DCB/DBC Mobile beta
+

Results per Page: Go
Modify search on Advanced Search page

Type of Result

      Region of Birth

          Region of Activities

              Occupations and Other Identifiers

                  41 to 60 (of 177)
                  1  2  3  4  ...9
                   
                  CLARKE, CHARLES, businessman, journalist, politician, office holder, author, and militia officer; b
                  . Cockshutt did take shares in companies in which he or his family could exert managerial influence. He held stock in C. H. Waterous and Company [see Charles Horatio
                   
                  . c. 1862 in Maitland, Hants County, N.S., son of Charles Cox, a shipbuilder, and Margaret Graham
                  the parish of Saint-Roch, and they had 13 children; d. 30 Sept. 1904 at Quebec and was buried 3 October in the Saint-Charles
                  DANIELLE, CHARLES HENRY, dancing teacher, costume maker, restaurateur, and resort owner; b
                   
                  . George Duncan, the youngest, served his time in the machine shops of the Carrier, Laîné et Compagnie foundry in Lévis [see Charles William
                  . . . (Toronto, 1873), the second pamphlet in a series inaugurated by William Alexander Foster
                  replace James McKay*, who had resigned with the Girard administration. Davis therefore added Charles
                  $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
                   
                  . 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
                  DRUMMOND, WILLIAM HENRY (known until 1875 as William Henry Drumm), telegraphist, physician, poet, professor, and
                   
                  DRURY, CHARLES ALFRED, farmer, politician, and office holder; b
                  ) into a local show-place, which he named Maple Shade Farm. In politics he was a reformer who had supported William Lyon Mackenzie
                  .” Duhamel was consecrated on 28 Oct. 1874 in the cathedral of Ottawa by Taschereau with the assistance of Laflèche and Édouard-Charles Fabre
                   
                  DUMARESQ, JAMES CHARLES PHILIP, architect; b. 18 Dec. 1844 in Sydney, N.S
                  , to draft a bill of rights and represent them at the meeting with the English. Dumont and Charles Nolin
                   
                  . Dumoulin entered provincial politics in 1867, when he ran as Conservative candidate in Trois-Rivières and was defeated by Louis-Charles
                   
                  Tilley* of New Brunswick, called on Premier Charles Tupper* in Halifax to see if the New Brunswick company could be granted concessions which
                  the Georgetown area of Upper Canada, where a maternal aunt and her husband had settled in 1833. He found employment as a junior bookkeeping clerk at a small general store in Glen Williams, just outside
                  since 1867. He was elected for the ruling Conservatives with a majority of 777 over his Liberal opponent, Charles Leduc, but his political career would be short. Running as an independent in 1875, he lost
                  41 to 60 (of 177)
                  1  2  3  4  ...9