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                  41 to 60 (of 177)
                  1  2  3  4  ...9
                  . 5 Feb. 1818 in Newburyport, Mass., third child of William Boardman, a merchant, and Esther W. Toppan; m
                   
                  . James Dove prepared for the Methodist ministry in the days when Newfoundland was a mission of the British Wesleyan Conference. With another young missionary, Charles Comben, he volunteered for service in
                  . c. 1840 in Halifax County, N.S., son of Charles Kellum; d. 26 Feb. 1905 in the
                  French, English, and several indigenous languages of western Canada. McKay settled at Red River in the parish of St Charles (Man.) and later in
                   1828, but left without taking a degree. With an elder brother, William Charles*, he sailed for the Canadas early in 1832. He took the
                  CANNIFF, WILLIAM, physician, medical educator, author, school administrator, and civil servant; b
                   
                  William Stagg, and those of his fellow native catechists and clergymen, including Charles Pratt and Alfred Campbell
                  . Charles continued his father’s office and in 1907 formed a partnership with one of Langley’s former students, William Ford Howland. Henry Langley was buried in the Necropolis, for which he had designed the
                   
                  BRODIE, WILLIAM, dentist and biologist; b. 1831 (baptized 9 July) in Peterhead, Scotland, son of George Brodie
                  a notary in Saint-Hyacinthe, had fought at Saint-Denis and Saint-Charles-sur-Richelieu and had been imprisoned in the Montreal jail. He had later moved to Saint-Norbert d’Arthabaska (Norbertville
                  NOLIN, CHARLES, Métis farmer, fur trader, and politician; b
                   
                  was rewarded with the post of attorney general in Charles James Fox Bennett*’s anti-confederate government, which took office
                  $500,000. When the prominent Liverpool traders James Bland and William and Hughes Pierce withdrew from the firm in 1873, it was reorganized. Quentin Fleming and Charles Taylor became the chief partners in
                  , second son and third child of William Pollock Yuile, a wine merchant, and Margaret Rattray; m. 11 June 1878 Margaret King in Montreal, and they had four daughters; d. 21 June 1909 in
                  Fearman continued to attend school in Hamilton, where he received his formal education under the capable instruction of Charles Ozen Counsell and William
                  ALEXANDER, CHARLES, confectioner, caterer, philanthropist, politician, and jp; b. 13 June 1816
                  VALLÉE, LOUIS-PRUDENT (baptized Louis-François-Charles-Prudent), photographer; b
                  DANIELLE, CHARLES HENRY, dancing teacher, costume maker, restaurateur, and resort owner; b
                  WITHROW, WILLIAM HENRY, Methodist minister, journalist, and author
                   
                  of the eight children of William Ironside and Catherine Airth; m. November 1889 Annie Gordon, and they had two sons; d. 12 Oct. 1910 in Montreal
                  41 to 60 (of 177)
                  1  2  3  4  ...9