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

                  21 to 40 (of 45)
                  1  2  3  
                  TRUTCH, Sir JOSEPH WILLIAM, engineer, surveyor, politician, and office
                  , son of Joseph Masson* and Marie-Geneviève-Sophie Raymond; m
                  . 28 March 1852 in Ash, near Rochester, Kent, England, second son of Joseph Flitcroft Fletcher and Mary Ann Hayward; m
                  . Brainerd subsequently worked in the iron business and then in the manufacture of blasting powder. In 1867 he joined the Laflin Powder Company, whose president was his father-in-law, Joseph Milton Boies; from
                  active career in business and in the service of his church and his community, Fitz Randolph died in May 1902. A letter of 1848 from his loyalist grandfather Joseph Fitz Randolph had admonished the
                  . In the spring of 1856, with only modest capital and limited credit, Fearman set himself up as a commission merchant and produce dealer on King William Street. The following year he relocated on Hughson
                  . Gooderham’s other great Toronto monuments were his business headquarters – the flat-iron building of 1892 at Front and Wellington, also by Roberts – and the King Edward Hotel on King Street
                  . Jean Berloin, dit Nantel, an ancestor of Guillaume-Alphonse Nantel, immigrated to New France in 1690. His descendant Joseph (1757–1833) was the first to abandon the name Berloin altogether, in
                   
                  in nearby Ancaster and in 1863, with Robert Ellis, they purchased it. In 1864–65, in partnership with Joseph Ellis, they built a second mill, the Cold Springs Woollen Mill at Brantford. By 1868 they
                   John Joseph Caldwell Abbott*], as a trustee of the Tiffin Library, and as an active member of the Art Association of Montreal, the
                  Medley*, bishop of Fredericton, and the Reverend John Armstrong, rector of St James’ Church, Saint John, as well as at King’s College, Windsor, N.S. Ordained deacon in 1864 and priest the
                  . Once the dust had settled and John Joseph Caldwell Abbott* had reluctantly agreed to serve as prime minister (from the Senate), it
                  denounced the order because of its status as a secret society. He first tackled Toronto’s archbishop, John Joseph Lynch*, on this subject in 1884
                  Benefit Association, the Young Men’s Society of St Joseph, the Father Mathew Association, St Malachi’s Total Abstinence Relief Society, the Irish Literary and Benevolent Society, the
                  attend the Presbyterian Church but resolved to become an Anglican when such a move became feasible. Machray studied mathematics at King’s College
                  in his canoe, Gabe was hailed by the prince, who asked for a ride. Against the remonstrances of equerries and household, Gabe paddled the future king across the river and into the mouth of the Nashwaak
                  retail district of King Street, Eaton was now established in the line that would serve as the advance guard of the retail industry in the changes it was undergoing. Furthermore, by directing his appeal to
                  and mla. In the Legislative Assembly Eddy played a minor role, supporting the governments of Pierre-Joseph-Olivier
                  ,” with the authority to act in any part of the province. In 1884 he moved to an office on King Street West, Toronto. Murray’s
                  members joining him, was carried 22 to 18; one of the defectors, Gaius Samuel Turner, would be made a member of Blair’s Executive Council. Joseph
                  21 to 40 (of 45)
                  1  2  3