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                  21 to 29 (of 29)
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                  government appointments were secured through the influence of his brother William McDonell Dawson, superintendent of the woods and forests branch of the Crown Lands Department and later a member of the
                  . 1 Aug. 1849 in Pictou, N.S., son of John William Dawson* and Margaret
                  Montagne (Côte de la Montagne): his only printing-press was the one that had been used by William Brown* in 1764 to launch the Quebec Gazette
                   
                  [Elliot*] and Lady Minto on a trip from Whitehorse to Dawson, for which exploit he later proudly wore a monogrammed pin presented to him by the governor general
                   
                  consolidated statutes of New Brunswick. He also prepared an index of the statutes in force as of 1878, and he was co-author, with William Pugsley
                  BOND, WILLIAM BENNETT, Church of England priest and archbishop; b
                  BOMPAS, WILLIAM CARPENTER, Church of England clergyman, bishop, and missionary; b
                   
                  . 1822 in Penryn, England, son of Robert Blenkinsop, an excise officer, and Mary —; m. first July 1846 Helen McNeill, daughter of William
                  Dawson until a church was erected. Named St Andrew’s in honour of a group of Scottish Catholic workers on the Dawson Road who had contributed $100 toward its construction, the church was
                  21 to 29 (of 29)
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