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was on intimate terms with Lieutenant Governor Auguste-Réal Angers, whom he served as private
 Dec. 1850 in Saint-François parish (in Beauceville), Lower Canada, son of George William Chapman, a merchant, and Caroline Angers, sister of François-Réal
Legislative Assembly, having won a stunning victory over the attorney general, Auguste-Réal Angers, as a result of
Governor Auguste-Réal Angers on 16 Dec. 1891 and the Liberals, including Shehyn, found themselves once
Angers, who became solicitor general, and he made room for the impatient young opportunists under Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau* by
anger of many public figures. His editorials sometimes advanced the Acadian cause, but not always. After publishing a few letters from Émilie
Angers, resigned from the cabinet on 8 July 1895. Ouimet and Adolphe Caron withdrew their resignations once Bowell promised action. When parliament ended in April 1896 before the
Angers, the minister of agriculture, had resigned in July 1895 and Bowell could not find a French Canadian to replace him; the government had lost two critical by-elections in Quebec over
Angers in 1891 and the election of 8 March 1892, Leblanc was unanimously voted in as speaker of the Legislative Assembly on 26 April. At first glance, the Boucherville government’s
Angers named Jetté to head the royal commission of inquiry into the Baie des Chaleurs Railway scandal. Allegedly, soon after the 1890 provincial election, members of the Mercier government and
About Duplicate Matches
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