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McKAY, WILLIAM, HBC official, fur trader, and
Battleford in April [see Sir William Dillon Otter*]. His lone mention in the regimental diary is as a cricketer in a match held
 
Bennet*; William Caven*]. His later concept of the United Church of Canada, according to which “all things work together for good to them that
), artist, educator, and author; b. 12 May 1873 in Durham, England, son of William Henry MacDonald, a cabinetmaker, and Margaret Usher (Ussher); m. 12 May 1899 Harriet Joan Prior Lavis
York City to study with William Merritt Chase, a member of the Hudson River School, and sculptor Frank Edwin Elwell. Ahrens’s paintings from this period attest to the effect Chase’s Impressionism had on
Roberts*, and he published short stories in the Toronto Star Weekly and William Arthur
Stewart, JOHN WILLIAM, railway contractor, businessman, and military officer; b
CAVENDISH, VICTOR CHRISTIAN WILLIAM, 9th Duke of DEVONSHIRE, governor general; b. 31 May 1868 in London, England, eldest son
 1918, leading his troops in every major engagement fought by the Canadian Corps during that period – the Somme, Vimy Ridge (where he was slightly wounded), Hill 70, Passchendaele, Amiens, and
 
. Sometime around 1856 Richard Power (usually known as Dick) began an apprenticeship in the gardens at Lismore Castle, which was then undergoing an extravagant restoration by Sir Joseph Paxton for William
North America or the United Kingdom; the McIlwraiths frequently crossed the Atlantic for family reasons, business, or education. This transnational network was impressive: for example, William Stone Booth
the diocese. His mother, Sophia, was a daughter of William Hume Blake*, the first chancellor of Upper Canada, and a sister of Edward
Township, Upper Canada, third child of William McKenzie and Catherine Shiells; m. 18 Aug. 1907 Ethel O’Neil (d. 1952) in Dublin; they had no children; d. 28 April 1938 in
BLACK, DAVIDSON WILLIAM, physician, anatomist, university professor, and anthropologist; b. 25 July 1884 in Toronto, son of
experience in the employ of William Smith, city architect of Aberdeen. In 1872 he entered the London office of Joseph Clarke, a prominent Gothic Revivalist who specialized in church design and restoration as
1887 Jane (Jennie) Emily Williams (1858–1945) in Winnipeg, and they had a son; d. 10 Nov. 1934 in Toronto and was buried in Acton’s Fairview Cemetery
records, nearly 25 per cent were dead, and at the school in the File Hills Colony run by William Morris
Phillips, Albert Edward, lawyer, militia officer, politician, and judge; b. 21 March 1861 in Richmond Hill, Upper Canada, son of George McPhillips and Margaret Lavin; m. 3
About Duplicate Matches
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