underprivileged and institutionalized. In the early 1900s she began working in provincial institutions, at first part-time, providing care to patients in mental hospitals in Toronto, Mimico, Orillia, and Hamilton
Hamilton, who was favourable to the merchants’ demands, when he was recalled to England for having given the lease of the king’s posts to a group of his sympathizers in 1785. Two years later
., one of the commissioners (Hamilton, [Ont.], 1845). H. I. Cowan, British emigration to British North America; the first hundred years (Toronto, 1961). Gates
Hilary Conroy (Honolulu, 1983). Roy Ito, Stories of my people: a Japanese Canadian journal (Hamilton, Ont., 1994). Kanada Nikkeijin Godo
* and Sir Charles Hamilton* would discover, Newfoundland had started on a slide into a serious post-war depression. Keats’s term ended on
scholar, he attended the Toronto School of Medicine and graduated from the University of Toronto (mb 1878). He interned at the Hamilton General Hospital before his former dean
Keefer*, working on channel and harbour improvements, on waterworks in Montreal, Ottawa, and Hamilton, and on other projects. In 1863 he was appointed assistant city surveyor in Montreal and a few
three of his children had graduated. Elizabeth Margaret Ritchie, after service overseas as a nurse in 1918–19, taught at Branksome Hall girls’ school in Toronto; Dorothy Hamilton, following several years
his wife took in boarders while he studied for his first-class teaching certificate. After he obtained the certificate, they moved to Hamilton, again taking in boarders, and William taught school and
, 1874–1920. Dominion annual reg., 1887. J. C. Hamilton, Osgoode Hall, reminiscences of the bench and bar (Toronto, 1904). G. H. Homel, “Denison’s law: criminal justice and the
, Jacob Silver, were chosen to seek suitable land. Assisted by Lauchlan Alexander Hamilton, land commissioner of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company in Winnipeg, Klenman and Silver travelled to various
entire summer travelling some 300 miles along the coast, using Baie des Esquimaux (Hamilton Inlet) as his headquarters. He had a series of male and female interpreters who helped him in his preaching
winter of 1875-76 at Baie des Esquimaux (Hamilton Inlet); there he came in contact with Naskapi and Inuit and began learning Inuktitut. He reportedly compiled a dictionary for this language that was lost
(1922), 220–21. Giraud, Histoire de la Louisiane française, I. P. J. Hamilton, Colonial Mobile (Boston, 1897; rev. ed., 1910). Kellogg, French régime. N. M
. Canadian Illustrated News (Hamilton, Ont.), 16 Jan. 1864. Canadian Illustrated News (Montreal), 12 Feb., 1 April 1876. James Hodges, Construction of the great
advancement were limited, and they sought a location for a foundry of their own. After investigating Hamilton in 1834, Elijah Jr decided that St Thomas seemed promising. In May he and his father, in
Board of Works of the Province of Canada under Hamilton Hartley Killaly* and Samuel
Russell*, Robert Hamilton*, and clergymen Edmund Burke* and Robert
and Newfoundland has been constructed from the following sources: the Royal Gazette, and Bermuda Commercial and General Advertiser and Recorder (Hamilton), 13 Dec. 1842; Bishop
.
