. Thereafter the paper gave unqualified support to the Conservative party of George-Étienne Cartier*, its plan for confederation, and its
August 1852 he took up permanent residence in Montreal. Over the next decade or so he was employed by the firm of Morison, Cameron, and Empey, studied law in the office of George-Étienne
about attacking not only the liberal democrats of the Institut Canadien and their organs Le Pays and Le Courrier de Saint-Hyacinthe, but also the supporters of George-Étienne
promoting instruction in the visual arts. At least three large institutions in Montreal had him teach their students: the École Normale Jacques-Cartier in 1861–62 and the Collège Sainte-Marie and the Institut
parish of Notre-Dame. To uphold their cause they could count on the advice of their former pupil, George-Étienne Cartier*, who was then
, Boutillier was one of those who, with George-Étienne Cartier* and Augustin-Norbert
test when elections were announced in November by the government, now led by Macdonald and his powerful French Canadian ally, George-Étienne
Beaudry. He was called to the bar in February 1849 and practised law in Saint-Lambert and later in Montreal in a legal firm with George-Étienne
: with the help of Béïque as chief organizer, Jetté convincingly defeated Sir George-Étienne
also suffered immediate decline. The Colonist could no longer be supported; instead it became an organ of the Macdonald–George-Étienne
his family background, education, and associations with men such as Boulton and Cayley, Cameron was a strong Conservative. He supported the government of George-Étienne
British Columbia for the “earliest possible period” and those in Manitoba for “the last half of August or the first week of September.” Campbell assisted in securing Sir George-Étienne
addition to Colonel Campbell (as he now was), who spoke for the military forces of the province, the commission was composed of George-Étienne
the Conservative members of parliament from Quebec. Caron was one of the ambitious young men eager to wrest from Langevin’s hands the sceptre passed on by George-Étienne
remained closely linked with the codification of civil law in Lower Canada. On 27 April 1857 George-Étienne
CARTIER, Sir GEORGE-ÉTIENNE, lawyer, politician, prime minister of the Province of Canada; b
. Alastair Sweeny, George-Étienne Cartier: a biography (Toronto, 1976), 19–21, 24, 39, 41, 91. B
cash-flow crisis and was forced to close its doors. Cartwright anxiously appealed to Macdonald and George-Étienne Cartier*, both then
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