. Daily Expositor (Brantford), 26 April, 1 May 1915. Can., Dept. of Indian Affairs, Annual report (Ottawa), 1929/30: 15–22. D. G. Dancocks, Welcome
Ottawa Silver Seven [see Francis Clarence McGee*] for the Stanley Cup. The Winnipeg team lost two of the three games in the
. Belleville, Ont., 1972), [167]. Wyatt Malcolm, Gold fields of Nova Scotia (Ottawa, 1912). Past and present of Prince Edward Island . . . , ed. D
June 1828. Ottawa Citizen, 17 Feb. 1860. Armstrong, Handbook of Upper Canadian chronology, 69, 80. Canada directory, 1857–58; 1864–65. “1828 Upper Canada
.
Somewhat embittered, Brown returned to land surveying, but received only a trickle of work from the Conservative government in Ottawa. He also engaged in a number of business projects, including the
Ottawa, the HBC, and the Canadian Pacific Railway, climaxed by Smith becoming the HBC’s largest shareholder and governor. As Brydges’ most exacting assignment, his connection with the HBC produced strains
Canals, Annual report (Ottawa), 1879–81. Canadian National Railways, Hist. Research Branch (Montreal), “Synoptical history of organization, capital stock, funded debt and other general information
). Canadian Northwest (Oliver), I, 71, 582, 620. Rapport du comité spécial sur les causes des troubles du Territoire du Nord-Ouest en 1869–70 (Ottawa, 1874), 114–19. R. B. Mitchell
., 1934). Christine Chartré et al., Répertoire des marchés de construction et des actes de société des Archives nationales du Québec à Trois-Rivières, de 1760 à 1825 ([Ottawa], 1980). Maurice
de la colonie française,” Canada-Français, 1re sér., I (1888), 114–34. Albert David, “L’affaire How d’après les documents contemporains,” Revue de l’Université d’Ottawa, VI
.
In 1907 Bélanger, now in his sixties, transferred the management of his foundry to his 30-year-old son, Joseph-Adrien-Amable, who had studied accounting and business at the College of Ottawa. He in
of Vimy, ed. W. W. Murray (Ottawa, [1936]). Don Kerr and S. [D.] Hanson, Saskatoon: the first half-century (Edmonton, 1982) (photo of Cairns on p.158). J. L
Roberts* given at Ottawa in 1891, which was published posthumously as “Two Canadian poets.”
Of Cameron’s published verse, his juvenilia, “Lyrics on
the government of the Province of Canada, 1841–1867 (Ottawa, 1963) never discusses Campbell, but this book is an excellent one for studying anyone such as Campbell who did so much
du Centre-du-Québec (Trois-Rivières, Québec), CE401-S48, 17 févr. 1794; Centre d’arch. du Vieux-Montréal, CN601-S29, 10 nov. 1791. Library and Arch. Can. (Ottawa), R11960-0-2, vol.11. La
. Répertoire des mariages de Saint-André de Kamouraska, 1791–1968, Armand Proulx, compil. (La Pocatière, Qué., [1970]). P.-H. Hudon, Rivière-Ouelle de la Bouteillerie; 3 siècles de vie (Ottawa
Frederick Charles Denison*]. The Canadian crew came mainly from Winnipeg, Ottawa, Trois-Rivières, and Caughnawaga. The Caughnawaga
were later founded in Toronto (1869), Montreal (1874), Ottawa (1887), Trois-Rivières (1889), Brooklyn (New York City) (1890), Portland, Ore. (1892), Sherbrooke (1895), Nicolet (1896), Manchester, N.H
1867 and then at Ottawa from 1874 to 1878.
Charles Caron had received some training in music at the school run by Charles
.
Silas Carpenter was educated at a local school in Brownsburg and at the Ottawa Collegiate Institute. In 1880 he was appointed constable on the Montreal police force. Promoted sergeant two years later, he
, she made pottery and rugs that she decorated with native motifs. In 1926 she invited the Ottawa-based ethnographer Marius
. G. Hart, The new annual army list . . . (London), 1885, 1888. History of the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, 1903–1961, ed. J. S. Moir (Ottawa
(Ottawa, 1965). Henri Têtu, Historique des journaux de Québec (2e éd., Québec, 1889).
Lavallée* and previously a blacksmith like himself. Casavant’s growing fame soon brought him an order for an organ for the church at Bytown (Ottawa), and he went to live there temporarily. On 19
-Ouelle de la Bouteillerie; 3 siècles de vie (Ottawa, 1972). [M.-E. Perreault], Mme E. Croff, Nos ancêtres à l’œuvre à la Rivière-Ouelle (Montréal, 1931).
la Bouteillerie; 3 siècles de vie (Ottawa, 1972).
