interest in botanical research had been kindled by his mentor, William Smith Clark. Both Clark and Penhallow followed the trail blazed by the “new school of botanical science” which, as Penhallow explained
Canadian News Company Limited) in association with William Walter Copp* and Henry James Clark of Copp, Clark and Company and with several
Brown* left an indelible mark on his approach towards publishing and politics. This political bias was further fed by Innes’s close relationship with Liberal power-broker Charles Clarke of nearby
race the Tory candidates, Edward Frederick Clarke, an editor and former printers-union leader, and Henry Edward Clarke, a trunk manufacturer, topped the polls. The third seat was won by Liberal candidate
photograph of Noel in his camp appear in Adney’s papers at the Peabody Museum (Salem, Mass.), box 56 (mfm. at UNBL). A painting of him, also by Adney, is reproduced on the dust cover of G. F. Clarke
Clarke, Charles Lindsey, David Christie*, Peter Perry*, and Malcolm
COWAN, JOHN WARREN, merchant and manufacturer; b. 1841 in Nenagh (Republic of Ireland), son of Edmund Cowan and Tryphena Clark; m. 28
Brigham Young; m. fourthly 2 Dec. 1885 Lavinia Clark Rigby; d. 9 Sept. 1906
. dict. [subject’s name is given incorrectly as Henry C. Caldwell at the head of the entry, but is correct in the text]. Charles Clarke, Sixty years in Upper Canada, with
Clarke Pray’s tragedy Poetus Cæcinna in October 1851.
Nickinson
Clarke* at Fort Carlton. Clarke immediately wrote to Lieutenant Governor Alexander Morris* claiming that the Métis had established a
newspapers and magazines. In 1906 he and George Harold Clark, later dominion seed commissioner, published the pictorial Farm weeds of Canada, an outstanding contribution to science. However, his best
Daniel Clark* of the Toronto asylum and endorsed to varying degrees by many physicians at
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