committee of citizens from Lévis. Along with these pieces, he had been working since 1883 on the pulpit of Notre-Dame church in Montreal. This imposing work, which would occupy him until 1887, must be
occasioned by the fact that charitable donations promised for the construction of St Catherine’s Church were slow in coming. He arrived in Lévis from New York on 24 Aug. 1881. Apart from the
Christian family who lived in Saint-Roch ward. In the autumn of 1855 his father enrolled him in the commercial program taught by the Brothers of the Christian Schools in the newly opened Collège de Lévis
In addition to the works already mentioned, Pamphile Le May is the author of Petits poèmes ([Québec], 1883) and Fêtes et corvées (Lévis, Qué., 1898). Manuscripts of his
Moyne-White, Le Moyne des Pins: genealogies from 1655 to 1930 . . . (Lévis, Que., 1930).
, Montreal, 1868–73; Quebec, 1830–68. P.-G. Roy, Fils de Québec (4 sér., Lévis, Qué., 1933
defence of their colleague George Irvine*, accused of fraudulent dealings in the sale of the Levis and Kennebec Railway, he joined their ranks in
.
Adelstan de Martigny did his classical studies at the Collège de Lévis in 1881–85 and at the Collège Sainte-Marie in Montreal in 1885–86. He then entered the faculty of medicine at the Montreal branch of the
). R. R. Gagan, A sensitive independence: Canadian Methodist women missionaries in Canada and the Orient, 1881–1925 (Montreal and Kingston, Ont., 1992). G. E. Levy, The
leaders. He took part in the Quebec election campaign of June 1890. While going by train from Lévis to Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière (La Pocatière) on 16 June to vote at Rivière-Ouelle (and
of Jacques Cartier*; Charles Levi Woodbury, an expert on the fisheries of the North Atlantic; and James Phinney Baxter, who studied
Saint-Urbain, Que., son of John Redman, a blacksmith, and Laure Martineau; m. 31 Jan. 1911 Valérie Bourassa in Saint-Joseph-de-la-Pointe-de-Lévy, Que., and they had one daughter; d. 19
companies attempted to establish operations, the recession of 1903 and the American tariff on Canadian pulp, paper, and newsprint contributed to their collapse. Changes to the Mines Act, also in 1900, levied
Dec. 1858 in Pointe-Lévy (Lévis), Lower Canada, son of Léon Roy and Marguerite Lavoie; m. 26 May 1885 Lucienne Carrier in Lévis; they had no children; d. there 8 May 1913
SCHEUER, CAMILLA (Levy), philanthropist; b. 28 Oct. 1845 in Berncastel
. . . (3v., Montreal and Toronto, 1904–7), 3: 91. Gary Levy, Speakers of the House of Commons
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