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                  41 to 60 (of 395)
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                  . 12 Feb. 1735 at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), son of Pierre Boucher
                   
                  Brisay* de Denonville and then Frontenac [see Buade] praised him, and the
                   
                  [Brisay*] and Frontenac [Buade*] during the Iroquois wars. In 1692, at Pointe-Lévy (Lauzon, Que.), he married
                   
                  , and in 1690 and 1696 he apparently took part in the expeditions organized by Frontenac [Buade*] against the English
                   
                  livres. Apparently on the recommendation of Frontenac [Buade
                   
                  discovery of the great west (12th ed.), 185, n. 1. Benjamin Sulte, “Le Fort de Frontenac, 1668–1678,” RSCT, 2d ser., VII (1901), sect.i, 47–96; “La
                   
                  . Shortly after his arrival he was actively involved in the preparations for the attack on the three British forts at Oswego. In June he was sent to take command at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), where a
                  prehistoric Clearville (Kent County, 1889) and Lawson (Middlesex, 1895) sites, the Southwold (Elgin, 1890) and Parker (Lambton, 1901) earthworks, the Bon Echo pictographs (Frontenac, 1895), and the Rice Lake
                  abandoned the campaign altogether. He decided that an attack on Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), which he described as “the Key” to Lake Ontario, must be the first campaign of 1756, and he assigned the task
                  themselves as middlemen. The then governor, Louis de Buade*, Comte de Frontenac, had attempted to curb this policy by
                  Montreal and now the Frontenac apartments. Browne also built three round-cornered commercial buildings, the Mowat Building (now destroyed), Wilson’s Buildings, and Commercial Mart. All are Tuscan and
                   
                  Caughnawaga many returned to their cantons. A letter addressed to Governor Buade* de Frontenac, in April 1691, reveals
                  BUADE, LOUIS DE, Comte de FRONTENAC et de PALLUAU, soldier, governor-general of New France; one of the more turbulent and
                  with John Bradstreet at the capture of Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.) in 1758. The next year he was second in
                  , Governor Buade* de Frontenac intervened little in the affairs of the upper colony and spent most of his time in Quebec
                  Frontenac County after it was separated from the county of Lennox and Addington in 1863. Three years later Garden Island was incorporated as a village and Calvin was routinely acclaimed reeve for the
                   
                  . Like his father before him, Calvin was reeve and magistrate on Garden Island; he also served on the Frontenac County Council for 12
                  the Cataraqui division, a large constituency that included Kingston and all of Frontenac and Addington counties; he served as speaker of the council from February to May 1863. In late 1861, when
                   
                  letter, dated 17 Sept. 1690, Carheil outlined to Governor Frontenac [Buade*] why the Ottawas wavered in their
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