.”
Meeting with some success, in 1875 White formed the Forest City Machine Bolt and Nut Works in partnership with Lucius George Jolliffe and William Yates, an inventor-machinist with an interest in steam
WATTS, JOHN WILLIAM HURRELL, architect, designer, artist, and civil servant; b
. Harris. This trial lasted the unprecedented length of one month and featured bitter personal exchanges between Travis and opposing counsel William
festivals organized by Charles Albert Edwin Harriss* which composer Sir Alexander Campbell Mackenzie held in 15 cities across
SULLIVAN, Sir WILLIAM WILFRED, journalist, lawyer, politician, and judge; b
Simpson, a surgeon and dentist, and Marion Campbell; m. 29 June 1891 Alice Maude DesBrisay in Charlottetown, and they had three sons and one daughter; d. there 29 Nov. 1920
ROSS, Sir GEORGE WILLIAM, educator and politician; b
George Edward Henry Douglas Sutherland Campbell], he was also a founder of
RAPHAEL, WILLIAM, artist, photographer, art teacher, anatomical illustrator, and art restorer; b
Charles William Covernton for three years at Port Dover, Upper Canada, and in 1856 he enrolled in the medical faculty of McGill College in Montreal. After graduating in 1860 he returned to Port Dover, where
under the influence of William Leslie Hooper, head of the college’s new department of electrical engineering. In the summer of 1884, for instance, he worked as a consultant at a gold-mine in Virginia
. 1 Nov. 1822 in Charlottetown, eldest of the 11 children of Thomas Owen and Ann Campbell; m
province for three years gathering evidence from natives and non-natives on the adequacy of reserves. McKenna reported regularly to Duncan Campbell
of William McKeever, a grocer and butcher, and Bella Henderson; d
regarded by chief factor William Joseph Christie* that in the spring of 1869 Christie offered him charge of a post. McDougall thought
federal government, although early in 1915 William Pugsley*, a former minister in Laurier’s cabinet, insinuated that some money had found its way
bar on 4 Dec. 1869. Like Thomas, he moved easily into Toronto’s legal community and society. In 1871 he formed a partnership with his brother, Featherston Osler, and William Alexander
Collegiate Institute. After working briefly for the architectural firm Darling and Curry, he switched to art and in January 1890 began studies with Toronto artist William Cruikshank. The following year he
classmate, William Osler, professor at McGill College, who persuaded him to study medicine. Mills entered the medical