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                  ARMSTRONG, JOHN, printer, labour leader, and office holder; b. c. 1845; d. 22 Nov. 1910 in
                  Fredericton Collegiate School, Andrew entered his uncle’s law office at age 14, and on Segee’s death in 1863 completed his legal studies under John
                   
                  . 4 Oct. 1825 in Selkirk, Scotland, son of John Blair and Margaret Armstrong; d. 25 Oct. 1901 in Greenbank
                  . 26 Dec. 1830 in Kirkcolm, Scotland, son of John Caven and Mary Milroy; m. July 1856 Margaret Goldie, daughter of botanist John Goldie, and they had three sons and three daughters; d
                  1863 he joined the 15th Battalion, Volunteer Militia Infantry, of Belleville. He served during the Fenian raids of 1866 [see John O’Neill
                  DAVIDSON, JOHN IRVINE, businessman, office holder, and militia officer; b
                  . 13 June 1818 in Redhaven, near Portsoy, Scotland, tenth child and eighth son of John Dawson and Anne McDonell; d. unmarried 30
                  wholehearted support to the Quebec and Lake St John Railway, then under construction, of which he had been a director from its earliest days. He repeatedly emphasized the importance of fixing up the long
                  member of the Guelph Board of Trade, he was an incorporator in 1884 of the Guelph Junction Railway along with John Belmer Armstrong
                  painters, including John Arthur Fraser*, Henry Sandham
                   F. Armstrong, Flora Eaton, and Maria Armstrong left for Rangoon (Yangon), Burma. Known as the “serving seven,” the group arrived on 12 Jan. 1874 and took up work among the Karen people, where
                  than 70 church commissions across Ontario and one as far east as Saint John, N.B
                  Thomas*, the Fireman’s Hall and Mechanics’ Institute in 1845–46 and stores planned by John George Howard* for A. V. Brown in 1847
                  . 22 July 1820 in Kingston, Upper Canada, son of John Mowat* and
                  Mulvey, its new master, led a procession at Armstrong’s Point (Winnipeg) to celebrate the anniversary of the battle of the Boyne there were over 100 members. Mulvey was a man of extreme Protestant views
                   
                  McCABE, WILLIAM, teacher and businessman; b. 12 June 1835 in Hallowell (Picton), Upper Canada, son of John
                   
                  McCORMICK, THOMAS, manufacturer; b. 1 July 1830 in Dungannon (Northern Ireland); m. Catherine Armstrong
                   
                  McRAE, JOHN WILLIAM, businessman and politician; b
                   
                   K. Armstrong, and they had two sons and two daughters; d. 19 Jan. 1904 in Montreal and was buried in Fernhill Cemetery, Saint John
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