Ottawa country as his assistant business agent. He left for the pays d’en haut in March 1690 and probably returned in the spring of 1691. On 12 June of that year, in Quebec City, he married
appointed colonel of militia. He improved upon his father’s economic position by engaging in the fur trade. In 1691 he was hired by a Montreal merchant to make a trip to the Ottawa country to trade. By 1700
, 1952). J.-P. Gagnon, Le 22e bataillon (canadien-français), 1914–1919; étude socio-militaire (Québec et Ottawa, 1986)
. Henri Morrisseau, “La famille Cherrier de Saint-Denis-sur-Richelieu; un salon aristocratique à la fin du dix-huitième siècle,” Revue de l’université d’Ottawa, XVI (1946
: Occasional Papers in Archaeology and History (Ottawa), no. 14 (1975), 5–125.
, Le calvaire d’Oka (Ottawa, 1974), 93, 101. Ramsay Traquair, The old architecture of Quebec (Toronto, 1947), 249, 292. A. Bellay, “L’église de Saint-François d’Assise de
in 1880 urged Ottawa to pay the $330 because Cochrane was “such a vindictive man.” Cochrane was a witness to the signing of treaties nos.1 and 5. He served as interpreter at East Doghead Point, Berens
those of the Royal Ont. Museum in Toronto; the National Gallery of Canada and the Picture Division of the PAC, both in Ottawa; the McCord Museum in Montreal; and, in Quebec, the Musée du Québec, the Musée
. Telegraph-Journal (Saint John), 10–11 Oct. 1927. J. M. Whalen, “‘Allmost as bad as Ireland’: Saint John, 1847,” Archiyaria (Ottawa), no.10 (summer 1980): 85–97.
(1848–1923) (Sillery, Qué., 1998). C. D. Melvill et al., Reports on fisheries investigations in Hudson and James bays and tributary waters in 1914 (Ottawa, 1915). Robert Parisé
City until 1869, in Ottawa from 1869 to 1870, in Montreal from 1871 to 1884, and, lastly, in New York City from 1884 to 1886. He probably died at his son’s residence in Troy, N.Y., about 1890
, specifically forbidding him to go north to the HBC post of Fort Pitt. But Crozier believed that Ottawa, through the Indian commissioner (Joseph-Alfred-Norbert
peace with the neighbouring Ojibwas and Ottawas.
Probably in the early summer of 1749 de Quindre moved to Detroit, where settlement was being
year Dagneau served as an officer and interpreter at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), and in 1739 he was in charge of taking presents to Detroit for the Ottawas. Two years later he was promoted first
from 1868 to January 19th, 1889,) compiled from the original register at Ottawa ([Toronto?, 1889?]). Encyclopedia of music in Canada (Kallmann et al.). H. C. Mathews
, Hist. papers, 1979: 33–47. History of the federal electoral ridings, 1867–1980 (4v., [Ottawa, 1982?]), 1. K. D. McLeod, “Archaeological investigations at the Delorme House
Lessard*, who had been sent by the military authorities in Ottawa to put a stop to the demonstrations. During the evening of 1 April, Easter Monday, cavalry, machine-gunners, and infantry set out
treatment, condemning Ottawa’s management of Indian affairs in Treaty No.7, and predicting trouble “costly to the government.”
Trouble came in Treaty No.6
(2v., Ottawa, 1948). P.-G. Roy, La famille Des Champs de Boishébert (Lévis, 1906). Benjamin Sulte, “Jean-Baptiste-François Des Champs de La Bouteillerie,” BRH, XII (1906
request could not be justified. During the succeeding years the company changed hands several times, becoming in 1847 the Ottawa Glass Works, under the ownership of Stewart
au C.f., 35. Claude Picher, “Les ex-voto,” Canadian Art (Ottawa), XVIII (1961), no.4.
contract of 3 June 1673, Desbrieux’ land was worked by farmers or indentured employees, while the owner devoted most of the year to his fur-trading expeditions in the territories of the Ottawa (Odawa
certificate, J. G. Donkin, 3 Jan. 1890. Royal Canadian Mounted Police Arch. (Ottawa), Service file 1094 (John George Donkin). Manitoba Daily Free Press (Winnipeg), 12 March 1890.
noviciate in Saint-Hyacinthe and his studies at the Dominican monastery in Ottawa, where he was ordained priest on 31 May 1901. He was in France in 1902 and 1903, and subsequently was given administrative