had to obtain for him a pension of 150
                   
                  several fur trade convoys back to Montreal, and Buade* de Frontenac often praised his work. In the early 1700s
                   
                  assigning lots, principally to loyalists in the early years. The territory Aitken surveyed began at the western end of what is now Leeds County and included the present Frontenac, Lennox and Addington, and
                   Nov. 1673), Frontenac [see Buade], tells us: “I have utilized the zeal shown
                   
                  . In 1695 Aloigny accompanied Crisafy on an expedition to re-establish Fort Frontenac. In September of that
                   
                  spent many years in various western posts where he served competently and won the confidence of the Indians despite his short stature. After an apprenticeship as second in command at Fort Frontenac
                  . As a result of the expansionist policy pursued by Governor Louis de Buade* de Frontenac, far more pelts were being
                   
                  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
                   
                   Chesnaye is scant. His godparents were none other than Governor Frontenac [Buade*] and Intendant
                  * de Frontenac against the Onondaga. The governor and the intendant recommended him to the minister, asked that his salary be increased, and sent him to France with their dispatches and a report on the
                   
                  . Throughout his active years Barker was influential in the masonic lodge, the St George’s Society, the mechanics’ institute, and the Frontenac County agricultural and horticultural societies. He was also a
                  Céloron de Blainville, who left Montreal on 15 June 1749, visited the regions of forts Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), Niagara (near Youngstown, N. Y.), and the Ohio, returning to Montreal
                   
                  . 1643; arrived in New France in 1692 (according to a note by Frontenac [Buade
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