. 31 March 1829 in London, England, daughter of Edward Rye, a solicitor, and Maria Tuppen; d
to have been aimed at the commercial market. This high-life romance set in London, England, concerns amorous and financial intrigues within the social class that has no better way to amuse itself. A
.
According to family tradition, Russell was born into reasonably comfortable circumstances on the Isle of Wight and became a boarder at Peckham Collegiate School in Southwark (London). In London he bowed to
career was filled with important lawsuits and he argued cases before every court, including the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London, in defence of the city’s interests. In May 1880 he
Canada, and they had two sons and a daughter; d. 18 May 1910 in London, England, and was buried in Almonte, Ont.
Bennett Rosamond
). F. C. Kelley, The bishop jots it down: an autobiographical strain on memories (New York and London, 1939). Corinne LaPlante, “Monseigneur James Rogers,” Dictionnaire
) and later for the Guardian (London), he published provocative and one-sided reports of Canadian church affairs. In 1876 he printed a letter which attacked the dependence of Bishop’s grammar
Thompson*], he argued that the United States had not acquired jurisdiction in the Bering Sea as a result of its purchase of Alaska. His views prevailed, and he was lauded in the London Times
*, and they had three daughters and six sons; d. 29 Sept. 1910 in London, England, and was buried in Toronto.
Matilda Ridout came from
London attempting to raise £1,000,000 to develop Reid’s properties when the Winter government fell. Upon returning to Newfoundland Reid applied to the new Bond government to have the 1898 contract assigned
.
William Proudfoot immigrated from Scotland to Middlesex County, Upper Canada, with his parents in 1832. Like many of his siblings, he was educated by his father at home, a farm near London. The family was
,” Architectural Rev. (London), 141 (1967): 364–72. Montgomery Schuyler, “The ‘sky-scraper’ up to date,” Architectural Record, 8 (1898–99): 231–57. V. J. Scully, The Shingle style
exposition, this time as the delegate of the chamber of commerce. In 1892 and 1896 he attended congresses of chambers of commerce in London, England. He was also secretary-archivist of the Forestry Association
, with portrait). Useful accounts also appear in Canadian men and women of the time (Morgan; 1898), the Globe, 27 Oct. 1910, and the London Times, 27 Oct. 1910
George Cockburn Curtis, a civil engineer in London. In early 1851 he was the successful respondent to the advertisement for an assistant placed in the London Times by J. D. Pemberton, the
Elizabeth P. Moorehouse; m. Mary Ann —; they had no children; d. 25 March 1909 in London, Ont.
John Seabury Pearce grew up on
Horticultural Society. Parker was one of the commissioners who arranged to have a Nova Scotia exhibit at the Great Exhibition of 1851 in London, England, for which he received the Prince Albert Medal, and with
. It also had retail outlets in Montreal, Winnipeg, Toronto, and Vancouver, and sold on consignment in London and
Roehampton, near London, England.
O’Bryan returned to Canada in the spring of 1892 and then spent four years preaching across the country, in
. secondly 1880 Victoria Fane, née Temple; they had no children; d. 23 Feb. 1903 in London, England.
Born into an Indian army family