After teaching briefly, Alexander Mackay worked as a telegrapher in Halifax, Hamilton, Upper Canada, and New York. He went to Newfoundland in January 1857 as local superintendent of the New York
of a child who had died of rabies in Hamilton.” He also used his laboratory to study infectious micro-organisms, especially those causing diphtheria. More than just a researcher, Mackenzie advocated
[Hamilton-Gordon*] and Lady Aberdeen [Marjoribanks*] in May 1897. The event was long remembered locally as “the grandest
The farm periodical for which Macpherson was dairy editor from July 1884 until sometime in 1887 began publication in 1883 as the Canadian Stock-Raisers’ Journal (Hamilton, Ont.), and
179; RG 22-191, no.10947; RG 80-8-0-677, no.29182; RG 80-27-2, 39: 47–48. LAC, MG 26, G: 3548–51, 3561–63; RG 31, C1, 1871, Hamilton Township, Ont., div.1: 66. Northumberland East Land
subject would shortly begin between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. The news was premature, for when Manners-Sutton was succeeded in October 1861 by Sir Arthur Hamilton
Wickett*, a pioneer in Canadian urban studies, and Robert Hamilton Coats
Lieutenant Richard Vesey Hamilton with reports for Belcher on the condition of the ships, and two others to the west, under the command of Mecham and Frederick J. Krabbé, master of the Intrepid
Institute. In May 1867 he joined the Hamilton branch of the Bank of Montreal as a clerk at a salary of $200 per year. Banking in mid-19th-century Canada offered young males the
Quebec the following month, and keeping in close, constant, and personal touch with lieutenant governors Sir William Fenwick Williams of Nova Scotia and Arthur Hamilton
and friend of Dandurand’s, to add an ice rink to the new Madison Square Garden building in New York and to buy the Hamilton Tigers, who became the New York Americans. Rickard insisted that the Canadiens
1863 Murray had been appointed to the Island’s Board of Education by the Conservatives, who had returned to power under John Hamilton
.
In 1899 McKenna was chosen to join Indian commissioner David Laird and James Hamilton
Chimo and Fort Smith (now North West River, Labrador) on Hamilton Inlet. Believing that success in the area would result in his rapid promotion, McLean embarked on trips of exploration into the interior
Street from the canal-builders Oliver Phelps and William Hamilton Merritt*. When the partnership of Norris and Neelon was
1881, he practised with his brother John Wallace in Hamilton. In 1883 Britton Bath Osler* persuaded him to join his Toronto firm, McCarthy
Fort Edmonton and in the Mackenzie River district. In June 1863 he made a personal appeal at the synod meeting in Hamilton but he could not persuade the delegates to incur new liabilities for an
; containing a complete history of the county of Oxford, from its first settlement; together, with a full abstract of each census . . . , comp. T. S. Shenston (Hamilton, [Ont
Patrick’s, John Hamilton Rowland, remained at odds with Walter until 1788, when the rival parishes of St Patrick and St George merged. Together the two congregations, under the joint care of Rowland
Hamilton Holton*]. In May 1858, after Joseph-Ferréol Pelletier’s death, Joseph Papin became counsel for the town of Montreal, with an
” (ma thesis, McMaster Univ., Hamilton, Ont., 1991). Ross Stuart, “The critic as reviewer: E. R. Parkhurst at the Toronto Mail and Globe, 1876-1924,” in Establishing our
Patterson,” Presbyterian Hist. (Hamilton, Ont.), 29 (1985), no.2. Eric Ross, “A Canadian abroad in Edinburgh University, 1847/48,” Univ. of Edinburgh Bull., January 1986: 11–14
Inuktitut. The Eskimo grammar (Ottawa, 1919) would go through several reprintings, and the Eskimo-English dictionary would be published by Walton in Hamilton, Ont., in 1925. To mark the
(Abingdon, Eng.), 27 (2015): 159–71. J. C. Hamilton, Osgoode Hall: reminiscences of the bench and bar (Toronto, 1904). Natasha Henry-Dixon, “One too many: the enslavement of Black people in Upper
supporter of the opposition Rouges and, in particular, the editorial champion of those English-speaking liberals clustered about Luther Hamilton
alone, 1912–13, she visited Ottawa, Toronto, Hamilton, London, Walkerville (Windsor), Ont., and Moncton, N.B., and attended the annual meeting of the National Council of Women in Montreal. Her travels in
system was organized there. Phelan consecrated John Farrell*, the first bishop of Hamilton, in 1856, and welcomed the Loretto sisters to Belleville
, the manager of the General Mining Association’s coalmines in Pictou County, and Elizabeth Noad Leonard; m. 15 June 1876, in Charlottetown, Florence Hope Gibson Gray, daughter of John Hamilton
vicars general William Peter MacDonald at Hamilton and Angus MacDonell at Sandwich (Windsor). The first
[Grey] in 1894, and Lord Aberdeen [Hamilton-Gordon] and Lady Aberdeen
east of Hamilton. He decided in late 1832, after some wavering, to settle in London.
Hoping soon to be self-sufficient, he bought a 200-acre farm just