DAVIDSON, ALEXANDER, teacher, author, journalist, businessman, politician, and office holder; b. 1794 in
WARBURTON, ALEXANDER BANNERMAN, lawyer, politician, judge, and author; b. 5 April 1852 in Charlottetown, son of James
Aug. 1846, Peers left for Fort George to succeed Alexander Lattie and to superintend the erection of a house and store at Baker’s Bay on the north side of the river. There he acted as port agent of
department, and he apparently remained in that position for several years.
On 20 June 1806 Alexander
Marquess of Lorne [Campbell*] and Alexander
EWEN, ALEXANDER, fisherman, salmon-canner, businessman, and alderman; b. 22 Nov. 1832 in Aberdeen, Scotland
capacities of the business. In recognition of his success, he was appointed president of the BCPA in 1907, succeeding Alexander Ewen*. He continued
brought him national renown. “The land of the maple” (1897), which appeared in both English and French versions, sold over 100,000 copies and was said, in his obituary, to rival Alexander
affairs in the hands of Alexander Mckee.
Hay reached his post
, England, son of Captain Alexander Thomas Emeric Vidal and Sarah Antoinette Veitch; m. first January 1869 Kate Allen (d. 1884), and they had two children; m. secondly 2 Feb. 1892 Béatrice
CAMPBELL, Sir ALEXANDER, lawyer, politician, educator, businessman, and office holder; baptized 9 March 1822 in Hedon
JOHNSTON, ALEXANDER, judge of the Court of Vice-Admiralty and legislative councillor; b. c. 1737; d. 26
KEMP, ALEXANDER FERRIE, Presbyterian clergyman, scholar, and administrator; b. 28 June 1822 at West Greenock (Strathclyde
LOGAN, ALEXANDER, businessman and politician; b. 5 Nov. 1841 in Fort Douglas (Winnipeg, Man.), son of Robert
MOUAT, WILLIAM ALEXANDER, master mariner and HBC employee; b. in 1821 in London, Eng., son of William Mouat; m. 8 Aug. 1854
BEGG, ALEXANDER, businessman, author, newspaper editor, and office holder; b. 19 July 1839 at Quebec, son
OGILVIE, ALEXANDER WALKER, miller, militia officer, jp, politician, and businessman; b. 7 May
TORRANCE, office holder, businessman, and developer; b. 24 May 1850 in Sherbrooke, Lower Canada, son of Alexander Tilloch
Alexander*, Angus Macdonell does not seem to have served in a loyalist corps during the revolution. Nor was he living with his father at Quebec at the end of the war. He did, however, spend a few years
metallurgist. After his call to the bar in 1884 he joined the law practice there of his brother Thomas Alexander Keefer and Edward Robert Cameron, who soon left. The brothers combined their legal work with an