Edgar*, and John Hoskin. Under the name of Strong and Matheson, he also worked in partnership with William Marshall Matheson.
During the first
a farm at Sillery, “equipped with all the latest implements and machines,” and he and his brother worked it. According to Charles-Edmond Rouleau, a journalist at Le Canadien, Tarte
the Legislative Council by the anti-confederate government of Charles James Fox Bennett*. He was prominent in the St John’s
VALLÉE, LOUIS-PRUDENT (baptized Louis-François-Charles-Prudent), photographer; b
five of her companions to succour the hapless victims of leprosy, a malady rife in the region since the second quarter of the 19th century [see Charles-Marie
Gault, Charles Ross Whitehead*, and others, he got the
. 15 Nov. 1834 in Newry (Northern Ireland), son of Charles Walkem and Mary Ann Boomer; m. 30
. 23 Aug. 1851 in Belleisle (Belleisle Creek), N.B., son of William Walker and Patience Taylor; m
WHITELEY, WILLIAM HENRY, fisherman, merchant, inventor, and politician; b. 5
WHITEWAY, Sir WILLIAM VALLANCE, lawyer and politician; b
formal education in Toronto and in his early teens he worked there as a newsboy. At age 16 he became a printer’s apprentice to his cousin William
WITHROW, WILLIAM HENRY, Methodist minister, journalist, and author
. 27 Feb. 1830 in London, England, son of William Wood and Anne Aston Key; d. unmarried 26
and he called for a royal commission to investigate the “lamentable situation.” In 1878 he entered into a legal partnership with Charles-Joseph
. 7 April 1840 in Crosby Township, Upper Canada, son of the Reverend William Young and Amanda Waldron; m
, 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